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Renewable Energy Development at NYSERDA

Renewable Energy Development at NYSERDA . Jeff Peterson NYSERDA June 25, 2008. Discussion Outline. Renewable Energy Task Force Recommendations - Creates the policy foundation Market Development - Builds wholesale and retail markets to meet policy goals Business Innovation

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Renewable Energy Development at NYSERDA

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  1. RenewableEnergy Development at NYSERDA Jeff Peterson NYSERDA June 25, 2008

  2. Discussion Outline • Renewable Energy Task Force Recommendations • - Creates the policy foundation • Market Development • - Builds wholesale and retail markets to meet policy goals • Business Innovation • - Grow sustainable businesses to serve the market • Renewable Fuels • - Long term commitment through investment in research and planning

  3. Renewable Energy Task Force

  4. RENEWABLE ENERGY TASK FORCE • The Task Force was charged with three primary goals: • Identify barriers in New York State to wider deployment and installation of renewable energy; • Recommend policies, including financial incentives to overcome those barriers to attract clean industries to economically depressed regions of the state; and, • Identify future market areas where additional research and development investment is necessary.

  5. Clean, Secure Energy and Economic Growth:A Commitment to Renewable Energy and Enhanced Energy Independence THE FIRST REPORT OF THE RENEWABLE ENERGY TASK FORCE TO GOVERNOR DAVID A. PATERSON FEBRUARY 2008

  6. RENEWABLE ENERGY TASK FORCE SUMMARY RECOMMENDATIONS • Re-Commit to Meeting the State’s Renewable Portfolio Standard Goal and Evaluate Raising Renewable Energy Target • Enhance and Expand New York’s Existing Net Metering Law • Invest in Clean Energy Businesses for Economic Growth • Develop Both a Renewable Fuels Roadmap and a Sustainable Biomass Feedstock Study • Expand Research and Development efforts for Renewable Energy • Reclaim a Leadership Role Through Building and Product Energy Performance • Expand Purchases of Renewable Energy by Local Governments • Create a Vehicle Efficiency/Vehicle Miles Traveled Working Group • Build a Sustainable Market for Solar Energy in New York State • Develop a Strategy to Reap the Benefits of New York’s Wind Energy Potential • Expand Training Programs to Sustain a Green Collar Workforce • Improve Overall Agency Consistency and Coordination • Use Creative Financing to Promote Investment in the Renewable Energy Industry • Encourage the Use of Advanced Metering and Smart-Grid Technology • Build on Public and Private Educational Programs • Facilitate Interconnection Processes for Renewable Distributed Generation

  7. Market Development

  8. Renewable Portfolio Standard • Target: 25% of retail sales served by 2013 • Existing resources account for about 19.5% • Incremental requirement satisfied as follows: • Main Tier (NYSERDA) 9,850 GWh • Customer-Sited Tier (NYSERDA) 50 GWH • Voluntary Green Retailing 1,800 GWh • State Agency Purchases 300 GWh • Total 12,100 GWh Approach: Design and administer a series of competitive procurements and incentive programs to add new grid-tied renewable generation and increase the penetration of renewable technologies located behind-the-meter on the customer premises and preserve existing renewable resource base

  9. Cumulative RPS Program Outcomes - Main Tier - New capacity (at end program year 2009) - approx. 1,345 MW Total Available REC produced annually - nearly 4,300,000 Facilities involved - 31 projects/29 in New York Resource type - 16 hydro/3 biomass/13 wind New capacity under NYSERDA contract - 1,106 MW Expected NYS economic benefits - approx. $ 1.4 billion REC under contract to NYSERDA annually - approx. 3,500,000 Weighted REC price - $ 17/MWh % of 2013 program goal achieved - approx. 35 % Results pending execution of contracts under 3 rd procurement cycle

  10. NYSERDA PV Rebate Applications per Year- SBC/RPS -

  11. Role of NYSERDA CAIR and RGGI Initiatives Funded/managed critical research on auction principles and practices Selected auction services provider and expect to execute auctions or brokered arrangements to comply with these new initiatives RGGI - Region wide auction CAIR - NYSERDA administered auctions/brokered arrangements NYSERDA administers CAIR/RGGI programs on behalf of NYS DEC NYSERDA allocated carbon (CO2) (approx 65 million tons) and nitrous oxide (NOx) allowances (approx 23,000 tons) respectively to sell to entities affected by these new regulations. Proceeds from the sales of CO2 and NOx will be used to promote and implement programs for energy efficiency, renewable or non-carbon emitting technologies, and innovative carbon emissions abatement technologies with significant carbon reduction potential.

