Price Responsive Load / Retail DR RMS Update Paul Wattles Carl Raish October 6, 2015.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
BG&E’s PeakRewards SM Demand Response Program Successful Approaches for Engaging Customers August 20, 2014.
Advertisements

Time-of-Use and Critical Peak Pricing
Results from the 2013 Survey of LSEs to Obtain Retail DR and Dynamic Pricing information Public Summary Frontier Associates LLC June
Retail DR and Price Response 2014 Product Headcounts Paul Wattles, ERCOT Market Design & Development DSWG Feb. 3, 2015.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR Workshop Paul Wattles Karen Farley DSWG/REP Workshop April 9, 2014.
1 SMUD’s Small Business Summer Solutions Pilot: Behavioral response of small commercial customers to DR programs (with PCTs) Karen Herter, Ph.D. Associate.
NERC LTRA Update / CDR Capacity Counting Issues
RMS Update December 14,  Advanced Meter Settlement Impacts  January 2012 – ERCOT settling 4.4M ESIIDs using Advanced Meter data  January 2012–
Measurement, Verification, and Forecasting Protocols for Demand Response Resources: Chuck Goldman Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR Data Collection Project and Lessons Learned Paul Wattles Karen Farley DSWG March 2014.
Price Responsive Load Next Steps – Data Collection Paul Wattles Karen Farley DSWG and RMS sub team October 16, 2012.
ERS Update for DSWG June 1, Agenda June – September 2012 Procurement XML Project Update Clearing Price discussion NPRR 451 Q & A.
Retail Smart Grid Trends Paul Wattles Senior Analyst, Market Design & Development UT Energy Week: “How Smart Grids Enable Consumers” Feb. 18, 2015.
1 AMS Data Workshop ERCOT Overview of AMS Data Processes June 27, 2014 ERCOT June 27, 2014.
FERC Assessment of Demand Response & Advanced Metering 2006 APPA Business & Financial Conference September 18, 2006 – Session 11 (PMA) Presented by: Larry.
Presented By: Mark Patterson ERCOT Manager, Demand Integration November 29, Minute ERS Pilot update to TAC 1.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR Update to RMS Karen Farley June 3, 2014.
FERC’s Role in Demand Response David Kathan ABA Teleconference December 14, 2005.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR Workshop Paul Wattles Karen Farley DSWG/REP Workshop April 2014.
1 Welcome to Load Participation Orientation Elev MenWomen Phones Info Presentation and other Load Participation information will be posted at:
Price Responsive Load Survey Draft Results Paul Wattles Karen Farley DSWG and RMS Aug. 22, 2012.
Distributed Energy Resources Concept Document Discussion ERCOT Staff DREAM Task Force Aug. 25,
Demand Response Workshop September 15, Definitions are important Demand response –“Changes in electricity usage by end-use customers from their.
ERCOT MARKET EDUCATION
Rate Design Indiana Industrial Energy Consumers, Inc. (INDIEC) Indiana Industrial Energy Consumers, Inc. (INDIEC) presented by Nick Phillips Brubaker &
Grabbing Balancing Up Load (BUL) by the Horns December 2006.
ERCOT Demand Response Spring 2015 ERCOT Operator Seminar.
PJM©2013www.pjm.com Economic DR participation in energy market ERCOT April 14, 2014 Pete Langbein.
Mandy Bauld ERCOT October 9, 2012 RTM SETTLEMENT TIMELINE.
Demand Response Status Report Calvin Opheim October 9, 2007.
Weather Sensitive ERS Training Presenter: Carl Raish Weather Sensitive ERS Training Workshop April 5, 2013.
Settlement Accuracy Analysis Prepared by ERCOT Load Profiling.
PJM© Demand Response in PJM 2009 NASUCA Mid-Year Meeting June 30, 2009 Boston, MA Panel: Price Responsive Demand – A Long-Term Bargain.
2016 Long-Term Load Forecast
NPRR 571 ERS Weather Sensitive Loads Requirements Carl Raish, ERCOT QSE Managers Working Group November 5, 2013.
