Compensation for Reactive Power Within the Standard Power Factor Range, 93410-93456 [2024-24528]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Commission (Commission) finds that
allowing transmission providers to
charge transmission customers for a
generating facility’s provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is unjust and
unreasonable. The Commission,
therefore, is revising Schedule 2 of its
pro forma open-access transmission
tariff (OATT), section 9.6.3 of its pro
forma large generator interconnection
agreement (LGIA), and section 1.8.2 of
its pro forma small generator
interconnection agreement (SGIA) to
prohibit the inclusion in transmission
rates of any charges related to the
provision of reactive power within the
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
18 CFR Part 35
[Docket No. RM22–2–000; Order No. 904]
Compensation for Reactive Power
Within the Standard Power Factor
Range
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Final determination.
AGENCY:
In this final determination,
the Federal Energy Regulatory
SUMMARY:
standard power factor range by
generating facilities.
DATES: Effective January 27, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paul Robinson (Technical Information),
Office of Energy Market Regulation,
888 First Street NE, Washington, DC
20426, (202) 502–8460,
Paul.Robinson@ferc.gov
Jennifer Enos (Legal Information), Office
of the General Counsel, 888 First
Street NE, Washington, DC 20426,
(202) 502–6247, Jennifer.Enos@
ferc.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
Paragraph
Nos.
I. Background .............................................................................................................................................................................................
A. Historical Framework Including Order Nos. 888 and 2003 ...........................................................................................................
B. Notice of Inquiry and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking .................................................................................................................
II. Discussion .............................................................................................................................................................................................
A. Need for Reform ............................................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
B. Cost of Producing Reactive Power ................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
C. Cost Recovery ...............................................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
D. Reliability ........................................................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
E. Investment ......................................................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
F. Additional Comments .....................................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
III. Compliance Procedures .......................................................................................................................................................................
A. Revisions to Eliminate Compensation for Reactive Power Supply Within the Standard Power Factor Range ...........................
1. Revise Schedule 2 of the Commission’s Pro Forma OATT ..........................................................................................................
2. Revise Section 9.6.3 of the Pro Forma Large Generator Interconnection Agreement .................................................................
3. Revise Section 1.8.2 of the Pro Forma Small Generator Interconnection Agreement .................................................................
4. Compliance Procedures .................................................................................................................................................................
B. Transition Period ............................................................................................................................................................................
1. Comments ......................................................................................................................................................................................
2. Commission Determination ............................................................................................................................................................
IV. Information Collection Statement .........................................................................................................................................................
V. Environmental Analysis .........................................................................................................................................................................
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act ......................................................................................................................................................................
VII. Document Availability ..........................................................................................................................................................................
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification ..................................................................................................................................
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1. In this final determination,
pursuant to section 206 of the Federal
Power Act (FPA), the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission finds that
allowing public utility transmission
providers (transmission providers) 1 to
1 Section 201(e) of the FPA, 16 U.S.C. 824(e),
defines ‘‘public utility’’ to mean ‘‘any person who
owns or operates facilities subject to the jurisdiction
of the Commission under this subchapter.’’ As
stated in the Order No. 888 pro forma OATT,
‘‘transmission provider’’ is a ‘‘public utility (or its
Designated Agent) that owns, controls, or operates
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facilities used for the transmission of electric energy
in interstate commerce and provides transmission
service under the Tariff.’’ Promoting Wholesale
Competition Through Open Access NonDiscriminatory Transmission Servs. by Pub. Utils.;
Recovery of Stranded Costs by Pub. Utils. &
Transmitting Utils., Order No. 888, FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,036 (1996) (cross-referenced at 75 FERC
¶ 61,080), order on reh’g, Order No. 888–A, FERC
Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,048 (cross-referenced at 78 FERC
¶ 61,220), order on reh’g, Order No. 888–B, 81 FERC
¶ 61,248 (1997), order on reh’g, Order No. 888–C,
82 FERC ¶ 61,046 (1998), aff’d in relevant part sub
nom. Transmission Access Pol’y Study Grp. v.
FERC, 225 F.3d 667 (D.C. Cir. 2000), aff’d sub nom.
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charge transmission customers for a
generating facility’s provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is unjust and
unreasonable. The Commission,
therefore, is revising Schedule 2 of the
N.Y. v. FERC, 535 U.S. 1 (2002); Pro forma OATT
section I.1 (Definitions). The term ‘‘transmission
provider’’ includes a public utility transmission
owner when the transmission owner is separate
from the transmission provider, as is the case in
regional transmission organizations (RTO) and
independent system operators (ISO).
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Commission’s pro forma OATT to
prohibit transmission providers from
including in their transmission rates any
charges associated with the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range from generating
facilities and requiring transmission
providers to make compliance filings to
update Schedule 2 of their OATTs
accordingly.2 The final determination
further revises the Commission’s pro
forma LGIA and pro forma SGIA to
remove the requirement that a
transmission provider pay an
interconnection customer for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range if the transmission provider pays
its own or affiliated generating facilities
for the same service, and the final
determination requires transmission
providers to make compliance filings to
update their pro forma interconnection
agreements accordingly. As a result of
this final determination, transmission
providers will be required to pay an
interconnection customer for reactive
power only when the transmission
provider requests or directs the
interconnection customer to operate its
facility outside the standard power
factor range set forth in its
interconnection agreement.
2. As discussed below, the
Commission has a statutory duty to
ensure that transmission rates are and
remain just and reasonable. We find that
this reform will ensure that
transmission providers do not pass onto
transmission customers unjust and
unreasonable charges that lack a
sufficient economic basis or justification
and yield no commensurate benefit for
ratepayers.
I. Background
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A. Historical Framework Including
Order Nos. 888 and 2003
3. Almost all bulk electric power is
generated, transported, and consumed
in alternating current (AC) networks.
Reactive power, which is measured in
megavolt-amperes reactive (MVAr),3 is a
critical component of operating an AC
electricity system and is required to
control system voltage within
appropriate ranges for efficient and
2 Operating ‘‘inside the standard power factor
range’’ refers to a generating facility providing
reactive power within the power factor range set
forth in the generating facility’s interconnection
agreement when the unit is online and
synchronized to the transmission system. The
standard power factor range is sometimes referred
to as the ‘‘deadband.’’ Compensation for Reactive
Power Within the Standard Power Factor Range,
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 89 FR 21,454 (Mar.
28, 2024) (cross-referenced at 186 FERC ¶ 61,203, at
P 2 n.1) (NOPR).
3 MVAr is the typical unit of measurement for
reactive power.
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reliable operation of the transmission
system. Reactive power supports the
voltages that must be controlled to
provide for delivery of real power and
for system reliability. Reactive power
can be produced or absorbed 4 by
generating facilities, power electronic
equipment such as flexible AC
transmission system devices,
transmission lines and equipment, and
load. As relevant here, generating
facilities must either produce or absorb
reactive power for the transmission
system to maintain voltage levels
required to reliably supply real power
from generation to load.
4. In Order No. 888, the Commission
required that reactive supply and
voltage control from generating facilities
be offered as a discrete ancillary service
by transmission providers and, to the
extent feasible, charged for on the basis
of the amount required.5 The
Commission explained that there are
two ways of supplying reactive power
and controlling voltage. One is to install
facilities as part of the transmission
system, the cost of which is part of the
cost of basic transmission service. The
second is to use generating facilities to
supply reactive power and voltage
control, which must be unbundled from
basic transmission service.
5. With respect to compensation, the
Commission stated that the transmission
provider’s ‘‘rates for ancillary services
should be cost-based.’’ 6 The
Commission expected, however, that
transmission customers would be able
to change the amount of reactive power
service they required. The Commission
also identified the possibility that
reactive power could potentially be
supplied by ‘‘a competitive market for
such service’’ if ‘‘technology or industry
changes’’ made such a market possible.7
6. The Commission’s policy on
reactive power compensation has
evolved since issuing Order No. 888 in
1996.8 In Order No. 2003, the
Commission adopted a standard
agreement for the interconnection of
large generating facilities (the pro forma
LGIA), and specifically addressed the
circumstances under which a
transmission provider must pay an
interconnection customer for reactive
power depending upon whether such
reactive power was inside or outside the
4 A generating facility’s leading reactive power
indicates its ability to absorb reactive power, and
its lagging reactive power indicates its ability to
produce reactive power.
5 Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036, at
31,705–07 & n.359.
6 Id. at 31,720.
7 Id. at 31,707 & n.359.
8 Id. at 31,705–07 & n.359.
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standard power factor range.9 This
standard agreement included the
requirement that interconnection
customers maintain a composite power
delivery at a continuous rate of power
output at the generating facility’s point
of interconnection at a power factor
within the range of 0.95 leading to 0.95
lagging when synchronized to the
transmission system, unless the
transmission provider has established a
different power factor range.10 Order
No. 2003 required that a transmission
provider compensate an interconnection
customer for reactive power when the
transmission provider requests that the
interconnection customer operate its
generating facility outside the
established power factor range. With
respect to reactive power within the
established power factor range, the
Commission concluded in Order No.
2003 that the interconnection customer
should not be compensated for reactive
power when operating within the range
established in the interconnection
agreement because doing so ‘‘is only
meeting [the generating facility’s]
obligation.’’ 11 However, in Order No.
2003–A, the Commission clarified that
‘‘if the Transmission Provider pays its
own or its affiliated generators for
reactive power within the established
range, it must also pay the
Interconnection Customer.’’ 12 This
standard is generally referred to as the
‘‘comparability standard.’’ 13
9 Standardization of Generator Interconnection
Agreements & Procs., Order No. 2003, 68 FR 49846
(Aug. 19, 2003), 104 FERC ¶ 61,103, at P 546 (2003),
order on reh’g, Order No. 2003–A, 69 FR 15932
(Mar. 26, 2004), 106 FERC ¶ 61,220, order on reh’g,
Order No. 2003–B, 70 FR 265 (Jan. 4, 2005), 109
FERC ¶ 61,287 (2004), order on reh’g, Order No.
2003–C, 70 FR 37661 (June 30, 2005), 111 FERC
¶ 61,401 (2005), aff’d sub nom. Nat’l Ass’n of Regul.
Util. Comm’rs v. FERC, 475 F.3d 1277 (D.C. Cir.
2007).
10 The power factor is the ratio of a generating
facility’s real power to its apparent power, where
apparent power is the total power output of the
system (both real and reactive power). Power factors
can range from 1.0 to 0.0, with 1.0 representing only
real power and 0.0 representing only reactive
power.
11 Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ¶ 61,103 at P 546.
12 Order No. 2003–A, 106 FERC ¶ 61,220 at P 416.
Order No. 2003–A also exempted wind generating
facilities from maintaining the established power
factor range. Id. P 34.
13 In Order No. 2006, the Commission adopted
identical power factor and compensation
requirements for small generating facilities (those
with a capacity of 20 MW or less) and initially
exempted small wind generating facilities from the
reactive power requirement before Order No. 827
eliminated such exemptions. Reactive Power
Requirements for Non-Synchronous Generation,
Order No. 827, 81 FR 40793 (June 23, 2016), 155
FERC ¶ 61,277, order on clarification and reh’g, 157
FERC ¶ 61,003 (2016); Standardization of Small
Generator Interconnection Agreements & Procs.,
Order No. 2006, 111 FERC ¶ 61,220, order on reh’g,
Order No. 2006–A, 70 FR 71760 (Nov. 30, 2005),
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7. Order No. 661 established technical
requirements for interconnecting large
wind resources and maintained the
exemption from providing reactive
power, except where the transmission
provider showed, through a system
impact study, that reactive power
capability was required to ensure safety
or reliability.14 In Order No. 2006,15 the
Commission adopted identical power
factor and compensation requirements
for small generating facilities (facilities
that have a capacity of no more than 20
megawatts (MW)) but exempted small
wind generating facilities from the
reactive power requirement.
Subsequently, in Order No. 827,16 the
Commission eliminated the exemptions
for both small and large wind generating
facilities, thus requiring those facilities
to provide reactive power. The
Commission explained that it had
previously exempted wind generators
from the uniform reactive power
requirement because, historically, the
costs to design and build a wind
generator that could provide reactive
power were high and could have created
an obstacle to the development of wind
generation. But the Commission found
in Order No. 827 that, due to
technological advancements since the
establishment of those exemptions, the
cost of providing reactive power no
longer presented an obstacle to the
development of wind generation, and
therefore found that the exemptions had
become unjust and unreasonable.17 The
Commission therefore required all
newly interconnecting non-synchronous
generating facilities to provide reactive
power within the range of 0.95 leading
to 0.95 lagging at the high-side of the
generator substation transformer as a
condition of interconnection.
8. In sum, ‘‘Order Nos. 2003 and
2003–A establish a reactive power
compensation policy that, in the first
instance, treats the provision of reactive
power inside the [standard power factor
range] as an obligation of good utility
practice rather than as a compensable
service and permits compensation
inside the [standard power factor range]
113 FERC ¶ 61,195 (2005), order granting
clarification, Order No. 2006–B, 71 FR 42587 (July
27, 2006), 116 FERC ¶ 61,046 (2006).
14 Interconnection for Wind Energy, Order No.
661, 70 FR 34993 (June 16, 2005), 111 FERC
¶ 61,353, order on reh’g, Order No. 661–A, 70 FR
75005 (Dec. 19, 2005), 113 FERC ¶ 61,254 (2005).
15 Order No. 2006, 111 FERC ¶ 61,220.
16 Order No. 827, 155 FERC ¶ 61,277.
17 See also PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 151 FERC
¶ 61,097, at P 28 (2015) (finding that, since Order
No. 661, the cost of the technology necessary for a
non-synchronous resource to provide reactive
power has lessened such that the cost of installing
equipment that is capable of providing reactive
power is comparable to the costs of a traditional
generator).
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only as a function of comparability.’’ 18
‘‘Put differently, reactive support by
generating facilities operating within the
standard power factor range ensures that
when these facilities inject real power—
the product that their facilities exist to
create and sell—onto the grid under
normal conditions, they can do their
part to maintain adequate voltages and
to not threaten reliability.’’ 19 By
contrast, reactive power provided
outside of the standard power factor
range is considered an ancillary service
for transmitting power across the
transmission system to serve load,20 and
thus, the Commission has required
compensation for such service.
9. Consistent with Order Nos. 2003
and 2003–A and Commission precedent
that pre-dated those Orders, the
Commission has permitted transmission
providers to eliminate separate
compensation for generating facilities
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range.21 In these
cases, the Commission affirmed its
18 Bonneville Power Admin. v. Puget Sound
Energy, Inc., 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 (2007) (BPA), order
denying reh’g and granting clarification, 125 FERC
¶ 61,273, at P 18 (2008) (BPA Rehearing Order). See
also BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at P
15 & n.24 (‘‘[N]either affiliated nor non-affiliated
generators have an inherent right to any
compensation for reactive power inside the
deadband.’’). Accord., Midcontinent Indep. Sys.
Operator, Inc., 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 (MISO), order on
reh’g, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022, at P 23 (2023) (MISO
Rehearing Order); Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 119 FERC
¶ 61,199 (SPP), order on reh’g, Sw. Power Pool, Inc.,
121 FERC ¶ 61,196, at 61,968 (2007) (SPP Order on
Rehearing) (‘‘[R]eactive power is required for an
interconnecting generator to deliver its power and
reactive power produced within the deadband and
is, therefore, generally not compensable.’’); Mich.
Elec. Transmission Co., 97 FERC ¶ 61,187, at
61,852–53 (2001) (METC Rehearing Order)
(‘‘Providing reactive power within design
limitations is not providing an ancillary service; it
is simply ensuring that a generator lives up to its
obligations.’’); Consumers Energy Co., 94 FERC
¶ 61,230, at 61,834 (2000) (affirming the
Commission’s rejection of generators’ request for
reactive power compensation when operating
within a facility’s reactive power design limitation,
stating that as a condition of interconnecting to the
transmission provider’s system, ‘‘to ensure system
security,’’ the generator was required to provide
equipment, ‘‘at its own cost, to meet its reactive
power obligations as provided for in [its
interconnection agreement].’’(emphasis added)); cf.
Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc., 125 FERC
¶ 61,280, at P 16 (2008) (‘‘Reactive power is a
localized service that is quickly used by
transmission system components and cannot be
transported over long distances.’’).
19 MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at
P 23.
20 See, e.g., id. at PP 23–24 (citing METC
Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–53).
21 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at PP 52–
53; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP
26–27; Pub. Serv. Co. of N.M., 178 FERC ¶ 61,088,
at PP 29–31 (2022) (PNM); Nev. Power Co., 179
FERC ¶ 61,103, at PP 20–21 (2022); BPA, 120 FERC
¶ 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119 FERC ¶ 61,340,
at P 15 (2007); Entergy Servs., Inc., 113 FERC
¶ 61,040, at P 38 (2005).
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determination that the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is not compensable
except as a matter of comparability. For
example, in BPA, the Commission
granted a complaint filed by Bonneville
Power Administration (BPA) arguing
that the rate schedules of certain
independent power producers (IPP) for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range, often referred to as
a ‘‘deadband,’’ were no longer just and
reasonable given BPA’s decision to no
longer pay its own or affiliated
generators for providing this service.22
The Commission found that
‘‘Commission policy clearly allows BPA
to discontinue paying all its merchants
for inside the deadband reactive power
service,’’ explaining that ‘‘[t]he
Commission’s policy is not new; we
confirmed it in Order No. 2003, when
we stated that an interconnecting
generator ‘should not be compensated
for reactive power when operating its
Generating Facility within the
established power factor range, since it
is only meeting its obligation.’’ 23
10. The Commission has also found
that a transmission provider’s decision
to end compensation for reactive power
within the standard power factor range
does not compromise a generating
facility’s ability to recover costs that it
may incur in producing reactive power
within this range.24 For example, the
Commission has observed that
generating facilities ‘‘may be able to
recover the costs for reactive power
within the deadband in other ways—
such as through higher power sales rates
of their own.’’ 25 In response to
arguments by certain independent
power producers that such recovery is
infeasible because of competition, the
Commission has found that ‘‘since the
incremental cost of reactive power
service within the deadband is minimal,
the infeasibility argument lacks
plausibility. The purpose for which
generation assets are built (including
reactive power capability to maintain
voltage levels for generation entering the
grid) is to make sales of real power.’’ 26
11. The Commission made similar
findings in MISO, wherein it accepted
an FPA section 205 application by
22 BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at PP 19–20; BPA
Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at PP 10–11.
23 BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at PP 19–20 (citing
Order No. 2003, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,146 at P
546); METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852
(‘‘Providing reactive power within design
limitations is not providing an ancillary service; it
is simply ensuring that a generator lives up to its
obligations.’’).
24 Id. PP 19–22.
25 Id. P 21 (citing Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 119 FERC
¶ 61,199, at P 39).
26 Id.
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Midcontinent Independent System
Operator, Inc. (MISO) transmission
owners to end generator compensation
for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor
range.27 In accepting MISO transmission
owners’ proposal, the Commission
reiterated its longstanding policy ‘‘that
the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range is, in
the first instance, an obligation of the
interconnecting generator and good
utility practice,’’ such that ‘‘MISO
[transmission owners] do not have an
obligation to continue to compensate an
independent generator for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range when its own or affiliated
generators are no longer being
compensated.’’ 28 The Commission also
rejected any reliance arguments,
reasoning in part that the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range required little or no
incremental investment given that, for
both synchronous and non-synchronous
generating facilities,29 the same
equipment is used for the production of
real power and reactive power.30 In
27 MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 53 (‘‘Bearing in
mind that the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range is, in the first
instance, an obligation of the interconnecting
generator and good utility practice, MISO
[transmission owners] do not have an obligation to
continue to compensate an independent generator
for reactive power within the standard power factor
range when its own or affiliated generators are no
longer being compensated.’’ (citation omitted)); see
also PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP 29, 33
(accepting PNM’s revisions to eliminate
compensation for reactive service under Schedule
2 and rejecting generators’ arguments that it is ‘‘just
and reasonable for it to be compensated for
investments made’’ to provide reactive support
consistent with interconnection requirements even
though PNM elected to no longer pay its own or
affiliated generators for such reactive power).
28 MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 53. The
Commission found ‘‘those protests that challenge
these well-established policies to be collateral
attacks on these earlier determinations.’’ Id.
29 Synchronous generating facilities (e.g., coal,
gas, nuclear resources) produce electricity in sync
with the transmission system at the system
frequency. Non-synchronous generating facilities
(e.g., solar, wind, battery storage resources) produce
electricity that is initially not in sync with the
transmission system and use inverters to convert
their electrical output to synchronize with the
transmission system. See FERC, Payment for
Reactive Power, 7 (Apr. 22, 2014) (2014 Staff
Report), https://www.ferc.gov/sites/default/files/
2020-05/04-11-14-reactive-power.pdf.
30 MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at
PP 29–30 (citing S. Co. Servs., Inc., 80 FERC
¶ 61,318, at 62,091 (1997) (noting also that the
primary function of a generating plant is to produce
real power; thus, if costs were allocated based on
the ‘‘predominant’’ function of the equipment, ‘‘all
of the costs of generation would thus be assigned
to real power production and there would be no
basis for any separate reactive power charge’’); BPA,
120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 21 (finding that the
incremental cost of reactive power service within
the standard power factor range is minimal); METC
Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–53 (‘‘[R]eactive
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addition, the Commission found that
generating facilities have other
opportunities, beyond Schedule 2, to
seek to recover their costs of providing
reactive power.31
12. Consistent with Order Nos. 2003
and 2003–A and other Commission
precedent, multiple RTOs/ISOs and
non-RTO/ISO transmission providers
have elected not to compensate
generating facilities for providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range under Schedule 2 of
their OATTs.32
13. Of the six Commissionjurisdictional RTOs/ISOs, only three
currently compensate generating
facilities for reactive power provided
within the standard power factor range.
