HomeMy WebLinkAboutEnergy Board - Minutes - 07/09/2020
ENERGY BOARD
REGULAR MEETING
July 9, 2020 – 5:30 pm
222 Laporte Ave.; Colorado Room
ENERGY BOARD MEETING |07/09/2020
ROLL CALL
Board Members Present: Amanda Shores, Jeremy Giovando, Bill Becker, Dan Gould, Alan Braslau,
John Fassler, Marge Moore, Sue McFaddin, Steve Tenbrink
Board Members Absent: OTHERS PRESENT
Staff Members Present: John Phelan, Christie Fredrickson, Cyril Vidergar, Molly Saylor, Rhonda Gatzke
Platte River Power Authority: Trista Fugate, Andy Butcher
Members of the Public: Rick Coen, Alexander Warne, Nick Michell, Scott Brechmacher
MEETING CALLED TO ORDER
Chairperson Shores called the meeting to order at 5:30 pm
PUBLIC COMMENT
Rick Coen said he hopes the Solar discussion tonight will cover repowering planning and costs for the
Riverside Community Solar Farm acquisition.
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
In preparation for the meeting, board members submitted amendments via email for the March 12, 2020
minutes. The minutes were approved as amended.
ANNOUNCEMENTS & AGENDA CHANGES
Chairperson Shores briefly reviewed some virtual meeting etiquette.
STAFF REPORTS
Interim Utilities Executive Director Introduction
Theresa Connor, Interim Utilities Executive Director
The previous Utilities Executive Director, Kevin Gertig, left the City on May 1 and Ms. Connor has been
serving as interim Director in the meantime. Ms. Connor has been the staff liaison for the Water Board
and was a Deputy Director in Utilities prior to accepting the interim position. Ms. Connor said she is
honored to be serving in this temporary role, and she’s very proud of Utilities staff and the way they have
upheld service and standards amidst the pandemic.
Board member McFaddin asked if the Energy Board will have a voice in hiring the new Executive
Director. Ms. Connor said she could pose that question to the hiring team, and that it’s not uncommon to
have a few different stakeholder panels.
Utilities COVID-19 Dashboard
John Phelan, Energy Services Senior Manager
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Mr. Phelan reviewed the COVID-19 Dashboard, which contains metrics indicating impacts to resource
use and customer service due to COVID-19. Weekly reports are available on the Utilities website at:
https://www.fcgov.com/utilities/covid-19
The key takeaways from March 26 through June 20 are the total electricity use and peak demand are
trending toward expected values, lower by 3%-8%, and community treated water is up about 6% and
wastewater is down about 7%.
Board member Becker asked if these changes have a meaningful effect on revenues. Mr. Phelan said it
does, though it is complex because it is a mixture of electricity use and demand. Residential has modestly
increased with everyone working from home, but commercial use has dropped dramatically (though it is
on its way back up).
Riverside Community Solar Project Acquisition
Leland Keller, Energy Services Engineer
The Utility’s acquisition of the Riverside Community Solar project was approved by City Council on June
16, 2020. The community array is fully subscribed with 205 customer-owners, and the median share size
is 10 panels, 3.05 kilowatts, which provides approximately $270.00 in annual utility bill credits. Clean
Energy Collective (CEC) has provided construction, recruitment, operations, maintenance and customer
support for the project since 2015.
The proposed acquisition, totaling $1.00, will transfer all assets previously owned by CEC to Fort Collins
Utilities, including all program management, operations, and maintenance. Solar and PV models owned
by participating customers, existing contracts for array operations and maintenance, communications and
site maintenance, development agreement, and liabilities incurred or initiated prior to closing are not
included in the ownership transfer.
Current bill credits will continue under the new Council adopted rates, though participants will be required
to sign a new Continuing Customer Agreement. Several email and USPS notifications will be sent to
participants, but if someone is unresponsive after 90 days their bill credit benefit will be donated to the
Payment Assistance Fund until they sign the Agreement to join the Community Solar Program.
Board member Tenbrink asked if the participants are more residential or commercial customers. Mr.
Keller said nearly all participants are residential, as the program was intended for the residential
population; however, some participants have donated their benefits to some non-residential accounts,
such as local non-profits or churches. Mr. Tenbrink wondered if the participation option is full. Mr. Keller
confirmed it is fully subscribed at this time, but he recently opened a waitlist (without advertising) and has
already added several customers to the list.
