Skip Navigation

Grant County PUD signs MOU on possible small modular reactor deployment

May 26, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 26, 2021

NuScale Power and Washington State’s Grant County Public Utility District on May 26 announced the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to evaluate the deployment of NuScale’s small modular reactor (SMR) technology in Central Washington State.

Under the MOU, the two parties will work together to support Grant PUD’s due diligence process in evaluating reliable, carbon-free energy solutions. “The deployment of NuScale’s Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)-approved design will support meeting the demands of Grant PUD’s customers and the desired commercial operation timeline with acceptable and affordable cost certainty,” NuScale and Grant PUD said in a news release.

NuScale’s power plant design is scalable in 77 megawatts electric (MWe) increments up to 924 MWe. Modules can be added incrementally as regional load demands increase.

“This flexibility also allows for seamless integration with intermittent sources of power utilizing exceptional load following capabilities. These qualities align well with Grant PUD’s long-term objective of providing its customers with reliable, carbon-free energy and are a driving force in the initiation of the due diligence process in order to investigate the applicability of the NuScale technology in Central Washington,” NuScale and Grant PUD said.

In April, Grant PUD with Energy Northwest and X-energy signed a MOU for the development of an advanced nuclear reactor demonstration project.

The partners agreed to collaborate and share resources to evaluate the goal of siting, building, and operating an X-energy Xe-100 SMR plant at an existing Energy Northwest site north of Richland, Wash. The plant would have four 80-MW units and is scheduled to begin construction in 2024 and come online in 2027.

“It’s too early to tell how this will ultimately come to fruition,” said Chuck Allen, Grant PUD public affairs supervisor.

“At this time, we’re pursuing both opportunities with the intention of having small modular reactor nuclear power as a generation resource for our customers and we’re excited to work with our partners in pursuit of that goal,” he said.

Based in Ephrata, Washington, Grant PUD is a public electric utility with the capacity to generate more than 2,100 megawatts of renewable, carbon-free energy for the Northwest at its hydropower plants. The utility also serves 40,000 retail customers in Grant County, which includes an expanding industrial sector. Grant PUD is a forward-thinking leader in managing and securing affordable, reliable, clean energy for its customers.

UAMPS, TVA

In January, Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems (UAMPS) and NuScale Power signed agreements to facilitate the development of the Carbon Free Power Project that would deploy NuScale’s SMR design at the Idaho National Laboratory. Energy Northwest has the option to operate the SMR plant.

Meanwhile, in April 2020 it was disclosed that the University of Tennessee and the Tennessee Valley Authority had signed a memorandum of understanding to evaluate the development of a new generation of cost-effective, advanced nuclear reactors, such as small modular reactors, at TVA’s 935-acre Clinch River Nuclear Site in Roane County.

TVA signed a similar agreement with Oak Ridge National Laboratory in February 2020 to explore advanced reactor designs as a next-generation nuclear technology with potential for improved safety and increased flexibility.

TVA and Kairos Power recently announced plans to collaborate on deploying a low-power demonstration reactor at the East Tennessee Technology Park in Oak Ridge, Tenn.

Jeff Lyash, President and CEO of TVA, discussed the Kairos Power news in a recent episode of the American Public Power Association’s Public Power Now podcast.

Biden administration, California identify areas with potential for 4.6 GW of wind power

May 26, 2021

by Peter Maloney
APPA News
May 26, 2021

The Biden administration, in conjunction with California Gov. Gavin Newsom, on Tuesday announced an agreement identifying regions off the California coast that could support of the administration’s goal of deploying 30 gigawatts (GW) of offshore wind energy by 2030.

The Department of the Interior with the Department of Defense and the state of California identified the Morro Bay 399 Area, which they said could support 3 GW of offshore wind on roughly 399 square miles off California’s central coast. The Department of the Interior is also advancing the Humboldt Call Area off the state’s northern coast as a potential Wind Energy Area. Together, the two areas could support as much as 4.6 GW of wind energy, according to government estimates.

