HomeMy WebLinkAboutENERGY BOARD - MINUTES - 02/08/2024
ENERGY BOARD
February 8, 2024 – 5:30 pm
222 Laporte Ave – Colorado Room
ROLL CALL
Board Members Present: Bill Althouse, Marge Moore, Alan Braslau, Stephen Tenbrink, Brian Smith, Bill
Becker (remote), Thomas Loran, Jeremy Giovando
Board Members Absent:
OTHERS PRESENT
Staff Members Present: Marisa Olivas, Phillip Amaya, Brian Tholl, Michael Authier, Katherine Bailey,
Rhonda Gatzke (remote), Leland Keller (remote)
Members of the Public: Paul Davis (Platte River), Aaron Fodge, Rick Coen (remote), Javier Camacho
(Platte River)
MEETING CALLED TO ORDER
Chairperson Tenbrink called the meeting to order at 5:30 pm.
ANNOUNCEMENTS & AGENDA CHANGES
None.
PUBLIC COMMENT
Mr. Fodge lives in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Fort Collins, he explained he recently wrote a letter to
the City Manager, Kelly DiMartino, regarding the Riverside Community Solar Garden. Mr. Fodge shared
that when the chance to purchase solar panels arose, he and his wife were eager to participate because
they are unable to put solar on their own home. They were happy to be able to support the City and the
community’s climate goals and they decided to purchase seven panels, which covered approximately
125% of their monthly utility bill.
Along with other program participants, the Fodges were informed in August of 2024 that the inverter for
the solar garden had failed, and they would not be receiving renewable energy credits until the repairs
could be made. As of today, the invertor is still without repair, and it may be well over a year before
renewable credits are restored. Mr. Fodge said he does not understand how the City can assume control
of an asset, and not have a maintenance plan upon acquisition. There does not seem to be a sense of
urgency from the City, which is different than the response from the City when electric outage occurs. Mr.
Fodge is looking for guidance to help expedite the invertor repairs and would like to see this issue
become an elevated priority for the City, consistent with the Board’s priorities on their work plan. (More on
this item in a staff report tonight.)
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
In preparation for the meeting, board members submitted amendments via email for the January 11,
2023, minutes. The minutes were approved as amended.
STAFF REPORTS
Riverside Community Solar Garden Update (Packet Item Only)
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Mr. Tholl gave a high-level overview of the Riverside Community Solar Garden’s invertor issue. The 600-
volt DC 500kw invertor is unique and extremely large with a design that is specific to the property. Not
only does the inverter require repair but it will also require an entire redesign. A request for purchase
(RFP) was put out in February 2024 to seek service providers for a redesign of the site using existing
panels, using string invertors rather than a central inverter. Staff has been in contact with several other
utilities, the City’s maintenance providers, and manufacturer of the equipment. Utilities does not have
committed staff for these sort of fixes (meaning professionals with experience fixing solar inverters or
designing solar arrays). The RFP for the redesign will leave an option for bidders to be able to say it will
be on the order of $250,000-300,000 to repair. The money allocated toward this project in the Operations
& Maintenance (O&M) fund does not currently doesn’t cover total cost for repair. Utilities is exploring three
options to seek money for repair and will give options to the program members. Mr. Tholl emphasized this
project is absolutely a priority, but it is more complex than it would appear from the outside.
Mr. Keller explained that the warranty claim was denied based on a provision that Schneider had not
been the agent used to conduct the difficult maintenance procedures on the property, which had been the
case since the project was installed in 2015 (prior to the City’s acquisition). Mr. Keller added that there
was originally an extended warranty, staff found out later that it wasn’t active and in place and supporting
the City’s operations. Clean Energy Collective had retained Namaste Solar as the O&M agent for project
and Schneider doesn’t authorize other contractors to do such preventative maintenance. This provision
was not listed in the warranty materials when the City took over the project from Clean Energy Collective,
but rather a footnote referenced in the installation manual; this note didn’t hit the radar when the facility
was acquired.
