Christie Using FERC Pulpit for Dire Prophecy

FERC Commissioner Mark Christie

by Steve Haner

Virginian Mark Christie is using his position on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission as a national pulpit to preach a message of energy reliability doom, and he is being heard.

It helps that he is not alone in spreading the alarm. It also helps that he is basing his warning on actual instances of energy shortages, from Texas’s deadly experience two years ago to the problems in the eastern United States just before Christmas 2022, which merely came close to catastrophe.

“The United States is heading for a very catastrophic situation in terms of reliability,” Christie told a United States Senate hearing May 4. “The arithmetic doesn’t work…. This problem is coming. It’s coming quickly. The red lights are flashing.”

Christie joined the FERC panel in January 2021, after 17 years as a member (and often chairman) of Virginia’s energy regulator, the State Corporation Commission. Prior to that he had a career as a lawyer, lobbyist and then advisor to Governor George Allen (R) and Virginia’s Republican state legislators.

This is not just a national debate, but also a Virginia debate. Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin’s (R) 2022 Energy Plan and now Dominion Energy Virginia with its new integrated resource plan are sending the same message. They also warn that eliminating most or all fossil-fueled baseload generation rapidly and replacing it with wind and solar only is a recipe for failure.

And Christie isn’t alone. The other three FERC commissioners, two of them appointed by Democratic administrations, joined him in the message to the Senate. The uniformity of their views is the point that cannot be ignored, and you can watch the full hearing here. The Utility Dive coverage quoted the other commissioners extensively as well, but then ran to various advocates for intermittent renewable energy who proceeded to dispute that there is a problem or sought to blame it on fossil fuels.

Behind the argument is a February report from the regional PJM Interconnection transmission network, the largest such regional electricity sharing organization in the country. Quoting from the media release of the same date:

Energy policies and market forces already have, and could further expedite, the retirement of existing generation resources faster than new resources are able to come online. PJM’s analysis…indicates that there is up to 40 GW (gigawatts) at risk of retirement from economic and policy drivers by 2030. The report also highlights significant uncertainty around the pace of resource additions, which at current completion rates would be inadequate to maintain resource adequacy. The potential also exists for significant load growth in the future, driven by data center additions and electrification of transportation, heating and industry.

The coal, gas and nuclear plants disappearing are reliable baseload generators. They account for more than 20% of PJM’s entire power assets. As a comparison, Dominion’s entire generation portfolio is 21 gigawatts, half the size of the PJM’s expected retirements. While they are retiring, demand is expected to grow about 13 gigawatts. The replacements coming online, and coming online more slowly than the retirements, are weather-dependent.

Solar panels produce nothing 75% of the time and wind turbines produce nothing 60-65% of the time. That is Christie’s point about the numbers not adding up. Some of the plants PJM warned were going to close, however, were Dominion’s and its new IRP calls for maintaining them instead.

In a Tweet, Christie (who has become prolific on Twitter), noted that another energy market observer, Independent Market Monitor, published an estimate that the retired generation within PJM could reach or exceed 50 gigawatts.

Christie then bolstered his argument with a law journal article challenging some of the basic economics and incentives of our current energy market, including PJM’s capacity market and the standard practice of paying all power generators within a single clearing price. That is usually higher than their actual costs. The article is technical, but you don’t need to be an economist or engineer to understand it. Read the summary at least.

Utility Dive went to the Natural Resources Defense Council and a Washington lobbying group for the renewable industry to dispute FERC’s warning. In Virginia, the angry pushback has come from Virginia Mercury, with a column by the Sierra Club’s Ivy Main complaining that Dominion is simply pandering to Youngkin. Main ignores the possibility that Dominion, in earlier IRP filings moving away from gas, might also have been pandering to a Governor she agreed with, Ralph Northam.

Main makes no mention of the PJM reliability report from February, or of the energy crunch right before Christmas. Virginia Mercury appears to have ignored both, along with the unanimous and bipartisan testimony in front of the Senate two weeks ago. Those who have disputed PJM’s report claim the problem in December was caused by a failure of the natural gas plants, but that is misleading.

In Texas two years ago, gas plants and pipelines that were not properly winterized failed from the cold. PJM facilities were better prepared for the cold (some still failed) but a different problem cropped up. Much of the shortfall happened because gas plants could not get supply.

When PJM was stretched near the breaking point, on December 23 and then again on December 24, generation units which had participated in the capacity market and been paid for their promised electricity didn’t step up. Some are facing fines, and the excuse that they could not get fuel is not being accepted.  Christie’s complaints that the capacity markets are not working is becoming a common one.