“The offshore wind industry has the potential to create tens of thousands of good-paying union jobs across the nation, while combating the negative effects of climate change,” Deb Haaland, Secretary of the Interior, said in a statement.

In late March, the departments of Interior, Energy, and Commerce, a White House forum, announced the administration’s goal of having 30 GW of wind energy in place by 2030.

At the same meeting, the administration announced the final Wind Energy Areas in waters off the New York and New Jersey coasts known as the New York Bight.

The Biden administration estimates the 30-GW target will trigger more than $12 billion per year in capital investment and create jobs for more than 44,000 in offshore wind by 2030 and nearly 33,000 additional jobs in communities supported by offshore wind activity.

At the same time, the Department of Energy (DOE) made available details of its $3 billion in capital to support offshore wind project through its Loan Programs office. And, in partnership with the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), the DOE announced the award of $8 million to 15 offshore wind research and development projects.

The Interior Department’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) plans to hold an Intergovernmental Renewable Energy Task Force meeting on June 24 to discuss the identified areas off the north and central California coasts as potential Wind Energy Areas (WEA).

Following the task force meeting, the WEAs can be finalized and will undergo environmental analysis, and the BOEM will undertake government-to-government tribal consultation. The processes for the northern and central coasts will then be merged in a Proposed Sale Notice for one lease sale auction, targeted for mid-2022.

On the East Coast, the BOEM plans to publish a Proposed Sale Notice followed by a formal public comment period and a lease sale in late 2021 or early 2022.

In selecting the Wind Energy Areas on the West Coast, the Department of the Interior collaborated with the Department of Defense to find offshore areas compatible with the Department of Defense’s ongoing military testing, training and operations.

In March, the Department of the Interior also began the environmental review of Ocean Wind LLC’s 1,100-megawatt wind project off New Jersey coast, marking the third review it has begun.

Interior has already begun environmental reviews for the Vineyard Wind offshore project in Massachusetts and South Fork offshore wind project in Rhode Island. The department expects to begin environmental reviews for up to 10 more projects later this year.

DEED board commits $637,707 to support public power research and students this spring

May 25, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 25, 2021

Grants and scholarships totaling $637,707 have been committed by the board of the American Public Power Association’s (APPA) Demonstration of Energy & Efficiency Developments program to support students, research in solar, electric vehicles, battery storage, hydrogen generation, and low-income residential energy efficiency, among other topics.

Seventy two percent of DEED grant applications were approved for funding. More specifically, eight of the eleven submitted applications were approved and amounted to funding of $572,707.

Additionally, 16 students interested in energy careers will be supported by $65,000 for ten internships (10 x $5,000), one student research grant (1 x $5,000), and five lineworker and technical education scholarships (5 x $2,000).

Details on the eight grant projects and 16 scholarships are as follows:

Grants

Additional details on projects tied to grants

Solar plus Storage Operations Support Trailer, Alabama Municipal Electric Authority

The Solar plus Storage Operations Support Trailer will be used by AMEA to offer support to AMEA members during outages due to storms, construction projects, and as an educational tool for solar and battery backup information.

Property Energy Plan: A public utility tool to reduce energy use and costs in the residential sector, Burlington Electric Department 

With this funding, customized property energy plans and portfolio assessments will be developed and implemented for 25 residential properties, with a focus on larger multi-unit buildings emphasizing affordability and equity. The residential sector is responsible for 25% of BED’s annual kilowatt hour sales and provides an opportunity for building electrification to advance BED’s Net Zero Energy vision.

Public Power’s Role in Attainable Housing, City of Westerville Electric Division

The City of Westerville will conduct an extensive data analysis to understand Westerville customers’ residential energy burden. With a greater understanding of residential consumption at the meter- and customer-level combined with other publicly accessible data, the utility hopes to implement incentive and efficiency programs for customers with a high energy burden, to support the community’s goal of attainable housing. The new programs would ultimately decrease residential utility bills, the city’s environmental impact, and the utility’s peak load while improving customer equity and engagement.

