Los Angeles Times

State to reassess power plant

Regulators OK a plan for studying clean alternativ­es to natural gas facility in Oxnard.

- By Ivan Penn ivan.penn@latimes.com

State regulators have accepted a proposal for a study of clean-energy alternativ­es to a proposed natural gas power plant in Ventura County — the second decision within a week to reassess building new fossil fuel facilities.

The California Independen­t System Operator, which manages the electrical grid for much of the state, had offered to conduct the study after prodding by the organizati­on’s governing board.

Members of the California Energy Commission reviewing the planned Puente natural gas plant deliberate­d for much of last week before issuing a seven-page statement late Friday in support of the study.

If a review can help determine whether energy storage or other sources can help meet Oxnard’s electricit­y needs, they should be considered as a substitute for building the planned Puente natural gas plant, the committee statement said.

“The committee understand­s developmen­t of such a study is normally a complex and intensive undertakin­g, but is hopeful that the California ISO will be able to derive a simplified set of assumption­s that will allow the ISO to provide meaningful results,” wrote energy commission­ers Janea Scott and Karen Douglas, who conducted the committee hearings.

The commission­ers gave the grid operator until June 16 to say whether it will conduct the study and requested that it be completed no later than July 19.

The commission­ers’ decision drew an immediate response from NRG Energy Inc., which would build and own the Puente power plant with Southern California Edison Co. as the electricit­y customer. Edison’s ratepayers would foot the bill.

“Six months ago, in December 2016, the [California Public Utilities Commission] approved … the Puente Power Project as necessary and appropriat­e to maintain reliable electric service in the Oxnard area,” NRG spokesman David B. Knox said in a statement.

“Since that time, no additional feasible, cost-effective and available preferred resources have been identified that would eliminate the need for the Puente Power Project,” Knox said. “We appreciate the commission striving to keep the project on schedule and remain confident that additional studies will continue to confirm the need for the Puente Power Project.”

Edison said it contracted for the Puente project under a directive from the California Public Utilities Commission to ensure that there are sufficient electric resources available to serve the Moorpark area of Ventura County after aging, gas-fired plants close by 2021.

“SCE was only responsibl­e to ensure that sufficient resources were contracted,” said Janet Clayton, Edison’s senior vice president for corporate communicat­ions. “SCE does not own or profit from the operation of any of these resources.”

Environmen­talists hailed the energy commission’s decision as long overdue. They said similar reviews should have been conducted before final approval of several other natural gas projects they believe aren’t needed.

“We have the technology to meet reliabilit­y needs without new gas plants. The only thing we need is political will,” said Matt Vespa, senior attorney at the Sierra Club.

Billionair­e Tom Steyer, president of NextGen Climate, said the study is a step in the right direction but that regulators shouldn’t stop there.

“The CEC must uphold its duty to California citizens by rejecting this plan outright,” Steyer said. “There are better clean energy alternativ­es that would cost less and protect the Ventura community’s environmen­t and public health.”

The review of the Puente project follows a decision Tuesday by the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to conduct a study to determine if clean-energy alternativ­es could replace natural gas plants that the agency is set to rebuild. The DWP study is expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2018.

Regulators and the utility industry have argued that the plants are needed close to customers to ensure reliabilit­y of the electrical grid, in particular when night falls or clouds reduce solar power and when the wind isn’t blowing to generate electricit­y from windmills.

 ?? Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times ?? A PROPOSED natural gas power plant would replace an existing facility, seen in 2001, in Oxnard.
Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times A PROPOSED natural gas power plant would replace an existing facility, seen in 2001, in Oxnard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States