Dominion’s New Plan Abandons Carbon Free Goal

Rendering of a GE combined-cycle natural gas-burning plant.  Despite demands from some for carbon free electricity, Dominion wants to add more gas generation in Virginia.

by Steve Haner

Dominion Energy Virginia has long been warning, albeit somewhat quietly, that the dream of running Virginia’s economy on nothing but solar, wind and battery power was not based on reality.  With the filing of its most recent integrated resource plan (IRP) on May 1, proposing how to meet customer needs out 25 years, it has made those warnings concrete.

The alternative plan that the company points to as preferred includes adding natural gas generation as early as 2028, an idea not even hinted at in the previous plan just a year ago. It wants to add 2,900 megawatts of new gas plants in all.  That proposal will prove anathema to the climate alarmism movement that imposed the Virginia Clean Economy Act just three years ago, demanding carbon-emissions-free electricity by 2045.

The previous 2022 plan did include the possibility of the utility building additional nuclear generation, with the first of four small modular reactors proposed to come online in about 2042.  This plan advances that schedule by eight years, to 2034, and calls for six reactors in all with 1,600 megawatts of capacity.

On the same day, Dominion also announced an application to change how it will collect fuel costs from customers, and some changes in the structure of its base rates and rate adjustment clauses.  The radical turn in the IRP is the bigger news, however.  Future columns will address those other two proposals.

Release of the IRP was followed that evening by a news release praising it from Governor Glenn Youngkin (R), something that normally doesn’t accompany these bureaucratic undertakings.  But Youngkin has pinned his political fortunes to what he calls the “moon shot” of introducing more nuclear power into Virginia’s mix, and his 2022 energy plan also supported continued and even expanded use of natural gas to maintain system reliability.  Dominion did both.

The review process will take months and may not be complete until after the November elections. Virginia Democrats are firmly opposed to and have voted down efforts to delay retiring the existing natural gas plants, let alone adding new ones.  The fate of that idea may rest with the voters.

Youngkin and the Dominion plan summary point to two major developments since last year’s IRP discussion.   First is the revised demand forecast by the regional electricity marketplace PJM, showing far greater growth in the data center industry and the need for more electricity as transportation and other sectors abandon fossil fuels under climate alarmism pressures.  Second was a close call just before Christmas, as demand for energy spiked in a cold spell, with PJM’s members almost replicating the blackout problems Texas suffered a few years back.

The Governor’s release stated:

The threat of premature [fossil fuel plant] retirements, and the resulting reduction to baseload and dispatchable generation capacity they produce, is magnified when the outsized load growth of Virginia is evaluated. PJM’s revised load forecast reveals that Dominion’s load will grow at 5% annually – higher than annual growth projected for Virginia when the Clean Economy Act was evaluated, and multiples of the 1% annual growth projected for the entire PJM region in the revised forecast.

As we explained last fall, there is a significant mismatch between supply and demand in the VCEA framework. Baseload generation provides the energy backbone to Virginia’s economy, and it would be a huge mistake to turn it off without an achievable plan to replace it….Our regulated utilities have the responsibility to ‘keep the lights on.’”

Adding the new SMR nuclear capacity and natural gas capacity allows Dominion to propose either building or buying substantially less solar capacity.  The preferred 2022 plan projected adding almost 26 gigawatts of solar but this new plan trims that to below 20 GW.  Both the 2022 and 2023 plans include the second phase of the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, another 2.6 gigawatts, coming online in the early 2030s.  But the 2023 plan, for the first time, also includes more than 600 megawatts of onshore wind turbines.

As before, Dominion offered five alternatives in all, one intended to be “least cost” and showing no concern for reducing CO2 emissions, and then two that achieve a claimed zero emissions by the VCEA target date of 2045.  Interestingly, the zero carbon alternatives rely on even more nuclear power to balance demand with supply.  The least-cost plan adds no nuclear but far more natural gas generation.  What are Virginians willing to pay for miniscule, too-tiny-to-matter reductions in worldwide CO2 levels?