Panel Level Energy Storage Demonstration Project, CPS Energy

This project looks at maximizing the benefit of locally generated solar power by utilizing a behind the panel designed battery energy storage system. The project will focus on solar, shifting the benefit of the grid, utilization of demand-response, and cyber security evaluation. The outcome can provide utilities with a companion system to distributed solar installations.

Producing renewable hydrogen from hydropower, Douglas County PUD

Douglas PUD will produce renewable hydrogen from its Wells Hydroelectric Project. Using anelectrolyzer, water particles will be split and the resulting hydrogen will be captured and stored. This hydrogen can then be sold as a transportation fuel, agricultural fertilizer additive or used in industrial processes. This pilot project will demonstrate the ability to create power sales moderation and maintenance and reserve capacity efficiencies.

Self-Service Ride & Drive and Rural EV Sharing, Northern Wasco County People’s Utility District

Electric vehicles have been gaining market share in large urban areas but their popularity in smaller towns and rural areas remains limited, primarily due to rural residents’ lack of access to EVs. Forth’s new Self-Service Ride & Drive and Rural EV Sharing program offers great promise as an accessible, cost-effective, user-friendly way to overcome barriers to EV adoption in rural towns. Users simply download a car-sharing app, create an account, and then unlock the EV with their smartphone or a radio-frequency identification card. The same vehicles can also be made available to low-income housing residents as a low-cost car-sharing service, thereby expanding users’ mobility and supporting utilities’ transportation equity initiatives.

Research to Support Income-Qualified Customer Segment, WPPI Energy

Research consistently shows a gap between how trustworthy income-qualified customers and average residential customers view their local utility. This marketing research project will both review secondary research and conduct primary research with an aim to dramatically increase customers’ trust in their utility and participation in energy assistance programs. There will be an identification of customer barriers and equity limitations when applying for energy assistance funding and a determination of the best messaging to overcome those barriers. There will also be an exploration of how a local utility can best support its customers when applying for energy assistance programs.

Cost-Benefit Analysis of Undergrounding Electric Cabling Through Co-Deployment With Optical Fiber, Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Co.

The UMass Energy Transition Institute in partnership with Groundwork Data and the Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company are developing a statistical model to help municipal utilities around the country better understand the costs and benefits associated with jointly undergrounding electric and broadband infrastructure. The research takes into account the latest construction methodologies, mapping tools, and data analysis techniques to calculate costs of construction, and it integrates a wide range of benefits including increased broadband access, smart grid technologies, and enhanced resiliency. The completed research will inform long-term capital planning and strategic decision-making for municipal utilities across the country

Scholarships

Internships

Student Research Grant

Lineworker and Technical Education Scholarships

For additional information about APPA’s DEED program, click here.

FEMA to provide $1 billion to help in preparations for extreme weather events, other disasters

May 25, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 25, 2021

The Biden Administration on May 24 announced that it will direct $1 billion for communities, states, and Tribal governments into pre-disaster mitigation resources to prepare for extreme weather events and other disasters.

In 2020, the U.S. experienced a record year for extreme weather, including an unprecedented 30 named storms in the Atlantic Basin and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is anticipating another above-normal hurricane season this year, a White House fact sheet noted.

NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center is forecasting a 60% chance of an above-normal season, a 30% chance of a near-normal season, and a 10% chance of a below-normal season. However, experts do not anticipate the historic level of storm activity seen in 2020, NOAA said on May 20.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) will provide $1 billion in 2021 for the Building Resilient Infrastructure and Communities (BRIC) program, a portion of which will be targeted to disadvantaged communities.

BRIC supports states, local communities, tribes, and territories in undertaking pre-disaster hazard mitigation projects, reducing the risks they face from disasters and natural hazards. This level of funding level is double the amount provided last year.

The American Public Power Association (APPA) offers a wide range of resources to its members related to hurricane and storms. Those resources include an All-Hazards Guidebook and a Restoration Best Practices Guidebook. APPA members can access disaster planning and response resources — including the public power Mutual Aid Network.

To join the Mutual Aid Network, complete the Mutual Aid Agreement and email it to APPA at MutualAid@PublicPower.org.

