August 22, 2018
Montana

Montana developer eyes PURPA contracts for 320 MW of wind, 640 MWh of storage

By Gavin Bade | Utility Dive | Published Aug. 21, 2018 | www.utilitydive.com

Dive Brief:

Dive Insight:

The Caithness project filing highlights the growing competitiveness of battery-paired renewable energy with traditional generators, as well as the complex negotiations in determining what to pay the new resources.

Caithness wants its four Beaver Creek wind projects to deliver a firm, dispatchable one-hour electricity product that can meet the peak demand needs on Northwestern’s system, which the utility says is capacity-deficient during December, January, February, July and August.

“The battery storage systems will time shift the wind output and provide much needed capacity during Northwestern’s peak periods,” the Caithness filing with the Montana PSC reads. “Each project will be capable of providing scheduled and dispatchable electricity in forward looking time blocks.”

Caithness initially pursued a direct contract with Northwestern for the projects, but turned to PURPA after contract negotiations broke down over the question of capacity payments. All four of the Beaver Creek wind facilities have already been certified as QFs under PURPA – two through self-certification and two through a September 2017 decision from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

“The projects should not be compensated as traditional wind only projects because the primary benefit of the projects is their ability to be used as capacity resources on Northwestern’s capacity deficient system,” Caithness said in its filing.

Other contract terms in dispute include the energy payments, length of contract and ancillary services payment. Caithness said it was willing to accept a lower energy payment of $28.25/MWh for heavy load hours and $18.46/MWh for light load hours in bilateral negotiations, but does not believe they represent the utility’s true avoided cost for setting PURPA rates.

Montana regulators said last week they will review the contract terms and make a final decision on the projects by Feb. 6, 2019. If approved, Caithness says each of the projects would come online in 2020.


URL to article:  https://www.wind-watch.org/news/2018/08/22/montana-developer-eyes-purpa-contracts-for-320-mw-of-wind-640-mwh-of-storage/