Generating facilities in PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C. (PJM) 33
generally use the cost-based AEP
Methodology to calculate cost-of-service
rates for the production of reactive
power.34 Because the same generation
equipment contributes to the production
of both real power and reactive power,
the AEP Methodology allocates the costs
of each piece of equipment to real
power service and reactive power
service by assigning the cost of each
piece of equipment to either real power
service, reactive power service, or both.
ISO New England Inc. (ISO–NE) 35 and
power provided, not as an ancillary service, but
rather as a ‘no cost’ service within reactive design
limitations, may therefore, be provided without
compensation.’’).
31 MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at
PP 40–42; SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 39 (stating
that IPPs ‘‘are free to negotiate rates that they charge
their customers for real power that are sufficient to
compensate them for any costs that they may incur
in producing reactive power within their
deadbands, just as affiliated generators may seek to
negotiate rates that they charge their customers that
are sufficient to compensate them for the costs of
any reactive power that they provide within their
deadbands.’’).
32 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at PP 52–
53; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P
26; PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP 29–31; Nev.
Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103 at PP 20–21; BPA,
120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119
FERC ¶ 61,340 at P 15; Entergy Servs., Inc., 113
FERC ¶ 61,040 at P 38.
33 PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., Intra-PJM Tariffs,
OATT Schedule 2, (Reactive Supply and Voltage
Control from Generation or Other Sources Service)
(4.0.0).
34 The AEP Methodology derives its name from
Opinion No. 440, where the Commission approved
AEP’s, a vertically integrated utility, method for
calculating the costs of synchronous generation
equipment associated with the production of
reactive power. See Am. Elec. Power Serv. Corp.,
Opinion No. 440, 88 FERC ¶ 61,141 (1999), order on
reh’g, 92 FERC ¶ 61,001 (2000). In WPS Westwood,
the Commission recommended that all generating
facilities that have actual cost data and support
documentation use the AEP Methodology. See WPS
Westwood Generation, LLC, 101 FERC ¶ 61,290, at
P 14 (2002).
35 ISO New England Inc., ISO New England Inc.
Transmission, Markets and Services Tariff,
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New York Independent System
Operator, Inc. (NYISO) 36 compensate
generating facilities for reactive power
under flat rate designs that are adjusted
for inflation.37
14. California Independent System
Operator Corporation (CAISO),38
Southwest Power Pool, Inc. (SPP),39 and
MISO 40 do not pay separately for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range.
15. Outside the RTOs/ISOs,
transmission providers that pay for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range generally
use the AEP Methodology to set reactive
power compensation on an individual
generating facility basis. Many nonRTO/ISO transmission providers do not
pay separately for reactive power
provided within the standard power
factor range.41
Schedule 2 (Reactive Supply and Voltage Control
Service) (8.0.0).
36 New York Independent System Operator, Inc.,
NYISO Tariffs, NYISO OATT, § 6.2 OATT Schedule
2 (Charges For Voltage Support Service) (6.0.0).
37 Both ISO–NE and NYISO proposed their
respective reactive power capability compensation
mechanisms pursuant to section 205 filings. See
ISO New England Inc., 122 FERC ¶ 61,056, at P 1
(2008) (settling, in part, for a new flat rate in $/
kVAR-yr). N.Y. Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., Docket
No. ER02–617–000 (Feb. 5, 2002) (delegated order
accepting NYISO’s amended Rate Schedule 2 of the
Market Administration and Control Area Services
Tariff).
38 CAISO never provided compensation for
reactive power within the standard power factor
range. See Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator Corp., 160
FERC ¶ 61,035, at P 7 (2017) (explaining that CAISO
considered the possibility of compensating
generating facilities for reactive power in its
stakeholder process, but decided against it,
reasoning that the ability to provide reactive power
is part of a generator’s fixed costs, which are
recovered through power purchase agreements).
39 SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 30.
40 MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at PP 52–66; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP 23–55.
41 See, e.g., Arizona Public Service Company,
FERC Electric Tariff Vol. No. 2, Schedule 2
(Reactive Supply and Voltage Control from
Generation or Other Sources Service) (6.0.0) (‘‘This
service will be provided at no charge until [Arizona
Public Service Company] has developed a rate that
has been filed with the Commission and allowed to
be implemented; however, Transmission Customers
taking service at transmission voltage levels shall be
responsible for maintaining a power factor of ±
95.0%, and Transmission Customers taking service
at distribution voltage levels shall maintain a power
factor of not less than 90% lagging but in no event
leading, unless agreed to by [Arizona Public Service
Company].’’); Public Service Company of New
Mexico, PNM Open Access Transmission Tariff,
Schedule 2 (Reactive Supply and Voltage Control
from Generation or Other Sources Service) (2.1.0)
(‘‘As of October 1, 2021, the Effective Date of this
Schedule 2, the Transmission Provider is not
charging for Reactive Supply and Voltage Control
from Generation or Other Sources Service from its
own resources. As a result, there will be no separate
charge for such service.’’).
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B. Notice of Inquiry and Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking
16. On November 18, 2021, the
Commission issued a Notice of Inquiry
(NOI) 42 in this proceeding, seeking
comment on various issues regarding
reactive power compensation and
market design as a result of the
significant changes that have taken
place in the electric industry in the last
two decades, including changes in the
generation resource mix and a general
shift away from cost-of-service rates for
generating facilities selling into
Commission-jurisdictional markets.
Generally, the Commission sought to
‘‘examine whether the current regime
for reactive power capability
compensation requires revisions to
ensure that payments for reactive power
capability accurately reflect the costs
associated with reactive power
capability.’’ 43
17. On March 21, 2024, the
Commission issued a NOPR in this same
proceeding. Based on a review of the
comments submitted in response to the
Commission’s NOI in the instant docket,
as well as the Commission’s experience
in the years since the issuance of Order
Nos. 2003 and 2003–A, the NOPR
preliminarily found that where
transmission providers require
transmission customers to pay for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range,
transmission rates may be unjust and
unreasonable, as they include costs
without a sufficient economic basis or
justification. In support of such
preliminary finding, the NOPR
explained that generating facilities
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range at no cost
or de minimis cost, and that providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is already an
obligation of the generating facility as an
interconnection customer and
consistent with good utility practice.44
The NOPR also stated that current
compensation may result in undue
compensation or other market
distortions. The NOPR proposed,
pursuant to FPA section 206,45 that a
just and reasonable replacement rate
was to prohibit transmission providers
from including in their transmission
rates any charges associated with the
supply of reactive power within the
42 Reactive Power Capability Compensation,
Notice of Inquiry, 177 FERC ¶ 61,118 (2021) (NOI).
43 Id. P 19.
44 Real power, which accomplishes useful work
(e.g., runs motors), is typically measured in MWs.
45 16 U.S.C. 824e.
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standard power factor range from a
generating facility.
18. Specifically, the NOPR proposed
to add the following sentence to the end
of Schedule 2 of the pro forma OATT: 46
‘‘However, such rates shall not include
compensation to generating facilities for
the supply of reactive power within the
power factor range specified in its
interconnection agreement.’’ Second,
the NOPR proposed to remove the
following clause from section 9.6.3 of
the pro forma LGIA: 47 ‘‘provided that if
Transmission Provider pays its own or
affiliated generators for reactive power
service within the specified range, it
must also pay Interconnection
Customer.’’ Third, the NOPR proposed
to remove the following sentence from
section 1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA: 48
‘‘In addition, if the Transmission
Provider pays its own or affiliated
generators for reactive power service
within the specified range, it must also
pay the Interconnection Customer.’’
19. Comments on the NOPR were due
on June 26, 2024. Thirty-one parties
filed comments.49 Comments were
submitted by RTOs/ISOs and other
transmission providers, generating
facilities, generation developers,
transmission owners, load-serving
entities (LSE), Monitoring Analytics,
LLC, acting in its capacity as the
Independent Market Monitor for PJM
(PJM IMM), trade associations
representing specific generation
technologies, and consumer advocates.
Of these, and with few exceptions,
transmission owners, LSEs, the PJM
IMM, independent filers,50 and
consumer advocates supported or did
not oppose the NOPR proposal to
eliminate compensation in the standard
power factor range,51 while generating
46 See
pro forma OATT, Schedule 2.
pro forma LGIA, § 9.6.3.
48 See pro forma SGIA, § 1.8.2.
49 See app. A.
50 C T Gaunt states that reactive power cannot be
delivered and also that it cannot be lost in
transmission through a transformer or power
system. Thus, C T Gaunt claims that there are no
grounds for arguing against the Commission’s
determination in the NOPR. C T Gaunt Reply
Comments at 2–3.
51 American Electric Power Service Corporation
(AEP) (on behalf of itself and its affiliates, including
Appalachian Power Company, Indiana Michigan
Power Company, Kentucky Power Company,
Kingsport Power Company, Ohio Power Company,
Wheeling Power Company, Public Service
Company of Oklahoma, Southwestern Electric
Power Company, AEP Appalachian Transmission
Company, Inc., AEP Indiana Michigan
Transmission Company, Inc., AEP Kentucky
Transmission Company, Inc., AEP Ohio
Transmission Company, Inc., AEP West Virginia
Transmission Company, Inc., AEP Oklahoma
Transmission Company, Inc., and AEP
Southwestern Transmission Company, Inc.);
Ameren Service Company (Ameren) (on behalf of
47 See
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facilities, generation developers, and
trade associations representing specific
generation technologies oppose the
NOPR proposal.52
Ameren Illinois Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois,
Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren Missouri
and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois); C
T Gaunt; New England Consumer Advocates
(consisting of the Office of Massachusetts Attorney
General Andrea Joy Campbell, the Connecticut
Office of Consumer Counsel, the Maine Office of
Public Advocate, the New Hampshire Office of
Consumer Advocate, and the Rhode Island Division
of Public Utilities and Carriers); Joint Consumer
Advocates (including the Illinois Attorney General,
Illinois Citizens Utility Board, Maryland Office of
People’s Counsel, the New Jersey Division of Rate
Counsel, the North Carolina Utilities Commission
Public Staff, the Office of the People’s Counsel for
the District of Columbia, and the West Virginia
Consumer Advocate Division of the Public Service
Commission), Joint Customers (including Old
Dominion Electric Cooperative, Northern Virginia
Electric Cooperative, Inc., and Dominion Energy
Services, Inc. on behalf of Virginia Electric and
Power Company d/b/a Dominion Energy Virginia);
Liberty Utilities (Granite State Electric) Corp. d/b/
a Liberty (Liberty); MISO; MISO Transmission
Owners (including Ameren, as agent for Union
Electric Company d/b/a Ameren Missouri, Ameren
Illinois Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois, and
Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois;
Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corporation; City
Water, Light & Power; Cooperative Energy;
Dairyland Power Cooperative; East Texas Electric
Cooperative; Entergy Arkansas, LLC; Entergy
Louisiana, LLC; Entergy Mississippi, LLC; Entergy
Texas, Inc.; Great River Energy; Indianapolis Power
& Light Company; Lafayette Utilities System;
MidAmerican Energy Company; Minnesota Power
(and its subsidiary Superior Water, L&P); Missouri
River Energy Services; Montana-Dakota Utilities
Co.; Northern States Power Company, a Minnesota
corporation, and Northern States Power Company,
a Wisconsin corporation, subsidiaries of Xcel
Energy Inc.; Northwestern Wisconsin Electric
Company; Otter Tail Power Company; Prairie
Power, Inc.; Southern Indiana Gas & Electric
Company (d/b/a CenterPoint Energy Indiana South);
and Southern Minnesota Municipal Power Agency);
the Ohio Office of the Federal Energy Advocate of
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (Ohio
FEA); Portland General Electric Company (PGE);
PJM; the PJM IMM; the Transmission Access Policy
Study Group (TAPS) (an association of transmission
dependent utilities in 35 states). For convenience,
we have listed each commenter and the parties they
represent. For brevity, for the remainder of this rule,
we will refer to each commenter by their
abbreviated names as defined in this footnote.
52 The American Council on Renewable Energy
(ACORE); Calpine Corporation (Calpine); Eagle
Creek Reactive Generators (including Mahoning
Creek Hydroelectric Company, LLC, York Haven
Power Company, LLC, Eagle Creek Reusens Hydro,
LLC, Great Falls Hydroelectric Company Limited
Partnership, Lake Lynn Generation, LLC, PE Hydro
Generation, LLC, Black River Hydroelectric, LLC,
All Dams Generation, LLC, and Eagle Creek Hydro
Power, LLC); EDP Renewables North America LLC
(EDPR); Elevate Renewables F7, LLC (Elevate);
Generation Developers (including Vistra Corp. and
Dynegy Marketing and Trade, LLC); Glenvale LLC
(Glenvale); Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
(including KMC Thermo, LLC, Bitter Ridge Wind
Farm, LLC, Guernsey Power Station LLC, Moxie
Freedom LLC, Safe Harbor Water Power
Corporation, BIF III Holtwood LLC, Brookfield
Power Piney & Deep Creek LLC, Erie Boulevard
Hydropower, L.P., Carr Street Generating Station,
L.P., Bear Swamp Power Company LLC, Brookfield
White Pine Hydro LLC, Brookfield Renewable
Trading and Marketing LP, and Reworld Waste, LLC
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II. Discussion
20. In this final determination, the
Commission adopts the NOPR as
proposed, except with respect to the
timing of the compliance procedures
and implementation. Based on our
review of the record, we find there is
substantial evidence to support the
conclusion that allowing transmission
providers to charge transmission
customers for a generating facility’s
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range results in
unjust and unreasonable transmission
rates. As explained in the NOPR,
generating facilities providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range are only meeting their obligations
under their interconnection agreements
and in accordance with good utility
practice, and in doing so, incur no or at
most de minimis variable costs beyond
the cost of providing real power.
Moreover, providing compensation for
the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range risks
overcompensation and market distortion
in ways that did not exist prior to the
existence of organized markets.
21. We find that these reforms will
not adversely impact reliability. We also
find that generating facilities have the
opportunity to seek to recover any costs
associated with providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range through their rates for selling real
power, including energy or capacity
sales, whether in organized or bilateral
f/k/a Covanta; Independent Power Producers of
New York, Inc. (IPPNY); Indicated Trade
Associations (including Electric Power Supply
Association, The PJM Power Providers Group the
New England Power Generators Association, Inc.,
Independent Power Producers of New York, Inc.,
the Coalition of Midwest Power Producers); ISO–
NE; Middle River Power LLC (including Coalition
of Midwest Power Producers, the Electric Power
Supply Association, the PJM Power Providers
Group, the New England Power Generators
Association, Inc., and the Independent Power
Producers of New York, Inc.); National Hydropower
Association (NHA) (a national trade association
with over 320 member companies); New England
Power Generators Association, Inc. (NEPGA); New
England Power Pool (NEPOOL); New England
States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE); Nuclear
Energy Institute (NEI); North American Generator
Forum (NAGF); NYISO; Onward Energy Holdings,
LLC (Onward Energy); PSEG (including Public
Service Electric and Gas Company, PSEG Power
LLC, and PSEG Energy Resources & Trade LLC, and
each wholly owned, direct or indirect subsidiaries
of Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated)
(PSEG); Reactive Service Providers (including CIP,
D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments, L.L.C.,
Invenergy Renewables LLC, Leeward Renewable
Energy, LLC, Lightsource Renewable Energy
Operations, LLC, NextEra Energy Resources, LLC,1
;rsted Wind Power North America, LLC, and RWE
Clean Energy, LLC); Clean Energy Associations
(including Solar Energy Industries Association
(SEIA) and American Clean Power Association
(ACP)). For brevity, for the remainder of this rule,
we will refer to each commenter by their
abbreviated names as defined in this footnote.
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markets. Given that the primary
function of a generating facility is to
produce real power and that the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is necessary
for the provision of real power, we find
that the existing means of cost recovery
for real power are not only reasonable
but also the most logical outcome.
22. Based on more than two decades
of experience since Order No. 2003, and
the record developed in this proceeding,
we find that, even as a function of
comparability, charging transmission
customers under Schedule 2 for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range has become
unjust and unreasonable. As explained
above and for the reasons discussed
below, in Order No. 2003, the
Commission found generators should
not receive compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor as it was an
obligation of good utility practice. Based
on rehearing requests, in Order No.
2003–A, the Commission agreed that
where vertically integrated transmission
owners continued to have rate
schedules providing payment to their
affiliated generating facilities for
reactive power service within the
standard power factor range, such
transmission owners were also required
to pay non-affiliated interconnection
customers for the same provision of
reactive power. At the time of Order
Nos. 2003 and 2003–A, functional
unbundling of transmission service 53
and the development of organized
wholesale electricity markets 54 were
relatively nascent, and so too was the
Commission’s experience with the
impacts of establishing the
comparability standard for the provision
of reactive power within the standard
power factor range. At the time,
establishing the comparability standard
appeared consistent with Order No.
2003’s stated intent of ‘‘minimiz[ing]
opportunities for undue discrimination
and expedit[ing] the development of
new generation, while protecting
reliability and ensuring that rates are
just and reasonable.’’ 55
53 Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036 at
31,654 (‘‘We conclude that functional unbundling
of wholesale services is necessary to implement
non-discriminatory open access transmission.’’).
54 Regional Transmission Orgs., Order No. 2000,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,089 (1999) (crossreferenced at 89 FERC ¶ 61,285) (‘‘We conclude that
properly structured RTOs throughout the United
States can provide significant benefits in the
operation of the transmission grid.’’), order on reh’g,
Order No. 2000–A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,092
(2000) (cross-referenced at 90 FERC ¶ 61,201), aff’d
sub nom. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 of Snohomish Cty.
v. FERC, 272 F.3d 607 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
55 See, e.g., Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ¶ 61,103
at P 12 (explaining that standard interconnection
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93415
23. Since Order No. 2003, however,
many industry changes have occurred.
Some vertically integrated utilities have
divested their generation. Competitive
markets have developed, leading many
generators to recover their costs through
market-based rather than cost-based
rates. The development of competitive
markets makes even more challenging
any allocation of costs between real
power production, under market-based
rates, and reactive power service, under
cost of service rates.56 When rates are
market-based, challenges in allocation
will affect the competitive positions of
the entities.57 New technologies have
developed that provide reactive power
through different means and to which
the AEP Methodology that predates
these technologies does not squarely
apply. With fewer vertically integrated
utilities, the continued development of
competitive markets, and new
technologies, the initial justification for
compensation (i.e., that the Commission
required separate compensation on a
comparable basis because vertically
integrated transmission owners
continued to have rate schedules
providing payment to their affiliated
generating facilities for reactive power
service) is no longer broadly applicable.
Indeed, the wide-ranging rates for
reactive power resulting from cost-ofservice proceedings further undermine
the principle of comparability as some
generating facilities now receive
substantially higher rates for the
provision of reactive power within the
procedures and a standard agreement will: ‘‘(1)
limit opportunities for Transmission Providers to
favor their own generation; (2) facilitate market
entry for generation competitors by reducing
interconnection costs and time; and (3) encourage
needed investment in generator and transmission
infrastructure’’).
56 See In re Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390
U.S. at 804 (‘‘There is ample support for the
Commission’s judgment that the apportionment of
actual costs between two jointly produced
commodities, only one of which is regulated by the
Commission, is intrinsically unreliable.’’); A.A.
Poultry Farms, Inc. v. Rose Acre Farms, Inc., 881
F.2d 1396, 1400 (7th Cir. 1989) (‘‘How does one
allocate the cost of activities that have joint
products? Agencies engaged in ratemaking struggle
with these problems for years, even decades,
without producing clear answers.’’); Richard A.
Posner, Natural Monopoly and Its Regulation, 21
Stan. L. Rev. 548, 595 (1969) (‘‘where services
involve joint or common costs a rational allocation
is impossible even in theory. How much of the cost
of a telephone handset is assignable to local and
how much to interstate telephone service?’’).
57 When both real power and reactive power rates
were cost-based, the only effect of the allocation
was to change the allocation of costs and the rates
for transmission and generation service; the
transmission provider would not exceed its total
revenue requirement.
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standard power factor range than
others.58
24. All of these changes taken
together, coupled with the record
developed here, make clear that separate
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range results in unjust and
unreasonable rates to transmission
customers, because such compensation
is not necessary for comparability or to
ensure continued investment in the
capability of generating facilities to
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range.59 We
acknowledge that this final
determination represents a change in
policy,60 a change we find appropriate
based on the record before us, as
explained in detail herein.61
25. Accordingly, we are modifying
Schedule 2 of the pro forma OATT,
section 9.6.3 of the pro forma LGIA, and
58 The PJM IMM notes that total settled reactive
power revenue requirements for oil-fueled steam
units average $993/MW-year whereas other units
have settled reactive power revenue requirements
as high as $18,750/MW-year. IMM Initial Comments
at 5.