Snohomish County PUD pilots to incentivize flexible energy usage

May 25, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 25, 2021

Washington State’s Snohomish County PUD has launched pilot programs that will incentivize customers to change their behavior or employ innovative technology and save energy when demand on the electrical grid is at its greatest, the PUD said on May 24.

The PUD plans to use the pilots to study the effects of shifting energy usage so the utility can keep rates low and meet clean energy goals.

The PUD’s FlexEnergy pilots are voluntary and open to all PUD customers who meet eligibility requirements. By enrolling, customers will earn bill credits and have the opportunity to save money on their bill.

Customers who have a Google Nest or ecobee smart thermostat or ChargePoint or EnelX (JuiceBox) connected electric vehicle charger are eligible to enroll those devices in SnoPUD’s FlexEnergy pilot program. Customers who enroll their eligible smart technology will receive alerts on those devices for specific pilot events.

PUD customers who don’t have eligible smart technology can enroll in SnoPUD’s FlexEnergy Customer Choice pilot, which will incentivize customers to change their energy usage habits through behavioral changes like doing laundry at night or turning the heat down a few degrees at select times and days, the PUD said in a news release.

Based on the type of smart device they enroll, customers will be able to participate in one of three FlexEnergy pilots: FlexTime, FlexResponse or FlexPeak.

The three pilots will focus on three approaches to shifting energy use: time-dynamic rate designs (FlexTime), and event-driven demand response (FlexResponse) and critical peak pricing (FlexPeak).

Customers who enroll in the Customer Choice program can choose to take part in the FlexTime or FlexPeak pilot.

The PUD has partnered with Virtual Peaker, a cloud-based energy management platform, to deploy its FlexEnergy pilots. Virtual Peaker’s Distributed Energy Resources Management System will be used to enable customer and communicating device enrollment, event scheduling and management, and pilot analytics.

New software tool helps utilities, customers evaluate energy storage

May 25, 2021

by Peter Maloney
APPA News
May 25, 2021

Sandia National Laboratories has released a software tool designed to help utilities and utility customers assess the economic value of installing an energy storage system.

The software suite, known as Quest, currently has two principal tools: a behind-the-meter tool for businesses or organizations such as schools and hospitals and a market-analysis tool to help utilities assess how much revenue an energy storage system would generate.

The open source software is available for download on the Quest page of Sandia’s website.

The behind-the-meter tool allows business owners or city project managers to estimate how much money an energy storage system could save them when combined with solar panels or other power generation sources.

To use the behind-the-meter tool, a customer inputs their location and the rate structure they pay to determine if a storage system could save them money by shifting their energy use away from peak times when rates are high. The software can be adjusted to reflect the kind of renewable power system the customer has or would like to install.

“For example, a homeowner or a warehouse manager who knows nothing about energy storage but wants to install it for their rooftop solar panels, can use Quest’s streamlined process to learn how much money the energy storage system would save them over a year,” Tu Nguyen, a Sandia electrical engineer who led the development of the optimization algorithms underpinning Quest, said in a statement.

The market-analysis tool is designed to allow small utilities determine how much revenue an energy storage system could generate by providing services to enhance grid stability and reliability. The tool uses historical data for the seven energy markets in North America, including the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) and the California Independent System Operator (CAISO).

“We’re providing an easy-to-use, open-source software suite that people can use to do their own energy storage analysis,” Babu Chalamala, manager of Sandia’s energy storage research program, said in a statement. “They could be small utilities or co-ops, vertically integrated utility companies or a project developer who wants to use energy storage.” The software can be used to evaluate the needs of a particular project and to determine if energy storage make sense and to provide a cost-benefit analysis, he said.

Sandia says Quest can also be used by energy researchers to evaluate different energy storage scenarios and model the potential of new solutions. “In our cutting-edge storage installations, we start by modeling the business case with Quest,” Imre Gyuk, who directs the energy storage program at the Department of Energy’s Office of Electricity, said in a statement. “If the results look promising to us and our project partners, we go ahead with the venture. After completion, we monitor the system using Quest for guidance and to optimize benefits.”