The argument for more gas supply is also a Virginia debate, as the Mountain Valley Pipeline across Southwest Virginia and TC Energy’s pipeline upgrade into Hampton Roads are being opposed bitterly by the wind and solar industry advocates. Both are vital. Both could still fail.

The competing visions for Virginia’s energy future, a diverse supply adding new natural gas and nuclear, or retiring gas to rely on two sources – wind and solar with some battery backup – should be put honestly before the voters picking a new General Assembly in November.

First published this morning by the Thomas Jefferson Institute for Public Policy.


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Comments

54 responses to “Christie Using FERC Pulpit for Dire Prophecy”

  1. David Wojick Avatar
    David Wojick

    Here is a simple solution:
    https://www.cfact.org/2023/02/24/how-ferc-can-protect-the-grid-from-wind-and-solar/

    Require new wind and solar generators to certify adequate backup from dispatchable sources. This could include storage but that is impossibly expensive.

    1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
      Eric the half a troll

      “Require new wind and solar generators to certify adequate backup from dispatchable sources.”

      Given that it is the fossil fuel generators that have been failing (not the renewables) they are the ones that need to certify the backups…

      1. David Wojick Avatar
        David Wojick

        It is not about failing. Solar drops to nothing every night and next to nothing on cloudy days. Wind can go to nothing for a week at a time. Both can be zero at once. But the juice still has to be there.

        In short the sum of dispatchable backup has to equal total need, plus a margin for failure. This seems so obvious I cannot see how you cannot see it.

    2. DJRippert Avatar
      DJRippert

      But that would wreak the liberal hallucination of an all renewable grid within 10 – 15 years.

    3. James C. Sherlock Avatar
      James C. Sherlock

      The hard left is not in the market for a simple solution, Dick, because they refuse to discuss the problem as you have done.

      They cannot admit the fact that “Solar panels produce nothing 75% of the time and wind turbines produce nothing 60-65% of the time. “

      If they do, their headlong rush must be paused, at least.

      1. David Wojick Avatar
        David Wojick

        Those numbers are incorrect and the reality is arguably worse. Wind likely produces over 90% of the time but almost never at full power, which requires sustained wind over 30 mph. So it typically produces an ever changing amount, oscillating endlessly between 20 and 80%.

        Solar is more reliable because it produces nothing 12-16 hours a day depending onseasonand latitude. But it too oscillates if there are clouds, including producing nothing for days at a time.

  2. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    It’s not like reading tea leaves. We knew the problem was approaching the day we began burning our food corn in our gas tanks… instead of drinking it like the Good Lord intended.

    1. Lefty665 Avatar
      Lefty665

      We’ve moved Iowa out of line as the first primary so maybe the politicians won’t have to pander to the corn growers quite as much. We’ll see. Last numbers I saw were that around 40% of US corn was going to ethanol, the burning kind. Bizarre.

      1. how_it_works Avatar
        how_it_works

        Fun fact: Ethanol is *required* in gasoline sold in the DC/Maryland/VA epa non-attainment areas.

        Prior to about 2003, they used MTBE instead.

        1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
          Eric the half a troll

          “Prior to about 2003, they used MTBE instead.”

          Which impacted a whole bunch of drinking water wells…

          1. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            That was the concern.

      2. Matt Adams Avatar
        Matt Adams

        We can’t be using it to make animal feed, that just makes more methane and increases global warming.

    2. WayneS Avatar

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        See, now there’s the difference in a flatlander and a coastal boy. I knew that song as “Rye Whisky”,… rye whisky don’t kill me, I’ll live ‘til I die.

  3. Lee Faust Avatar
    Lee Faust

    The push for electric cars/buses stoves etc. won’t help either

  4. William Chambliss Avatar
    William Chambliss

    Steve, for a deeper examination of reasons for fossil retirements, I also commend Judge Christie’s excellent article in the Energy Bar Journal of May 2, 2023.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      You must have missed it. It is recommended and linked within the column, as well. That was a sign this is a planned campaign on his part. 🙂

      1. William Chambliss Avatar
        William Chambliss

        I sure did. Thanks.

  5. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “…actual instances of energy shortages, from Texas’s deadly experience two years ago to the problems in the Eastern United States just before Christmas 2022, which merely came close to catastrophe.”

    Both of which were due to fossil fuel generation failures, btw… not to sound like a broken record…

    As to your claim that the equipment was not to blame but the fossil-fuel generators failed due to lack of natural gas supply, I offer the following:

    “But power generation at three North Carolina plant locations — coal-fired Mayo and Roxboro and natural gas-powered Dan River (aside to Haner… note fuels cited) — were essentially cut in half early Dec. 24 when insulated instrumentation lines froze, Duke executives said. Meanwhile, already contracted purchases of electric power on a regional transmission system didn’t happen because neighboring utilities had no supplies to share.”