DSWG – March 9, 2015 Four-CP Response in ERCOT Competitive Area Carl L Raish.
DR issues in California discussed last year in March Historical DR in California: some background issues –Twenty years of programs/tariffs I/C and AC cycling.
Final Report Weather Sensitive Emergency Response Service (WS ERS) Pilot Project Carl Raish, ERCOT Technical Advisory Committee November 7, 2013.
Emergency Demand Response Concept Overview and Examples Presented to: ERCOT December 3, 2004 Presented by: Neenan Associates.
RMS/COPS Workshop VI 1 October 06, Antitrust Admonition ERCOT strictly prohibits Market Participants and their employees who are participating in.
Sept. 28, 2007 Interim Update Load Response Survey.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR Workshop Paul Wattles Carl Raish Karen Farley REP Roundtable August 5, 2015 – Updates in RED.
01/17/ CP Discussion October 16,2002 Retail Market Subcommittee Austin, Texas.
Advanced Metering Rule Christine Wright Public Utility Commission of Texas June 6, 2007 Retail Market Workshop COMET WG Meeting.
ERS Update – DSWG Presentation September 21, 2012.
Retail DR and Price Responsive Load Next Steps – Data Collection Paul Wattles Karen Farley Updates to DSWG & RMS January 2013.
An Overview of Demand Response in California July 2011.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR DSWG Update Paul Wattles Carl Raish September 17, 2015.
1 TX SET Mass Transition Project RMS Update March 15, 2006.
Business Case NPRR 351 Floyd Trefny Amtec Consulting Brenda Crockett Champion Energy Services.
Price Responsive Load / Retail Demand Response 2013 Analysis Report Overview ERCOT Staff & Frontier Associates RMS Meeting August 5, 2014.
Programs/Products that ERCOT Does Not Presently Offer ERCOT Demand Side Working Group New DR Product Options Subgroup Jay Zarnikau Frontier Associates.
Developing Load Reduction Estimates Caused by Interrupting and/or Curtailing Large Customers By Carl L. Raish 2000 AEIC Load Research Conference.
Retail Market Update August 6, Load Profile Guides In accordance with section § (e) (3) and PUCT Project 25516, Load Profiling and Load Research.
Overview of Governing Document for Weather-Sensitive ERS Pilot Project Stakeholder Workshop Mark Patterson, ERCOT Staff March 1, 2013.
February 2, 2016 RMS Meeting 1. * Reasons: * Per the ERCOT Board Report dated 8/5/14 there were 6.6M Advanced Metering System (AMS) Electric Service Identifiers.
Status Report on DSWG Task 11: Retail DR/Dynamic Pricing Project Presentation to the ERCOT Demand Side Working Group Jay Zarnikau Frontier Associates LLC.
DSWG - June 25, Four-CP Response for Transmission- and Distribution- Connected ESIIDs in ERCOT Competitive Area Carl L Raish.
Load Participation in Nodal Training Session Update DSWG December 7, 2007.
Proxy $G and other Loads in SCED 2 Litmus Tests Loads in SCEDv2 Subgroup Dec. 2, 2014.
Price Responsive Load / Retail DR RMS Update Paul Wattles Carl Raish September 1, 2015.
Capacity Forecast Report Fall Update Sean Chang Market Analysis and Design Suresh Pabbisetty CQF, ERP, CSQA Credit CWG/MCWG December 16, 2015 ERCOT Public.
Demand Response Options Review Carl Raish November 27, 2007.
Voltage Reduction Task Force Update September 25, 2014 Presentation to ERCOT TAC.
Draft NPRR Weather Sensitive ERS Loads December 2012.
Analysis of Load Reductions Associated with 4-CP Transmission Charges in ERCOT Carl L Raish Principal Load Profiling and Modeling Demand Side Working Group.
Principal Load Profiling and Modeling
Pilot Project Concept 30-Minute Emergency Response Service (ERS)
Emergency Response Service Baselines
Mike Mumper & Brian Kick Good afternoon
Presentation transcript:

Price Responsive Load / Retail DR RMS Update Paul Wattles Carl Raish October 6, 2015

2 RMS topics 2014 analysis - status report 2015 snapshot date review Next steps Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

3 PUC Rule Pursuant to PUC Subst. Rule §25.505(e) (5), “Load Serving Entities (LSEs) shall provide ERCOT with complete information on load response capabilities that are self-arranged or pursuant to bilateral agreements between LSEs and their customers” Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

4 Pricing Events – 2014 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 ERCOT identified 9 days in calendar year 2014 with pricing events price for 4 or more consecutive intervals exceeded $200 in all four competitive load zones. One of the days, January 6, was an EEA day when prices were at the cap until various forms of demand response kicked in Three of the days were on a Sunday: March 2 and 16, September 21 Graphs on the following slides compare actual prices on those nine days to the average price for that day-type and month

5 Pricing Events – 2014 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Jan 6 – EEA eventFeb 10 Mar 2 - Sunday Mar 3

6 Pricing Events – 2014 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Mar 16 - Sunday Apr 7 May 30Sep 21 - Sunday

7 Pricing Events – 2014 (continued) Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Nov 13

8 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, CP

9 Number of ESIIDs with 4 CP Responses – 2014 October 6, 2015Price Responsive Load / Retail DR

10 Hour-ending 17:00 MW Reductions on 4 CP Days MW Load Reduction for Responding 4-CP ESIIDS October 6, 2015Price Responsive Load / Retail DR

11 Hour-ending 17:00 Reductions on 4 CP Days October 6, 2015Price Responsive Load / Retail DR

12 4 CP 15-Minute Response

13 4-CP Interval Reductions on 4 CP Days Percentage of Load Reduction based on Customer Peak

14 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Other Load Control

OLC Analysis Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 May Composite Day Early Oct Composite Day Mid October Composite Day 5 Reps reported OLC programs in 2014 ~19,200 Res and 64 Bus customers 3 Reps reported 7 deployments in 2014 affecting 3,200 Res and 5 Bus customers 4 events (3 in Aug, 1 in Oct) showed no evidence of any load reduction May and October days combined into composite graphs to approximate the total OLC load reduction that could occur with same-day deployment

16 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Peak Rebate

PR Analysis Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 August Composite Day September Composite Day 6 Reps reported PR programs in 2014 ~ 410,700 Res and 30,200 Bus customers With DLC: Res 4,400 Bus 4 4 Reps reported 9 deployments in 2014 affecting 32,100 Res and 143 Bus customers With DLC: Res 4,400 Bus 4 3 events (1 in Sep, 2 in Oct) showed no evidence of any load reduction 6 events showed obvious reductions ranging from 27 – 40 MW August and September days are combined into composite graphs to approximate the total PR load reduction that could occur with same-day deployment

18 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Real Time Pricing

RTP Analysis Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, Reps reported RTP programs in 2014 ~ 1,000 Res and 9,700 Bus customers None with DLC 2 pricing events days (Jan 6 and Mar 3) with evidence of load reduction –Jan 6: ~4,500 customers ~12.9 MW of load reduction (~8.8 MW from BUSIDRRQ) –Mar 3 ~5,000 customers ~7.4 MW load reduction (~4.4 MW from BUSIDRRQ) Note: EEA related Load reduction led to price drop, and RTP related load reduction mostly occurred following the price drop Jan 6, 2014 – EEA Day Mar 3, 2014

20 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Block and Index

BI Analysis Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, Reps reported BI programs in 2014 ~ 6,800 Bus customers None with DLC 2 pricing events days (Jan 6 and Mar 3) with evidence of load reduction –Jan 6: ~5,400 customers ~507.9 MW of load reduction (~330.4 MW from BUSIDRRQ) –Mar 3 ~5,700 customers ~229.3 MW load reduction (~43.6 MW from BUSIDRRQ) Note: EEA related Load reduction led to price drop, and BI related load reduction during high price intervals did occur prior to the price drop –Jan 6: 455 MW in interval 30 when price was $2,800 –Mar 3: 179 MW in interval 28 when price was $4,990 Jan 6, 2014 – EEA DayMar 3, 2014

22 Combined Price Response CategoryResponse (MW) 4-CP710 Other Load Control5 Peak Rebate40 Real Time Pricing5 Block and Index180 Critical Peak Pricing0 Time Of UseAnalysis in Progress Total940 Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015 Response reported for ERCOT competitive areas only Customers responding to 4-CP and participating in RTP or BI were excluded from RTP and BI totals. 4-CP customers on RTP reduced load by 9 MW during January pricing event 4-CP customers on BI reduced load by 330 MW during January pricing event