“Quest is a useful application suite for a lot of utilities, a kind of tool that isn’t really available commercially,” Chalamala said. The application’s “foundational capabilities” can set the stage for further development of any other applications people need to develop, he said.

The Sandia team that developed Quest is also working with PNM, New Mexico’s largest electricity provider, to develop a tool to help vertically integrated utilities assess the different paths for achieving reliable 100% carbon-free electricity by 2045.

The Quest team is also investigating the costs and benefits of adding energy storage to the New Mexico grid in comparison with transmission-infrastructure expansion to better transport power from renewable energy power plants to cities. When the new tools have been developed and tested, they will be added to Quest for any utility or researcher to use.

Another tool the Quest team is working on would help evaluate resilient microgrids and would help consumers compare different kinds of energy storage technologies depending on their locations and applications. The team is also working on a cost-analysis tool and a tool for comparing different battery technologies as they age.

Longer term, Sandia would like to include a distribution-modeling tool to quantify how energy storage can help increase the amount of solar power the grid can safely handle before the control systems need to be upgraded.

Sandia National Laboratories is operated and managed by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia, LLC., a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International, Inc.

National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia operates Sandia National Laboratories as a contractor for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and supports numerous federal, state, and local government agencies, companies, and organizations.

LIPA issues request for information for utility management services

May 25, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 25, 2021

The Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) has issued a request for information (RFI) seeking interest from providers to perform all or select portions of utility management services currently performed by PSEG Long Island.

LIPA owns the Long Island electric grid and contracts with PSEG Long Island, a subsidiary of Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated, to operate the grid on a day-to-day basis. “Following PSEG Long Island’s failures before, during, and after Tropical Storm Isaias in August 2020, LIPA, as directed by its Board of Trustees, is now seeking organizational and contractual changes, as well as appropriate compensation for the costs unnecessarily incurred to restore electric service to customers,” LIPA states on its website.

On April 28, 2021, LIPA released a Phase II Report of its Options Analysis. The report details the pros and cons of four management options and provides the Board and stakeholders with the facts to make an informed decision. These options include selling LIPA’s assets to private investors, resetting the PSEG Long Island relationship and reforming the contract, contracting with a new service provider to improve operations or bringing utility operations under LIPA management.

The RFI issued by LIPA on May 19 seeks interest from other providers to perform all or select portions of utility management services currently performed by PSEG Long Island in the Long Island and Rockaway service territory. The action comes as negotiations are continuing with PSEG Long Island on a reformed contract as well as an ongoing analysis to examine a fully municipal model of utility governance.

The goals of the RFI include:

The LIPA Board of Trustees is holding virtual public comment sessions to hear from customers on the alternatives to improve the future management of LIPA’s assets. The first session took place on May 25, which the second session is scheduled for May 27.

The RFI is available here.

APPA’s Schryver details rise in municipalization interest, resources offered by APPA

May 24, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 24, 2021

There has been an increase in the number of communities exploring the public power option, a trend that has been driven by a number of factors including reliability, the desire for renewable energy options and increased economic development, said Ursula Schryver, Vice President, Strategic Member Engagement and Education, at the American Public Power Association (APPA) during a recent hearing held by Maine state lawmakers.

Schryver, who made her comments at a May 20 hearing held by the Maine Legislature’s Energy, Utilities, and Technology Committee, also detailed the resources that APPA offers when it comes to municipalization.

The Maine committee hearing focused on a bill, LD 1708, which would create a consumer owned utility that would take over the electric service now provided by Central Maine Power and Versant Power. Central Maine Power Company and Versant Power (formerly known as Emera Maine), are majority owned by Iberdrola of Spain and Emera of Canada, respectively.

In late April, a bipartisan group of legislators in Maine announced plans to introduce the legislation. Together, the two investor-owned utilities in Maine serve 96.2 percent of the state’s residential load and have 963,187 residential customers, according to state regulators. The remaining residential load is served by public power utilities – or consumer-owned utilities, as they are known in Maine – and electric cooperatives.