Chairperson Shores wondered what spurred the decision to acquire the solar garden, and what the
maintenance and repowering costs are. Mr. Keller said the negotiations with CEC began when the Time
of Day structure was implemented for residential rates, which ultimately led to considering this acquisition
option later in 2019. Chairperson Shores asked if someone could speak on the maintenance costs. Mr.
Keller said the O&M fund is replenished on a regular basis with approximately 9.4% withholding of
benefits from generation of the array. Using those O&M funds, Fort Collins Utilities will pay for site
maintenance as well as O&M and replacement of the array and modules.
Distributed Energy Resources Strategic Planning
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John Phelan, Energy Services Senior Manager
Tim McCollough, Deputy Director, Utilities Light & Power
Mr. Phelan said staff plans to bring more content and time to this topic at a future meeting but wanted to
give the Board a brief update.
The four cities (Fort Collins, Loveland, Longmont, and Estes Park) and Platte River partnered together to
create a Strategic Plan for Distributed Energy Resources (DER). Smart Electric Power Association
(SEPA) was selected as the consultant for the project, but when the shutdowns began in March
everything was placed on hold. Things have since restarted and there was project kickoff meeting, and
SEPA has collected data from the partners and they have scheduled workshops over the next few
months.
The goal of the project is to develop a framework for which DER programs can be screened and
evaluated for each distribution utility, their customers, and Platte River.
OUR CLIMATE FUTURE UPDATE
John Phelan, Energy Services Senior Manager
Molly Saylor, Environmental Services Senior Specialist
Our Climate Future (OCF) is a joint process to equitably update the City’s Energy Policy, Road to Zero
Waste plan, and Climate Action Goals. Equity is a guiding theme of the OCF process and outcome,
meaning the process should ensure opportunities for all to co-create policies, tools, and programs, and in
the end everyone benefits from a carbon neutral Fort Collins. Ms. Saylor noted that in the past, staff has
viewed social benefits as co-benefits, and while there is still a strong role for those technical aspects, staff
is putting the community in the center of this work and looking at the community’s needs and priorities.
The OCF Project scope remains the same in that it will cover three existing plans, it is community-
centered, led with equity and racial and cultural equality, and will be delivered to City Council no later than
the first quarter in 2021. It has changed recently to include virtual engagement and now has a reduced
consultant scope and overall budget. Originally, the budget was $150,000 split over two years, but in the
post-pandemic revision there is $60,000 in 2020, all coming from Light & Power (which is partially
balanced by 2019/20 general fund contributions).
Community, Staff, and Consultants all still have roles in this process. The Community role is the same as
previously envisioned, with the caveat of pandemic engagement impacts, and includes community
subject matter experts and stakeholders. The Staff role is increased, picking up work previously
envisioned to have support from consultants. The Consultants role has decreased, putting a strong focus
on their strengths.
Phase one is officially complete, and staff is making steps into Phase two, strategic planning. The
community identified several priorities and barriers earlier this Spring. Staff is currently working on
scheduling eight (virtual) brainstorming workshops, which are designed to facilitate a collaborative space
for community members and experts from the City and other organizations to think of big moves, or
strategies and goals, to help the City address the community’s priorities, while also considering those big
barriers that could keep us from getting there. Community members can also submit ideas on the City’s
virtual idea board at fcgov.com/ourclimatefuture.
The objective of phase two engagement is to develop this list of potential big and next moves for further
screening, evaluation, and analysis. Staff wants to reach various groups of people, including residents,
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historically underrepresented groups, businesses, industry experts, stakeholder groups, and other City
staff. Energy Board members may fall into several of these categories, and they have a role in promoting
participation and community engagement. Staff has developed some templates that the Board can send
throughout their own personal networks. The Board also has a work session scheduled for August 27
which Mr. Phelan would like to dedicate to OCF as an idea workshop.
Board members wondered if the OCF Community Advisory Committee has been able to meet remotely
during the shutdown. Mr. Phelan said they briefly met, and hope to meet again soon. Chairperson Shores
asked for clarification on the budget cuts to the program and what it means. Mr. Phelan confirmed the
budget was cut in half for 2020, but nothing was cut from the project scope. The timeline was extended,
and the workload was shifted from the consultant to City staff.