59 See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11–12
(‘‘The salient difference between PJM and CAISO,
SPP, and MISO is that PJM customers paid
$388,044,837.00 in out of market payments for
reactive capability in 2023, and customers in
CAISO, SPP and MISO, paid $0.00’’); For Schedule
2 service in 2023, PJM paid $388 million, NYISO
paid $75 million, and ISO–NE paid $18 million. See
PJM 2023 Annual Report at 5, https://services.pjm.
com/annualreport2023/); 2023 NYISO Voltage
Support Service Rates, https://www.nyiso.com/
documents/20142/35126567/2023-OATT-MSTSchedule-2-VSS-Rates-FINAL-for-posting.pdf/
f59317b0-41c6-9f41-5d61-e7f502af82c2); 2023
Annual Markets Report at 154, iso-ne.com/staticassets/documents/100011/2023-annual-marketsreport.pdf.
60 See Order No. 2003–C, 111 FERC ¶ 61,401 at
P 42 (finding that because providing reactive power
within the established range is an ‘‘important
service,’’ payment for such service does not
constitute a ‘‘windfall’’).
61 PJM Power Providers Grp. v. FERC, 88 F.4th
250, 271–72 (3d Cir. 2023), amended sub nom. PJM
Power Provisers Grp. v. FERC, No. 21–3068, 2024
WL 259448 (3d Cir. Jan. 24, 2024) (‘‘An agency may
alter its ‘view of what is in the public interest.’ The
fact that contrary agency precedent exists ‘gives us
no more power than usual to question the
Commission’s substantive determinations.’ The
agency need not establish that ‘the reasons for the
new policy are better than the reasons for the old
one; it suffices that the new policy is permissible
under the statute, that there are good reasons for it,
and that the agency believes it to be better.’ ’’)
(citing FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S.
502, 515 (2009)); In re Permian Basin Area Rate
Cases, 390 U.S. 747, 784 (1968) (Permian Basin);
see also Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v.
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42
(1983) (‘‘[W]e fully recognize that regulatory
agencies do not establish rules of conduct to last
forever.’’) (internal quotations omitted); Greater
Bos. Television Corp. v. FCC, 444 F.2d 841, 852
(D.C. Cir. 1970) (an agency may change its course
as long as it ‘‘suppl[ies] a reasoned analysis
indicating that prior policies and standards are
being deliberately changed, not casually ignored.’’),
cert. denied, 403 U.S. 923 (1971)).
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section 1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA, and
we are requiring transmission providers
to make corresponding revisions to their
OATTs and pro forma interconnection
agreements, to prohibit transmission
providers from including in their
transmission rates any charges
associated with the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range from generating facilities.
26. We discuss below the issues
raised in the comments.
A. Need for Reform
27. The NOPR preliminarily found
that where transmission providers
require transmission customers to pay
for generating facilities’ provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range, transmission rates
may be unjust and unreasonable, as
such rates may include costs without a
sufficient economic basis or justification
and such costs may not result in
transmission customers receiving
commensurate reliability benefits.62 In
support of the need for reform, the
NOPR preliminarily found that
generating facilities providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range are only meeting their obligations
under their interconnection agreements
and in accordance with good utility
practice, and in doing so, incur no or at
most a de minimis increase in variable
costs beyond the cost of providing real
power.63 The NOPR also highlighted
various adverse impacts of the
Commission’s policy on reactive power
compensation, which have been
exacerbated by the increasing volume of
filings for reactive power compensation
and in turn, increasing reactive powerrelated costs to transmission
customers.64 For example, in many
regions, generating facilities are sited
without regard to where there is a
geographic need for reactive power,
which is significant given that unlike
real power, reactive power cannot be
efficiently transmitted long distances.65
Additionally, adjudicating cost-ofservice reactive power rates has become
increasingly administratively
burdensome and may result in
inconsistent rate treatment across
generating facilities.66 Furthermore, in
regions where generating facilities may
seek to recover their costs by
participating in organized competitive
wholesale markets, providing separate
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
62 NOPR,
186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at PP 25, 40.
PP 28–33.
64 Id. PP 34–40.
65 Id. P 35.
66 Id. PP 36–38.
63 Id.
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power factor range risks
overcompensation and market distortion
in ways that did not exist prior to the
existence of organized markets.67
Finally, as explained in the NOPR, the
costs to transmission customers have
increased substantially without any
commensurate increase in benefits.68
28. The NOPR also preliminarily
found that cessation of payments for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range for generating
facilities does not compromise a
generating facility’s ability to recover
costs–if any–that it may incur in
producing reactive power within such
range because generating facilities have
the opportunity to seek to recover such
costs in other ways, such as through
energy or capacity sales.69
1. Comments
29. AEP, Ameren, Joint Consumer
Advocates, Joint Customers, MISO
Transmission Owners, New England
Consumer Advocates, Ohio FEA, PGE,
PJM, the PJM IMM, and TAPS agree
there is a need for reform and,
accordingly, support the NOPR proposal
to eliminate compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range.70
30. Many commenters argue that there
is substantial evidence to support the
conclusion that allowing transmission
providers to charge transmission
customers for a generating facility’s
provision of reactive power from within
the standard power factor range results
in unjust and unreasonable transmission
rates.71 They also agree that current
generator compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range lacks
sufficient economic basis or
justification,72 and that customers may
67 Id.
P 39.
P 40.
69 Id. P 42.
70 AEP Initial Comments at 1–2; Ameren Initial
Comments at 2–3; Joint Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 1; Joint Customers Initial Comments
at 2; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 1, 5; New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 6; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 3;
PGE Initial Comments at 1; PJM Initial Comments
at 1, 3; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 2; TAPS
Initial Comments at 1.
71 See, e.g., Joint Customers Reply Comments at
10–11 (‘‘Standing on its own, the record in this
proceeding is sufficient to justify the conclusion
that compensating generators, any generators, for
reactive service within the standard power factor
range is not just and reasonable. Through the NOI
comments, the development of the NOPR, and
comments to the NOPR, the Commission has
supported its conclusions and addressed potential
concerns.’’).
72 Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
1, 5; Joint Customers Initial Comments at 5–6; Joint
Customers Reply Comments at 1–2; MISO
Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 2; PGE
Initial Comments at 5; TAPS Initial Comments at 3.
68 Id.
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not be receiving commensurate
reliability benefits.73
31. Joint Customers maintain, for
example, that the NOPR builds on
longstanding Commission policy,
reaffirmed since Order No. 2003, that no
compensation is appropriate for reactive
service within the standard power factor
range and that challenges to the
sufficiency of the record or the process
are unfounded.74 Joint Customers
explain that ‘‘[t]he only change the
Commission is making in the NOPR is
to determine that transmission
providers no longer should have the
option to compensate, affiliate and nonaffiliate alike. And for that discrete
change, that the exception to the general
rule on compensation should be closed,
the Commission has plainly created a
sufficient record.’’ 75
32. PJM supports the NOPR and
asserts that it would largely eliminate
the problems with the current reactive
power compensation regime in PJM,
including the resource-intensive
administrative burdens of reactive
power rate proceedings and the ‘‘black
box’’ settlements that ‘‘seem[ ] at odds
with the Commission’s general
precedent on efficient energy and
ancillary service price formation.’’ 76
MISO explains that it has not
experienced reliability concerns since
eliminating compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range in December 2022 77 and that it
would not expect to see any effect on
reliability through eliminating
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range.78
33. MISO Transmission Owners
support the need for reform, arguing
that the current framework for reactive
power compensation is neither just nor
reasonable given that it results in
transmission customers being required
to pay for a service that generators
already are required to provide and that
costs them little or nothing to provide.79
34. Many commenters agree that the
current reactive power framework does
not result in commensurate reliability
benefits.80 First, many commenters
73 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 13–17;
MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 8,
19; New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 4–6; TAPS Initial Comments at 3.
74 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 10–11.
75 Id. at 11 (emphasis in original).
76 PJM Initial Comments at 1–3.
77 MISO Initial Comments at 2.
78 Id.
79 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 5.
80 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 19; MISO
Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 3–5; New
England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
4–6; TAPS Initial Comments at 3–5.
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agree that compensation for providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is unnecessary to
maintain reliability.81 Second, many
commenters also agree with the NOPR
that under the current framework,
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range is not
tied to whether there is a particular
geographic need for reactive power.82
TAPS, for example, contends that the
existing approach to reactive power
capability compensation does not
adequately consider a generator’s actual
contribution to reliability or lack thereof
and thus requires consumers to pay
excessive charges for reactive power
that may not be needed or is in the
wrong location.83 Similarly, Joint
Customers contend that ‘‘[t]his incentive
structure to provide payment based on
reactive capability results in the
building of unnecessary capabilities in
locations it is not or may not be needed
and does not allocate the costs
associated with reactive capability in a
manner that is at least roughly
81 See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11–12
(‘‘There will be no adverse reliability impacts in
PJM (or other similarly situated regions) for the
same reasons that . . . there have been no
observable impacts in regions that do not
compensate generating facilities for the supply of
reactive power with the standard power factor
range. As in the case of CAISO, SPP and MISO, new
and existing generating facilities in PJM are
required to provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range as a condition of
obtaining and maintaining interconnection service.
There is no evidence that expanding the just and
reasonable approach to compensation already in
place in CAISO, SPP and MISO to PJM will have
any adverse impact on reliability in PJM.’’); MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 13
(‘‘When the MISO Transmission Owners proposed
to eliminate compensation for producing reactive
power within the deadband, the most common
protest from generators was that it would impact
the reliability of the grid. However, such claims are
not supported by evidence and distract from the
underlying fact that generators are obligated to
provide reactive power within the deadband
whether or not they are compensated for it.’’
(citations omitted)).
82 See, e.g., Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5 (‘‘As
a result, in areas like PJM, generators currently
receive compensation regardless of proximity to
locations on the transmission system where there is
an actual need for additional reactive power.’’);
Joint Customers Initial Comments at 17 (‘‘Further,
the failure to account for transmission system needs
or grid geography in the current regime in regions
like PJM undermine the reliability benefits of
generators that interconnect to the system with
reactive capabilities, whether meeting or exceeding
their baseline interconnection requirements. The
current paradigm has resulted in the development
and deployment of generator based reactive
capability that is ill-suited to the needs of the
transmission system, and specifically that is well in
excess of needs. Eliminating the incentive to
overbuild reactive capability will not negatively
impact reliability.’’).
83 TAPS Initial Comments at 4–5.
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commensurate with the benefits
received.’’ 84
35. Further, like PJM, many
commenters agree with the NOPR
regarding the administrative burden for
all parties to determine Schedule 2
rates.85 Joint Consumer Advocates argue
that ‘‘the existing compensation
framework for generators that supply
reactive power has led to unjust and
unreasonable rates’’ and note that ‘‘[d]ue
to limited resources, the [Joint
Consumer Advocates] have generally
been unable to participate in the
numerous reactive proceedings and
assist the Commission with the review
and scrutiny of generator submissions.
But such review and scrutiny are
essential given the sheer number of
filings and the absence of standardized
accounting for the costs claimed in them
by generators.’’ 86
36. AEP states that it supports the
Commission’s proposal to prospectively
terminate reactive power compensation
to generators for maintaining the ability
to produce reactive power within the
standard power factor range because it
‘‘will more equitably balance the
interests of customers and generators,
ensure that reactive power will continue
to be provided as a requirement of
interconnection, and significantly
decrease the administrative burdens
associated with individualized, opaque,
and inconsistent cost-of-service reactive
power rate proceedings.’’ 87
37. Similarly, New England Consumer
Advocates state that ‘‘[t]ransmission
rates have been rising in recent years
and costs are only expected to increase
in the near term to accommodate
projected future transmission system
84 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12 (citing
Ill. Com. Comm’n. v. FERC, 576 F.3d 470, 477 (7th
Cir. 2009)).
85 AEP Initial Comments at 4–6; Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 1–5; PJM IMM Initial
Comments at 9.
86 Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
7. See also PJM IMM Initial Comments at 9
(‘‘Applying cost of service rules is costly,
burdensome and unnecessary. Most reactive
proceedings for generators in PJM are resolved in
black box settlements that require substantial time
and resources from all parties, fail to address the
merits of the cost support provided, result from an
unsupported split the difference approach, and that
produce a wide, unreasonable and discriminatory
disparity among the rates per paid per MW-year for
the same service.’’); Joint Customers Initial
Comments at 7 (‘‘As well documented in comments
to the NOI and described in the NOPR, the current
individualized consideration of reactive filings
purporting to apply the AEP [M]ethodology places
a heavy burden on customers, Transmission
Providers, and the Commission while resulting in
customer charges with dubious connection to any
clear benefits to the customers paying those
charges. This combination created an intolerable
condition necessitating Commission action to
reform the compensation structure.’’).
87 AEP Initial Comments at 4–5.
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needs. At this time of increasingly
onerous retail energy costs, particularly
in New England, the Commission must
ensure that transmission providers are
passing on to consumers only those
costs which are just and reasonable, and
for which consumers receive
commensurate benefit.’’ 88
38. The PJM IMM argues that
opposing comments come largely from
generation owners opposed to the
removal of subsidies that have benefited
them, even though such subsidies are
primarily the result of the ‘‘nonsensical,
wasteful and unworkable’’ attempts to
allocate a portion of costs recoverable in
markets to a guaranteed reactive
payment based on an outdated and
arbitrary cost-of-service approach
referred to as the AEP Methodology.89
39. Other commenters opposed the
NOPR, arguing that existing reactive
power rates remain just and
reasonable.90 Reactive Service Providers
argue that ‘‘changes to cost allocation’’
following Order No. 888 (i.e., functional
unbundling) do not warrant a change to
reactive power compensation.91
Reactive Service Providers contend that
reactive power supply being unaffected
in regions where transmission providers
no longer pay for reactive power is not
evidence that reactive power
compensation is unjust and
unreasonable,92 that the
‘‘comparability’’ policy cannot be used
as a basis to end compensation,93 that
administrative burden is not a basis to
find that compensation is unjust and
unreasonable,94 and that inconsistent
rate treatment across generating
facilities does not mean that
compensation is unjust and
unreasonable.95
40. Reactive Service Providers argue
that the Commission should study
88 New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 3–4. See also PJM IMM Initial
Comments at 5 (‘‘Most recent cases settled prior to
issuance of the NOPR have settled for costs well in
excess of the average cost and well in excess of the
ARR offset amount. The issue is growing in
significance.’’); MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 5 (‘‘The Commission’s preliminary
findings that led to the changes proposed in the
NOPR are accurate. The current framework for
reactive power compensation can result in
transmission customers being required to pay for a
service that generators already are required to
provide and that costs them little or nothing to
provide. Therefore, the current framework allows
for compensation that is neither just nor
reasonable.’’).
89 PJM IMM Reply Comments at 1–2.
90 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
2–3; Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 16; NEI Initial Comments at 1.
91 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
4, 29–34.
92 Id. at 41–43.
93 Id. at 43–48.
94 Id. at 48–52.
95 Id. at 53–54.
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individual generating facilities to
determine if reactive power is still
needed.96 Reactive Service Providers
also argue that the Commission must
ensure that compensation for providing
reactive power outside the standard
power factor range is adequate.97
41. Indicated Trade Associations
assert that the NOPR would grant
transmission providers unlawfully
preferential treatment, creating a
preference for higher cost transmission
solutions, and suggest that the
Commission should withdraw the
NOPR proposal and refocus its efforts
on improving the methodologies used to
determine reactive power rates.98
Further, Indicated Trade Associations
assert that concerns raised about the
AEP Methodology being burdensome
and a lack of refund protections for
customers do not justify eliminating
reactive power compensation within the
standard power factor range
altogether.99
42. ISO–NE argues that ISO–NE’s
Schedule 2 VAR compensation program
should not be disturbed.100 ISO–NE
asserts that its treatment of reactive
power is distinct from its energy and
capacity markets.101 ISO–NE further
states that its VAR service is not based
on cost-of-service and is different from
the standard AEP Methodology but is
instead based on a resource’s capability
to provide reactive power. ISO–NE
explains that its VAR service
compensates resources at a uniform
payment rate (i.e., a single rate for
reactive power provided within and
outside of the standard power factor
96 Id.
at 76–77.
at 77.
98 Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 16–17.
99 Id. at 8–9.
100 ISO–NE Initial Comments at 1–2, NESCOE
Reply Comments at 2; NEPGA Reply Comments at
6–7; NEPOOL Reply Comments at 6–7. ISO–NE
explains that its VAR service consists of four
components: (1) the fixed Capacity Cost (CC) rate,
under which Qualified Reactive Resources are
eligible to receive VAR payments for their
measurable capability to provide VAR service to the
New England Transmission System; (2) the variable
Lost Opportunity Cost, which compensates for the
value of a resource’s lost opportunity in the
wholesale energy market in situations where a
resource that would otherwise be economically
dispatched is directed by the ISO to reduce real
power output to provide more reactive power; (3)
the variable Cost of Energy Consumed, which
compensates for the cost of energy consumed by the
resource solely to provide reactive power; and (4)
the Cost of Energy Produced, which compensates
for the difference between the locational marginal
price and a resource’s offer price, if the locational
marginal price is lower than the offer price, for each
hour the resource provides reactive power. ISO–NE
Initial Comments at 3–4. ISO–NE notes that the
components other than the CC component may
occur infrequently and are far less than the CC rate
component. ISO–NE Initial Comments at 4 n.5.
101 ISO–NE Initial Comments at 1–2.
97 Id.
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range) and is not resource-intensive to
calculate.102 ISO–NE adds that total
VAR payments amounted to 0.25% of
the total energy, ancillary services, and
capacity markets combined (or
approximately 18–20 million dollars)
for the same given period. NEPOOL
argues that one of the reasons Schedule
2 has worked well for New England is
that it provides a simple fixed rate for
the main component of VAR service,
which pays part of the costs of a reactive
power resource’s capability to provide
VAR service to the transmission system
when needed. NEPOOL explains that
this same fixed rate is provided to all
qualified resources without further
analysis of, or dispute about, resourcespecific costs.103 NEPOOL argues that
one of the reasons Schedule 2 has
worked well for New England is that it
provides a simple fixed rate for the main
component of VAR service, which pays
part of the costs of a reactive power
resource’s capability to provide VAR
service to the transmission system when
needed, without further analysis of, or
dispute about, resource-specific
costs.104
43. NYISO challenges the
Commission’s preliminary conclusion
that compensating generating facilities
for providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range has resulted
in unjust and unreasonable transmission
rates and urges the Commission to allow
NYISO to maintain its current reactive
power compensation program.105
NYISO states that it supports the
NOPR’s objective to avoid
administratively burdensome processes
and procedures to determine
individualized cost-of-service reactive
power rates for generation facilities.
NYISO adds that NYISO’s existing
reactive power and Voltage Support
Service (VSS) compensation structure,
which uses a flat dollars per MVAr-year
structure, is just and reasonable.106
NYISO maintains that this structure
aligns costs directly with services
provided, ensures reliability benefits
102 Id. at 3–5, 14. The ISO New England Ancillary
Service Schedule 2 Business Procedure is available
on the ISO–NE website: https://www.iso-ne.com/
static-assets/documents/rules_proceds/operating/
gen_var_cap/schedule_2_var_business_
procedure.pdf. Operating Procedures include
primarily: ISO New England Operating Procedure
No. 12—Voltage and Reactive Control, available at
https://www.iso-ne.com/static-assets/documents/
rules_proceds/operating/isone/op12/op12_rto_
final.pdf; and ISO New England Operating
Procedures No. 23—Generating Resource Auditing,
available at https://www.iso-ne.com/static-assets/
documents/rules_proceds/operating/isone/op23/
op23_rto_final.pdf.
103 NEPOOL Reply Comments at 6–7.
104 Id. at 6–7.
105 NYISO Initial Comments at 1.
106 Id. at 2; IPPNY Reply Comments at 1–2.
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commensurate with expenses,107
provides market-like incentives, and
encourages resources to offer reactive
power cost-effectively by rewarding
increased capability and maintaining
necessary equipment,108 which reduces
the need for complex, individualized
cost-based payments and integrates
reactive power support efficiently into
the broader market framework,
promoting economic efficiency and
reliability.109 NYISO contends that a
uniform implementation approach is
not suitable given the varying regional
needs and existing effective
compensation frameworks.110
44. Indicated Trade Associations,
Generation Developers, NEI and PSEG
raise constitutional claims with respect
to the NOPR proposal. Indicated Trade
Associations argue that the proposed
rule violates the Takings Clause of the
Fifth Amendment to the United States
Constitution.111 They argue that public
utilities have the statutory and
constitutional right to compensation for
the services they provide, including
reactive power, and the Commission
cannot deprive public utilities of just
and reasonable compensation simply by
characterizing the provision of reactive
power as a condition of interconnection,
particularly where it was the
Commission that established this
condition. Similarly, Generation
Developers argue that forcing generators
to supply an identifiable portion of the
reactive power they generate, without
any compensation, as a condition of
interconnection to the transmission
system, falls squarely within the kinds
of takings prohibited by the Takings
Clause.112 PSEG states that, in
accordance with the FPA and the
Supreme Court precedent in Hope, the
Commission has a duty to protect public
utilities from rates that are
confiscatory.113 PSEG argues that the
proposed rule, not unlike the
Commission denying transmission
owners the opportunity to earn a return
on network upgrades in Ameren,
107 NYISO
Initial Comments at 2–5.
at 7–8.
109 Id. at 7–8.
110 Id. at 14.
111 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 22–24 (citing Smyth v. Ames, 169 U.S.
