
SRP’s district board of directors has approved a new Integrated System Plan, which envisions adding 1,000 MW of pumped hydro by 2035, among other resources.
The plan sets forth power system strategies to be implemented between 2025 and 2035 that prioritize affordability, reliability, sustainability and customer focus. The Integrated System Plan was developed as part of a two-year, data-driven planning process that incorporated perspectives from Arizona universities, businesses, environmental organizations, limited income advocates, nonprofits and more.
SRP has shifted from an Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to an Integrated System Plan. An IRP mainly considers what power resources will be needed, SRP said. SRP’s Integrated System Plan is a holistic roadmap for its future power system that factors in evolving customer energy needs and achieving SRP’s 2035 carbon reduction goals. The new plan was developed through collaboration with stakeholders and involved modeling potential system plans under varying growth scenarios and possible regulatory and supply chain environments.
The Integrated System Plan process determined SRP will need to double or triple power resource capacity from a wide range of technologies in the next decade to continue serving its growing customer base affordably, reliably and sustainably.
SRP’s plan prepares to add 7,000 MW of new renewable resources, which includes 6,000 MW of new, large-scale solar resources by 2035. This will triple SRP’s current portfolio of solar resources scheduled to come online by the end of 2025. The plan also prepares to add 1,500 MW of new battery resources and 1,000 MW of long-duration energy storage capacity from pumped hydro by 2035. This new storage will be in addition to SRP’s existing large investment in storage resources, including more than 1,100 MW of battery projects to be online by the end of 2024.
This summer SRP saw a multi-day, record-breaking peak energy demand that beat previous summer records by more than 7% for an extended period. To help ensure continued reliability of SRP’s power system, the Integrated System Plan recommends SRP prepares to add 2,000 MW of natural gas by 2035. These resources will support the grid as SRP integrates more solar, battery and other renewable resources and as SRP moves forward with the planned retirement of more than 1,300 MW of coal.
The strategic resource additions from the Integrated System Plan will also contribute to a 56% overall reduction in SRP’s water used by power generating resources from 2005 levels.
The Integrated System Plan also factored in construction of large electrical transmission to carry power across the state, local electrical distribution to deliver power to new homes and businesses, and transforming customer energy programs and usage patterns. As part of this, the Integrated System Plan analyzed the anticipated influx of electric transportation and electric heating and cooling in the next decade. To account for greater customer adoption of these technologies, the Integrated System Plan recommends SRP will need to evolve customer programs – such as demand response and energy efficiency programs – to help shift when energy is consumed and conserved.
“We are projecting energy demand increases of more than 25 percent by 2030,” said Angie Bond-Simpson, senior director of resource management at SRP. “The Integrated System Plan will strengthen and prepare our grid for a future that’s largely powered by renewable energy without sacrificing the affordability and necessary power reliability to best serve one of the nation’s fastest growing areas.”
Findings from Integrated System Plan customer focus groups and two customer surveys underscored the need for SRP to primarily ensure affordability while maintaining power reliability. Customers are in favor of SRP progressing toward its carbon reduction goals but showed preference for future system plans with lower generation costs and reduced bill impacts.
SRP is a community-based, not-for-profit public power utility that serves about 1.1 million customers. It has a total of eight hydroelectric facilities.