Toward a US national transmission grid for renewable energy
Estimates of the transmission buildout required in the US to bring renewable electric power to market have ranged from 19,000 to 50,000 miles of new transmission lines. The Brattle Group has estimated the total investment in transmission required between 2010 and 2030 to be on the order of $300 billion. But unlike the EU, there is no federally mandated carbon or emissions objective in the US. However, 36 states have some form of renewable energy portfolio standards (RPS or RES).
The length of time it takes to develop a new transmission line is clearly a deterrent to rapid transmission build-out. At a recent transmission conference a speaker estimated the time required to develope a new transmission line is 10-20 years, or broken down
Two persistent transmission construction issues have held things back, planning and cost allocation.
Order No. 1000
FERC has approved a rule, Order No. 1000, for transmission that indirectly makes renewable energy allocation an important component in planning and cost allocation. The rule establishes requirements for transmission planning and cost allocation and takes effect within 60 days of publication.
Planning
The length of time it takes to develop a new transmission line is clearly a deterrent to rapid transmission build-out. At a recent transmission conference a speaker estimated the time required to develope a new transmission line is 10-20 years, or broken down
- Planning 1-2 years
- Cost allocation 6-12 months
- Federal approval 3-5 years
- State approval and siting 3-5 years
- Construction including access roads 2-7 years
Two persistent transmission construction issues have held things back, planning and cost allocation.
- Who should plan for new transmission ?
- Who should pay for new transmission?
Order No. 1000
FERC has approved a rule, Order No. 1000, for transmission that indirectly makes renewable energy allocation an important component in planning and cost allocation. The rule establishes requirements for transmission planning and cost allocation and takes effect within 60 days of publication.
Planning
- Each public utility transmission provider must participate in a regional transmission planning process
- Local and regional transmission planning processes must consider transmission needs driven by federal or state public policy requirements [which includes state renewable energy portfolio standards (RPS or RES)]
- Public transmission providers in neighboring transmission planning regions must coordinate to determine if there are more efficient solutions to their mutual transmission needs.
- Each public transmission provider must participate in a regional transmission planning process that has a regional cost allocation method for new transmission facilities
- Public transmission providers in neighboring planning regions must have a common interregional cost allocation method
- Participant-funding of new transmission facilities is permitted, but is not allowed as the regional or interregional cost allocation method
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