Board member Loran commented that if the City is going to have locally generated resources, they need
credibility, and this is not a good case in credibility. You can’t ask consumers to invest in something like
this, and ask that they trust the systems will work, and then have such a catastrophic operational failure.
Board member Althouse noted that solar by itself is no longer the way to go, we should be looking at solar
plus storage. He wondered what options panel owners have. Mr. Tholl said that is definitely part of the
conversation, and while the RFP doesn’t include storage, it is something they’d like to explore with the
caveat of understanding that the panels also have a limited lifespan.
Board member Braslau felt like the memo included in the Board’s packet downplayed the situation. He
knows this solar array is very much in demand and there is generally an ongoing demand for community
solar, so it should be very much a priority to repair now as well as to explore additional projects in the
future.
Mr. Keller said the Utility definitely learned some things from the structure of the project and the way the
rules were originally set up. Community solar is developed in a different format now than it was when this
project was developed. As far as battery storage goes, Mr. Keller said the site has some unique
constraints on it. It is located behind a locked gate which makes it inaccessible, it is also already quite full
of panels, so there is little room for on-site battery storage there. Staff explored this idea a couple of years
ago with Mr. Amaya as well as former Utilities Executive Director, Kendall Minor. At this point Fort Collins
Utilities is pursuing ideas for installing distribution-scale battery storage closer to Utilities’ substations. The
primary goal is to get Riverside Community Solar back online as soon as possible and not delay it any
further by complicating it with additions.
Board member Moore asked what can the Board do to support staff through this process? Mr. Tholl said
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once the RFP is released, ultimately Council will weigh on the funding and the Energy Board can express
support if they believe this is in the City’s best interests.
Board member Giovando asked what kind of legal track the Utility might have in the repair process. Mr.
Tholl explained that Schneider Electric would charge a minimum of $40,000 just to come and look at it,
never mind the cost and extended timeline for whatever they may come up with as a solution. In their
collaboration with other utilities, staff found that many have spent upwards of $150,000 out of pocket and
were still left holding the bag with no solution. Mr. Tholl thinks staff is doing their due diligence but
bypassing the original warranty and trying to move on.
BUILDING PERFORMANCE STANDARDS COUNCIL
RECOMMENDATIONS
Brian Tholl, Utilities Senior Energy Services Manager
Katherine Bailey, Project Manager, Utilities Customer Connections
Ms. Bailey displayed a graphic for the Board showing the projected efforts to meet the community’s 2030
community carbon emissions goal. Each category (electricity, buildings, transportation, industry, waste,
and land use) shows their contribution to carbon emissions reductions. Ms. Bailey pointed out that
buildings in Fort Collins contribute more than two thirds of the community’s carbon emissions.
A displayed graph focuses on 2030 goals, and the data show significant potential in building performance
of existing buildings. Building Performance Standards (BPS) are a part of the City’s Our Climate Future
Plan under Big Move 6 (Explore Building Performance Standards). BPS is by far the most impactful direct
action the City can take to reduce emissions by 2030 and has a much higher impact on natural gas than
other Utilities programs. The impact of improving BPS by 2030 is projected to be just under that of all
other efficiency programs combined (an estimated 132.5k MTCO2e accounted from BPS compared to
184.3k MTCO2e from all other efficiency programs).
There are other benefits to implementing BPS as well, including: health, safety, comfort, resilience,
reduced energy burden, economic growth and increased competitiveness, higher building occupancy and
tenant retention, increased productivity of occupants, mitigate utility impacts of rising temperatures for
both the Utility as well as the rate payer, and improved indoor and outdoor air quality.
The BPS Task Force was comprised of industry experts (not technical experts) representing industries
that would potentially be significantly impacted by BPS. They finalized their recommendations in
November 2023. The Technical Committee supported them, along with a consultant who has experience
in the field as well. The technical committee is expected to wrap up this spring. A part of that work
includes a cost benefit analysis and target setting. Staff will present to City Council on Tuesday, April 23rd
with their recommendations.