23 Updated Categories pg. 1 of 3 Demand Response category (improved) definitions: RTP – Real Time Pricing - retail prices for all hours or intervals based on ERCOT Real-Time Settlement Point Prices for the premise Load Zone, calculated every 15 minutes, or other real-time wholesale price indicator(s). BI – Block & Index – fixed pricing for a defined volume of usage, coupled with pricing indexed to the wholesale market for usage exceeding the block. Block prices and volumes may vary by time of day/week. (removed last line from definition - Option could include if usage dips below the block.) PR – Peak Rebates – a retail offering in which the customer is eligible for a financial incentive paid for load reductions taken during periods of time identified by the LSE, and communicated to the customer during the prior day or the event day, or both. LSE has defined a method to identify whether a customer has responded and to quantify the response amount. Payment (rebate) to customer is based upon customer’s response. Peak Rebate examples - No DLC: The REP sends an one day prior if high prices are forecasted, and sends a reminder text/tweet the morning of the following day. The REP identifies responding customers using a recent similar weather day as a baseline to estimate what the customer’s load would have been. If the customer’s actual load during the predicted intervals was lower than the baseline, the REP agrees to pay the customer $100 / kw of reduction. DLC: REP sends one day prior if high prices are forecasted, and sends a reminder text/tweet the morning of the following day. When high prices materialize, the REP sends a signal to the customer’s web-enabled thermostat to increase its set point by 3 degrees. The REP establishes a baseline for the customer to estimate what the customer’s load would have been. If the customer’s actual load during the predicted intervals was lower than the baseline, the REP agrees to pay the customer $100 / kw of reduction. Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

24 Updated Categories pg. 2 of 3 Demand Response category definitions: CPP – Critical Peak Pricing – prices that rise during critical peaks: limited duration periods of time identified by the LSE that usually correlate to high prices in the real-time wholesale market. Critical peak events may occur a limited number of times per year and typically are communicated a day in advance. TOU – Time of Use — prices that vary across defined blocks of hours, with predefined prices and schedules. (As used here, does not apply to seasonal adjustments). TOU Example – free evening hours OLC – Other Direct Load Control – contracts that allow the LSE or a third party to control the customer’s load remotely for economic or grid reliability purposes. This category applies to Direct Load Control (DLC) with different deployment criteria than described elsewhere. (Avoid double counting if DLC data was reported in other categories.). Customer incentive is predefined and does not vary based upon the response. OLC Example - OLC (always has DLC) REP identifies a day on which high prices have, or are about to, materialize. The REP sends a signal to the customer’s web-enabled thermostat to increase its set point by 3 degrees. The REP agrees to pay the customer $10 / month for each summer month, and the customer agrees to allow the thermostat to be set higher 10 times during the summer for periods up to 2 hours long. If the customer overrides the REP thermostat setting during a month, the customer’s payment is reduced by $3. OTH – Other Voluntary Demand Response Product – any retail product not covered in the other categories that includes a demand response incentive or signal. Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

25 Updated Categories pg. 3 of 3 Demand Response category definitions: NOTE – will not use 4CP and FO categories for summer 2015 data collection 4CP – Four Coincident Peak – predictor signals or direct load control provided to customers in advance of potential Four Coincident Peak (4CP) intervals during summer months (June through September). Reducing load during such intervals lowers transmission charges. 4CP charges apply to large customers (peak demand ≥700 kW) in competitive choice areas, and also to NOIEs at the boundary meter level. FO – Financial Option – product where LSE purchases an option from the customer that is backed by a specified level of DR and uses it for portfolio trades in the wholesale market. 4CP - ERCOT can do the 4CP analysis without the need to ask the LSEs to provide data in the survey. FO – category has not been used for 2 years Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

26 Snapshot for Summer Summer data collection timeline September 30, snapshot by REPs for which ESI IDs are in programs November 4, file submission to ERCOT* November 18, error correction file submission to ERCOT –* pushed file submission back by 2 weeks to allow any error handling to be completed prior to Thanksgiving Holiday –REP should make all necessary corrections and re-send the full file to ERCOT. ERCOT will use the last file sent for data analysis. –ERCOT will send survey monkey after receipt of ‘clean data’ or declaring ‘uncle’ December 1, 2015 – ERCOT will send Survey Monkey links to REPs to gather REP-specific event information December 11, 2015 – Survey Monkey responses due Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

27 Next Steps – for future Still for future discussion Future years (starting 2016?) –Evaluate quarterly submissions for 2016 –Ask REPs to evaluate winter programs for future consideration Please review categories to see if definitions fit or if new categories would need to be added Consider possible dates and/or frequency of a winter file submission Protocol Revision and/or Market Guide Revision? Review categories each year to see if adjustments need to be made Review reporting of events via Survey Monkey to see if there is a better method to leverage Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

28 Take Aways REPs –Prepare to take the snapshot for Sept 30 th –Log self-initiated events in preparation for the survey –Map product types to the categories in the guide –If unsure which category to use – please ask Carl Raish Paul Wattles Karen Farley ERCOT –ERCOT will continue work on TOU analysis for future report to market. Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015

29 Questions? ON OFF Price Responsive Load / Retail DROctober 6, 2015