  12. Business Innovation

  13. Why Businesses Need to Pay Attention to Climate Change Regulatory Risk – Emission regulation. Supply Chain Cost – Higher component and energy costs as suppliers pass along increasing carbon-related costs to their customers. Product and Technology Opportunities - Ability to identify new market opportunities for climate-friendly products and services. Reputation – Public, or consumer, perception on the role of the company as a steward of the environment.

  14. What Drives Public and Private Decisions? Based on: J.E. Pater, Framework for Evaluating the Total Value Proposition of Clean Energy Technologies, Technical Report NREL/TP-620-38597, February 2006

  15. Rebates alone will not Build a Market

  16. Development of commercial market • Develop market for prototypes Business Scale-up Clear path to competitive economics Support Business Innovation along with Technology Development • Identify early-entry market segments • Validate market size/fit High Level Business Plan • Develop viable product concept • Identify potential applications for product Business Development Value Proposition Product Idea Will the technology work? Business Product Definition Is the business viable? Business Concept Initial Concept Will it work for a customer? Commercial Scale-up Commercial Start-up Working Prototype Technology Business Validation Technology Development MultipleBetaPrototypes • Research and development • Demonstrate key concepts Manufacturing • Demonstrate working system prototype Technology Development • First generation field prototypes • Refine prototypes Bench-top fabrication • Beta field prototypes • Pre-production product refinement • Low volume commercial deployment • All value-chain firms on-board Contract manufacturing Pilot-scale manufacturing • Product refinement • Volume scale-up Commercial production Navigant, 2008

  17. Clean Energy Business Growth & DevelopmentPON 1124$6 million of funding -$200,000 per projectRound 3 – August 4, 2008 • Partner with companies to share the risk of -- • Innovation • Entrepreneurship • Implementation of new business models and strategies • -- that will enable the adoption and diffusion of clean energy technology.

  18. Clean Energy TechnologyManufacturing Incentive Program PON 1176 $10 MILLION AVAILABLE - $1.5 million per project PROPOSALS -- ACCEPTED ANYTIME Expand the level of manufacturing of renewable, clean, and energy-efficient products in New York through … … funding for Facility and Site Characterization, Project Development and Construction, and Project Commercial Operation

  19. Renewable Fuels

  20. RETF Renewable Fuels • Governor Paterson’s Renewable Energy Task Force included examination of Renewable Fuels • TF Report concluded: “…no single renewable fuel will answer increasing energy needs…NY should address critical concerns regarding specific fuels…both to solve energy mandates and prioritize environmental, land-use and health concerns in policy decision making.” • Calls for completion of Renewable Fuels Roadmap • RFP will be issued by NYSERDA very soon

  21. Located at the Griffiss Technology Park in Rome, NY • Pilot Plant: 500,000 gallons/year of ethanol • NYSERDA Funds: $14.8 million Total Cost: $29.8 million • Pilot plant used to test proprietary thermophilic microbes (e.g. T. saccharolyticum) and engineered Consolidated Bioprocessing (CBP) microorganism (reduce enzyme requirement) • Partners: Genencor, Cornell, Clarkson, Dartmouth • Feedstocks: willows, papermill sludge, switch grass

  22. Co-located with the Lyonsdale 19MW power plant. • Pilot Plant:130,000 gallons/year of ethanol • NYSERDA Funds: $10.3 million Total Cost: $20.7 million • Biomass extraction (hemicellulose), membrane separation and fermentation developed and tested at SUNY-ESF • Partners: SUNY-ESF, New Energy Capital, O’Brien & Gere • Feedstocks: willows, harvested wood

  23. The Wacko Tree-huggers Secret Ploy The Way I See It #289 So-called “global-warming” is just a secret ploy by wacko tree-huggers to make America energy independent, clean our air and water, improve the fuel efficiency of our vehicles, kick-start 21st century industries, and make our cities safer and more livable. Don’t let them get away with it! -- Chip Giller Founder of Grist.org, where environmentally minded people gather online.

  24. Jeff Peterson NYSERDA 17 Columbia Circle Albany, NY 12203 518-862-1090 ext. 3288 Jmp@nyserda.org

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