new mexico renewable energy transmission authority santa fe, nm – october 10, 2007

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Transmission to Enable Renewables Development Jerry Vaninetti, VP Western Development Denver, Colorado Trans-Elect Development Company, LLC New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

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Transmission to Enable Renewables Development Jerry Vaninetti, VP Western Development Denver, Colorado Trans-Elect Development Company, LLC. New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007. Background. Trans-Elect ( www.trans-elect.com ): - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Transmission to Enable Renewables Development

Jerry Vaninetti, VP Western Development

Denver, ColoradoTrans-Elect Development Company, LLC

New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission AuthoritySanta Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Page 2: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Background

• Trans-Elect (www.trans-elect.com): – Independent Transmission company funded by AES– Sole focus is transmission

• Path 15 developer: 83 mile $250 MM CA project– Public/private partnership with WAPA & PG&E

• Largely focused on greenfield transmission projects to enable renewables– High Plains Express & Wyoming-Colorado Intertie

• Jerry Vaninetti, VP Western Development– Interim Executive Director of Wyoming Infrastructure Authority– Former Power Project Developer

Page 3: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

National Transmission Grid

Page 4: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007
Page 5: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Power Flow Capacities between WECC Control Areas

Most paths are fully

subscribed

Page 6: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Western Wind Power

Map

Page 7: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Developable Solar

Page 8: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

RTO Coverage

Page 9: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

NorthwestTransmissionAssessmentCommittee

Northern Tier Transmission Group

ColoradoCoordinated

PlanningGroup

SouthwestArea

Transmission

CaliforniaSub-Regional

Planaing Group

SouthwestTransmission

ExpansionPlanning

NTACNTAC

NTTG

CCPGCCPG

SWATSWAT

CSPGCSPG

STEP

Sub-Regional Transmission Planning Groups

WECCWestern

Electricity Coordinating

Council

Columbia Grid

Activities under WestConnect umbrella

SierraSierra

Page 10: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Transmission Development

• Transmission Line Costs (excluding substations)– $1.5 MM/mi for 500 kV for 1,500 MW = $1,000/kW– $1.0 MM/mi for 345 kV for ~750 MW = $1,333/kW– $0.75 MM/mi for 230 kV for ~400 MW = $1,870/kW

• Transmission Development– Design, economics, permitting, routing & customers– 5-7 Year Timetable– Typical development costs: ~$10 million/project– Risky proposition not suited to traditional utilities

• State Transmission Authorities– Seeding transmission development for economic and power

generation development, focused on renewables

Page 11: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Line Utilization Dictates Transmission Rates(Sold as Capacity, not Energy)

$-

$5

$10

$15

$20

$25

20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80%

CAPACITY FACTOR

$4/kW-mo

$3/kW-mo

$2/kW-mo

TR

AN

SM

ISS

ION

RA

TE

($/

MW

H)

WIND-ONLY LINE MULTI-RESOURCE LINE

UTILIZATION LEVEL

Page 12: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

• Initial Feasibility Studies• Master Plan for Local Projects

– WCI, EPTP & SunZia• Integrated AC System

– Improved connections between states/systems

– Improved Reliability• 2- 500 kV lines; 3,000 MW• 1,200 Miles• Renewables “firmed” with

other resources• Power Imports/Exports• Stakeholder Process• Project Participants

– Xcel, Tri-State, WAPA, PRPA, CSU, PNM, SRP & Trans-Elect

– WIA, NM-RETA & CEDA?• http://www.rmao.com/wtpp/HP

X_Studies.html

High Plains Express (HPX) Project

Disclaimer: this map is for study purposes only and is not meant to imply any specific project routing

Note: Conceptual Routing

Page 13: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Generation Capacity (MW)

Developable* Installed (‘07)

• Wyoming 257,650 319• Colorado 73,130 1,066

• New Mexico 73,040 496 • Arizona 2,310 0 TOTALS 406,130 1,881

Note: Current WECC peak demand ~ 175,000 MW WECC RPS requirement in 2020 ~ 23,000 MW

Wind Resources & Installations(from NREL & Interwest Energy Alliance)

* Class 4 +; excludes unsuitable land; 5 MW per km2

Page 14: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Geographic Diversity of Wind

Source: NREL wind performance projections

New Mexico40%

SE Wyoming 48%

Lamar, CO43%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

Hours of the Day (Yearly Average)

Lamar, CO SE Wyoming

New Mexico Average (44%)

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

JAN

FEB

MA

R

AP

R

MA

Y

JUN

JUL

AU

G

SE

P

OC

T

NO

V

DE

C

New Mexico Average (44%)

SE Wyoming

Lamar, CO

CA

PA

CIT

Y F

AC

TO

R

Page 15: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

New Mexico Transmission

Page 16: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

New MexicoWind &

Transmission

26Indian Reservationor Pueblo

Page 17: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

RETA Considerations

• Congratulations – RETA Exists!• RETA’s Scope

– Project Specific: Generator Leads– State Focus: Collector Systems & Integration– Regional: Linkage to Adjoining States

• Complementary wind resources & improved reliability– 30% Energy Requirement

• Transmission Development– Assistance to generators & local utilities?– Public/Private Partnerships?– Serving Native Load vs. Import/Export Markets– Cost Recovery: PRC rate based vs. merchant markets

Page 18: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Wyoming-Colorado Intertie Example

TOT 3 Project$318 mm - 250 miles

750 MW - Coal & Wind

Recommended RMATS Projects

Wind

Page 19: New Mexico Renewable Energy Transmission Authority Santa Fe, NM – October 10, 2007

Questions?

Jerry Vaninetti

[email protected]

(303) 790-0513