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Unclassified1 Competitive Acquisition of Renewable Energy & Renewable Energy Certificates Andrea L. Kincaid, Contracting Officer Electricity & Renewables.

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Presentation on theme: "Unclassified1 Competitive Acquisition of Renewable Energy & Renewable Energy Certificates Andrea L. Kincaid, Contracting Officer Electricity & Renewables."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unclassified1 Competitive Acquisition of Renewable Energy & Renewable Energy Certificates Andrea L. Kincaid, Contracting Officer Electricity & Renewables Defense Energy Support Center

2 Unclassified2 EPAct 05 Requirements Section 203. Federal Purchase Requirements –Renewable Energy Goals Not less than 3% FY07-FY09 Not less than 5% FY10-FY12 Not less than 7.5% FY13- –Acceptable Resources Solar, Wind, Biomass, Landfill Gas, geothermal, municipal solid waste, new hydroelectric generation

3 Unclassified3 EPAct 05 Ability to double count RECs associated with- –Generation on Federal Installations –On Indian Lands –On other Federal Land However – must be generated and used Policy/Guidelines still being developed

4 Unclassified4 Electricity Restructuring Status Open to competition, competitive contracts awarded Open for competition, no competitive awards Competitive contracts no allowed

5 Unclassified5 Renewable Power Policy originally provided in Executive Order 13423 and EPAct 05 – Solar – Wind – Geothermal – Biomass – Tidal, thermal, landfill gas, waste-to-energy, others Additional Input – National Energy Policy – Agency Policy

6 Unclassified6 What are the Goals? EO 13423 dated Jan 24, 2007 – 50% of purchased renewables from resources operational after Jan 1, 1999 EPAct05 – Not less than 3% FY07-FY09 – Not less than 5% FY10-FY12 – Not less than 7.5% FY13-? To the extent economically feasible and technically practicable

7 Unclassified7 Facilitated Projects We see as the wave of the future – Build the most feasible projects on-site Energy security The real green power (not a REC, not rebundled) – Significant up front costs – RECs count twice

8 Unclassified8 Utility Green Power Options Do they exist? Yes but… – Not well publicized – Cost has been a factor Always a premium ($) Not much room to negotiate price – Must take or leave what is offered Fewer source options

9 Unclassified9

10 10 Competitive Green Power Purchases Only in deregulated states Request for Proposal (RFP) for electrons including a % green – More costly than electrons + RECs Usually different suppliers – Often reduces the number of offerors – Easier for many customers to justify – Potential for long term contracts Price justification can be an issue

11 Unclassified11 REC Diagram RECs/Green Tags: Renewable Energy Generation Electricity Environmental Attributes Renewable Power REC

12 Unclassified12 REC Diagram Conventional Power Green Power Power Grid Electricity Supplier REC Supplier Electricity Consumer Power REC $ Power REC $ $

13 Unclassified13 Renewable Energy Procurement Approaches Renewable Energy Certificates – Pros RECs currently the least costly alternative Ability to purchase nationwide – Cons Not viewed as a long term solution Not without issues – Not everyone agrees with purchasing – Green Power Partnership conflicts – RPS driving price up, availability decreasing – Never mentioned in EPAct05

14 Unclassified14 Renewables Portfolio Standards State Goal ☼ PA: 18%¹ by 2020 ☼ NJ: 22.5% by 2021 CT: 10% by 2010 MA: 4% by 2009 + 1% annual increase WI: requirement varies by utility; 10% by 2015 goal IA: 105 MW MN: 25% by 2025; (Xcel: 30% by 2020) TX: 5,880 MW by 2015 *NM: 20% by 2020 (IOUs) 10% by 2020 (co-ops) ☼ AZ: 15% by 2025 CA: 20% by 2010 ☼ NV: 20% by 2015 ME: 30% by 2000; 10% by 2017 goal - new RE State RPS *MD: 7.5% by 2019 ☼ Minimum solar or customer-sited requirement * Increased credit for solar or customer-sited ¹PA: 8% Tier I / 10% Tier II (includes non-renewables); SWH is a Tier II resource HI: 20% by 2020 RI: 15% by 2020 ☼ CO: 20% by 2020 (IOUs) *10% by 2020 (co-ops & large munis ) ☼ DC: 11% by 2022 ☼ NY: 24% by 2013 MT: 15% by 2015 *DE: 10% by 2019 IL: 8% by 2013 VT: RE meets load growth by 2012 Solar water heating (SWH) eligible *WA: 15% by 2020 DSIRE: www.dsireusa.org March 2007

15 Unclassified15 Recent REC Purchases DoE Paducah Lab – awarded Sep 06 – GPP requested – 72,000 MWh – 2 year – awarded $1.29/MWh –wind/biomass/geothermal blend NASA (KSC)/IHS – awarded Apr 07 – GPP requested – one time delivery NLT 1 May 07 – 8,953 MWh awarded at $2.30/MWh – Biomass (LFG)

16 Unclassified16 Recent REC Purchases BOPD – awarded Aug 06 – GPP requested – 12,000 MWh – 4 year – awarded $1.73/MWh – biomass Commerce – Awarded 12 Sep 06 – no special requirements – one time delivery NLT 30 Sep 06 Municipal Solid Waste – 100,000 MWh awarded at $0.30/MWh

17 Unclassified17 Recent REC Purchases EPA various – to finish off 100% renewable for EPA Labs – “NEW” March 1, 2006 – delivery Sep 06 – Sep 07 – 110,000 MWh – Wind $1.50/MWh Interior/Agri./DHS – Renewable resource commenced operation after January 1, 1991 – Delivery date(s) Agri.- 30 Sep 06, 01 Dec 06, 31 Jul 07 Interior/DHS – NLT 30 Sep 06 200,900 MWh – Wind and Biomass $0.32/MWh

18 Unclassified18 Points of Contact John Nelson Division Chief, Electricity & Coal PH: (703) 767-8523 Email: John.Nelson@dla.mil John Nelson Division Chief, Electricity & Coal PH: (703) 767-8523 Email: John.Nelson@dla.mil Leslie Simpson Contract Specialist Electricity and Renewables PH: (703) 767-8536 Email: Leslie.Simpson@dla.mil Leslie Simpson Contract Specialist Electricity and Renewables PH: (703) 767-8536 Email: Leslie.Simpson@dla.mil Andrea Kincaid Contracting Officer Electricity and Renewables PH: (703) 767-8669 Email: Andrea.Kincaid@dla.mil Andrea Kincaid Contracting Officer Electricity and Renewables PH: (703) 767-8669 Email: Andrea.Kincaid@dla.mil


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