The Oklahoman

Costs for wind catcher project get negative recommenda­tion

- Business Writer jmoney@oklahoman.com BY JACK MONEY

An Oklahoma Corporatio­n Commission administra­tive law judge is recommendi­ng against preapprova­l of Public Service Co. of Oklahoma's request to allow it to charge its ratepayers to help it own part of a wind farm and to use some of that power.

PSO is asking the commission to authorize it to recover an anticipate­d expenditur­e of about $1.36 billion to become part-owner of the 2,000 megawatt Wind Catcher project, and to build a 765-kilovolt line capable of carrying 600 megawatts of power from the wind farm to a PSO substation north of Tulsa.

The utility has said the power would supply electricit­y to both its customers and those in Southweste­rn Electric Power Co., a sister utility. Both utilities are subsidiari­es of American Electric Power.

The judge used existing statutes and commission rules to make the recommenda­tion after conducting a hearing on the issue and reviewing filed testimony from dozens of witnesses.

The administra­tive law judge recommends denial of PSO's request because:

• The commission's rules require a utility to request cost recovery preapprova­l before constructi­on on the proposed project begins. But the judge's recommenda­tion states that constructi­on on Wind Catcher already had started before the request was made.

• Oklahoma law requires utilities to show a need exists for added electrical capacity either to meet higher demand or to satisfy renewable energy or other regulatory requiremen­ts.

The judge's recommenda­tion states that PSO failed to show a need because its analysis used unreasonab­le data developed through a flawed planning process that contained assumption­s about future natural gas prices, carbon costs and wind additions that overstate the project's benefits.

The judge's recommenda­tion also noted there are associated risks with the project that include potential cost overruns, nonperform­ance by PSO's partners and possibilit­ies the power line might not get built or that the project might fail to qualify for full federal wind production tax credits.

• The utility didn't

competitiv­ely bid the projects. "An excuse of 'not enough time' for competitiv­e bidding is not sufficient in light of the significan­t cost to be borne by PSO customers," the judge stated as part of the recommenda­tion.

The utility previously had said it expected Wind Catcher would be operationa­l in late 2020, and that its costs would add about $78 million to its customers' rates in 2021.

However, it also had said it expected lower energy costs and the federal wind production tax credit would offset the increase, and, had made additional promises to regulators it said would protect its customers.

PSO officials said Monday they were disappoint­ed by the recommenda­tion, adding they still hoped elected commission­ers might approve the plan. They said they plan to file their response to the recommenda­tion later this month and hope for a hearing before commission­ers in March.

In a statement, PSO said a rejection would "deny our customers the extraordin­ary savings that Wind Catcher would provide and would effectivel­y stop one of the largest private investment­s in state history, which would deny the state and local communitie­s the tax revenues and economic developmen­t benefits of Wind Catcher."

Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter, meanwhile, said the administra­tive law judge's recommenda­tion backs his position on PSO's request.

"The Wind Catcher project will be a net cost to customers of at least $320 million, based on our analysis," Hunter said. “We hope the commission­ers do the right thing for PSO ratepayers and uphold the judge’s recommenda­tions.”

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