The Task Force’s final recommendations are published at https://ourcity.fcgov.com/bps, but the high-level
overview is inclusive of the following: Covered buildings are 5,000 square feet and above, including a
small building cohort. The targets should measure Energy Use Intensity (how much energy is used per
square foot) and explore alternative pathways or adjustments. Resources will be critical to help building
owners, The program should include, but not be limited to, extensive outreach prior to implementation.
and ongoing programming surrounding physical building options, pathways, and overall effectiveness of
changes made for building owners.
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The Technical Committee is still working on finalizing their recommendations, but they have made some
progress in Targets, Small Buildings, and Alternate Pathways. Next, they will be focusing on Target
setting methodology, penalties (costs), and Council direction. Ms. Bailey said staff does expect that
Council may provide some direction that will need staff to adjust and pivot. Board member Smith asked
why there are penalties as opposed to incentives to comply. Ms. Bailey advised there are penalties
because this is not an optional program, it’s required. Incentives are provided through the City’s Efficiency
Works Business program, which is optional to participate in.
A key takeaway when looking at renewables and efficiency, is that efficiency enables renewables.
Efficiency reduces energy use, and reduced energy use increases the impact of existing and new solar,
as well as the impact of electrification. Ms. Bailey noted that OCF includes a goal of 5% local renewable
resources; as of today, the community is at 3.2%, but without the current efficiency programs the City has,
we’d be at 2.5%. She reiterated that even if BPS doesn’t touch renewables, increasing efficiency is a
critical pathway for electrification and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, ultimately still helping the
community meet its renewables goal.
Locally, we have 11 programs targeting renewables in Fort Collins. The average commercial building with
solar in 2022 met 20% of their annual load with onsite solar. Roughly 50 potentially covered buildings in
Fort Collins already have onsite solar.
In some communities, such as Denver, Renewable Energy Credits (RECs) can be used as a way to get
closer to the building’s BPS targets. Here in Fort Collins, RECs do not in any way change our community
carbon inventory, so encouraging owners to purchase additional RECs won’t make any progress toward
our climate goals, so it does not seem like a relevant option for Fort Collins.
Board member Althouse said many areas in the Country are not using RECs, but many are beginning to
install equipment offsite and aggregate the system back to their meter, because they recognize a roof
isn’t big enough to power a commercial building. Denver’s RECs are more regional and not necessarily
within Denver city limits; peer to peer is becoming more common around the world where you can buy
and sell in real time.
Ms. Bailey asked the Board what the role of renewables should be within Fort Collins BPS program. She
advised them to take into consideration a focus on flexibility for building owners, the role of target
adjustments for owners that can’t meet their target (i.e., such as historic buildings). Ms. Bailey clarified
that means renewables don’t have to be used as a gap filler; if a building can’t meet its target, there will
be another pathway. Additionally, are renewable in our “lane,” as a program focused on performance?
Chairperson Tenbrink said he believes efficiency is paramount, renewables can’t provide power 24 hours
a day, seven days a week. Board member Braslau agreed, that’s what the target adjustments are for, but
they are two different subjects and should not be viewed under an either/or lens. There should be a target
adjustment and encourage renewables. Board member Loran said renewables should have financial
incentives, performance first with penalties and then financial incentives. He added that capping solar
contribution to BPS makes no sense, very few places even have adequate roof space.
Board member Braslau said we should look historically at what developers want to do, such as with the
Hughes Stadium project—they wanted to cut corners on efficiency and somehow compensate by putting
solar on the roof, because solar is marketable. We need to have the rules in place, and of course offer
adjustments because not every building will be able to meet every target.
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Board member Moore asked who is determining beforehand what efficiency targets are feasible on
buildings? She also wondered if there will be options for interim periods, so they aren’t out of compliance
and facing penalties. Ms. Bailey said it will have to be engineers; it will be critical to be consistent.