466, 546 (1898)).
112 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 26
(citing Horne v. Dept. of Ag., 576 U.S. 350, 359, 367
(2015); FPC v. Hope Nat. Gas Co., 320 U.S. 591, 603
(1944); Bluefield Waterworks & Improvement Co. v.
Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 262 U.S. 679, 690 (1923)).
113 PSEG Initial Comments at 18–19 (citing
Bluefield Waterworks & Improvement Co. v. Pub.
Serv. Comm’n, 262 U.S. at 690; Duquesne Light Co.
v. Barash, 488 U.S. 299, 308 (1989) (‘‘If the rate does
not afford sufficient compensation, the State has
taken the use of the utility property without paying
just compensation.’’)).
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essentially compels generators to
provide a service without the ability to
recover their fixed associated costs,
which is unjust and unreasonable,
unduly discriminatory, and confiscatory
and in violation of the FPA and judicial
precedent.114
45. MISO Transmission Owners
disagree with commenters arguing that
the NOPR proposal constitutes an
unconstitutional taking.115 They
contend that the commenters’ claim that
the Order No. 2003 requirement for
generators to provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range
violates the Takings Clause of the U.S.
Constitution is a collateral attack on
Order No. 2003. They contend that,
while some contractual rights are
considered ‘‘property’’ within the
meaning of the Takings Clause of the
Fifth Amendment, the contractual
relationship entered into when a
generator interconnects with a
transmission system does not implicate
a taking that must be compensated.116
MISO Transmission Owners state that
the Commission determined in Order
No. 2003 that generators ‘‘should not be
compensated for reactive power when
operating [their] Generating Facilit[ies]
within the established power factor
range, since [they are] only meeting
[their] obligation.’’ Moreover, they state
that ‘‘as ‘legislation [that] readjust[s]
rights and burdens is not unlawful
solely because it upsets otherwise
settled expectations,’ the Commission’s
action implementing the changes in the
NOPR would not constitute an
unconstitutional taking just because the
changes would ‘impact the benefits and
burdens’ of the agreement entered into
by generators interconnecting with the
Transmission System.’’ 117 They
contend that ‘‘[g]enerators have only a
unilateral expectation of payment for
the provision of reactive power and not
a legitimate claim of entitlement to
compensation.’’ 118
114 PSEG Initial Comments at 19–20 (citing
Ameren Servs. Co. v. FERC, 880 F.3d 571, 581–82
(D.C. Cir. 2018)).
115 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 12 n.33.
116 Id. (citing Transmission Plan. & Cost
Allocation by Transmission Owning & Operating
Pub. Utils., Order No. 1000–A, 77 FR 32184 (May
31, 2012), 139 FERC ¶ 61,132, at P 368 (citing
Connolly v. Pension Guar. Corp., 475 U.S. 211, 224
(1986)), order on reh’g and clarification, Order No.
1000–B, 77 FR 64890 (Oct. 24, 2012), 141 FERC
¶ 61,044 (2012), aff’d sub nom. S.C. Pub. Serv.
Auth. v. FERC, 762 F.3d 41 (D.C. Cir. 2014)).
117 Id. (citing Order No. 1000–A, 139 FERC
¶ 61,132 at P 369 (citing Connolly v. Pension Guar.
Corp., 475 U.S. at 223)).
118 Id. (citing Bd. of Regents of State Coll. v. Roth,
408 U.S. 564, 577 (1972) (‘‘To have a property
interest in a benefit, a person clearly must have
more than an abstract need or desire for it. He must
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93419
46. Eagle Creek and the NHA both
assert that existing reactive service rates
enjoy the Mobile-Sierra presumption.
The NHA asserts that, in order for the
Commission to disallow the existing
reactive service rates, each rate on-file
must be demonstrated by the
Commission to ‘‘seriously harm the
public interest.’’ 119 Eagle Creek and the
NHA both note that, given the highly
localized nature of reactive power, it is
unclear how the Commission could
assess these individual contracts
without conducting a case-by-case
analysis through individual section 206
proceedings.120 Eagle Creek and the
NHA claim that absent such
proceedings, generating facilities would
be deprived of their current just and
reasonable compensation and previous
investments made by generating
facilities would be compromised.121 The
NHA and Eagle Creek assert that, by
relying on a generic rulemaking to
effectively cancel all reactive power
rates, the NOPR is an ‘‘act of
convenience’’ and ‘‘an indirect attempt
to strip the value of existing rates
without facing the legal challenge that
the Mobile-Sierra doctrine presents.’’ 122
47. Joint Customers disagree with
Eagle Creek and the NHA’s argument
that the Commission cannot eliminate
compensation within the standard
power factor range without initiating
individual rate proceedings.123 Joint
Customers explain that precedent cases,
such as PNM and MISO, demonstrate
that changes to the underlying Schedule
2 tariff provisions effectively eliminate
compensation for third-party generators
without separate rate challenges.124
48. Reactive Service Providers and
Generation Developers argue that the
NOPR violates the D.C. Circuit’s holding
have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He
must, instead, have a legitimate claim of
entitlement to it.’’); Del. Riverkeeper Network v.
FERC, 895 F.3d 102, 108–09 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (citing
Town of Castle Rock, Colo. v. Gonzales, 545 U.S.
748, 756 (2005)).
119 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4; NHA Initial
Comments at 8–9.
120 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4; NHA Initial
Comments at 8.
121 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4–5; NHA
Initial Comments at 8.
122 NHA Initial Comments at 8–9; see also Eagle
Creek Initial Comments at 4–5.
123 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 13–14.
124 Id. (‘‘There is no validity to the argument that
individual rate challenges must be pursued by the
Commission or complainants, and it is well
established that a change to the underlying
Schedule 2 in a transmission provider’s tariff, as
proposed by the Commission in the NOPR, will
contemporaneously end compensation to thirdparty generators with no further action required.’’);
see also PJM IMM Initial Comments at 9 (‘‘The
NOPR does not propose a new Commission policy.
Rather, it extends and makes uniform policies that
have long applied in jurisdictional markets.’’).
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in Atlantic City.125 They assert that by
using the Commission’s authority under
section 206 of the FPA to eliminate
reactive power compensation, the NOPR
essentially strips generating facilities of
their ability to make filings under
section 205 of the FPA to recover the
costs of the reactive power service that
they provide.126
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2. Commission Determination
49. Based on our review of the record,
we find that there is substantial
evidence to support the conclusion that
transmission rates are unjust and
unreasonable to the extent they include
charges associated with the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range. We therefore adopt
the preliminary findings in the NOPR
concerning the need for reform 127 and,
pursuant to section 206 of the FPA,
conclude that certain revisions to
Schedule 2 of the pro forma OATT, pro
forma LGIA, and pro forma SGIA are
necessary to ensure rates that are just,
reasonable, and not unduly
discriminatory or preferential.
50. We agree with commenters that
the current framework allows for
transmission rates that are ‘‘neither just
nor reasonable’’ and ‘‘can result in
transmission customers being required
to pay for a service that generators
already are required to provide and that
costs them little or nothing to
provide.’’ 128 As reflected in the record,
absent reform, transmission customers
would be required to continue to pay
charges associated with generating
facilities’ provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range
even though such charges are without a
sufficient economic basis and do not
result in transmission customers
receiving commensurate reliability
benefits. The need for reform is
particularly acute given that
‘‘transmission rates have been rising in
recent years and costs are only expected
to increase in the near term to
accommodate projected future
transmission system needs.’’ 129
125 Atl. City Elec. Co. v. FERC, 295 F.3d 1 (D.C.
Cir. 2002) (Atl. City).
126 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
31–32 (citing Atl. City, 295 F.3d at 9–10); Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 54.
127 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at PP 24–27, 28.
128 See, e.g., MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 5; Joint Customers Initial Comments
at 6–16, PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1–4, 6–9;
PJM IMM Reply Comments at 2–3, 6–7; Ameren
Initial Comments 2–3; AEP Initial Comments at 4–
5; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5–6; TAPs Initial
Comments at 1, 3–8; PGE Initial Comments at 3–4.
129 See, e.g., New England Consumer Advocates
Initial Comments at 3 & n.7 (citing, e.g.,
Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey,
Initial Comments, Docket No. RM21–17–000, at 28
(filed Aug. 17, 2022); see also New England States
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51. As described below, most
commenters agree or do not dispute that
real and reactive power are provided as
joint products,130 with joint costs.131
Similarly, most commenters agree or do
not dispute that, under their
interconnection agreements and in
accordance with good utility practice,
generating facilities have a longstanding obligation to provide reactive
power within the standard power factor
range in order to interconnect reliably to
the transmission system. Most
commenters agree or do not dispute that
generating facilities must produce
reactive power within the standard
power factor range to allow the
generating facilities’ real power to
reliably flow to load.132 As such, we
disagree with some commenters who
challenge the Commission’s preliminary
finding that providing reactive power
within the standard power factor range
has no or de minimis costs 133 and find,
as discussed in greater detail below, that
there is substantial evidence to
conclude that in satisfying such
obligations generating facilities incur no
incremental investment, or fixed costs,
and at most de minimis variable costs
over and above those needed to provide
real power.134 This is because no
Committee on Electricity, New England States’
Vision for a Clean, Affordable, and Reliable 21st
Century Regional Electric Grid (2020), https://
nescoe.com/resource-center/vision-stmt-oct2020/).
130 See PSC VSMPO-Avisma Corp. v. U.S., 688
F.3d 751, 756 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (‘‘[J]oint products
[are] two dissimilar end products that are produced
from a single production process.’’) (citing Robert
A. Anthony & James S. Reece, Accounting
Principles 442 (5th ed. 1983).
131 A joint cost is an expenditure that benefits
more than one product, and for which it is not
possible to separate the contribution to each
product. Permian Basin, 390 U.S. at 761 n.25 (citing
Accounting Tools, The Supply and Price of Natural
Gas 25 (1962)) (‘‘Joint costs ‘are incurred when
products cannot be separately produced.’’’); https://
www.accountingtools.com/articles/joint-cost.
132 See SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199, at P 28 (‘‘[I]f a
generator is to sell (and be able to deliver) its power
to a customer, reactive power is essential to the
transaction. Thus, it is hardly surprising that the
Commission has concluded, . . . , that the
provision of sufficient reactive power is an
obligation of a generator interconnected to the
system, and that, . . . , a generator is not entitled
to separate compensation for providing reactive
power within its deadband.’’).
133 See, e.g., Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3–
4; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at
7; ACORE Initial Comments at 2; Elevate
Renewables Initial Comments at 9–12; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 13; Glenvale Initial
Comments at 9–10; Indicated Reactive Power
Suppliers Initial Comments at 2, 9–10; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 2, 6; Middle
River Power Initial Comments at 2–3; NEI Initial
Comments at 4–5, 8–9; NHA Initial Comments at 2,
4–5.
134 Although the Commission found in the MISO
Rehearing Order, and earlier, that ‘‘Reactive Service
requires little or no incremental investment’’ see,
e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at
P 29 (emphasis added), we note that beyond vague
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additional equipment is required to
provide reactive power; rather the same
equipment that is needed to produce,
and is used to produce, real power also
provides reactive power functions, at no
additional capital cost. Variable costs, if
any, are limited to the fuel costs (in
synchronous facilities) or the cost of
foregone direct current power (in nonsynchronous facilities) necessary to
provide the reactive power and to
reliably inject real power into the
transmission system.135 For example, in
Panda Stonewall the annual revenue
requirement of $2,051,894 included just
$10,018 of identified variable costs.136
In light of this evidence, we find that
charging transmission customers for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range results in
unjust and unreasonable rates.137
52. ISO–NE and NYISO oppose the
NOPR and seek flexibility to preserve
their existing reactive power
compensation regimes. We deny their
requests. ISO–NE and NYISO
principally argue that their flat-rate
assertions that incremental fixed costs are incurred,
no evidence of investment or fixed costs specific to
providing reactive power was provided in response
to requests for such costs in the MISO Rehearing
Order, the NOI, or the NOPR. As such, the
Commission concludes below that there are no
incremental or fixed costs to provide reactive power
beyond those to provide real power.
135 Under certain transmission system conditions,
the generating facility may operate at a power factor
of 1.0, which represents zero incremental variable
costs and thus zero total costs of providing reactive
power. A generating facility operating at any
reactive power level (i.e., a power factor other than
1.0) will incur some amount of incremental fuel
cost, but the Commission generally considers these
costs de minimis within the standard power factor
range. See, e.g., APS, 94 FERC at 61,080 (‘‘We note
that operating a generating unit within the proposed
[standard power factor range] does not affect the
generation output of a unit.’’); Commission Staff
Report, Principles for Efficient and Reliable
Reactive Power Supply and Consumption, Docket
No. AD05–1–000, at 96 (2005 Staff Report) (2005)
(‘‘The marginal cost of providing reactive power
from within a generator’s capability curve (D-curve)
is near zero.’’).
136 Panda Stonewall, LLC, 176 FERC ¶ 61,072, at
P 6 n.9 (2021). We note that the heating losses
component reflects the incremental fuel cost of
providing reactive power. See, e.g., Panda
Stonewall, LLC, 174 FERC ¶ 61,266, at P 155 (2021)
(‘‘The AEP methodology already has a means in
place to provide compensation for the small amount
of additional fuel used during the production of
reactive power, which is a heating loss calculation
based on the MW-hours of actual reactive power
production and the usage charges for fuel.’’).
137 See Belmont Mun. Light Dep’t v. FERC, 38
F.4th at 173, 179, 186 (2022) (finding that the
Commission’s approval of a portion of ISO–NE’s
Inventoried Energy Program ‘‘was not reasoned
decisionmaking’’ and ‘‘thwart[ed] the
[Commission’s] own ‘longstanding policy that rate
incentives must be prospective and that there must
be a connection between the incentive and the
conduct meant to be induced’’’ because it would
compensate market participants for conduct they
already engage in as part of standard business
operations).
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compensation regimes are transparent,
not administratively burdensome,
designed to prevent double-recovery,
and able to procure significant
reliability benefits at ‘‘reasonable’’ or
‘‘low’’ cost. However, these arguments
ignore the preliminary findings of the
NOPR, namely that generating facilities
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range are only
meeting their obligations under their
interconnection agreements in
accordance with good utility practice,
and in doing so incur no or at most a
de minimis increase in variable costs
beyond the cost of providing real power.
As explained in this final determination
and decades of prior Commission
precedent, in order to reliably
interconnect to the transmission system
and deliver real power to customers,
generating facilities must be capable of
maintaining voltage levels for injecting
real power into the transmission
system.138 As relevant here, these
findings apply equally to flat-rate
compensation regimes like ISO–NE’s
and NYISO’s, as well as the
compensation regimes of PJM and
certain non-RTO regions. Thus, the
ISO–NE and NYISO regimes, while
easier to implement administratively,
also impose unreasonable and
unsupportable costs on transmission
customers.
53. ISO–NE’s and NYISO’s claims
regarding transparency, administrative
burden, and preventing double recovery
all presuppose that compensation is
due, and thus that a compensation
method is needed. But, where
compensation is found to be unjust and
unreasonable, as we find here, such a
compensation methodology will
necessarily result in unjust and
unreasonable rates and thus is not
permissible.
54. Additionally, we agree with New
England Consumer Advocates,139 who
138 See, e.g., BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 21
(‘‘The purpose for which generation assets are built
(including reactive power capability to maintain
voltage levels for generation entering the grid) is to
make sales of real power.’’); SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199
at P 28 (‘‘[I]f a generator is to sell (and be able to
deliver) its power to a customer, reactive power is
essential to the transaction’’). See also PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C., 145 FERC ¶ 61,280, at P 17
(2013) (approving tariff revisions that require
interconnection customers to pay for upgraded
telecommunication equipment (phasor
measurement units) as the ‘‘data is integral to
improved communication and to the reliability of
the system and, as such, benefits both the system
and the generators’’).
139 New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 5 (‘‘To the extent . . . benefits are
achieved by compliance with a generating facility’s
interconnection agreement and/or as ‘good utility
practice,’ [New England Consumer Advocates]
agree[] with the Commission that ratepayers should
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argue that any payment for reactive
power capability within the standard
power factor range must yield some
roughly commensurate incremental
benefit above and beyond that which
would accrue absent payment.140 As
discussed below,141 ISO–NE and NYISO
allude generally to reliability benefits
from reactive power compensation over
the full range of a resource’s capability
to provide reactive power—that is, both
within and outside of the standard
power factor range—rather than the
narrower focus of this final
determination. And, in both ISO–NE
(except for certain circumstances as
explained by ISO–NE) 142 and NYISO, as
everywhere, generating facilities must
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range to make
sales of real power regardless of whether
they receive separate compensation.143
55. We do not dispute that the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range provides
reliability benefits, only that there are
no incremental fixed costs other than
joint costs that are also associated with
the production of real power and at
most de minimis incremental variable
costs that would warrant a separate
compensation mechanism. We also find
that there is substantial evidence to
conclude that, under the current
not be paying separately for the costs to produce a
joint reactive power product.’’).
140 See, e.g., Ill. Com. Comm’n. v. FERC, 576 F.3d
at 476 (‘‘[The Commission] is not authorized to
approve a pricing scheme that requires a group of
utilities to pay for facilities from which its members
derive no benefits, or benefits that are trivial in
relation to the costs sought to be shifted to its
members.’’).
141 See infra II.D.2.
142 ISO–NE notes that not all generating facilities
are obligated to provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range. ISO–NE Initial
Comments at 9. Specifically, ISO–NE notes that
several older generating facilities in New England
have interconnection agreements that pre-date the
obligation to provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range. Id. ISO–NE states that
these resources choose to participate in the
Schedule 2 VAR compensation program, incurring
an obligation to maintain and provide VAR service
in New England. Id. Any generating facilities with
individualized bilateral contracts providing for
reactive power compensation within the standard
power factor range may pursue claims that they
have an independent contractual right to reactive
power compensation within the standard power
factor range, but we express no opinion here as to
whether any such generator would be entitled to
such compensation.
143 See, e.g., BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 21
(‘‘The purpose for which generation assets are built
(including reactive power capability to maintain
voltage levels for generation entering the grid) is to
make sales of real power.’’); SPP Order on
Rehearing, 121 FERC ¶ 61,196 at P 15 (‘‘As we have
previously explained, reactive power is required for
an interconnecting generator to deliver its power
and reactive power produced within the [standard
power factor range] and is, therefore, generally not
compensable.’’ (emphasis added)).
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reactive power compensation
framework, reactive power-related
transmission charges are not tied to
geographic need and result in excess
reactive power capability that is not
required for interconnection and does
not provide transmission customers
with commensurate reliability
benefits.144 Accordingly, we deny ISO–
NE’s and NYISO’s respective requests
for flexibility to include in transmission
rates charges associated with the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range.
56. We reject commenters’ arguments
that the final determination violates the
Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of
the U.S. Constitution. The final
determination’s elimination of reactive
power payments for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is not confiscatory
and would not amount to a taking of
property. As noted above, generating
facilities incur no or at most a de
minimis increase in variable costs
beyond the cost of providing real power
and have the opportunity to seek
recovery of any costs they do incur. In
addition, commenters’ arguments that
the obligation to provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range
is unconstitutional are impermissible
144 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12 (‘‘This
incentive structure to provide payment based on
reactive capability results in the building of
unnecessary capabilities in locations it is not or
may not be needed and does not allocate the costs
associated with reactive capability in a manner that
is at least roughly commensurate with the benefits
received.’’ (citing Ill. Com. Comm’n. v. FERC, 576
F.3d at 477)); MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 8 (‘‘Moreover, the capability-based
compensation methodology currently permitted by
the Commission . . . allows and even incentivizes
generators to add as much reactive equipment as
they desire, i.e., to gold plate a facility’s reactive
capability, regardless of whether that reactive
support is needed at that point on the grid.’’); TAPS
Initial Comments at 4–5 (‘‘Nor can customers be
assured they are receiving reliability benefits
commensurate to the reactive power compensation
paid under the current approach. The existing
approach to reactive power capability
compensation does not adequately consider a
generator’s actual contribution to reliability, or lack
thereof. For example, that approach does not
account for relevant factors such as location, the
need for reactive power, deliverability to where
reactive power may be needed, possible degradation
in generator performance or other changes over
time. The result is that the current approach to
reactive power compensation requires consumers to
pay excessive charges for reactive power that may
not be needed or is in the wrong location.’’
(citations omitted)). See Belmont Mun. Light Dep’t
v. FERC, 38 F.4th at 187–90 (finding that the
Commission’s acceptance of ISO–NE’s Inventoried
Energy Program ‘‘was not reasoned decision
making’’ because record evidence indicated that
certain types of generating facilities ‘‘would not
change their behavior in response to payments.’’).
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collateral attacks on our prior
determinations and unpersuasive.145
57. The Commission has repeatedly
held that ‘‘the provision of sufficient
reactive power is an obligation of a
generator interconnected to the system,
and . . . as a general matter, a generator
is not entitled to separate compensation
for providing reactive power within its
deadband.’’ 146 A generating facility
must in fact produce reactive power to
move real power from the generating
facility to the transmission system to
deliver its real power to customers,
while maintaining system reliability.147
It is only by virtue of comparability that
generating facilities were previously
entitled to reactive power
compensation.148
58. Simply stated, the obligation to
provide reactive power within the
standard power range exists
independent of, and was not altered by,
the NOPR’s proposal: it was stated in
145 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 12 n.33 (‘‘Moreover, as ‘legislation [that]
readjust[s] rights and burdens is not unlawful solely
because it upsets otherwise settled expectations,’
the Commission’s action implementing the changes
in the NOPR would not constitute an
unconstitutional taking just because the changes
would ‘impact the benefits and burdens’ of the
agreement entered into by generators
interconnecting with the Transmission System.
