A3 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2021 RENEWABLE ENERGY COORDINATING A NORTHWEST GRID By PETER FAIRLEY InvestigateWest March of 2019 opened with a deep chill across Cascadia. Arctic air poured south, jacking up energy consumption and straining energy supplies in Oregon, Washington state and British Columbia. It conjured a per- fect storm for the region’s electricity grid. As temperatures plum- meted, Cascadia’s hydro- power reservoirs sat at record lows following weak fall rains and an exception- ally cold winter. Mechanical trouble had halved output from the Centralia, Wash- ington, coal-fi red power plant — the largest genera- tor between Seattle and Port- land. A low-pressure weather system was hampering Cas- cadia’s wind farms. And maintenance work on lines in Los Angeles limited the amount of power that could fl ow north. Utilities appealed to cit- izens to conserve energy. Industries cut back as power prices spiked. And the grid held. Utility offi cials call it a near miss and a sign of a new normal. “We really had a very close call,” says Scott Bolton, senior vice presi- dent for transmission devel- opment at Portland-based Pacifi Corp. “Future events could have direct impacts to the reliabil- ity of the bulk power sys- tem,” concluded an assess- ment by Western Electricity Coordinating Council, the utility consortium that over- sees reliability for the inter- connected transmission net- work west of the Rockies. Sharing renewable elec- tricity across long distances is among the most cost-ef- fective strategies for slash- ing carbon emissions, as InvestigateWest reported in April. Longer power lines with centralized control cen- ters increase grid fl exibility to carry high levels of wind and solar power. A robust network would allow utilities to tap diverse sources. If inconvenient weather zaps Cascadia’s power supply, for example, utilities can import electric- ity — maybe solar power from the Southwest or wind power from Montana and Wyoming. And if the tables turn, Cascadia can export solar, wind and water power. A bigger grid isn’t the sole solution. Giant bat- tery arrays on the high-volt- age grid or smaller packs charged from rooftop solar panels could keep things running for several hours. Hydrogen gas produced from clean electricity and stored locally could back up the grid. Even diehard advocates for an expanded grid agree local energy upgrades will be crucial. Still, they say, grid expansion requires immediate action. Yet grid projects often are delayed for a decade or more by community opposition to new power lines and inter- state disputes over who should pay for new lines. In most of the United States and parts of Can- ada, utilities give neutral grid operators and regional markets control over power plants. Such optimized sys- tems provide electricity at lower costs, identifying where new lines are needed and spreading costs among the utilities and states that benefi t. West of the Rockies, the power sector remains dom- inated by vertically inte- grated monopolies. An independent grid operator manages most of Califor- nia’s electricity, but every- where else control rests with 37 public and private util- ities, including 14 within British Columbia, Washing- ton and Oregon alone. A coordinated Western grid is needed to acceler- ate wind and solar installa- tions and to expand access to imported renewable energy, says Spencer Gray, who runs the Portland-based David T. Hanson The Colstrip coal plant in Montana, which supplies electricity to customers in the Northwest and elsewhere. Northwest & Intermoun- tain Power Producers Coa- lition. The group’s members include most of the North- west’s renewable energy developers. “It’s crazy to go into a decarbonized future still treating each state or each utility as a little island unto itself,” Gray said. Although attempts to shift the dynamic in the West failed in recent decades, the U.S. Senate recently approved an infrastruc- ture bill with provisions to encourage centralized oper- ations and to facilitate line approval and fi nancing. And Western utilities have now gained experience with open power markets via an exchange launched in 2014 by Pacifi Corp and the agency that operates Cali- fornia’s grid. Although the Western Energy Imbalance Market trades only last-min- ute surpluses — mostly renewable energy that would go to waste —as of last month, it had saved con- sumers a cool $1.4 billion. To assess prospects for a coordinated regional grid, InvestigateWest sought the views of an industry rep- resentative, a renewable energy advocate and a for- mer British Columbia power