“Our new bill, ‘An Act to Create the Pine Tree Power Company,’ will allow us to control our own money and our own energy destiny — to advance fast and fairly toward our own clean energy and connectivity future,” Democratic Rep. Seth Berry, sponsor of the bill and House Chair of the Energy, Utilities and Technology Committee, said in a statement last month.

At the hearing, Schryver noted that her comments were neither for or against the legislation “primarily because APPA doesn’t weigh in on decisions made by individual communities.” APPA, she noted, serves as a resource and APPA believes that every community needs to make a decision that is right for itself.

In terms of municipalization, “we believe it’s important that communities have all the information on the benefits of public power, the process, the impacts to the community, to make an informed decision for their community or their region,” she told the state lawmakers.

“We can serve as a resource from a national perspective including municipalization trends, the process, hurdles we typically see related to municipalization efforts and obviously talk about public power and successful public power examples,” Schryver said at the hearing.

“Over the last several years we have seen an increase in the number of communities exploring the public power option,” she said, noting that interest has actually been very consistent over the past several decades. “Dozens of communities contact APPA for information on public power and on the municipalization process every year,” Schryver said.

The reasons differ, she noted. “In recent years it has really been driven by the desire for renewable energy options, more environmentally friendly options or increased economic development,” she said. Rates and reliability are often common driving factors, Schryver said. “There’s often interest after a storm when the incumbent utility responds poorly,” the APPA official said.

In terms of the number of new public power utilities that have been formed, she said that 88 have formed since 1973 and 20 new public power utilities have formed in the last 20 years, Schryver told the state lawmakers. “Several of these were greenfield developments where a new utility was created in the service territory of an investor-owned utility.”

Schryver said that while there are a lot of ongoing discussions, changes in utility ownership are rare. “Often, once these discussions begin, the incumbent utility fights the effort with expensive PR campaigns, with legal battles and often they will offer concessions to encourage the community to end the initiative, which, in some cases, may be in the best interest of the community,” she said. “Once again, that’s a local decision.”

APPA offers a variety of resources related to municipalization including the Public Power for Your Community guidebook and case studies on municipalization. Additional information is available here.

Parties voice support for legislation

In written testimony for the hearing, Stephanie Clifford, Campaign Manager for Our Power, said that the Pine Tree Power Company “will be transformational for our state because it will put us in control of our energy future.

A consumer-owned utility “operates for the benefit of its ratepayers, that’s you and me. It is run locally by Maine people, with its profits being reinvested in our communities, instead of into the pockets of foreign investors and foreign governments,” she said.

The Solar Energy Association of Maine (SEAM) also voiced support for the bill.

Steve Weems, Executive Director of SEAM, said in written testimony that establishing the Pine Tree Power Company offers a superior alternative to investor-owned utilities. This is due to the structure of this proposed statewide consumer-owned utility, he said.

“First, Pine Tree Power (PTP) would be a not-for-profit corporation, controlled by an elected board of seven elected Maine directors,” which offers a number of fundamentally important positive distinctions from the investor-owned utility model, Weems said.

Among other things, he said that PTP’s municipal not-for-profit legal structure would provide PTP “with access to tax-exempt revenue bonds. Access to tax-exempt revenue bonds would reduce PTP’s cost of capital to one-half or less than the capital used by IOUs. This is why PTP would save electric ratepayers $5-10 billion dollars over the next 30 years.”

Program uses network of residential storage batteries to help balance New England grid

May 22, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 22, 2021

A new program from Vermont-based Green Mountain Power (GMP) marks the first time that stored energy in a network of residential batteries is being used to help keep the regional grid balanced, GMP said on May 13.

GMP’s new frequency regulation pilot program allows customers to share stored energy with regional grid operator ISO New England (ISO-NE) to keep a steady, regulated flow of energy on the grid at all times, a critical function for regional system safety and reliability for customers, GMP said.