Chairperson Shores also noted that engaging with underrepresented groups is going to be a huge
challenge, and she wondered what staff’s plan is. Mr. Phelan said she is correct, online engagement will
be an enormous challenge, but staff is committed to the community members. Staff will be working with
plan ambassadors and community partners who network and workshop within their communities and
neighborhoods. Mr. Phelan said staff was notified earlier today that they were awarded a grant from the
Urban Sustainability Directors Network for a unique project to engage specific neighborhoods that are
historically underrepresented through two partner organizations, MiVoz and La Familia, using art as an
integral piece of the engagement program.
Mr. Phelan said he would like the Board to consider how they want to engage as the Energy Board.
RAWHIDE UNIT 1
Trista Fugate, Platte River Power Authority
Andy Butcher, Platte River Power Authority
The 2019 session of the Colorado General Assembly passed several significant pieces of legislation that
addressed greenhouse gas emissions from Colorado’s electric utilities. HB 1261, or The Climate Action
Plan to Reduce Pollution, established statewide goals to reduce 2025 greenhouse gas emissions by at
least 26%, 2030 emissions by at least 50%, and 2050 emissions by at least 90% (compared to 2005
baseline). SB 236, the sunset Public Utilities Commission bill, reauthorized the PUC and requires a
qualifying retail utility to submit a Clean Energy Plan (CEP), and allows any other utility to voluntarily
submit a CEP to the commission. A CEP is one that reduces a utility’s carbon dioxide emissions
associated with electricity sales by 80% from 2005 levels by 2030. It also seeks to provide its customers
with energy generated from 100% clean energy resources by 2050. The format for the CEP is currently
undetermined, but Platte River staff members are participating in weekly stakeholder meetings with the
Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE) to discuss the details of the guidance
document, so the CEP can be determined by this fall and filed in early 2021. If Platte River doesn’t
voluntarily submit a CEP, they could be subject to additional regulation and/or fees on greenhouse gas
emissions that may be implemented by Air Quality Control Commission. The announced decision to close
Rawhide Unit 1 coal generation by 2030 as part of a CEP derives from these considerations.
AQCC Regulation 22 implements a statewide greenhouse gas reporting and reduction policy that aligns
with different legislative directives, including HB 1261 and SB 236. The Federal Regional Haze Program
aims to reduce visibility impairment in protected lands, such as national parks and forests. Rawhide
Energy Station is subject to this program due its proximity to Rocky Mountain National Park. CDPHE is
using a four-factor analysis to determine whether any additional controls are needed for Rawhide. These
factors include the cost of additional controls, the time frame to install the controls, energy and air quality
impacts, as well as emission source remaining useful life. CDPHE will hold its initial hearing with the
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AQCC on August 20, and a second hearing on November 20, where the AQCC will provide a regional
haze recommendation. The state’s regional haze plan is also due to the EPA in July of 2021.
Leading up to today, Platte River has developed several plans and studies around the impacts to
generation resources: Customized Resource Plans (2016), Zero Net Carbon Study (2017), Resource
Diversification Policy (2018), and the Integrated Resource Plan (2018-2020).
The IRP is an ongoing process, even though it is presently on hold, it was due to be submitted to the
Western Area Power Administration (WAPA) in July. Due to COVID-19, Platte River was unable to meet
that deadline because it is important to them to be able to get public input. WAPA granted Platte River an
extension until July of 2021. Platte River has publicly presented four portfolio options: Continuity, Zero
Coal, Zero Carbon, and Integrated Utilities, but with the closure of Rawhide, Portfolios 2 (Zero Coal) and
3 (Zero Carbon) are the only remaining viable options in the IRP. Mr. Butcher said they plan to present
these options to the Platte River Board once again and Platte River staff will make a recommendation on
a portfolio that will bring closure to the IRP.
Mr. Butcher explained it would be virtually impossible to meet the state’s requirement of 80% carbon
reduction goal by 2030 with Rawhide still online, it would have to be used only as a peaking-unit and the
costs of doing that are too prohibitive for that scenario to make sense.