trader who now teaches energy economics. Managing energy politics Scott Bolton says he’s the lone liberal arts major in a utility’s transmission depart- ment — usually the domain of electrical engineers. But it’s no accident. Modern- izing the grid is more than a technical challenge for Pacifi Corp. “We have a six- state system, and we have three of the bluest of the ‘blue’ states and three of the reddest of the ‘red’ states,” Bolton said. As negotiators work in several forums to unify the power sector, weather and politics associated with cli- mate change stoke tensions across the West. Grid devel- opment in states as polit- ically diverse as Oregon, Washington and Wyoming requires a political science major’s experience. State politicians “think local.” For example, pres- sure to avoid a repeat of 2020’s rolling blackouts prompted California’s grid operator to adopt a Califor- nia-fi rst policy that could block urgent power fl ows to other jurisdictions. This engendered distrust in other states and impeded Cal- ifornia system’s eff ort to spearhead a Western power market. Closer to home for Pacif- iCorp, tensions between pro-coal Montana and Wyo- ming and anti-coal Oregon and Washington threaten to delay development of reli- able wind energy. Federal politicians are working to accelerate grid expansion. Gray worked with U.S. Sen. Maria Can- twell, a Washington Dem- ocrat, on a proposal to help transmission developers get Bradley W. Parks/Oregon Public Broadcasting Power lines are seen at Bonneville Dam. private fi nancing. The plan would empower the Depart- ment of Energy to sign up for rights to a proposed or expanded line, thereby encouraging utilities to join in. And a $2.5 billion “trans- mission facilitation fund” is part of the Senate’s $550 billion infrastructure bill, which still must pass the House. Meanwhile, Bolton said a proposal by U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Demo- crat, to extend tax breaks to transmission projects could have even greater impact. That measure could pass as part of a $3.5-billion, Dem- ocrat-driven package. But not everyone in Cas- cadia welcomes Bolton’s pitch. Communities and conservationists are fi ghting a link between Eastern Ore- gon and Idaho, for example. They accuse Idaho Power, Pacifi Corp’s project partner, of trying to siphon off Cas- cadia’s renewable energy and degrading views along the Oregon Trail. Critics in coal-rich states, meanwhile, are riled by Ore- gon and Washington man- dates to phase out imports of coal-generated power. The way to transcend these divisions, Bolton said, is to deliver cheaper power to everyone. He notes the “happy coincidence” that adding renewable energy and cutting the use of fossil fuels now also reduces costs. On utilities and the greater good Nicole Hughes’ big- gest challenge is disjointed thinking by some utilities and their states’ regulators. Hughes runs Renew- able Northwest, a coali- tion pushing for renewable energy deployment in Ore- gon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. To her, blackouts that crippled Texas in Feb- ruary dramatized the impor- tance of sharing power among regions. Texas operates its own grid and has only weak con- nections to adjoining west- ern, eastern and Mexican grids. The result, she said, was that Texas couldn’t tap outside help when extreme cold shut down dozens of gas, coal, wind and nuclear power plants in February. Hundreds of people died when heaters turned off . Her fi rst focus for Cas- cadia’s grid is repurpos- ing and expanding exist- ing high-voltage lines. One example is the line linking the Colstrip, Montana, coal power plant to the plant’s four co-owners: Pacifi Corp, Portland General Electric, Avista and Bellevue, Wash- ington–based Puget Sound Energy. Those utilities all anticipate shutting down their Colstrip units between 2027 and 2030. Renewable Northwest eagerly awaits retirement of the Colstrip plant so that its line to Washington can be repurposed for Mon- tana wind power. But Puget Sound Energy put that future in doubt in early 2020 when it requested permission from Washington state regulators to sell its shares in Colstrip and the power line to North- Western Energy, a Montana utility with a weaker com- mitment to climate action. Puget Sound Energy priced its transmission asset at $1.725 million — a bar- gain according to a transmis- sion expert hired by Renew- able Northwest and the Seattle-based NW Energy Coalition. The expert, Michael Goggin, testifi ed to WANTED Alder and Maple Saw Logs & Standing Timber Northwest Hardwoods • Longview, WA Contact: John Anderson • 360-269-2500 