Adjustment requests will come in like a waiver form and reviewed by a team, such as a third-party vendor
(based on what other cities do). Mr. Tholl said the strategy being brought to Council is to have them
weigh in on three primary things: the target (2030 or beyond?), timeline and square footage, and how
hard to push. Staff will define alternative pathways and EUI targets.
Board member Braslau said City Council talks about the climate emergency being a priority, and then
claims that there isn’t much they can do. We must put the responsibility on their bench to make decisions
on something like this that will have a large impact, despite pushback from developers and building
owners.
Board member Giovando said he supports flexibility to improve performance, but the challenge is
performance and renewables are kind of like apples and Tuesdays. How do you create a combined
metric that takes that and says the benchmark has been met. He encouraged staff to put some thought
into gap filling and the adjustments process with renewables versus performance, because his biggest
concern is that we want flexibility, but we also do not want to penalize people who are trying to do the
right thing, and on the flip side we don’t want to open up gaps for the people who don’t want to do
anything.
VIRTUAL POWER PLANTS
Brian Tholl, Utilities Senior Energy Services Manager
Paul Davis, Platte River Power Authority
Javier Camacho, Platte River Power Authority
Mr. Tholl said this is probably the first-time staff have presented the concept of Virtual Power Plants
(VPPs) to the Board, but it will not be the last time it is discussed either. He respectfully asked the Board
to please to keep discussion contained to VPPs and operations.
A virtual power plant (VPP) is a network of distributed energy resources (DERs) and systems that, when
grouped together, can provide a reliable power supply for energy users. This differs from “traditional”
centralized, large-scale power generation and delivery. VPPs are regionally unique and built to handle
several use cases and require programs to support DER adoption. VPP best practices continue to
emerge.
Mr. Tholl, searching for an image for the VPP presentation, asked Google to “oversimplify a VPP”, and it
returned an image of a collection of traditional alkaline batteries. VPPs are very localized, so what works
in California may not work or be needed here. He encouraged the Board to think locally in terms of City
goals and policies, as well as PRPA’s goals and policies. VPP has become somewhat of a buzz word at
this point and it’s very common to see businesses marketing their services as providing VPPs.
This process is being led by Mr. Davis with Platte River, along with members of all Platte Rive owner
communities, including Mr. Tholl. They are working to identify needs, solutions, and next steps, as well as
drivers for a VPP locally. Mr. Tholl said they are considering what goals they want a VPP to achieve and
will complete a risk analysis to help identify challenges to manage expectations.
The team identified seven high-level goals for the development of a VPP, driven by pillars of Fort Collins
and Platte River, and from those goals came 160 functional use cases with a future VPP. All those cases
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can be grouped under one of 17 different Functional Categories (see attachments for more detail).
In the VPP ecosystem, you can find use cases at every level—the customer level, the distribution utility
level, the Platte River level, as well as the future market. Connecting those along spectrum you will find
differing values, policies, program requirements, agreements, systems, programs, integrations,
data/information, etc. A fully fledged VPP is laden with complexities to consider.
Board member Smith asked if there are currently challenges when homeowners don’t like control of
thermostat being revoked (in the Peak Partners program) Mr. Davis said we still want to manage cost for
customers and is more incentive based approach to start. It’s important to make it easy for customers to
have their devices respond for them and save money. Mr. Tholl added that within the functional use
cases staff recognizes there will be different areas of aggregators, and the question remains who will
control a lot of these DERs. Staff is building out target technologies data, and are anticipating utility
owned DERs, customer owned DERs, as well as third party aggregation companies.
Mr. Davis said FERC Order 2222 (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission), issued in 2020, says DERs
should be able to participate in organized energy markets and required markets to create a path for
aggregations of DERs with at least 0.1MW to participate. These aggregations could be created by third
parties and bid into the market. Utilities that have loads with less than 4 million MWh a year (every partner
community under Platte River), don’t have to allow that, they have the ability to opt in and it would be up
to the governing body to choose. Regardless of that choice, Platte River and the owner communities want
to enable customer DER participation in the market through their combined VPP.
