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New England Governors Plan Massive Renewable Energy Procurement for End of 2013

Jessica Robbins
August 21, 2012  |  3 Comments

At the New England Governors’ Conference (NEGC) on July 30th, 2012, Governor Deval Patrick of Massachusetts presented, and all six governors signed, a resolution stating their intent to launch a coordinated regional procurement by the end of 2013. The resolution charges the New England States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE) with the responsibility of developing a work plan and executing the procurement, though all six states will contribute input and experts to the process. The procurement process will likely involve a request for proposal (RFP) issued by the body for a certain amount of renewable energy, with projects competing for contracts based on their bid-in price.

New England Governors pass a resolution directing the six states to work together to issue an RFP for a large amount of renewable energy, including solar PV. AP Photo/Toby Talbot.

New England Governors pass a resolution directing the six states to work together to issue an RFP for a large amount of renewable energy, including solar PV. AP Photo/Toby Talbot.

The New England Governors’ Conference is comprised of the leaders from Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts. This initial resolution is a call to mobilize for the organization and related bodies but does not contain binding language for action. NESCOE has been working for several years on this topic at the direction of the New England governors, issuing requests for information establishing that markets for significant amounts of renewable energy do in fact exist within the six states.

The regionally coordinated procurement will be held as an open and competitive solicitation, meaning it will likely be similar to a bid-in RFP or reverse auction mechanism (RAM). Solar will have to compete with all other sources of renewable energy, including large-scale wind, in this competitive RFP. However, states like Massachusetts have already incorporated large solar capacities. In fact, Massachusetts recently broke the half-way point on their 250 MW by 2017 solar goal.

Sources from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) noted that while no exact figure for program capacity has been named, ideally it will be measured in gigawatts — a program of unprecedented size. EEA Assistant Secretary for Renewable Energy Steven Clarke expects that the ceiling for the RFP will be set by the combined renewable portfolio standards of all six states. However, if the all-in costs of the projects submitted are lower than conventional fuel sources, there is no reason for the RPS requirements to limit the procurement.

Clarke named three main policy drivers supporting the plan. First and most obviously, such a large-scale procurement is a huge win for the environment and will help all states meet various climate goals. Secondly, potential economies of scale are significant when all-in cost is the competitive factor in an RFP. There is no word yet on whether certain technologies will have capacity targets within the overall procurement figure.

Finally, in order to meet such an aggressive goal, new transmission capacity will likely be added during the course of the program. Coordinating transmission requirements for a large amount of renewable energy over many states will aid in long-term planning and likely result in cost efficiencies on the transmission side as well. Job creation will also be significant, as a renewable energy procurement of this size is unprecedented in the U.S.

The information and views expressed in this blog post are solely those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on this Web site and other publications. This blog was posted directly by the author and was not reviewed for accuracy, spelling or grammar.

3 Comments

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ANONYMOUS
September 5, 2012
Governor Deval Patrick - there's a governor who never saw a program he didn't like - at least one that can spend taxpayer's money!

Massachusetts - HA - they are forcing utilities to purchase power from CAPE WIND - the yet to be built offshore wind power project that notables such as Ted Kennedy were dead against because it would ruin their "view". However, while the state of Massachusetts REASSURES that Cape Wind will only add a "few dollars" to ratepayers every month, what they REALLY NEGLECT to tell them is that the cost of power from Cape Wind at last count was 2.3 times the cost of power from standard sources. That's right well OVER TWICE as much. And don't forget that the utilities still add on their "distribution" cost when charging you!

The fact that it's "only a few dollars" belies the fact that this will CONTINUE TO GO UP as the state INCREASES the amount of renewable energy in it's mix - as it PLANS TO DO... But - NOBODY TALKS ABOUT THIS because they would have a full-on RATE REBELLION on their hands if they told people their bills were going to rise by 50% or MORE in the next 5 years.

John Lynch (or Flynch) as we call him may have signed on to this, but the next governor will most likely be Republican (thank god) and he won't be so quick to jump on the "damn the torpedoes, we don't care what people have to pay because WE are in charge" attitude.
ANONYMOUS
August 22, 2012
Hopefully this coordinated approach can replace the current haphazard market structure which has resulted in suboptimal and in many ways wasted spending, especially in Connecticut, where REC prices increased 500% when already registered units shut down, thus proving that a poorly designed RPS can actually disincentivize the amount of renewable energy brought to the grid.
Ronald STEENBLIK
Ronald STEENBLIK
August 22, 2012
Um, Delaware? I'm sure you mean Massachusetts.

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Sol Systems is a boutique financial services firm that offers investor clients direct access to the renewable energy asset class and provides developers with sophisticated project financing solutions. Founded in 2008, Sol Systems focuses...
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