The 2023 plan also increases the amount of planned battery storage, from 3070 megawatts in the earlier plan to more than 5,000 megawatts in this one.  Perhaps recognizing the limits of battery technology, the 2023 plan also projects major purchases of power from other utilities, reaching the level of 4 GW per year in the out years.  The 2022 plan didn’t show a shortfall until 2044.  The 2023 plan shows shortfalls in all five alternatives, some of them massive.

The customer cost projections on the 2023 option adding new natural gas and nuclear power does not change much between the 2022 and 2023 document.  Another change since last year, of course, is the federal Inflation Reduction Act changing all the federal tax credits and subsidies for nuclear and renewable energy. The details on how those changes impacted these calculations may emerge as the IRP review proceeds.

Dominion calculates the future cost one way; the State Corporation Commission uses another method, with the difference apparently being how they account for the impact of load growth.  With so many assumptions, both must be taken as just estimates, but the trend lines are both steadily up.

Last year Dominion projected that a residential bill on 1,000 kilowatt hours per month would reach $177 by 2035, and now it has lowered that to $174. (The actual bill was under $117 three years ago.) The earlier estimate using the SCC’s method was $213, and now it projects that bill will reach $235 by 2035.  Yes, the SCC methodology has bills doubling between 2020 and 2035.

Keep those long term cost projections in mind with all the hoopla you will hear during this election year about some temporary changes in your bills (your bills, not your total costs) due to the proposed changes in how the fuel costs are recovered and in rate adjustment clauses.  More information on those will follow soon.

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


Share this article



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)


Comments

18 responses to “Dominion’s New Plan Abandons Carbon Free Goal”

  1. Nathan Avatar

    I’m all for nuclear and natural gas, but natural gas has to come from somewhere and pipelines are the best delivery mechanism.

    I was encouraged by this, from Reuters:

    U.S. energy company Equitrans Midstream Corp (ETRN.N) said on Tuesday it expects federal agencies to issue the required authorizations for its $6.6 billion Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline from West Virginia to Virginia by the early summer.

    That should allow the company to finish the long-delayed project by the end of 2023, however, Equitrans warned in its first quarter earnings that “there remains significant risk and uncertainty, including regarding current and likely litigation.”

    https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/equitrans-may-still-complete-mountain-valley-natural-gas-pipe-by-end-2023-2023-05-02/

  2. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    As you point out, these are significant changes in a long range plan over the course of a year. As usual, Dominion seems to be hedging its bets with an eye on the political winds.

    1. DJRippert Avatar
      DJRippert

      Yes, some things never change.

    2. Nathan Avatar

      When the administration in power wants a plan based on fantasies and pixie dust, that’s what they get.

      If we want an energy plan that can work, we can’t ignore the issue when we go to the ballot box.

      Virginia is far better off with Younkin, rather than Terry (Solyndra) McAuliffe.

      https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424127887323741004578416821313987276

  3. William O'Keefe Avatar
    William O’Keefe

    I’d like to believe that Dominion finally saw the light of energy reality but it is probably just hedging. If the Ds win in the next election and keep VCEA, Dominion will simply claim that it has no choice and pocket more economic rent.
    In addition to nuclear and natural gas is the progress being made with hydrogen technology and specifically gas/hydrogen turbines.
    The General Assembly should give Dominion realistic targets, which aren’t zero emissions by a date certain, and let the market provide the most reliable and cost-effective mix.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      That won’t satisfy the big money behind the wind and solar and battery industrial complex. They’ll be counting their boodle before the public knows it was had. As I wrote, the last couple of Dom IRPs have included warnings along these lines, concerns about reliability, but this is the first time the company put forward a hard plan to expand its gas fleet. Whether it actually files an application to build such a plant is another matter.

  4. Nathan Avatar

    I’m all for nuclear and natural gas, but natural gas has to come from somewhere, and pipelines are the best delivery mechanism.