Board member Loran asked what the end accomplishment is, smoothing power generation curve or
lowering the baseline. To him they seem like two different things, and if object is to smooth out the peaks
and valleys, then it seems there could be a simpler way. He agrees with the other concerns about control
of the thermostat but said if his home is generating excess power during peak time then he is glad to
send that power back to the grid. Mr. Davis said we need flexible DERs operated as part of a VPP to
provide resource adequacy—or the ability to reliably serve load at all times—and to try to align DER
operation in response to availability of non-dispatchable renewable energy.
Board member Althouse said the Public Utilities Commission just issued a final decision with Xcel
Energy’s plan to roll out a 50MW VPP (Decision R24-0009), utilizing a new “prosumer tariff” by the end of
the year. Mr. Althouse said it will be full blown, third-party private aggregators, and will open the door to
VPP aggregators. This commission was the in the country to officially define prosumer as delivering
capacity and grid services to the grid—a participant on a VPP is not a customer, it’s a prosumer. Part of
the Commission’s logic in the case was to reduce Xcel Energy’s need for gas peakers by tapping capacity
from Prosumers. The decision also said, “Prosumer tariffs should be designed to be attractive financially
to the participant such that the option to qualify for the tariff would be an incentive for the prosumer to
invest in more DERs.” Utilities have a guaranteed rate of return; the Commissioners just extended a Rate
of Return to prosumers. Mr. Althouse said he believes Platte River has no business operating VPP
because they are transmission, and the municipal distribution should be the operator. Until Fort Collins
produces over 100% of load, no electricity can flow to the wholesale market. Mr. Althouse said the market
for Fort Collins prosumers is the neighbors. Pier to pier transactions that bypass the utility are becoming
very common in Europe and Australia He does not understand from engineering standpoint why a
Generation & Transmission utility would take the lead when this is a distribution system operation. Mr.
Davis said Platte River is responsible for ensuring reliability to the City and as long as it is their job to
ensure reliability and provide these resources to serve the community, then they will continue to provide
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those opportunities to all four cities.
Mr. Tholl said the core element of this work is an enterprise DERMs platform, and it is co-structured so it
could be built out to accommodate a tenanted DERMS platform. We don’t have 75,000 solar and storage
installations in Fort Collins. If we were to compete for resources, it would mean, for example, talking to
Chairperson Tenbrink’s pastor (since they have a solar array) to make a deal between the City of Fort
Collins and Platte River. Mr. Davis added that Platte River serves the four owner communities and will be
interacting with the market, and the market has capacity requirements for its participants. This will tell us
how much capacity they need to serve the cities and will help to define the requirements for the VPP.
Board member Althouse wanted to know what Platte River is paying per kilowatt for capacity, for ancillary
services, wires, and upgrade deferrals because that is what the PUC is already mandating. He said now
Platte River wants a gas plant that doesn’t appear to be accounted for, and they are looking at $1.5
million per megawatt for capacity only because Platte River alleges the gas plant will only run in
emergency situations. He asked if we install a megawatt of local dispatchable capacity, will Platte River
pay out $1.5 million? Mr. Davis said Platte River will pay to facilitate DER programs, costs tend to be
similar to that of battery storage. Board member Althouse pushed and asked if Platte River is prepared to
pay $1.5 million for VPP capacity today. Mr. Davis said he cannot commit to something he hasn’t seen,
but they are committed to running programs that will pay incentives to customers but noted that most new
initiatives are not cost effective from day one.
Board member Althouse said he started asking about capacity from local resources 10 years ago and
was told that Platte River had excess capacity, but now with coal plant closure Platte River will be
spending $1 Billion on new capacity since they no longer have a stranded cost. He added his serious
concern is that VPPs and DERs are being delayed to maybe 2027 or ‘28 before a prosumer can see a
benefit. By that time the gas plant will likely be online and then the capacity from VPPs may no longer be
needed. He is really worried that the proposed gas plant is trying to prevent prosumers from being able to
capture capacity value, and the Commission just defined prosumer as delivering capacity. Is the gas plant
going to be called the new stranded cost that prevents prosumers from getting paid for capacity. Mr.