Generators have only a unilateral expectation of
payment for the provision of reactive power and not
a legitimate claim of entitlement to compensation.’’)
(citations omitted). See also MISO, 182 FERC
¶ 61,033 at P 62; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at PP 52–54 (‘‘Vistra has not persuaded us
that it has a property interest in continued Reactive
Service compensation under the Tariff, nor that
MISO TOs’ proposal would unconstitutionally
deprive generators of that putative property interest
under the Takings Clause or Due Process Clause of
the Fifth Amendment.’’).
146 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 62
(citing SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 28); MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 52
(finding that protesters constitutional claims were
impermissible collateral attacks on the
Commission’s prior determinations given ‘‘[t]he
obligation to provide Reactive Service exists
independent of, and was not altered by, MISO TOs’
proposal: it was stated in Order No. 2003 and
applies to individual generators through their
GIAs.’’).
147 See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 53 (‘‘[T]he function of generators’
Reactive Service is to ensure that generators’ real
power can enter the transmission grid while
maintaining system reliability.’’); SPP, 119 FERC
¶ 61,199 at P 28 (explaining that if a generator is
to sell (and be able to deliver) its power to a
customer, reactive power is essential to the
transaction).
148 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 4 (citing Order
No. 2003–A, 106 FERC ¶ 61,220 at P 416). See also
MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 26
(‘‘On rehearing, we continue to reject, as collateral
attacks on that longstanding policy, arguments that
stand-alone compensation for Reactive Service is
generically required—for example, to ensure that
generators can recover their costs for Reactive
Service capability. These arguments would negate
the conclusions in Order Nos. 2003 and 2003–A
that such compensation should not be provided,
except as required by the comparability standard.’’).
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Order No. 2003 and applies to
individual generating facilities through
their interconnection service
agreements. This final determination
changes only the allowance for
transmission providers to provide
compensation at their discretion to their
own and affiliated generating facilities,
and then to third-party generating
facilities under the comparability
standard for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range. This change eliminates a stream
of revenue under Schedule 2, but we
find here that such elimination is just
and reasonable given that the record
demonstrates that generating facilities
incur no or at most a de minimis
increase in variable costs beyond the
cost of providing real power.149
Moreover, to the extent that generating
facilities have any costs associated with
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range, generating
facilities may seek to recover these costs
through energy or capacity sales.150
Accordingly, and consistent with
precedent, commenters have not
persuaded us that they have a property
interest in continued compensation
under Schedule 2, or that this final
determination would unconstitutionally
deprive generating facilities of that
putative property interest under the
Takings Clause or Due Process Clause of
the Fifth Amendment.
59. We disagree with Eagle Creek’s
and the NHA’s assertions that most
reactive service rate schedules on file
enjoy the Mobile-Sierra presumption
and as a result, in order for the
Commission to disallow the existing
reactive service rates, each rate on file
must be demonstrated by the
Commission to ‘‘seriously harm the
public interest.’’ 151 While the MobileSierra doctrine establishes a more
rigorous application of the just and
149 See MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 6 (‘‘The MISO Transmission Owners’
experience supports the Commission’s preliminary
finding that providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range requires little or no
cost to generators. Generators incur little or no costs
beyond what is already needed to produce real
power because the same equipment used to produce
real power includes reactive power functions.’’
(citations omitted)); PJM IMM Reply Comments at
3 (‘‘Neither the [Indicated Trade Associations] nor
any other opposing commenter, nor any of the
precedent relied upon by opposing commenters,
identify any additional costs or more than de
minimis costs incurred by generators in order to
provide reactive capability.’’).
150 MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at
P 53; BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 20; BPA
Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at P 11; see
also NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 24; see also
MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 6;
PJM IMM Reply Comments at 3.
151 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4; NHA Initial
Comments at 8–9.
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reasonable standard when the
Commission proposes to change an
individual contract negotiated at armslength,152 reactive power-related
transmission rates are not individually
negotiated contract rates, but rather
transmission owner tariff-based rates of
general applicability reflected in the
transmission owner’s Schedule 2.153
The fact that the Commission has
accepted generating facilities’ rate
filings setting forth reactive power rates
covering the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range
establishes only the rate at which the
generating facility is obligated to sell
reactive power to a transmission
provider; that rate does not establish an
obligation for the transmission provider
to purchase such reactive power. Those
individual rates establish only the
charges that transmission providers will
include in transmission rates if, and
only if the transmission providers’
OATTs require the payment of
compensation for reactive power.154
60. As discussed above, the final
determination requires revisions to
152 The Commission has explained that the
Mobile-Sierra ‘‘public interest’’ presumption
applies to an agreement only if the agreement has
certain characteristics that justify the presumption.
In ruling on whether the characteristics necessary
to justify a Mobile-Sierra presumption are present,
the Commission must determine whether the
agreement at issue embodies either: (1)
individualized rates, terms, or conditions that apply
only to sophisticated parties who negotiated them
freely at arm’s length; or (2) rates, terms, or
conditions that are generally applicable or that
arose in circumstances that do not provide the
assurance of justness and reasonableness associated
with arm’s-length negotiations. Unlike the latter,
the former constitute contract rates, terms, or
conditions that necessarily qualify for a MobileSierra presumption. E.g., Linden VFT, LLC v. Pub.
Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 161 FERC ¶ 61,264, at P 27
(2017); PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 161 FERC
¶ 61,262, at P 18 (2017); Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 144
FERC ¶ 61,059, at P 127 (2013), order on reh’g and
compliance, 149 FERC ¶ 61,048, at P 94 (2014)
(citations omitted); Midwest Indep. Transmission
Sys. Operator, Inc., 142 FERC ¶ 61,215, at P 177
(2013), order on reh’g and compliance, 147 FERC
¶ 61,127, at P 108 (2014) (citations omitted).
153 See, e.g., Wabash Valley Power Ass’n, Inc. v.
FERC, 45 F.4th 115, 120 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (‘‘[A]
contract requiring the purchaser to pay a utility’s
‘going rate’ on file with FERC, without more, does
not eliminate review under the ordinary just-andreasonable standard.’’).
154 Cf. Whitetail Solar 3, LLC, Opinion No. 583,
184 FERC ¶ 61,145, at P 45 (2023) (affirming the
Presiding Judge’s finding that Schedule 2, not
Applicants’ interconnection agreements, determines
whether generating facilities are eligible for
compensation, therefore, ‘‘there is no reason for the
Commission to amend the [interconnection
agreements] of all existing distribution-connected
generation, as Applicants suggest would be
necessary in light of the Initial Decision.’’); see also
MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 63 (‘‘As described
above, MISO [Transmission Owners] have the
unilateral right to change Schedule 2 through an
FPA section 205 filing and by doing so, they
automatically change the rate payable for Reactive
Service that generators contractually agreed to in
section 9.6.3 of their GIAs.’’ (citations omitted)).
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Schedule 2 to prohibit the inclusion in
transmission rates of charges associated
with reactive power in the standard
power factor range and, for consistency,
also requires conforming revisions to
the pro forma LGIA and pro forma SGIA
to remove language related to the
comparability standard. Since Schedule
2 is a tariff-based rate, that rate can be
modified under the ordinary just and
reasonable standard.155 However, this
final determination does not affect the
ability of generating facilities to pursue
claims that they have an independent
contractual right to reactive power
compensation within the standard
power factor range, based on a bilateral
agreement with the relevant
transmission owner.156
61. We also find that Generation
Developers’ and Reactive Service
Providers’ 157 assertions that the final
determination would violate Atlantic
City by depriving generating facilities of
their FPA section 205 filing rights lack
merit. The Commission is not depriving
generating facilities of their filing rights.
The commenters’ arguments
fundamentally misunderstand
generating facility compensation under
the Commission’s pro forma OATT and
interconnection agreements. The final
determination is not adjusting,
overturning, or reducing to zero any
generating facility’s rate for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range. The final determination
addresses only the justness and
reasonableness of transmission rates
chargeable to transmission customers
under Schedule 2 and by extension,
payable to the transmission providers’
own generating facilities or affiliated
generating facilities and third-party
generating facilities under the
comparability standard, consistent with
their interconnection agreements, not
any independent right of generating
facilities to establish a rate under FPA
155 See Joint Customers Reply Comments at 14
(‘‘There is no validity to the argument that
individual rate challenges must be pursued by the
Commission or complainants, and it is well
established that a change to the underlying
Schedule 2 in a transmission provider’s tariff, as
proposed by the Commission in the NOPR, will
contemporaneously end compensation to thirdparty generators with no further action required.’’).
156 For example, ISO–NE and NEPOOL claim that
certain agreements exist that do not obligate certain
non-generator resources to provide reactive power
either within or outside of the standard power
factor range and are still entitled to compensation.
See supra n.142; ISO–NE Initial Comments at 9;
NEPOOL Reply Comments at 9. We express no
opinion here as to whether any such generating
facility, such as those situations noted by ISO–NE
and NEPOOL, would be entitled to such
compensation under such agreements.
157 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
31–32 (citing Atl. City, 295 F.3d at 9–10); Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 54.
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section 205. While this does result in
generating facilities, affiliated and nonaffiliated, no longer being entitled to
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range as a function of
comparability, the Commission has
found that such an outcome does not
undermine the generating facilities’ FPA
section 205 filing rights.158
B. Cost of Producing Reactive Power
62. The NOPR preliminarily found
that providing compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is unjust
and unreasonable. The Commission
relied on three key points to support
this preliminary finding.
63. First, the NOPR relied on the
Commission’s prior findings that, for
both synchronous and non-synchronous
generating facilities, because all
158 Cf. MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 65 (‘‘[W]e
find that MISO TOs’ proposal does not restrict
independent power producers’ FPA section 205
rights to file a rate for reactive power; instead, the
proposal addresses only the rates chargeable to
transmission customers under Schedule 2 and by
extension, payable to resources consistent with
their GIAs, not any independent right of generators
to seek compensation under FPA section 205.’’);
Opinion No. 583, 184 FERC ¶ 61,145 at P 45
(‘‘Applicants’ [interconnection agreements] do not
establish an independent right outside the context
of Schedule 2 to reactive power compensation for
merely meeting the technical requirements required
for interconnection.’’); see also Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 14 (‘‘Without comparability as
an issue, it is existing Commission policy that it is
inappropriate to compensate within the standard
power factor range. The Order No. 2003
determination that compensation should not be
paid for reactive service meeting interconnection
requirements remains well supported.’’ (emphasis
in original)). We also note that individual
generating facility reactive power tariffs themselves
do not establish a payment obligation, only the rate
that a buyer will pay if it takes service. A tariff rate
is an offer to sell service at the stated rate; it does
not establish an obligation on any party to pay that
rate. See 18 CFR 35.2(c)(1) (‘‘The term tariff as used
herein shall mean a statement of (1) electric service
as defined in paragraph (a) of this section offered
on a generally applicable basis) (emphasis added));
Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 149 FERC ¶ 61,048 at P 106
(‘‘The Commission’s use of the term ‘tariff rates’ as
generally applicable rates is justified by the
definition of the term ‘tariff’ set forth in the
Commission’s regulations under the FPA, which
state, in part, that a tariff is ‘a statement of . . .
electric service . . . offered on a generally
applicable basis.’ ’’). In order to constitute an
obligation, a party must sign a pro forma or other
service agreement. See Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator
Corp., 100 FERC ¶ 61,234, at 61,834 (2002) (‘‘[T]he
Commission moved to a paradigm of standard
agreements in which terms and conditions that are
included in a public utility’s OATT and bilateral
contracts are replaced by pro forma service
agreements’’). Therefore, if transmission providers
revise their Schedule 2’s to eliminate compensation
for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range, no party will exist to
pay the generating facility’s filed tariff rate. See,
e.g., PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 (finding that the
transmission owner is not required to pay for
reactive power, but not instituting section 206
proceedings to cancel reactive power tariffs).
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equipment used to produce reactive
power is also necessary to produce and
deliver real power to the transmission
system, there are no incremental fixed
costs associated with the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range.159 The NOPR also
explained that the Commission has
repeatedly found, that ‘‘[v]ariable costs
of generating reactive power are de
minimis’’ and ‘‘generally limited to
changes in losses within the generating
facility which are part of the overall
efficiency of the resource and, as such,
are typically captured in the resource
offers.’’ 160 Thus, by providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range, both synchronous and
nonsynchronous facilities incur no
additional fixed costs and at most de
minimis variable costs beyond which
they already incur to provide real
power.161
64. Second, the NOPR relied on the
fact that all generating facilities must
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range as an
obligation of good utility practice and to
meet the obligations under their
interconnection agreements.162
159 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at PP 29–31
(‘‘[S]ynchronous and non-synchronous resources
provide real and reactive power as joint products,
with joint costs.’’).
160 Id. P 31.
161 Id. PP 8, 28.
162 Id. P 33 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at
P 53 (‘‘Bearing in mind that the provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor
range is, in the first instance, an obligation of the
interconnecting generator and good utility practice,
MISO [transmission owners] do not have an
obligation to continue to compensate an
independent generator for reactive power within
the standard power factor range when its own or
affiliated generators are no longer being
compensated.’’ (citations omitted)); id. P 54 (‘‘We
find unpersuasive protesters’ arguments that it is
not just and reasonable to eliminate compensation
for Reactive Service within the standard power
factor range because generators have come to rely
on the compensation for Reactive Service in order
for the generators to remain financially viable. The
Commission has previously rejected such
arguments, finding that all newly interconnecting
generators are required to provide reactive power
within the power factor range of 0.95 leading to
0.95 lagging as a condition of interconnection.’’
(citations omitted)); PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP
29, 33 (rejecting generating facility’s arguments that
it is ‘‘just and reasonable for it to be compensated
for investments made’’ to provide reactive support
consistent with interconnection requirements even
though transmission provider elected to no longer
pay its own or affiliate generators for such reactive
power); Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103 at P 22
(finding that the generating facility’s argument,
‘‘that it is not just and reasonable to eliminate their
compensation for reactive service because they
made investments in their generating facilities
based on the expectation that they would receive
compensation for reactive service,’’ unpersuasive
because all newly interconnecting generators are
required to provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range as a condition of
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Additionally, the NOPR emphasized
that ‘‘reactive support by generating
facilities operating within the standard
power factor range ensures that when
these facilities inject real power—the
product that their facilities exist to
create and sell—onto the grid under
normal conditions, they can do their
part to maintain adequate voltages and
to not threaten reliability.’’ 163 In other
words, a generating facility must
produce reactive power within the
standard power factor range in order to
generate and safely inject real power
into the transmission system and
comply with reliability requirements.
As such, providing reactive power
within the standard power factor range
can be regarded as a joint product with
providing real power, with joint costs.
65. Third, the NOPR noted that in
regions where generating facilities
recover their costs by participating in
organized competitive wholesale
markets, providing separate
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range risks
overcompensation and market
distortions in ways that did not exist
prior to the existence of organized
markets.164 The NOPR explained that
the AEP Methodology was created in an
era of vertically integrated utilities,
when most utilities filed FERC Form
No. 1s, used the Uniform System of
Accounts (USofA) to classify their costs,
and recovered those costs through costbased rates.165 Today, however, most
generating facilities recover their costs
through competitive markets in both
RTO/ISO and non-RTO/ISO regions, so
the imprecision of the AEP
Methodology, the NOPR explained,
becomes more significant because it can
lead to arbitrary increases in the utility’s
total recovery when cost-based reactive
power payments are added to any
market recoveries.166 The NOPR added
that this is especially true when markets
fail to account for separate, cost-based
reactive power revenues by using
standard rate making techniques.167
interconnection); Order No. 2003, 104 FERC
¶ 61,103 at P 546.
163 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 13 (citing MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 23).
164 Id. at P 39.
165 Id.
166 Id.
167 Id. at 39 & nn.100–02. The Commission noted
that, in PJM for example, while the capacity market
rules currently account for reactive power payments
to resources by assuming average reactive power
compensation of $2,546 per MW-year, reactive
power revenue requirements in PJM range from
roughly $1,000 per MW-year to $13,000 per MWyear. The Commission noted that this wide range
of actual compensation, which is both above and
below the assumed reactive power compensation in
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1. Comments
66. Many commenters support the
NOPR’s finding that transmission
charges for generating facilities’
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range are unjust
and unreasonable.168 Likewise, many
commenters support the NOPR’s
preliminary finding that generating
facilities already provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range
at no cost or de minimis cost.169 Ameren
and MISO Transmission Owners agree
with the NOPR that providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range requires little or no cost to
generators because the same equipment
used to produce real power includes
reactive power functions.170 In support,
MISO Transmission Owners point to
MISO and the MISO Rehearing Order
wherein the Commission also
concluded that, based on that record,
reactive power service within the
standard power factor range required
little or no incremental investment.
MISO Transmission Owners add that, as
the Commission found in the MISO
Rehearing Order, even newer wind
turbines use inverters that allow
generating facilities to produce and
control reactive power without costly
additional equipment.171 MISO
Transmission Owners also state that
generating facility equipment typically
comes with reactive power capabilities
the capacity market rules, can lead to market
distortions.
168 AEP; Ameren; Joint Consumer Advocates;
Joint Customers; MISO Transmission Owners; New
England Consumer Advocates; Ohio FEA; PGE;
PJM; the PJM IMM; the Transmission Access Policy
Study Group.
169 See Ameren Initial Comments at 3; Joint
Customers Reply Comments at 11–13; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 5–7; New
England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
4–6; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4.
170 Ameren Initial Comments at 3 (citing BPA, 120
FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 21 (‘‘Evidence from numerous
reactive power rate filings demonstrates newly
interconnecting resources have the capability to
provide reactive power, some well in excess of the
required 0.95 leading to 0.95 lagging. It is also welldocumented that the same equipment used to
produce real power includes reactive power
functions and thus there is little, if any, incremental
cost associated with providing reactive power.’’));
MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 5–
7 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 55; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP 25 n.76,
29–30, 34, 41–42 (‘‘[T]he record establishes, that
Reactive Service requires little or no incremental
investment.’’)); MISO Transmission Owners Reply
Comments at 9; see also Ohio FEA Initial Comments
at 3.
171 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 7 & n.18 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 30 n.98 (‘‘[O]lder wind generators
could not produce and control reactive power
without the use of costly equipment [ ] ‘because
they did not use inverters like other nonsynchronous generators’ but modern turbines now
use inverters and newer wind generators now
can.’’)).
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that not only meet the standard range
requirements (i.e., 0.95 leading and 0.95
lagging) but exceed them (e.g., 0.80–
0.90).172 MISO Transmission Owners
argue that since generating facilities
bear no or at most de minimis
incremental costs to provide reactive
power within the standard power factor
range, one must consider what the
actual purpose is of compensating
generating facilities for such service.173
67. Joint Customers state that attempts
to undermine the NOPR, such as
challenging the assertion that
incremental costs of providing reactive
service within the standard power factor
range are de minimis, are meritless.174
Joint Customers argue that the costs
incurred by generators to meet
interconnection requirements are
necessary for safe and reliable grid
operations and that arguments against
the de minimis designation often
misrepresent the incremental costs
involved in meeting interconnection
requirements versus providing
additional reactive capability.175 Joint
Customers note that claims of excessive
costs for non-synchronous generators to
comply with power factor requirements
are collateral attacks on prior
Commission orders, particularly Order
No. 827.176
68. The PJM IMM, MISO
Transmission Owners, and several other
commenters assert that providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is an obligation of
interconnection and consistent with
good utility practice.177 The PJM IMM
asserts that the Commission has a long
172 Id.
at 7.
at 9.
174 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 11–13.
175 Id.
176 Id. at 13 (citing Order No. 827, 155 FERC
¶ 61,277 at P 11 (‘‘Prior to Order No. 827, nonsynchronous generators were exempt from
complying with power factor requirements. The
entire point of Order No. 827 was to find that
technological advancements had reduced the cost of
compliance such that non-synchronous generators
no longer needed the exemption. The order also
explicitly maintained the compensation scheme for
reactive power, with all that means for the
elimination of compensation if not justified by
comparability.’’).
177 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6–9 (citing PJM,
OATT, Attachment O, §§ 4.7.1.1.1., 4.7.1.2. (3.0.0));
Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6–
7; MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at
4; TAPS Initial Comments at 6; Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 5; Joint Customers Initial Comments
at 14–16; PGE Initial Comments at 4 (citing MISO,
182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 53 (noting that in the
acceptance of the MISO Transmission Owners
application to end compensation within the
standard power application, the Commission
reiterated its policy ‘‘that the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range is, in
the first instance, an obligation of the
interconnecting generator and good utility
practice.’’)).