It noted that ISO-NE is continually calling on qualified regional energy producers to increase or decrease output to help maintain that important balanced flow of power on the grid at all times. Typically, this cycling on and off of energy is done by ISO-NE with fossil fuel generators through the regulation market, a wholesale energy market that also pays participants for their consistent, quick, and accurate responses to grid needs, which can shift minute-to-minute.

Using their network of Powerwall batteries and Tesla Autobidder software, GMP is the first utility to perform this key grid service in the wholesale power market with stored energy distributed from customers’ homes.  The project is also benefitting all GMP customers through reduced power supply costs, according to GMP. It creates a new value stream for all GMP customers in addition to the ongoing benefits of GMP’s earlier home energy storage programs, GMP said.

GMP successfully entered the regulation market with this network of residential power sources after three months of testing with ISO-NE, and partnerships with ISO-NE, Tesla and Customized Energy Solutions (CES), a software solutions company. Tesla coordinates the distributed batteries to respond to signals from ISO-NE and aggregates critical data about the response, while CES provides the key integrations between Tesla and ISO-NE.

A total of 200 GMP customers are currently enrolled in the program and a prerequisite is that they already have two Powerwall batteries through a GMP program.

GMP plans to expand this pilot program in the future. Customers sharing energy through the program are paid $13.50 per month on their energy statements. This includes a share for their program participation and for the increased use of their batteries, which can charge and discharge rapidly for periods of time each month.

GMP takes steps to ensure that customers have backup power available if weather is predicted to cause outages.

In 2017, GMP was the first utility to partner with Tesla, and launched the first Powerwall pilot program.

GMP is now the first utility with tariffed home energy storage programs for customers. These programs provide participating customers with backup power in residential batteries in exchange for sharing some of that stored energy to reduce peak demand on the grid.

There are about 3,000 Powerwalls installed in customers’ homes, and GMP’s network of stored energy, including Powerwalls, car chargers, and utility-scale batteries, helped reduce costs for customers by more than $3 million in 2020 through peak reduction, according to GMP.

GMP serves approximately 266,000 residential and business customers in Vermont.

OPPD Board names Javier Fernandez as the utility’s next President and CEO

May 21, 2021

by Paul Ciampoli
APPA News Director
May 21, 2021

The Omaha Public Power District (OPPD) Board of Directors on May 20 named OPPD Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Javier Fernandez as the utility’s next President and Chief Executive Officer.

Timothy Burke announced in March that he will retire at the beginning of July.

Fernandez will assume the role July 1. His selection comes after a stakeholder outreach effort in which the utility asked employees, customers, and community leaders what they would like to see in our next CEO. The board asked for this input during its monthly meeting in March, and surveys were submitted at OPPDCommunityConnect.com. Comments were also received via OPPD.com. Directors received feedback from more than 1,000 stakeholders.

During a special board meeting held April 28, directors announced they had selected Fernandez as the sole finalist of five internal applicants to move forward in their selection process. OPPD held a virtual public meet and greet event May 10, to allow the public an opportunity to get to know him better, OPPD said.

“Fernandez has been a steady hand for OPPD, both in terms of financial guidance and navigating times of crisis,” OPPD said. He helped lead the utility’s response to historic flooding in 2019, when the utility’s business continuity plan was activated. He has been doing so, again, throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, OPPD noted.

Fernandez, 46, joined the utility in June 2017. He came to OPPD from the Bonneville Power Administration. He had been with the federal power marketing administration since 2012, most recently serving as executive vice president and chief financial officer.

Previously, he served as senior vice president of Fixed Income Capital Markets for D.A. Davidson & Company and vice president of Public Finance for Seattle-Northwest Securities Corporation, where he performed public finance banking and financial advisory services to municipal jurisdictions, primarily in Oregon.

Fernandez holds a bachelor’s degree in Economics from Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) in Mexico City, a master’s degree in Business Administration from Yale University, a Utility Management Certificate from Willamette University, and a Utility Executive Certificate from the University of Idaho.

He currently serves on the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City Board of Directors for the bank’s Omaha branch. He is one of three directors appointed to serve who work outside of the banking industry. He also serves on the boards of directors for Habitat for Humanity and Bellevue University.