Davis said Platte River wants to grow this resource, the point is to help as many loads as possible
respond to the market. Mr. Althouse asked again, is the gas plant going to eliminate VPP participants
from getting capacity payments. Mr. Davis said they have had no such discussions. Board member
Althouse asked if local resources can reduce Platte River’s investments in new capacity, if the gas plant
is four 50MW units and if local resources could deliver 50MW, would Platte River cut back to three units.
He also noted that 3rd party VPPs will have 50MW of prosumer capacity online in Denver this year.
Board member Braslau asked if staff could please explain capacity reduction findings, as shown in the
presentation Mr. Davis said a DER Potential study was conducted last year where they looked at potential
flexible DERs to provide 5:00-9:00 pm capacity reductions with electric vehicles, batteries, thermostats,
water heaters, etc. What they found was the achievable potential (displayed in dark blue) was the cost
effective, achievable potential of flexible DERs. Board member Loran said that confirms to him that a gas
plant is still necessary insurance for 100-dark calm scenarios; the gas plant is insurance and everything
else is capacity—hopefully you never have to use the insurance, but the VPP (regardless of who has it)
will also go down during a dark calm.
Board member Braslau noted that the best use case shows the gas plant would never be used, but the
finances indicate otherwise. He noted that Mr. Davis has said a few times today that Platte River has a
financial responsibility at lowest price possible, but they are not the same thing. The economy is set up
now to reward gas usage; if this was just an insurance policy and there was an absolute guarantee that
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Platte River isn’t going to be using gas generation to pay for the investment (in the gas plant) but there is
no guarantee. Mr. Tholl acknowledged that point and reminded the Board that Platte River will be back
later this year with an update regarding their Integrated Resource Plan.
Board member Loran added that the fundamental issue is that Platte River is paying more for renewable
energies than fossil fuels, which defies conventional wisdom. VPPs are going to be renewable energy
and they should be less cost, as long the VPPs and renewable energy remains less, they won’t be able to
sell fossil fuels. However, he is very concerned that we are buying renewable energy through Power
Purchase Agreements (PPAs) at more money than we pay for fossil fuels. Mr. Davis said it depends on
circumstances, fixed and marginal costs will influence the pricing.
Board member Althouse noted the PUC’s VPP decision that says when the prosumer makes the
investment, it’s not in rate base, so when the prosumer deploys the dispatchable asset, it is free to the
ratepayer. Rates aren’t about selling power; rates are about recovering investments. Now we have the
prosumer willing to invest in resources with a huge federal subsidy to get it done, and the cost to the
ratepayer is zero when we are talking costing, so far, we have only talked about Platte River’s costs, if we
talk system cost, the prosumer is the superhero of lowering rates to everyone. The only way to lower
rates is to reduce Platte River’s investments. Mr. Davis said we do anticipate 150MW of solar by 2030
and is factored into the plan. Platte River wants that solar in the VPP to monitor and do better at load
forecasting. There is still a cost to back customer up because solar is not available at night, depending on
the rate structure. Mr. Davis agreed that Mr. Althouse has a partial solution but there is more to learn.
Board member Althouse said he had requested a copy of the GRIP (Grid Resilience and Innovation
Partnerships) Grant proposal, and he was denied. It is subject to CORA, and he asked if it is subject to
CORA why couldn’t it be provided. Mr. Camacho advised that Mr. Althouse will need to send that through
as an official CORA request, as the grant is a competitive process. Mr. Althouse asked why Platte River
would be hiding it if it is subject to CORA. Mr. Camacho said again that they are not hiding it but
reiterated the grant process is competitive and he would be glad to have this conversation offline.