    So the “supply” failure is the supply from other states who had contracts to sell to Duke but had no extra (fossil-fuel generated) power to spare.

    1. David Wojick Avatar
      David Wojick

      FERC, NERC and all the ISOs have issued warnings, so the Texas details are not really relevant.

      1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
        Eric the half a troll

        Haner brought them up… lol…

      2. Stephen Haner Avatar
        Stephen Haner

        National Energy Reliability Corp (NERC) just issued a new one.

        1. William Chambliss Avatar
          William Chambliss

          NERC is actually the “North American Electric Reliability Corporation,” and formulates standards for the reliable operation of the bulk power electric grid throughout the US (including Texas) and parts of Mexico and most of Canada.

    2. DJRippert Avatar
      DJRippert

      Uninsulated instrumentation lines can be insulated. Gas supply can be increased. Nothing will make the Sun shine at night or the wind blow on a calm day.

      1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
        Eric the half a troll

        However, when the wind blows and the sun shines is very predictable and reliable… what part of a fossil fuel plant will fail… not so much…

        1. WayneS Avatar

          You are not seriously positing that wind turbines and solar arrays are somehow immune from equipment failures, are you?

          Questions:

          1) How long have fossil fuel power generating facilities been reliably providing a virtually continuous supply of electricity to this country?

          2) How long have solar arrays and wind turbines been reliably providing a virtually continuous supply of electricity to this country?

          1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            A wind turbine goes down, one wind turbine comes off line… no big deal… a power plant goes down… we’ve seen the result of that kind of failure.

          2. Randy Huffman Avatar
            Randy Huffman

            It was also documented that many of the wind turbines in Texas failed too during this extreme weather event. But the loss of power from them was a smaller percentage than the gas failures, because they produced less power to begin with……

          3. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            Ironically, as some mills in west Texas failed because of low temperatures, the mills in east Texas produced more than planned because of higher than usual winds.

            Not that anyone should count on that happening.

          4. Randy Huffman Avatar
            Randy Huffman

            My bottom line view is we shouldn’t have all our eggs in one basket. But that is not what some from either side is advocating. It is so shortsighted to be shutting down fossil fuel and nuclear plants on an arbitrary deadline, but at the same time I don’t like the “drill baby drill” mantra, and I used to work in the fossil fuels business!

        2. WayneS Avatar

          And, more recently:

          https://www.wisn.com/article/absolutely-crazy-wind-turbine-in-dodge-county-collapses/42598567

          And it was during the winter, too…

          😉

        3. David Wojick Avatar
          David Wojick

          Completely false! Neither sustained wind speed nor degree of cloudiness are reliably predictable even a day ahead in many cases. In some cases not an hour ahead.

          We recently had a sunny NWS forecast going while it was cloudy. Solar can vary by 90% from minute to minute when we have sun mixed with dark clouds, like today.

          Sustained wind speed, which determines power output, may not be predictable minute to minute.

          1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            And yet, during Duke Energy’s infamous Christmas outages, renewable pretty much performed as predicted. Pumped hydro power is a big reason why. There is more to renewable power than just wind and solar instantaneous energy.

        4. WayneS Avatar

          Bottom line: When power companies don’t take proper care of their stuff, stuff breaks. Even if that stuff produces “green” energy.

          https://projects.oregonlive.com/wind-farms/

          1. Matt Adams Avatar
            Matt Adams

            You mean hope, dreams and unicorn toots don’t keep things running without maintenance. I’ll be darned, haha.

          2. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            That typically doesn’t lead to power outages, though…

        5. WayneS Avatar

          And, more recently:

          https://www.wisn.com/article/absolutely-crazy-wind-turbine-in-dodge-county-collapses/42598567

          And it was during the winter, too…

          😉

    3. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Duke is not PJM, Mr. Troll. I’d send you the links to PJM’s reports, but you really don’t want to read things that prove you wrong.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        We hunger for misinformation.

        Will Rogers was ahead of his time. Nowadays, “half of what you see” is far too much.

      2. Eric the half a troll Avatar
        Eric the half a troll

        Duke is the one that had the problem at Christmas which you are referring to… the problems came from failing generation plants. They relied on PJM excess as a fallback but PJM had no excess. Perhaps for the reasons you cited but the problem started with failing generator plants. Please provide links to the PJM findings. I will indeed read them.