173 Id.
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standing policy that ‘‘treats the
provision of reactive power inside the
[standard power factor range] as an
obligation of good utility practice rather
than as a compensable service and
permits compensation inside the
[standard power factor range] only as a
function of comparability.’’ 178
69. The PJM IMM states that reactive
power is not the only design obligation
the generation interconnection
customers assume.179 The PJM IMM
notes, for example, that generating
facilities are required to provide
primary frequency response capability,
but the PJM OATT does not provide an
out of market payment for such service
because it is treated as an obligation
assumed by generation interconnection
customers for receiving interconnection
service.180 MISO Transmission Owners
also point out that the SEIA, the
national trade association for the U.S.
solar industry, has acknowledged that
reactive power compensation does not
affect a generator’s operations and that
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is required
regardless of compensation.181
70. Additionally, MISO Transmission
Owners agree that the Commission’s
line of precedent since Order No. 2003
has required interconnecting generators
to be able to provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range
without compensation, with few
exceptions.182 MISO Transmission
Owners argue that generators are
178 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6–8 (citing
NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 5 (citing BPA
Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at P 18)); see
also MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 10–12.
179 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 8.
180 Id. (citing PJM, OATT, Attachment O § 4.7.2.
(3.0.0)).
181 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 9 & n.24 (citing SEIA, Reactive Power
Compensation: How to Unlock New Revenue
Opportunities for Solar and Storage Projects, Solar
Energy Industries Association 4 (July 29, 2020),
https://old.seia.org/sites/default/files/2023-01/
Speaker%20Q&A%20-%20Reactive%20Power
%20Compensation%20Webinar.pdf (also attached
as Exhibit I) (‘‘Filing for and receiving reactive
revenues has no impact on the generator’s operating
profile. The ISO/RTOs have a right to dispatch
generators to provide reactive service as needed to
maintain reliability.’’)). The MISO Transmission
Owners also add that ‘‘[a]t the same time MISO was
experiencing a dramatic increase in the amounts
transmission customers paid for reactive power
service prior to its elimination of compensation for
reactive power service within the deadband, SEIA
highlighted that MISO was one of the two ‘most
lucrative’ regions for reactive power compensation,
where generators received millions of dollars in
compensation for having the capability to produce
reactive power within the deadband, a capability
that was already a condition of obtaining
interconnection.’’ Id. at 9–11.
182 Id. at 10–11 (citing Order No. 2003, 104 FERC
¶ 61,103 at P 546; Order No. 2003–A, 106 FERC
¶ 61,220 at PP 410, 416; Order No. 827, 155 FERC
¶ 61,277 at P 59).
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incented by their own reliability
requirements to install the equipment
that will help keep their projects on-line
and delivering real power, and that
‘‘skimping’’ on equipment that can
provide reactive power across a range of
operating conditions is not in
generators’ best operational interests or
consistent with good utility practice.183
MISO Transmission Owners state that
generating facilities are also required by
the North American Electric Reliability
Corporation (NERC) reliability standards
to operate in automatic voltage control
mode and maintain a voltage set point
provided by the transmission
provider.184
71. MISO Transmission Owners and
the PJM IMM agree with the NOPR’s
preliminary finding that the current
reactive power compensation
framework allows for undue
compensation and potential market
distortions, and they argue that the
current compensation framework leads
to ‘‘black-box’’ settlements that lack
transparency and result in vastly
disparate rates.185 The PJM IMM argues
that separately compensating resources
based on a judgment-based allocation of
capital costs is not appropriate in the
PJM markets.186 The PJM IMM argues
that cost-of-service compensation for
reactive power distorts markets and
undermines competition.187 The PJM
IMM asserts that the current rules create
strong incentives for generating facilities
to attempt to maximize the allocation of
capital costs to reactive service in order
to maximize guaranteed, nonmarket
revenues.188 The PJM IMM claims that
there is no reasonable basis for the
disparity in the price to customers from
different types of generators for the
same service and that reactive power is
a homogeneous product which should
have the same price for all sellers. The
PJM IMM notes that the most recent
reactive power rate cases settled prior to
183 Id. at 11 & n.29 (citing MISO Rehearing Order,
184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 35 n.116 (‘‘[G]enerators
have incentives to install equipment to ensure that
their generation remains online and delivering real
power.’’)).
184 Id. at 11–12 (citing Reliability Standard VAR–
002–3—Generator Operation for Maintaining
Network Voltage Schedules), at 2 (Aug. 1, 2014),
https://www.nerc.com/pa/Stand/Reliability%20
Standards/VAR-002-3.pdf (‘‘R2 . . . Generator
Operator shall maintain the generator voltage or
Reactive Power schedule (within each generating
Facility’s capabilities).’’).
185 Id. at 8; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4–6; see
also Joint Customers Initial Comments at 4–6.
186 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 3–4.
187 Id. at 4–6.
188 Id. at 4. The PJM IMM asserts that these
revenues provide a nonmarket advantage to
generating facilities that receive them, resulting in
an arbitrary and nonmarket-based advantage (i.e.,
distortionary).
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93425
issuance of the NOPR have resulted in
costs well in excess of the reactive
power revenue offset assumed in PJM’s
capacity market.189
72. Many other commenters, in
contrast, challenge the Commission’s
preliminary finding that providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range has no or de minimis
costs.190 The Indicated Trade
Associations and Generation Developers
emphasize that the costs of equipment
and production associated with reactive
power, particularly for renewable
resources, are substantial and involve
significant capital investments.191
Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers,
NEPGA, and Reactive Service Providers
assert that eliminating compensation for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is unjust and
unreasonable, given the substantial
capital costs incurred by generators.192
They argue that the NOPR’s proposal
fails to account for these costs as well
as for lost opportunities for real power
generation and renewable energy
credits.193 They assert that the
189 Id. at 6 (explaining that in PJM’s capacity
market, ‘‘the parameters that define the demand
curve . . . are based on the costs of new entry of
a reference generating unit, less net revenues from
other PJM markets’’ such as reactive power
revenues). The PJM IMM explains that the level of
these net revenues that are subtracted, or offset,
from the costs of new entry, are based on a
calculation from the PJM IMM of the average
Schedule 2 payment for reactive done in 2008 and
based on reactive rates from prior years. However,
the PJM IMM states that ‘‘[m]ost recent cases settled
prior to issuance of the NOPR have settled for costs
well in excess of the average cost and well in excess
of the [] offset amount’’ and that ‘‘[t]he issue is
growing in significance.’’ Id. at 5.
190 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3–4; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 7; ACORE
Initial Comments at 2; Elevate Renewables Initial
Comments at 9–12; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 13; Glenvale Initial Comments at 9–
10; Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 2, 9–10; Indicated Trade Associations
Initial Comments at 2, 6; Middle River Power Initial
Comments at 2–3; NEI Initial Comments at 4–5, 8–
9; NHA Initial Comments at 2, 4–5. Indicated Trade
Associations also assert that prior Commission
orders cited by the NOPR to support the assertion
that no costs or de minimis costs are incurred to
provide reactive power within the standard power
factor range do not provide evidence to support the
conclusion. Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 8 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at
P 21; BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at
P 7 n.7; Ariz. Pub. Serv. Co., 94 FERC ¶ 61,027, at
61,080 (2001) (APS)); Onward Energy Reply
Comments at 2.
191 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 10; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 13.
192 Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 6–7; NEPGA Reply Comments at 3 (citing
Indicated Trade Association Initial Comments,
Affidavit of Michael Borgatti, Docket No. RM22–2–
000 at 9–10 (filed May 28, 2024)); Reactive Service
Providers Initial Comments at 37–40.
193 See Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 11–12 (‘‘[F]or renewable resources,
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Commission’s proposal is inconsistent
with the FPA’s purpose of ensuring just
and reasonable returns on investment,
particularly for inverter-based resources,
which incur distinct incremental costs
for reactive power provision.194
73. Some commenters argue that there
is an insufficient legal foundation under
section 206 of the FPA to demonstrate
that all existing reactive power rates are
unjust and unreasonable.195 Generation
Developers assert that the fact that many
generators are required to provide
reactive power as a condition of
receiving interconnection service and
consistent with good utility practice
does not provide a basis for concluding
that the compensation received by
generating facilities is unjust and
unreasonable.196 Generation Developers
assert that the Commission’s reasoning
improperly assumes that generating
facilities investing in reactive power
capability are not performing a service
that benefits the transmission system,
but is instead only needed to support
their own deliveries.197 Generation
Developers assert that the NOPR’s
categorical determination that the just
and reasonable reactive power rate is
zero, and thus all reactive rates that are
not zero are unjust and unreasonable,
fails to comply with the requirements of
section 206 of the FPA.198 NEI adds that
the Commission failed to meet its
section 206 burden because the NOPR
does not offer substantial evidence that
reactive power costs are zero or
minimal, cost allocation is
inappropriate, or reducing reactive
power compensation to zero would
allow generators to recover their costs,
plus a reasonable rate of return.199
74. Generation Developers assert that
the Commission ignores welldocumented evidence that certain types
of generating facilities, namely inverterbased generating facilities, incur
distinct, incremental costs associated
with providing reactive power.200
Generation Developers assert that, when
the Commission first required that
having to back down generation in order to produce
reactive power would also result in lost renewable
electricity production tax credits, renewable energy
certificates, and similar benefits’’); Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 13.
194 See Indicated Trade Associations Reply
Comments at 7; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 13, 20–21.
195 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
24–25; Middle River Power Initial Comments at 4;
NEI Initial Comments at 7; PSEG Initial Comments
at 2–3, 11–12; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 7–54; NYISO Initial Comments at 1.
196 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 25.
197 Id.
198 Id. at 31; PSEG Initial Comments at 12–13.
199 NEI Initial Comments at 8.
200 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
13–17.
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generating facilities be capable of
supplying reactive power within the
standard power factor range in Order
No. 2003, it explicitly exempted wind
generating facilities from that
requirement because most wind
generators could not maintain the power
factor range.201 Generation Developers
state that the Commission also generally
exempted wind generators from
operating within the standard power
factor range in Order No. 661 because
‘‘for wind plants, reactive power
capability is a significant added
cost.’’ 202 Generation Developers assert
that while the Commission removed this
exemption in Order No. 827 203 after
finding that technological advancements
made it so the cost of reactive power no
longer presented an obstacle to the
development of wind generation, it
‘‘notably did not find that there were no
such costs or even de minimis costs
associated with the provision of reactive
power by wind resources.’’ 204 Instead,
Generation Developers argue that the
Commission removed this exemption
based on its finding that imposing an
obligation on non-synchronous
generating facilities to provide reactive
power within the standard power factor
range was necessary to support
transmission service and reliability.205
Generation Developers add that, even if
costs have declined over the years, the
Commission has not demonstrated that
it would be just and reasonable to
nullify the rate schedules of facilities
201 Id. at 13 (citing Order No. 2003, 104 FERC
¶ 61,103 (noting that the Commission exempted
wind generation from the requirement because
‘‘wind generators for the most part cannot maintain
the required power factor, simply because the
necessary technology does not exist for wind
generators’’)).
202 Id. at 13–14 (citing Order No. 661, 111 FERC
¶ 61,353 at P 46; Order No. 661–A, 113 FERC
¶ 61,254). Generation Developers add that in Order
No. 661, the Commission was presented with
evidence that ‘‘wind turbines cannot meet the
proposed power factor standard over the full range
of real power output, and that dynamic VAR control
(DVAR) banks or static capacitors would have to be
installed at an additional expense to meet the
proposed power factor over the entire range.’’
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 13
(citing Order No. 661–A, 113 FERC ¶ 61,254 at P 45
(emphasis added)). Generation Developers state that
while Order No. 661 was limited to wind resources,
the Commission extended the exemption to other
non-synchronous resources on a case-by-case basis.
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 14
(citing Nev. Power Co., 130 FERC ¶ 61,147, at P 27
(2010)).
203 Order No. 827, 155 FERC ¶ 61,277 at P 21.
204 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 14.
205 Id. (citing Order No. 827, 155 FERC ¶ 61,277
at P 4) (‘‘The Commission instead made its decision
to apply reactive power requirements to nonsynchronous resources based on its ‘balancing the
costs to newly-interconnecting non-synchronous
generators of providing reactive power with the
benefits to the transmission system of having
another source of reactive power.’ ’’).
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that came online years before the
technological advancements referenced
in Order No. 827 and had to make
incremental investments to its facility to
produce reactive power within the
standard power factor range.206
75. Generation Developers argue that
the 2014 Staff Report is the most recent
and comprehensive evidence on the
costs that non-synchronous generating
facilities incur in providing reactive
power.207 Generation Developers assert
that the NOPR does not provide any
evidence to support that the costs of
providing reactive power have changed
since the Commission’s observations in
the 2014 Staff Report, but instead relies
on a rehearing order in a proceeding
concerning the MISO transmission
owners’ proposal to eliminate reactive
power compensation within the
standard power factor range for the
proposition that non-synchronous
generating facilities have no or de
minimis costs.208 Generation Developers
assert that the Commission’s reliance on
a statement from the MISO Rehearing
Order, and the purported failure of
parties in that proceeding to
demonstrate costs of non-synchronous
facilities, does not satisfy the
Commission’s burden in this case.209
Generation Developers add that the
Commission’s reliance on cases that predate the emergence of non-synchronous
generating facilities for the proposition
that all generating facilities have no or
de minimis costs is misplaced.210 For
example, Generation Developers
contend that the Commission erred in
citing Duke Energy Corporation’s
comments to the NOI in support of its
finding that the inverter is the most
critical equipment for the production of
reactive power from non-synchronous
resources.211
76. PSEG similarly notes that the
Commission has long used the AEP
Methodology to allocate costs associated
206 Id.
at 17.
at 14–15 (citing 2014 Staff Report (‘‘[M]ost
dynamic reactive power, which is crucial to
transmission system reliability, is provided by
generators.’’). Specifically, Generation Developers
state that the 2014 Staff Report made the following
findings: ‘‘(1) the costs of reactive power equipment
for wind generators range from 3.18% to 4% of their
capital costs; and (2) the costs of adding reactive
power capability to solar photovoltaic generators
range from 2% to 20% of a project’s total costs,
depending on project size.’’ Id. at 15 (citing 2014
Staff Report app. 2 at 2–3).
208 Id. at 15 (citing NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at
P 29 n.70 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 30)).
209 Id.
210 Id. at 16 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211;
METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–53;
APS, 94 FERC at 61,080).
211 Id. at 16–17 n.52 (citing Duke Energy
Corporation Initial Comments to the NOI at 4).
207 Id.
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with the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor
range.212 PSEG witness Dr. Dumais
observes that the AEP Methodology
identifies four categories of equipment
costs that are involved in the production
of reactive power from synchronous
generating facilities.213
77. Indicated Trade Associations
argue that the cases cited to in the
NOPR to support the finding that there
are no or de minimis costs associated
with producing reactive power do not
support the Commission’s assertion.214
For example, Indicated Trade
Associations assert that in BPA, the
Commission summarily stated without
evidence that ‘‘the incremental cost of
reactive power service within the
deadband is minimal.’’ 215 Indicated
Trade Associations assert that, on
rehearing, however, when a party
argued that ‘‘ ‘only the short-run
marginal cost of producing the next
increment of reactive power ‘can
logically be described as minimal’
because it excludes capability costs,’
. . . the Commission sidestepped this
issue, stating that ‘the issue of whether
or not the cost is minimal is not relevant
to whether the independent power
producers are entitled to
compensation.’ ’’ 216 Indicated Trade
Associations argue that in APS, another
order cited in the NOPR, ‘‘the
Commission simply noted that
intervenors ‘have not demonstrated that
[the proposed reactive power]
requirement will limit the real power
output of a generating unit and therefore
will not result in any lost opportunity
costs.’ ’’ 217
78. Elevate and Glenvale further argue
that the Commission’s assumption that
all resource classes, including energy
storage resources, incur no or minimal
costs is unsupported by evidence.218
Elevate asserts that recurring capital
investments are required to address
battery degradation caused by the
provision of reactive power.219
Specifically, Elevate argues that while
the level of degradation increases as the
reactive power to real power ratio
moves further from unity, even the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range contributes
to the degradation of the storage
resource’s capability.220 Elevate states
that energy storage resources must make
significant and recurring capital
investments to address this degradation,
which, in Elevate’s experience, costs
approximately one percent of the
resource’s original capital investment
annually.221 Elevate asserts that the
record is devoid of any evidence that
energy storage resources incur no or de
minimis costs to provide reactive
power.222 Glenvale argues that there are
marginal, operational, and replacement
costs associated with providing reactive
power within the power factor range for
solar generating facilities.223
Specifically, Glenvale asserts that, at the
capital investment stage, there are
different inverter options that allow
generating facilities to provide reactive
service outside of generating hours (e.g.,
allowing solar generating facilities to
provide reactive power at night) and
that this incurs additional costs which
would not be required if the generating
facility were not set up to provide
reactive power at night.224 Glenvale also
asserts that inverters use electricity to
provide reactive power, explaining that
when a generating facility is
synchronized, this presents as reduced
generation, and when a generating
facility is not synchronized, the
generator must either use an alternate
power source or it presents as negative
generation (both of which Elevate states
result in additional costs).225 Glenvale
also states that the provision of reactive
power can result in a reduced inverter
service life.226 Glenvale notes that it is
difficult to allocate these costs among
each of the three service conditions—
within the standard power factor range
while synchronized, within the
standard power factor range at night,
and outside the standard power factor
range at all times—but Glenvale asserts
that at least some of the costs are
attributable to providing reactive power
220 Elevate
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212 PSEG
Initial Comments at 9.
213 Id., Prepared Testimony of Dr. Paul A. Dumais
at 11, 1:11.
214 Indicated Trade Association Initial Comments
at 7–8.
215 Id. at 8 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P
21).
216 Id. (citing BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC
¶ 61,273 at n.7).
217 Id. (quoting APS, 94 FERC at 61,080; citing
NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 29 n.70).
218 Elevate Initial Comments at 9–12; Elevate
Reply Comments at 7–9; Glenvale Initial Comments
at 9–10.
219 Elevate Initial Comments at 9–12; Elevate
Reply Comments at 7–9.
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Reply Comments at 8.
221 Id.
222 Elevate
Initial Comments at 12.
Initial Comments at 9–10.
223 Glenvale
224 Id.
at 9.
225 Id.
226 Id. at 9–10 & n.29 (citing Ramanathan
Thiagarajan, Adarsh Nagarajan, Peter Hacke, and
Ingrid Repins, Effect of Reactive Power on
Photovoltaic Inverter Reliability and Lifetimes
(2019), https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy19osti/
73648.pdf.) (‘‘One characterization in recent
research is that providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range reduces service life by
one year, and that providing reactive power outside
of the standard range reduces service life by a
second year.’’)).
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93427
within the standard power factor
range.227 NEI asserts that there are real
costs for nuclear generating facilities to
provide and maintain reactive power
capability, including: properly sized
generators, maintenance associated with
normal operations to preserve reactive
power capability, and additional repairs
that may be needed to address agerelated degradation to equipment that
might otherwise impair reactive power
capability.228
79. Relatedly, NEI explains that
nuclear generators are most likely to be
called upon to provide reactive power
services and thus are the generators
most likely to face accelerated
degradation and damage to reactive
power equipment.229
80. Reactive Service Providers argue
that there is no evidence to support the
claim that providing reactive power
within the standard power factor range
requires no incremental investment, and
that even if the investment needed were
de minimis, that would not be a reason
to not provide compensation.230
Reactive Service Providers further
contend that there is no evidence that
the costs of providing reactive service
have increased since the advent of RTOs
and IPPs 231 or that generating facilities
are recovering their costs in regions
where transmission providers do not
provide compensation.232
81. Eagle Creek criticizes the
Commission’s determination that there
are no or de minimis costs associated
with the provision of reactive power in
the standard power factor range as
flawed based on its own tariff cases
under the AEP Methodology and argues
that eliminating compensation for
reactive power would be arbitrary and
capricious.233 ACORE, Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers, and Middle
River Power similarly argue that their
facilities have demonstrated just and
reasonable compensation covering
actual reactive power costs during
settlement negotiations.234
227 Id.
at 10.
Initial Comments at 5.
229 Id. at 14–16.
230 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
37–40.
231 Id. at 31–34.
232 Id. at 37–41.
233 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3–4. Eagle
Creek argues that, for each of its tariff cases, it
submitted evidence documentation of the fixed and
sunk costs that it invested to increase its reactive
power generation. Id.
234 ACORE Initial Comments at 2; Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 9;
Middle River Power Initial Comments at 2–3
(noting that Middle River Power owns 19 fossilfired generating facilities that recover
approximately $4.5 million in annual reactive
power revenues through their reactive service tariffs
228 NEI
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82. Indicated Trade Associations
assert that the Commission fails to
reconcile the NOPR’s insistence that
there are no segregable costs associated
with the provision of reactive power
with its longstanding precedent of the
AEP Methodology, where the
Commission approved isolating costs of
providing reactive power.235 NEI asserts
that, rather than point to actual data that
demonstrates generating facility costs
for providing reactive power, the NOPR
relies on the misplaced theory that
‘‘because both synchronous and nonsynchronous resources provide real and
reactive power as joint products, with
joint costs, . . . any allocation of joint
fixed costs between real and reactive
power could be viewed as inherently
arbitrary.’’ 236 NEI and Generation
Developers argue that the AEP
Methodology compensates generators
based on their actual costs and reactive
capabilities, providing them with a just
and reasonable opportunity to recover
their investments in reactive service
capability, and asserts that the
Commission has repeatedly confirmed
this cost allocation methodology and its
underlying factual predicates in
numerous proceedings.237 Generation
Developers suggest that the Commission
has allocated real and reactive power
costs using the AEP Methodology for
over two decades 238 and has rejected
arguments that the AEP Methodology
results in an improper allocation of
costs or is used merely as a matter of
administrative convenience.239 The
NHA asserts that the Commission
on file with Commission, which it argues were
‘‘demonstrated in rigorous proceedings before the
Commission’’ to be just and reasonable
compensation covering actual costs).