the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commis- sion that Puget Sound Ener- gy’s asset was worth at least $342 million to Washington ratepayers. Ultimately, staff advised the commission to reject the sale. Hughes, meanwhile, expects her struggle to con- tinue: “We anticipate hav- ing this fi ght over and over again, every time a utility gets out of Colstrip.” Hughes says some new transmission lines are needed — and likely will be included in the projects planned by Pacifi Corp. Still, she cautions against plan- ning new lines until the West has a regional market that involves states and stake- holders beyond just utilities. She argues that such a mar- ket is needed to unlock the full potential of the existing grid. “Instead of just buying something new, we need to fi gure out if there’s some- thing we can reuse. We’re not very good at that in this country,” Hughes said. Sharing British Columbia’s fl exibility Blake Shaff er spent seven years as an electric- ity trader for provincial util- ity BC Hydro. As an aca- demic, he focuses on the role that power trading can play in decarbonizing econ- omies. Power trading’s moneymaking and climate action opportunities increas- ingly align, says the Univer- sity of Calgary economics professor. He points to Cascadia’s hydropower and argues it has a lucrative role to play in helping utilities across the West slash reliance on coal- and gas-fi red electricity. Hydropower reservoirs are essentially giant batter- ies, and British Columbia has the West’s biggest. The W.A.C. Bennett Dam on the Peace River impounds about 60 million acre-feet of water — roughly six times more than Grand Coulee Dam. This gives the province unusual fl exibility, Shaff er said. Hydropower reservoirs smooth out seasonal fl uc- tuations in supply, making British Columbia less vul- nerable to low-water years Happy 70th Birthday Alan We love you! that stress Washington and California. In recent years, British Columbia also has earned extra revenue by tap- ping its fl exible hydropower to smooth out the Western grid’s electricity supply. Here’s how it works: BC Hydro ramps up its turbines and sends power south when the Western grid’s power supplies are tight — often when wind and solar gener- ation are in short supply. It then uses imported power to meet local demand when electricity is abundant — often when winds are strong and sunny days are activat- ing millions of solar panels. “B.C. doesn’t have mas- sive surplus of hydro- power to export. In fact, they’re often net importers. But they do have fl exibil- ity as to when they deploy their hydropower,” Shaff er said. And British Columbia hydropower off ers its neigh- bors an alternative to turning on fossil-fueled generators, which currently are their leading source of fl exibility. BC Hydro’s import/ export arm turns a tidy profi t by trading electricity. Over fi ve years, Powerex has earned an average of $260 million more annually on power sales than it paid for imports. Shaff er said BC Hydro is boosting its capacity and fl exibility. The utility is add- ing turbines at existing hydro dams and building a dam on the Peace River, although the structurally troubled Site C hydropower project remains controversial. The West will need as much fl exibility as it can get. As greenhouse gas tar- gets tighten, it will be harder for utilities to use fos- sil-fi red power plants. At the same time, peak electricity demand for home heating, cars and other equipment is expected to increase. If the province wants to use its expanded hydro- power to add fl exibility to the Western grid, it will need more cross-border transmis- sion capacity. Shaff er said added cross-border transmission is likely to pay off for both sides. He points to work by Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers who ran computer models to explore the value of com- parable exchanges between Hydro-Québec’s big reser- voirs and the northeastern United States. In the university’s sim- ulation, Quebec and New England traded increas- ing volumes of energy back and forth as researchers pro- grammed in more transmis- sion between the jurisdic- tions. As trading increased, carbon pollution and energy costs fell, and electrifi cation of home heating and vehi- cles accelerated. But conjuring this elec- trical symbiosis may take years. Proposed power lines from Quebec south are fre- quently hamstrung by oppo- sition from local and state interests. “Transmission doesn’t get discussed enough,” said a clearly frustrated Shaf- fer. “We’re all kicking and screaming and saying this is a big part of the solution if we’re going to decarbonize.”