Board member Althouse asked what is “dramatically altering the relationship between the provider and a
community component.” Mr. Tholl said in topic area two, it outlines how this relationship is going to be
altered and evolve into a VPP. Mr. Amaya clarified that staff is about to discuss the GRIP Grant.
Mr. Davis said one of the things that was put into this grant and is not common is the integration of
DERMS and owner community advanced distribution management system (ADMSs). Board member
Althouse said today there is no visibility because there is no DERMS. Mr. Tholl said we have had a
DERMS for 12 years. Board member Althouse asked if the system can dispatch a battery and Mr. Tholl
clarified that we can’t dispatch a stationary battery in a home in South Fort Collins, because no
manufacturer allows the Utility to do that without an astronomical cost. We have 2,500 thermostats that
the Utility can control, 1,200 water heaters, and close to 80 EVs—we have this capability, but we stopped
funding associated with residential battery installations because every manufacturer didn’t support the
IEEE 2030.5 protocol. The Utility stopped that single work stream but still have about eight others that
they’re working on within our DERMS.
Mr. Amaya said this is the direction that Fort Collins and Platte River have chosen to take.
Board member Giovando said it would be really helpful to understand how all these things potentially
going to grants and the VPP possibilities, what that does to change the rate forecast over the next 5-10
years. What would these options do to the rate forecast, do they have a substantial impact or are we still
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on the same steep incline trajectory.
Mr. Tholl said it’s a good question and he will share the board’s comments with the financial team to
address when they present increases later this fall. He reminded the Board that retail rate increases are
due in part to wholesale increases. Board member Althouse asked if it is a goal to reduce rates by
deploying local resources that aren’t in the rate base. Mr. Tholl doesn’t foresee reducing electric rates but
may try to work toward incremental increases.
Board member Althouse apologized for his passion on this topic. It is something he has been working on
for 40 years, hanging the first solar panels in the world and fighting wars with utilities trying to protect their
revenue streams. Now the whole world agrees that VPPs are how you reduce rates. This is a sea change
on how grids operate. He complimented Mayor Arndt for her commitment to the City to deploy local
resources to reduce purchases from Platte River. He asked what the nature of that commitment is and
how do we accelerate it noted there are hundreds of billions of dollars are available for that deployment.
MEMO RE: PLATTE RIVER’S NATURAL GAS TURBINE
Board members reviewed and discussed some small changes to a drafted memo they are considering
sending to City Council regarding Platte River’s plans for a natural gas turbine.
Board member Braslau asked if Platte River’s mention of hydrogen was green washing of natural gas
when the equipment can’t use hydrogen. He also asked if ancillary services are part of the plan for the
gas plant and if other non-fossil technologies might provide ancillary services.
Board member Althouse said all our balancing and ancillary services are bought by Platte River from Xcel
Energy. How much is paid to Xcel and is Platte River planning to cut out Xcel with ancillary services from
the gas plant? He noted that local resources with grid forming inverters can provide ancillary services
almost free as it is already in the software.
Board member Althouse mentioned that our environmental community was upset that the gas plant was
broken out of the IRP. The IRP was to evaluate all possible resources and judge them fairly, before
choosing the resource. If they have already chosen the gas plant, the IRP has no purpose. Platte River
may have broken the gas plant out of the IRP out of concern that it might not be chosen in a fair IRP.
Board member Tenbrink moved the Board to send the drafted memo regarding Platte River’s
plans for Natural Gas Turbine to the Mayor and City Council.
Board member Loran seconded the motion.
Discussion:
None.
Vote on the motion: It passed unanimously, 8-0
BOARD MEMBER REPORTS
Board member Loran advised that his ongoing heat pump project is not going well, and he is considering
going back to gas. The technology works, the hardware is a little immature and does not reach the
standard of reliability of gas-fired hardware.
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FUTURE AGENDA REVIEW
March’s Board meeting will include operational updates from Light & Power and Energy Services, a year-
end financial update, and an update regarding debt issuance utilization for distribution transformer
purchases.
ADJOURNMENT
The Energy Board adjourned at 8:21 pm.