235 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 9; see also id. (citing Va. Elec. &
Power Co., 114 FERC ¶ 61,318, at P 3 (2006)) (‘‘[T]he
Commission expressly instructed generators to use
the AEP Methodology ‘to compute the portion of
plant investment attributable to reactive power
production . . . Because these production plants
produce real and reactive power, AEP developed an
allocation factor to segregate the reactive
production function from the real power production
function. The allocation factor is used to determine
the amount of investment allocable to reactive
power.’ ’’) (emphasis added by Indicated Trade
Associations)).
236 NEI Initial Comments at 10 (citing NOPR, 186
FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 30)
237 Id. at 10–11; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 7–9.
238 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 8–
9 (citing Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc., 125
FERC ¶ 61,280 at P 11; Bluegrass Generation Co.,
L.L.C., 118 FERC ¶ 61,214, order on reh’g, 121 FERC
¶ 61,018, at P 12 (2007)).
239 Id. (citing Bluegrass Generation Co., 121 FERC
¶ 61,018 at P 12 (‘‘This policy is not a matter of
administrative convenience . . . but the result of
the Commission’s deliberate determination that the
AEP methodology is a just and reasonable manner
of calculating a reactive power revenue
requirement’’).
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correctly identifies real power and
reactive power as jointly produced
commodities, but it incorrectly
attributes the cost of all generation
equipment to be predominantly for the
production of real power.240
83. Clean Energy Associations assert
that reactive power is not always
coupled with real power as they believe
the Commission states in the NOPR.241
Middle River Power argues that the
Commission’s statement that generating
facilities are being asked to provide
reactive power in order to offset the
impact of the power they inject into the
system is incorrect.242 Similarly, Middle
River Power asserts that the
Commission has previously found that
generators are being asked to supply
reactive power to support load. Clean
Energy Associations argues that the
Commission conflates the cost of
equipment with the cost of providing an
essential transmission service and that
providing reactive power—even within
the standard power factor range—comes
at the expense of providing real
power.243 Clean Energy Associations
note that a possible solution to this
problem could be that the Commission
distinguish ‘‘reactive power capability’’
from the ‘‘reactive power service.’’ 244
84. ACORE asserts that a requirement
to provide a service does not negate the
fact that costs are incurred to provide
that service.245 Similarly, Elevate and
Indicated Trade Associations argue that,
even if it were true that resources do not
incur distinct costs associated with
reactive power, the Commission fails to
point to precedent to support its
conclusion that the lack of distinct costs
is an appropriate basis on which to deny
resources the ability to recover those
costs.246 The Indicated Trade
Associations assert that the NOPR’s
assumption that there are no or minimal
costs associated with the provision of
reactive power directly contradicts
Order No. 888, which Indicated Trade
Associations argue found that reactive
service from generating facilities must
be priced at cost, thereby
acknowledging that there are
distinguishable costs associated with
240 NHA Initial Comments at 4–5 (noting that
‘‘[t]here is no basis for this assumption, especially
if the Commission believes the AEP Methodology
is incapable of isolating real and reactive cost.’’).
241 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
7.
242 Middle River Power Initial Comments at 3.
243 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
6–7.
244 Id.
245 ACORE Initial Comments at 2.
246 Elevate Initial Comments at 9–10; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 9.
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the provision of reactive power.247
Middle River Power argues that the
Commission has historically required
compensation for reactive power as a
separate ancillary service.248
85. Reactive Service Providers assert
that the Commission has not supported
its claim that generating facilities (and
specifically IPP) already have an
obligation to provide reactive service
within the standard power factor
range.249 Reactive Service Providers
argue that the NOPR’s finding is
contrary to decades of Commission
precedent,250 and the Commission ‘‘lost
its way as it proceeded to Order No.
2003 and beyond, caught up in a
myopic view that unbundling and the
emergence of the IPP industry somehow
transferred the ‘obligation’ to provide
reactive service within the standard
range from the Transmission Provider to
the IPP generator.’’ 251 Reactive Service
Providers assert that transmission
providers alone have the obligation to
maintain a reliable and stable
transmission system, and generating
facilities are purely a tool that
transmission providers use to fulfill this
obligation.252 Reactive Service
Providers assert that in Order No. 888,
the Commission determined that
various ancillary services support the
transmission system so that load can be
served, but the Commission notably did
not find that generating facilities have
this obligation.253 Instead, Reactive
Service Providers argue that the
Commission merely recognized that
generating facilities were a critical tool
that transmission providers can use to
maintain the safe and reliable operation
of the transmission system.254 Reactive
Service Providers assert that, for
Reactive Supply and Voltage Control
from Generation Sources (which
247 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 9 (citing Order No. 888, FERC Stats.
& Regs. ¶ 31,036 at 31,720–21).
248 Middle River Power Initial Comments at 2–3.
249 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
7 (citing NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 5).
250 Id. at 9.
251 Id. at 8.
252 Id. at 8–9 (citing Affidavit of Dennis W.
Bethel).
253 Id. at 9 (citing Order No. 888, FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,036 at 31,349 (noting that the
Commission adopted the following definition of
ancillary services: ‘‘Those services that are
necessary to support the transmission of capacity
and energy from resources to load while
maintaining reliable operation of the Transmission
Provider’s Transmission System in accordance with
Good Utility Practice’’ and that the Commission
determined that ‘‘A control area is part of an
interconnected power system with a common
generation control system. It may contain one or
several utilities. The operator of the control area is
responsible for balancing generation and load and
for maintaining reliable system operation.’’)).
254 Id.
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ultimately became Schedule 2), the
Commission noted that:
NERC states that reactive supply is
provided from both generation resources and
transmission facilities (e.g., capacitors), and
lists its provision as two services,
distinguished by the facilities that supply
them. NERC further distinguishes reactive
supply service based on the source of the
need for the service: (1) reactive supply
needed to support the voltage of the
transmission system; and (2) reactive supply
needed to correct for the reactive portion of
the customer’s load at the delivery point.255
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Reactive Service Providers assert that
NERC did not identify the impact of
generating facilities to the transmission
system as a reason or need for reactive
supply, but instead only identified the
transmission system and load as
needing the reactive service, noting that
generating facilities would serve those
needs at the point of interconnection.256
Reactive Service Providers assert that,
while both before and after Order No.
888, transmission providers holistically
relied on generation- and transmissionbased reactive assets to fulfill their
obligations to maintain the voltage of
the transmission system, generating
facilities never had an independent
obligation to provide reactive service, as
the Commission asserts in the NOPR.257
86. Reactive Service Providers assert
that when the Commission issued Order
No. 2003, it summarily stated that, as a
condition to obtain interconnection
service, the generating facility must
provide reactive service within the
standard power factor range.258 Reactive
Service Providers argue that the
Commission did not amass any
evidence in the Order No. 2003
proceeding to explain why generating
facilities have an obligation to provide
reactive service within the standard
power factor range and posit that the
Commission may have come to this
conclusion in Order No. 2003 and the
NOPR ‘‘because the Transmission
Provider has always relied on generators
as one of its tools to enable the
Transmission Provider to fulfill its
obligation to maintain the Transmission
System in a safe and reliable
manner.’’ 259 Reactive Service Providers
assert that none of the transmission
system operators, NERC, and the
Commission, in nearly all precedent,
have ever concluded that generation has
an ‘‘obligation’’ to provide reactive
service within the standard range; the
255 Id. at 10 (citing Order No. 888, FERC Stats. &
Regs. ¶ 31,036 at 31,355).
256 Id.
257 Id. at 11.
258 Id. at 11–12.
259 Id. at 12.
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Commission’s statement in Order No.
2003 is an outlier.260
87. Similarly, Reactive Service
Providers assert that ‘‘good utility
practice’’ does not entail an obligation
for generating facilities to provide
reactive power for free, and the
Commission has not explained why it
believes such obligation exists.261
Reactive Service Providers argue that
the current compensation scheme for
reactive power is consistent with the
Commission’s definition of good utility
practice because it includes practices
that ‘‘could have been expected to
accomplish the desired result at a
reasonable cost consistent with good
business practices, reliability, safety and
expedition.’’ 262 Reactive Service
Providers assert that good utility
practice does not address what the
electric industry (i.e., the transmission
provider) can achieve for free, but rather
a cost that the transmission provider
must pay as a matter of ‘‘good business
practices’’ in order to fulfill its
obligation.263 Indicated Trade
Associations argue that the Commission
cannot deprive public utilities from just
and reasonable compensation for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range by simply classifying
it as a condition of interconnection,
particularly when the Commission
established that condition.264
260 Id. at 12–19 (citing Order No. 661, 111 FERC
¶ 61,353 at PP 50–51 (‘‘this Final Rule requires the
wind plant to maintain the required power factor
range only if the Transmission Provider shows
through the System impact Study, that such
capability is required of that plant to ensure safety
or reliability. . . . ‘‘[B]ecause the Transmission
Provider is responsible for the safe and reliable
operation of its transmission system (pursuant to
NERC and regional reliability council standards), it
is in the best position to establish if reactive power
is needed in individual circumstances.’’); Order No.
827, 155 FERC ¶ 61,277 at P 35 (‘‘balancing the
costs to newly-interconnecting non-synchronous
generators of providing reactive power with the
benefits to the transmission system of having
another source of reactive power’’) (emphasis added
by Reactive Service Providers)); id. at 18 (‘‘[I]n
Order No. 901, the [Commission] continued the
clear distinction between a Transmission Provider
that has the obligation to plan and operate the
Transmission System and generation that is a tool
that Transmission Providers must account for and
uses to fulfill its obligation to plan and operate the
Transmission System.’’) (citing Reliability
Standards to Address Inverter-Based Res., Order
No. 901, 88 FR 74250 (Oct. 30, 2023) 185 FERC
¶ 61,042, at P 174 (2023)).
261 Id. at 19.
262 Id. at 19–20 (quoting at Order No. 2003, 104
FERC ¶ 61,103 at P 56) (emphasis added by Reactive
Service Providers). Reactive Service Providers
assert that the Commission adopted the same
definition of ‘‘good utility practice’’ in Order No.
2003 as it did in Order No. 888. Id. at 19.
263 Id. at 20.
264 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 23 (citing Banton v. Belt Line Ry.
Corp., 268 U.S. 413, 420 (1925) (‘‘[t]he commission
under the guise of regulation may not compel the
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93429
88. Generation Developers assert that
the NOPR errs in concluding that
separate compensation for reactive
power may result in a windfall to
generators. Generation Developers note
that many generators across markets are
in fact increasingly unable to recover
their costs.265 Indicated Trade
Associations similarly refute the
NOPR’s preliminary conclusion that
separate compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range may result in market distortions,
contending that all rates are approved
by the Commission and that any
distortions are a result of PJM’s capacity
market rules.266
2. Commission Determination
89. Based on our review of the record,
we conclude that compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is unjust
and unreasonable because: (1) the
provision of such reactive power
requires either no or at most a de
minimis increase in variable costs
beyond the cost of providing real power;
(2) such compensation may result in
undue compensation and other market
distortions; and (3) the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is an obligation of
the generating facility as an
interconnection customer and
consistent good utility practice.267
90. As explained in the NOPR,
because real and reactive power are
provided as joint products with joint
costs produced from the same
use and operation of the company’s property for
public convenience without just compensation.’’);
Gulf Power Co. v. U.S., 187 F.3d 1324, 1331 (11th
Cir. 1999) (‘‘[c]haracterizing the mandatory access
provision as a regulatory condition . . . cannot
change the fact that it effects a taking by requiring
a utility to submit to a permanent, physical
occupation of its property’’)).
265 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 27
(citing CAISO, 2022 Annual Report on Market
Issues & Performance 15 (July 11, 2023), https://
www.caiso.com/market/Pages/MarketMonitoring/
AnnualQuarterlyReports/Default.aspx; PJM, Energy
Transition in PJM: Resource Retirements,
Replacements and Risks 10 (Feb. 24, 2023), https://
insidelines.pjm.com/pjm-details-resourceretirements-replacements-and-risks.).
266 Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 9.
267 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6–9; Joint
Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6–7;
MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 4;
TAPS Initial Comments at 6; Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 5; Joint Customers Initial Comments
at 14–16; PGE Initial Comments at 4 (citing MISO,
182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 53 (noting that in the
acceptance of the MISO Transmission Owners
application to end compensation within the
standard power application, the Commission
reiterated its policy ‘‘that the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range is, in
the first instance, an obligation of the
interconnecting generator and good utility
practice.’’)).
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equipment, any allocation of joint fixed
costs between real and reactive power
could be viewed as inherently
arbitrary.268 And while the production
of reactive power within the standard
power factor range can result in certain
incremental variable costs such as fuel,
maintenance, and potentially other
costs, we continue to find, based on the
record and past precedent, that variable
costs of generating reactive power
within the standard power factor range
are at most de minimis.269 With respect
to fixed costs, for synchronous
generating facilities, ‘‘the same
equipment is used to provide real and
reactive power.’’ 270 Non-synchronous
generating facilities use a different
physical process to produce reactive
power, but ‘‘the most critical element in
VAR production, the inverter,’’ 271 is
also necessary for non-synchronous
generating facilities to produce real
power that can be reliably injected into
AC systems.272 In other words, for both
synchronous and non-synchronous
268 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 30; (citing PJM
IMM Initial Comments to the NOI at 2 (‘‘There is
no reason to include complex rules that arbitrarily
segregate a portion of a resource’s capital costs as
related to reactive power and that require recovery
of that arbitrary portion through guaranteed revenue
requirement payments based on burdensome cost of
service rate proceedings.’’); id. at 3, 5, 21, 24;
Permian Basin, 390 U.S. at 804 (‘‘There is ample
support for the Commission’s judgment that the
apportionment of actual costs between two jointly
produced commodities, only one of which is
regulated by the Commission, is intrinsically
unreliable.’’); Richard A. Posner, Natural Monopoly
and Its Regulation, 21 Stan. L. Rev. 548, 595 (1969)
(‘‘[W]here services involve joint or common costs a
rational allocation is impossible even in theory.
How much of the cost of a telephone handset is
assignable to local and how much to interstate
telephone service?’’); see also A.A. Poultry Farms,
Inc. v. Rose Acre Farms, Inc., 1400 (7th Cir. 1989)
(‘‘How does one allocate the cost of activities that
have joint products? Agencies engaged in
ratemaking struggle with these problems for years,
even decades, without producing clear answers.’’)).
269 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 31 (citing SPP
Initial Comments to NOI at 2; PJM IMM Initial
Comments to NOI at 4.).
270 Ameren Initial Comments at 3; MISO
Transmission Owner Reply Comments at 9. See also
NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 29 (citing Edison
Electric Institute Initial Comments to the NOI at 6).
271 Duke Energy Corporation Initial Comments to
the NOI at 4.
272 See, e.g., MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 7 (‘‘[E]ven newer wind turbines use
inverters that allow for the generator to produce and
control reactive power without costly additional
equipment.); see also MISO Rehearing Order, 184
FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 30 (‘‘As to non-synchronous
resources, the principal piece of equipment
required for non-synchronous resources to produce
reactive power is the inverter, which is already
necessary to convert the direct current produced by
non-synchronous resources to alternating current—
i.e., to supply real power that can be injected into
alternating current power systems. On rehearing
and in earlier protests, no party points to any other
equipment costs incurred by non-synchronous
generating facilities that are attributable to
providing Reactive Service.’’ (citations omitted)).
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generating facilities, ‘‘[t]here are few if
any identifiable costs incurred by
generators in order to provide reactive
power’’ 273 beyond the investments in
equipment already necessary to generate
and supply real power to the
transmission system.274
91. While most commenters agree or
do not dispute that all equipment used
to produce reactive power, for both
synchronous and non-synchronous
generating facilities, is also necessary in
order to produce and deliver to the
transmission system real power, several
commenters dispute the NOPR’s
findings that both synchronous and
non-synchronous facilities incur no or
at most a de minimis increase in costs
beyond the cost of providing real
power.275 However, these commenters
do not identify any specific costs
beyond those incurred to ensure that
real power can be reliably injected into
the transmission system.276 For
example, Indicated Trade Associations,
Generation Developers, and Glenvale
emphasize that there are costs of
equipment and production associated
with reactive power, but they provide
only vague references to those specific
equipment costs and identify no distinct
equipment (apart from equipment
already needed for real power
production).277 Many of the commenters
opposing the rule also conflate the cost
of providing reactive power capability
within and outside the standard power
factor range.278 For example,
commenters suggest that there are
opportunity costs to provide reactive
power capability, even within the
standard power factor range, because
doing so requires a generating facility to
forgo real power production.279 As
explained in the NOPR and in other
Commission precedent, however,
reactive power opportunity costs are an
issue only when providing reactive
power outside the standard power factor
range. This is because, unlike operating
within the standard power factor range,
generating facilities operating outside
the standard power factor range forgo
generating more real power output and
thus, forgo sales of real power.280
Importantly, commenters do not provide
any evidence to support their assertion
that operating within the standard
power factor range will limit the real
power output of their generating
facilities. To the contrary, rather than
limiting real power output, real power
cannot be supplied from a generating
facility unless that facility is producing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range to generate and
safely inject real power into the
273 PJM IMM Initial Comments to the NOI at 4;
see also MISO Transmission Owners Reply
Comments at 7–8.
274 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 6 (‘‘The MISO Transmission Owners’ experience
supports the Commission’s preliminary finding that
providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range requires little or no cost to
generators. Generators incur little or no costs
beyond what is already needed to produce real
power because the same equipment used to produce
real power includes reactive power functions.’’
(citations omitted)); PJM IMM Reply Comments at
3 (‘‘Neither [Indicated Trade Associations] nor any
other opposing commenter, nor any of the
precedent relied upon by opposing commenters,
identify any additional costs or more than de
minimis costs incurred by generators in order to
provide reactive capability.’’); MISO Transmission
Owners Reply Comments at 9–10 & n.29. See also,
BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 21 (finding that the
incremental cost of reactive power service within
the deadband is minimal); METC Rehearing Order,
97 FERC at 61,852–53 (‘‘[R]eactive power provided,
not as an ancillary service, but rather as a ‘‘no cost’’
service within reactive design limitations, may
therefore, be provided without compensation.’’);
APS, 94 FERC at 61,080 (rejecting generators’
arguments for reactive power compensation for
operating within standard power factor range
because the generators failed to demonstrate that
‘‘such a requirement will limit the real power
output of a generating unit and therefore will not
result in any lost opportunity costs’’ or that
operating a generating unit within the proposed
standard power factor range will ‘‘affect the
generation output of a unit’’).
275 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at PP 8, 28.
276 The only incremental costs identified in the
NOPR were heating losses. NOPR, 186 FERC
¶ 61,203 at P 28 & n.74.
277 Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3–4;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 13;
Glenvale Initial Comments at 9–10 Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 7–12; Middle
River Power Initial Comments at 2–3.
278 See Clean Energy Associations Initial
Comments at 6–7 (‘‘However, during certain
generating facility and grid operating conditions,
when the generator provides an actual service (i.e.,
injects reactive power to support voltage) it could
come at the cost of production of real power. During
that time, reactive power is prioritized and real
power generated by the plant may be limited. In
such a case the generation facility is prioritizing the
utilization of their asset to assist or enhance grid
stability at the cost of their revenue, which is
primarily obtained from real power sales. The
Commission should consider this opportunity cost
in the context of interconnection customers that
participate in regional wholesale markets.’’)
279 See, e.g., Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
Initial Comments at 10 (‘‘Stripping generators of the
ability to be compensated for reactive power
supply, including lost opportunity costs, within the
[standard power factor range] is not just and
reasonable and not supported by the record.’’);
Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at
11 (‘‘The NOPR also completely ignores the fact that
the provision of reactive power within the
deadband represents a lost opportunity to produce
real power, thereby resulting in lost opportunity
costs.’’).
280 See, e.g., NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 32
(‘‘[I]f the transmission provider requires a
generating facility to provide reactive power outside
of the standard power factor range, the generating
facility may have to ‘reduce its MW output in order
to comply with such an instruction[,]’ which could
limit the generating facility’s opportunity to receive
compensation for real power sales.’’) (citing CAISO
Initial Comments to NOI at 4).
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transmission system and comply with
reliability requirements.
92. Like in MISO, the commenters
here fail to identify any incremental
fixed costs associated with the provision
of reactive power within the standard
power factor range and identify only de
minimis variable costs.281 In MISO, the
MISO transmission owners proposed to
eliminate all charges under Schedule 2
for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range.
Like here, protesters opposing MISO’s
proposal challenged the conclusion that
reactive power within the standard
power factor range required little or no
incremental investment. The
Commission rejected their protests,
finding that they had failed to identify
any record evidence demonstrating that
there are more than minimal capital
expenditures on equipment or
additional operations and maintenance
costs attributable to providing such
reactive power. Like here, protesters
alluded to alleged opportunity costs and
operation and maintenance costs but
failed to point to any evidence of such
costs.