    I was encouraged by this, from Reuters:

    U.S. energy company Equitrans Midstream Corp (ETRN.N) said on Tuesday it expects federal agencies to issue the required authorizations for its $6.6 billion Mountain Valley natural gas pipeline from West Virginia to Virginia by the early summer.

    That should allow the company to finish the long-delayed project by the end of 2023, however, Equitrans warned in its first quarter earnings that “there remains significant risk and uncertainty, including regarding current and likely litigation.”

    https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/equitrans-may-still-complete-mountain-valley-natural-gas-pipe-by-end-2023-2023-05-02/

    1. Nathan Avatar

      Weren’t some Virginia natural gas pipeline projects canceled? Does anyone know where they stand now?

      Natural gas is proven to be extremely reliable and better for the environment than most alternatives. I think having excess capacity from multiple sources via redundant paths is the best protection from any potential natural gas supply issues.

      Sufficient supply of reliable energy is critical.

      1. Lefty665 Avatar
        Lefty665

        The Atlantic Coast Pipeline that came through Nelson County was cancelled. Apparently there are some residual issues with easements that were granted for the pipeline.

        One of the issues with the ACP was that it provided excess capacity for the export of gas in addition to using it domestically. That was not popular with folks whose land it was going to cross and was contrary to the promises made for shale gas development. That was sold as domestic use only to help give us energy independence and to keep prices low.

        US producers are currently making big money exporting gas to Europe. Energy independence, ha, we don’t need no steenkin’ energy independence when there’s money to be made exporting. I’m sure there’s no truth to the rumors that American Gas Producers financed Biden’s blowing up of the Nord Stream pipelines by putting Hunter on their board of directors.

        1. Nathan Avatar

          I don’t see anything wrong with becoming an energy exporter.

          If we bolstered our ability to create liquid natural for export, it would greatly enhance our own ability to respond domestically to emergencies, as those described in Mr. Bacon’s article “Enjoy the Blackouts…)

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

            “I don’t see anything wrong with becoming an energy exporter.”

            It would ironically increase domestic energy costs. Right now (mainly due to inadequate export facilities – not pipelines, btw) domestic natural gas prices are cheap relative to Europe. By exporting more, we are reducing domestic supply and increasing costs here.

          2. Lefty665 Avatar
            Lefty665

            Uh, once you export it LNG is no longer available for domestic use, emergency or otherwise as we can see with domestic natural gas price increases this past winter. We can have reliable low cost domestic gas or high price exports, one or the other, but not both.

            But not to worry, all will be well when we outlaw natural gas for heating, cooking and power generation. There will be plenty of gas available for export, and no domestic “emergencies” to fret over.

  5. DJRippert Avatar
    DJRippert

    It’s good to see Dominion sobering up after the drunken wish fest of the Northam Administration.

    VECA’s 2045 goal of carbon free emissions (with affordable and reliable electricity) seems like more hope than analysis.

  6. Eric the half a troll Avatar
    Eric the half a troll

    “The preferred 2022 plan projected adding almost 26 gigawatts of solar but this new plan trims that to below 20 GW”

    And there you have it. They don’t want to develop (or pay to develop) more solar capacity.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Because it only works 25% of the time? Makes sense to me.

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

        You know that is not why.

        1. Stephen Haner Avatar
          Stephen Haner

          They get their ROE no matter what they build, so pray tell, why else would they be hostile to solar other than performance? Complete the following: Don’t put all your (blank) in one (blank).

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

            Suddenly you trust Dominion to act in our best interest? I think they view solar as easy entry for competition and loss of market share and control of the industry. Every time I turn around, another person I know is installing a system. You showed that private solar developers can generate commercial power for less than Dominion. How long until other commercial Dominion customers figure that out? How long until the law is changed to force private developers in? As battery storage develops (which you know is coming) prices will drop. At that point who needs a grid? They may not be looking that far in advance but clearly the solar development boom threatens them. They have an interest in moving away from that and towards markets they can corner. Nothing scares a utility more than a contracting customer base. And then there is politics and the election….

Leave a Reply