        Edit: Another source citing PJM saying it was due to fossil fuel plant failures:

        “At the peak of Winter Storm Elliott, about 47,000 MW were unexpectedly offline in PJM’s footprint. About 63% of all outages were natural gas-fired power plants, 28% was coal, 4% oil, 2% nuclear, 1% hydroelectric and about 1% “other,” according to the grid operator’s fact sheet.

        The outages were mainly caused by power plant equipment failures, along with failure to start, units tripping offline and temperature-related failures, according to PJM’s preliminary review”

        https://www.utilitydive.com/news/pjm-ferc-settlement-winter-storm-elliott-complaints-penalties-outages/647777/#:~:text=About%20200%20market%20participants%20face,sheet%20from%20the%20grid%20operator.

        Your claim is failing scrutiny, Haner.

        1. David Wojick Avatar
          David Wojick

          No PJM issued a warning and request for turning off Christmas lights and dinner.
          https://www.cfact.org/2022/12/30/blackouts-for-christmas-a-sick-grid-gift/

          1. Eric the half a troll Avatar
            Eric the half a troll

            Duke Energy implemented rolling blackouts because their plants failed. They were originally supposed to get energy from PJM members to make it up but they denied their contracts. They reneged on their contracts because they had no excess because their plants failed. That is what happened… plain and simple

  6. James C. Sherlock Avatar
    James C. Sherlock

    It is no surprise that the pushback came from Virginia Mercury. It is not what it professes to be – a source of independent journalism.

    Instead it is subsidiary of States Newsroom funded by the Hopewell Fund, a very wealthy progressive non-profit advised by Arabella Advisors.

    They are self-described https://www.devex.com/organizations/arabella-advisors-62136

    “Arabella is a consulting company that “has helped hundreds of clients representing more than $100 billion in assets increase their philanthropic impact.”

    “Their clients increasingly recognize that promising ideas with the power to effect deep social change often require up-front capital, rapid prototyping, and a higher tolerance for risk than governments or the market can provide.”

    For more details see “Independent Journalism – The Special Case of the Virginia Mercury” that I published in October of 2022. https://www.baconsrebellion.com/independent-journalism-the-special-case-of-the-virginia-mercury

  7. James C. Sherlock Avatar
    James C. Sherlock

    It is no surprise that the pushback came from Virginia Mercury. It is not what it professes to be – a source of independent journalism.

    Instead it is subsidiary of States Newsroom funded by the Hopewell Fund, a very wealthy progressive non-profit advised by Arabella Advisors.

    They are self-described https://www.devex.com/organizations/arabella-advisors-62136

    “Arabella is a consulting company that “has helped hundreds of clients representing more than $100 billion in assets increase their philanthropic impact.”

    “Their clients increasingly recognize that promising ideas with the power to effect deep social change often require up-front capital, rapid prototyping, and a higher tolerance for risk than governments or the market can provide.”

    For more details see “Independent Journalism – The Special Case of the Virginia Mercury” that I published in October of 2022. https://www.baconsrebellion.com/independent-journalism-the-special-case-of-the-virginia-mercury

  8. Lee Faust Avatar
    Lee Faust

    The push for electric cars/buses stoves etc. won’t help either

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Cars, buses, trucks, farm machinery, yard tools, railroad locomotives, stoves, water heaters, furnaces — the list of targeted fuel-burning equipment is endless. The power companies want it all!

    2. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Cars, buses, trucks, farm machinery, yard tools, railroad locomotives, stoves, water heaters, furnaces, backyard grills, generators — the list of targeted fuel-burning equipment is endless. The power companies want it all!

      1. WayneS Avatar

        Don’t forget fighter planes, tanks and armored personnel carriers…

          1. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            You’d smoke like that too if you put a battery in your six.

          2. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            You’d smoke like that too if you put a battery in your six.

  9. f/k/a_tmtfairfax Avatar
    f/k/a_tmtfairfax

    If one truly wanted to make changes in energy use and sources, one would have to set forth all of the issues presented and address them in a realistic manner. That may include recognizing actual barriers that may or may not be easily overcome. I suspect that some overestimate the barriers, but many underestimate them. The U.S. does not have the assets needed to meet the demands of the radical environmentalists.

    One cannot will results into being. And we need public officials to be honest with Americans. And that includes an acknowledgment that the electric grid cannot handle an all renewable energy market.

    If the radical environmentalists would have been in War Department when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, FDR’s December 8 speech would have included a promise to invade Japan by December 7, 1942.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Just because one promised to put men on the moon by the end of a decade?

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