Board member McFaddin asked if there is a portfolio option that the community is leaning toward and if
there will be additional transparency as the IRP process continues. Mr. Butcher said Platte River will be
moving forward with Portfolios 2 and 3, and transparency will come with the publishing of the IRP Report
(over 100 pages). He noted that in any scenario, there is not an action plan that takes place within the
next five years, so there are no dollars to commit in the next five years.
2021 BUDGET UPDATE
John Phelan, Energy Services Senior Manager
Tim McCollough, Deputy Director, Utilities Light & Power
Lance Smith, Director, Financial Planning & Assets
Mr. Phelan explained how the budget process has changed in the wake of COVID-19. Rather than
budgeting for two years (as is the City’s typical planning process), this year’s process has been reduced
to a one-year budget for 2021. Revenue entry was formed with top-down modeling and reconciled with
each revenue stream. Offer development has net spend level targets by each service area, with linkage
to the strategic plan and performance measures. BFO (Budgeting for Outcomes) Teams will not be
deployed under this modified approach and community engagement will be more limited, with a focus on
service level “add backs.”
Mr. Smith said through June operating revenues are about 1.3% below budget for the year, and for the
month of June they were about 2.3% below budget. Based on this trend information, staff is
conservatively assuming a 3-4% decrease in operating revenues in 2021. Electric revenues are a function
of variable demand, and fixed revenues are very small in this Utility, increasing the revenue risk. Revenue
risk is largely offset with a pass through of wholesale power expense.
Given the economic situation we are in, Staff was asked to write a 2021 budget without imposing a rate
increase to the community. If Platte River moves forward with a 2% wholesale increase, then the City will
need to increase purchased power expenses and subsequently increase operating revenues, to offset
that increased cost.
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Mr. McCollough said City Staff have been working on 2020 budget revisions since late February
(reducing expenditures by 5%), while also working on the 2021 budget process in tandem. Staff used the
reduced 2020 budget as a template for 2021’s budget. The City will not be giving salary increases in 2021
and imposed hiring freeze through at least the end of 2020. Due to the reduction in revenues and O&M,
there is less money available for enhancement offers in the next budget cycle, though a few offers will be
brought forward as priorities. Budget Lead Team deliberations will take place through most of July into
early August, and the City Manager will submit his recommended Budget to the City Clerk’s office in early
September, and typically the final Council reading of the budget is in late November. Staff would like to
bring the City Manager’s Recommended Budget back to the Energy Board at their September meeting.
Mr. McCollough reminded the Board they can submit feedback to Council regarding the budget through
letters to their Council Liaison, Ross Cunniff, or attend any of the Council meetings and speak during
public input.
Board members asked for clarification on purchased power. Mr. Smith said purchase power is how the
City refers to wholesale charges from Platte River. Mr. McCollough added that Platte River develops a
revenue requirement based off their expenses on annual basis, which is represented in several of the
Utility’s budget offers.
Board member Braslau wondered if staff would be able to share their budget offers prior to when the City
Manager releases his recommended budget. Mr. Phelan said given the financial situation we are in, the
offers that are being submitted are not dramatically different than what has been submitted in previous
years on the program and funding level sides, with most enhancement offers removed. Mr. McCollough
said he will take the feedback to the BLT and Theresa Connor to find out what level of detail and
engagement can be shared with the Board right now, but he is hesitant because he would not want to set
any false expectations about what is economically feasible.
Chairperson Shores asked what would happen to the rates if the economic effects of COVID-19 linger.
Mr. Smith said the reality is, we don’t know what will happen and there is no way to know, so they are
being as conservative as possible with the information we currently have. If people continue to work from
home rather than in an office, there will be a shift in usage from commercial to residential and the Utility
would need to evaluate the rate structure because the wholesale charges come through with energy and
demand components, but for the residential rates these are bundled together.
BOARD MEMBER REPORTS
Chairperson Shores plans to attend the City Council work session when they discuss reimagining Boards
& Commissions. The Board reviewed a letter Ms. Shores drafted regarding this topic and are in support of
sending it to Council.
FUTURE AGENDA REVIEW
2021 Budget will be discussed in September, along with the Utilities Affordability Programs.
Chairperson Shores would like an update on EPIC Homes, and Board member McFaddin would like an
update on Metro Districts when it comes back to Council.
ADJOURNMENT
The Energy Board adjourned at 8:40 pm.