93. Although Generation Developers
claim that the report is the most recent
and comprehensive evidence on the
costs of non-synchronous generating
facilities to provide reactive power,
Generation Developers’ arguments
regarding the evidence in the 2014 Staff
Report ignore that the Commission
found in the MISO Rehearing Order that
even newer wind turbines use inverters
that allow generating facilities to
produce and control reactive power
without costly additional equipment,282
281 See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 29 (‘‘We continue to conclude, and the
record establishes, that Reactive Service requires
little or no incremental investment.’’); METC
Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–53 (‘‘[R]eactive
power provided, not as an ancillary service, but
rather as a ‘‘no cost’’ service within reactive design
limitations, may therefore, be provided without
compensation.’’); APS, 94 FERC at 61,080 (rejecting
generators’ arguments for reactive power
compensation for operating within standard power
factor range because the generators failed to
demonstrate that ‘‘such a requirement will limit the
real power output of a generating unit and therefore
will not result in any lost opportunity costs’’ or that
operating a generating unit within the proposed
standard power factor range will ‘‘affect the
generation output of a unit’’); BPA, 120 FERC
¶ 61,211 at P 21 (‘‘[T]he incremental cost of reactive
power service within the [standard power factor
range] is minimal.’’). See also S. Co. Servs., Inc., 80
FERC at 62,091 (noting also that the primary
function of a generating plants is to produce real
power; thus, if costs were allocated based on the
‘‘predominant’’ function of the equipment, ‘‘all of
the costs of generation would thus be assigned to
real power production and there would be no basis
for any separate reactive power charge’’).
282 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 7 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 30 n.98 (‘‘[O]lder wind generators
could not produce and control reactive power
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and has found elsewhere 283 that the
provision of reactive power requires no
or at most de minimis variable costs
beyond the cost of producing real
power.
94. Generation Developers also assert
that the Commission’s reliance on a
statement from the MISO Rehearing
Order, and the purported failure of
parties in that proceeding to
demonstrate significant incremental
costs of non-synchronous facilities, does
not satisfy the Commission’s burden in
this case.284 Generation Developers add
that the Commission’s reliance on cases
that pre-date the emergence of nonsynchronous generating facilities for the
proposition that all generating facilities
have no or de minimis costs is
misplaced.285 Indicated Trade
Associations similarly argue that
Commission precedent cited in the
NOPR (i.e., BPA and APS) does not
support the conclusion that the
incremental costs of the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range are at most de
minimis.286
95. We disagree with Indicated Trade
Associations and Generation
Developers. Commenters provide no
support for the contention that decades
of Commission precedent are irrelevant
for purposes of supporting our findings
here, including precedent from after the
emergence of non-synchronous
generating facilities.287 As demonstrated
by the decades of Commission
precedent cited in the NOPR and here,
many of the findings in this final
determination are not new. The
Commission has reached similar
conclusions based on similar evidence
(or lack thereof) in other proceedings,
including with respect to the provision
of reactive power within the standard
power factor range by non-synchronous
generating facilities.288 This precedent
without the use of costly equipment [ ] because they
did not use inverters like other non-synchronous
generators but modern turbines now use inverters
and newer wind generators now can.’’)).
283 METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–
53.
284 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 15.
285 Id. at 16 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211;
METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–53;
APS, 94 FERC at 61,080).
286 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 8 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at
P 21; BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at
P 7 n.7; APS, 94 FERC at 61,080).
287 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033; PNM, 178
FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP 29–31.
288 See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at PP 29–31 (finding that providing
reactive service requires ‘‘little or no incremental
investment’’ by both synchronous and nonsynchronous resources); PJM Interconnection,
L.L.C., 151 FERC ¶ 61,097 at PP 7, 28 (finding that
non-synchronous generating facilities are
comparable to traditional synchronous generating
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93431
coupled with the evidence in this
record, supports this final
determination, including with respect to
non-synchronous generating
facilities.289
96. Glenvale contends that certain
types of non-synchronous generating
facilities incur additional costs to
provide reactive power when not
providing real power, such as for solar
generating facilities providing reactive
power at night.290 However, as these
capabilities relate to the provision of
reactive power when not providing real
power, such costs necessarily are for the
provision of reactive power outside the
standard power factor range and thus
are not impacted by and are beyond the
scope of this proceeding.
97. Similarly, some commenters point
to capital investments that expand a
generating facility’s reactive power
capability beyond the standard power
factor range,291 but that capability, and
thus that investment, does not address
the relevant issue of whether
transmission charges associated with
the provision of reactive power within
the standard range are just and
reasonable.292
98. Eagle Creek and others argue that
rates calculated using the AEP
Methodology are themselves evidence of
significant reactive-power-related
capital investments.293 Putting aside
facilities, in that there are for both types of
generating facilities very little if any incremental
costs incurred to provide reactive power); 2005
Staff Report at 96 (‘‘The marginal cost of providing
reactive power from within a generator’s capability
curve (D-curve) is near zero.’’).
289 We also note that Order No. 827, which was
issued in 2016, after the 2014 Commission Staff
Report, removed the exemption for wind generating
facilities to provide reactive power because of
‘‘declining costs’’ resulting from ‘‘improvements in
technology.’’ Order No. 827, 155 FERC ¶ 61,277 at
P 24. In Order No. 827, the Commission noted that
other types of non-synchronous generating facilities
were not exempt from the requirement to provide
reactive power and that Order No. 827’s findings
applied to all newly interconnecting nonsynchronous generating facilities. Id. P 22.
290 Glenvale Initial Comments at 9–10.
291 See, e.g., Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3
(‘‘Where Eagle Creek Reactive Generators made
specific capital investments that enhanced reactive
service—for example, by installing upgraded
exciters with demonstrable power factor
improvements—their related reactive compensation
case was necessarily strengthened.’’).
292 We note that the additional capabilities are not
required as a condition of interconnection.
Furthermore, all generating facilities are allowed to
seek compensation when directed to provide
reactive power beyond the standard power factor
range. This final determination does not change the
ability of generating facilities to seek compensation
associated with providing reactive power outside
the standard power factor range.
293 See, e.g., ACORE Initial Comments at 2 (‘‘A
requirement to provide a service does not negate the
fact that costs are incurred, as demonstrated by the
multiple settlements reached for payment of this
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that these commenters provide no
support for their contentions, the AEP
Methodology is a cost allocation
methodology only; it is not designed to,
and does not, establish ‘‘evidence of
significant reactive-power-related
capital investments.’’ To the contrary,
were it possible to identify discrete,
incremental capital investments made to
provide reactive power within the
standard power range, the AEP
Methodology could be utilized to
allocate such reactive power costs
incurred by the generator; however, no
such incremental capital costs exist
here, and so the AEP Methodology is
inapplicable. In addition, as noted in
the NOPR, the AEP Methodology
originated in an era of vertically
integrated utilities that recovered both
generation and transmission costs
entirely through cost-based rates and
classified those costs under USofA
accounting requirements.294 The
Commission accepted the AEP
Methodology as a way to assign these
costs using a cost-of-service allocation
method for assigning joint costs between
the generation and transmission
functions. As the PJM IMM explains
‘‘The AEP Method[ology] is not about
identifying incremental costs incurred
to provide reactive power . . . [but
rather] allocates the costs of an
integrated power plant between reactive
power and real power.’’ 295 As noted in
the Fern Initial Decision, ‘‘The standard
techniques for addressing a facility that
operates in both a monopoly market and
a competitive market—cost allocation
and revenue credit—have no connection
to the AEP [M]ethod[ology],’’ and
‘‘[a]uto-transporting a monopoly-era
method into an organized-market
context—which is exactly what this
proceeding’s witnesses do, what dozens
of settlements do and what this Initial
Decision does—is not regulating based
on physical facts.’’ 296
99. We also disagree with those
commenters that suggest that the mere
existence of joint products requires
allocating costs to both real and reactive
power production. These assertions
disregard longstanding Commission
precedent.297 PSEG, for example, relies
on Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc. v.
FERC for the proposition that ‘‘the
NOPR . . . conflicts with Commission
and judicial precedents that have long
recognized that there are specific fixed
costs associated with the production of
reactive power.’’ 298 But the Commission
explicitly rejected this same argument
when Dynegy made it in the MISO
proceeding.299
100. Thus, based on the totality of the
record, we agree with Ameren that, for
both synchronous and non-synchronous
generating facilities, ‘‘it is [ ] welldocumented that the same equipment
used to produce real power includes
reactive power functions,’’ and thus
‘‘there is little, if any, incremental cost
service.’’); Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
Initial Comments at 9 (‘‘[S]ubstantial cost support
included with the proposed reactive service tariffs
of each of the Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
. . .meticulously demonstrate the fixed and sunk
costs allocable to reactive power production using
the AEP [M]ethodology’’).
294 See, e.g., Joint Customers Reply Comments at
6–7; ELCON Initial Comments at 5. As noted in the
NOI, most of the filings at the Commission seeking
to establish rates for reactive power compensation
are made by generating facilities (both synchronous
and non-synchronous) that have received waivers of
the Commission’s requirement to maintain their
accounts under the USofA rules and to file FERC
Form No. 1.
295 PJM IMM Reply Comments at 3. See also PJM
IMM Initial Comments at 3 (‘‘The AEP
Method[ology] was based on three sentences in
testimony filed in 1993 that provide no logical,
engineering or economic support for allocating a
part of generator capital investment to reactive.
That testimony was about a subjective decision to
reassign costs that were already fully accounted for
and not about any asserted costs to provide reactive
power that were not recovered elsewhere and not
for any asserted additional costs of providing
reactive power.’’); Joint Customers Reply Comments
at 12 (‘‘The amount of total plant cost that is
allocated to the reactive function based on a power
factor for ratemaking purposes under the AEP
[M]ethodology is not at all indicative of actual
incremental costs for incremental levels of
additional reactive capability.’’ (emphasis in
original)). See also 2005 Staff Report at 69 (‘‘[T]he
allocation factor used in the AEP Methodology does
not directly relate to the incremental investment
cost in providing reactive capability or supply’’).
296 Fern Solar LLC, 183 FERC ¶ 63,004, at P 937
(2023).
297 See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 26 (‘‘[W]e continue to reject, as
collateral attacks on that longstanding policy,
arguments that stand-alone compensation for
Reactive Service is generically required—for
example, to ensure that generators can recover their
costs for Reactive Service capability.’’); Entergy
Servs. Inc., 114 FERC ¶ 61,303, at P 14 (2006) (‘‘In
Order No. 2003, the Commission emphasized that
an interconnecting generator should not be
compensated for reactive power when operating its
Generating Facility within the established power
factor range, since it is only meeting its obligation.
Generators interconnected to a transmission
provider’s system need only be compensated where
the transmission provider directs the generator to
operate outside the dead band.’’ (internal citations
omitted)).
298 PSEG Initial Comments at 13 & n.33 (citing
Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc. v. FERC, 633 F.3d
1122, 1126 (D.C. Cir. 2011)).
299 MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at
P 31 (‘‘Vistra challenges the conclusion that
Reactive Service requires little or no incremental
investment by claiming that the D.C. Circuit in
Dynegy rejected that conclusion. We disagree with
Vistra’s interpretation of Dynegy. Rather, in Dynegy,
the court concluded that the Commission had not
made any such finding in that case, instead
providing only a ‘glancing remark’ to this effect,
and that the record in that case did not support
such a finding. Here, in addition to noting the
Commission’s previous conclusions that Reactive
Service capability requires little or no incremental
investment, we have further explained immediately
above the basis for this finding.’’).
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associated with providing reactive
power’’ beyond the investments in
equipment already necessary to generate
and supply real power to the
transmission system.300 As discussed
below, we also find that the joint costs
associated with the production of real
and reactive power are costs that
generating facilities must incur to
provide the real power for which they
are compensated.301
101. Reactive Service Providers argue
that the Commission has not supported
its claim that generating facilities
already have an obligation to provide
reactive service within the standard
power factor range. Specifically,
Reactive Service Providers assert that
when the Commission issued Order No.
2003, it summarily stated that a
generating facility must provide reactive
service within the standard power factor
range as a condition to obtain
interconnection service, but it did not
amass any evidence to explain why
generating facilities have this obligation.
Reactive Service Providers claim that
Order No. 2003 is an outlier among
Commission precedent and that none of
the transmission system operators,
NERC, or the Commission, in nearly all
precedent, has ever articulated such
obligation. However, as discussed at
length above, outlined in the NOPR, and
reiterated in recent Commission
decisions, the Commission has for
decades stated that ‘‘the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is, in the first
instance, an obligation of the
interconnecting generator and good
utility practice.’’ 302 We find Reactive
300 See, e.g., Ameren Initial Comments at 3; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 6
(‘‘Generators incur little or no costs beyond what is
already needed to produce real power.’’); PJM IMM
Initial Comments at 4 (‘‘There are few if any
identifiable costs incurred by generators in order to
provide reactive power. Separately compensating
resources based on a judgment based allocation of
capital costs was never and is not now appropriate
in the PJM markets. Generating units are fully
integrated power plants that produce both the real
and reactive power required for grid operation
. . . . [T]here is no reason to include complex rules
that arbitrarily segregate a portion of a resource’s
capital costs as related to reactive power.’’).
301 See PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12 (‘‘The
market approach should be used, as it is
overwhelmingly more efficient than the current rate
case, cost of service approach. Supporters of the
cost of service approach have never explained why
a nonmarket approach is required in PJM or why
it is preferable to a market approach.’’); id. at 11–
12 (‘‘There is no evidence that units are built as a
result of reactive revenue. There is no evidence that
sources of revenue are not fungible and that a
decrease in reactive revenues could be not replaced
with other sources of revenue. There is no basis for
adding new resources to the already very crowded
interconnection queue solely based on out of
market subsidies from reactive revenues.’’).
302 MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at PP 53–54 (citing
Order No. 2003–A, 106 FERC ¶ 61,220 at P 416;
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Service Providers’ comments
challenging this well-established policy
to be a collateral attack on Order No.
2003.303
102. Further, as the Commission has
explained, to interconnect reliably to
the transmission system and deliver
power to customers, generating facilities
must be capable of maintaining voltage
levels for injecting real power into the
transmission system.304 Said differently,
‘‘if a generator is to sell (and be able to
deliver) its power to a customer,
reactive power is essential to the
transaction.’’ 305 Thus, standalone
SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 28) (‘‘Accordingly, by
designing their generating facilities to have the
capability to provide reactive support,
interconnecting generators are meeting the
conditions of interconnection required of all
generators and as a general matter are not entitled
to compensation under the Commission’s precedent
unless the transmission provider pays its own or
affiliated generators for reactive power within the
standard power factor range.’’); NOPR, 186 FERC
¶ 61,203 at P 16.
303 See e.g., ISO N. England Inc., 138 FERC
¶ 61,238, at P 17 (2012) (‘‘[A] collateral attack is
‘[a]n attack on a judgment in a proceeding other
than a direct appeal,’ and is ‘generally prohibited.’ ’’
(quoting N. England Conf. of Pub. Utils. Comm’rs
v. Bangor Hydro-Elec. Co., 135 FERC ¶ 61,140, at P
27 (2011))).
304 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 23 (citing
METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852–53); see
also MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 11 (‘‘Moreover, generators are incented by their
own reliability requirements to install the
equipment that is most likely to keep their projects
on-line and delivering real power.’’ (citations
omitted)); NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 33 (‘‘For
example, CAISO states that ‘‘[t]he rationale for the
CAISO’s existing approach to reactive power
compensation is that the reactive power ranges
called for in each interconnection agreement
represent a reasonable range of what a generator is
expected to provide the CAISO without additional
compensation in accordance with good utility
practice and as a condition of being part of the
CAISO markets and CAISO grid.’’) (citing CAISO
Initial Comments to the NOI at 3).
305 SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 28. This has
always been a physical reality of the transmission
system, even for wind generating facilities that were
exempted from providing reactive service within
the standard power factor range prior to Order No.
827. Specifically, in Order No. 827, the Commission
‘‘exempted wind generators from the uniform
reactive power requirement because, historically,
the costs to design and build a wind generator that
could provide reactive power were high and could
have created an obstacle to the development of
wind generation.’’ Order No. 827, 155 FERC
¶ 61,277 at P 4 (emphasis added). During this
period of exemption, wind generating facilities
would have had to rely on dynamic reactive power
service supplied by other generating facilities and
equipment on the transmission system capable of
providing reactive support to allow their real power
to reliably flow onto the transmission system. In
essence, prior to Order No. 827, the Commission
allowed the nascent wind industry to make up for
these reactive power deficiencies by relying on
transmission customers for reactive support because
it determined that the costs of requiring them to
provide their own reactive power could have been
prohibitive. By the time of Order No. 827, that
rationale for the exemption no longer existed, and
the Commission, in removing this exemption for
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compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range does not result in
just and reasonable transmission rates.
103. Some commenters note that
because Order No. 888 defined voltage
support as a distinct ancillary service, it
must be compensated separately.306 The
Commission’s policy on reactive power
compensation has evolved since issuing
Order No. 888, which included
provisions regarding reactive power
from generating facilities as an ancillary
service in Schedule 2 of the pro forma
OATT.307 Specifically, in Order No.
2003, when adopting the pro forma
LGIA, the Commission initially
concluded that the interconnection
customer should not be compensated for
reactive power when operating within
the range established in the
interconnection agreement because
doing so ‘‘is only meeting [the
generating facility’s] obligation.’’ 308
And in Order No. 2003–A, the
Commission clarified that ‘‘if the
Transmission Provider pays its own or
its affiliated generators for reactive
power within the established range, it
wind generating facilities in Order No. 827, noted
that ‘‘[d]ue to technological advancements, the cost
of providing reactive power no longer presents an
obstacle to the development of wind generation.’’
Id. Additionally, the Commission expressed its
concern ‘‘that, as the penetration of nonsynchronous generators continues to grow,
exempting a class of generators from providing
reactive power could create reliability concerns,
especially if those generators represent a substantial
amount of total generation in a particular region, or
if many of the resources that currently provide
reactive power are retired from operation. In
addition, as noted above, maintaining the
exemptions for wind generators places an undue
burden on synchronous generators to supply
reactive power without a reasonable technological
or cost-based distinction between synchronous and
non-synchronous generators.’’ Id. P 25.
306 See, e.g., Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 9 (‘‘This assumption is at odds with
Order No. 888, which expressly found that reactive
service from generation facilities must be priced at
cost’’); NEI Initial Comments at 4 (‘‘Unsurprisingly,
in Order No. 888 the Commission found that
reactive power is one of six ancillary services
necessary to provide basic transmission service
within every control area. Schedule 2 of the Open
Access Transmission Tariff thus required that
transmission providers provide—and transmission
customers pay for—reactive power.’’); PSEG Initial
Comments at 13 (‘‘The NOPR, if adopted, would
effectively eliminate reactive power as one of
ancillary services that the Commission has
recognized since Order No. 888.’’); Middle River
Power Initial Comments at 2–3 (citing Indicated
Energy Trade Associations Initial Comments at 21;
Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036 at
31,707 (‘‘[T]ransmission customer actions do not
eliminate entirely the need for generator-supplied
reactive power.’’ ‘‘The transmission provider must
provide at least some reactive power from
generation sources.’’)).
307 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 12; Order No.
888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036 at 31,705–07 &
n.359; see also BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC
¶ 61,273 at P 18.
308 Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ¶ 61,103 at P 546.
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93433
must also pay the Interconnection
Customer.’’ 309 As a result, since Order
No. 2003–A, the sole basis for reactive
power capability compensation within
the standard power factor range has
been comparability (i.e., to ensure
comparable treatment between affiliated
and unaffiliated generating facilities),
not compensability (i.e., an independent
right to receive compensation for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range).310 The Commission
has reiterated these findings in
subsequent orders permitting
transmission providers to eliminate
separate compensation for generating
facilities providing reactive power
within the standard power factor
range.311 Accordingly, commenters’
arguments in this regard are without
merit.
104. We also find Elevate’s and
Glenvale’s arguments that some
resource classes incur additional costs,
including Elevate’s claims about battery
degradation, unpersuasive.312 Elevate
highlights battery degradation caused by
the provision of reactive power, while
Glenvale notes the operational and
replacement costs associated with
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range but neither
explains how or why such costs are
different and separate from the costs to
provide real power. Degradation of
components of a generator, including
degradation of batteries, is a natural and
inevitable result of power plant
operation. As a result, the costs incurred
by a generator to address such
degradation, like other costs discussed
above, are costs that generating facilities
must incur to provide the real power for
which they may seek compensation; nor
309 Order No. 2003–A, 106 FERC ¶ 61,220 at P
416; see also MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 24 (‘‘Order No. 2003 reflects the
distinction between these two different reactive
power concepts. When the transmission provider
asks the interconnecting generator to operate its
facility outside the established power factor range,
the transmission provider is required to pay the
interconnecting generator for the provision of such
reactive power. By contrast, compensation for
reactive power when the generating facility is
operating within the established power factor range
is generally not required. The sole exception the
Commission identified was that ‘if the
Transmission Provider pays its own or its affiliated
generators for reactive power within the established
range, it must also pay the Interconnection
Customer.’ ’’ (internal citations omitted)).
310 BPA Rehearing Order 125 FERC ¶ 61,273 at P
18.
311 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at PP 52–
53; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP
23–25, 41; PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP 29–31;
Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103 at PP 20–21;
BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC,
119 FERC ¶ 61,340 at P 15; Entergy Servs., Inc., 113
FERC ¶ 61,040 at P 38.
312 Elevate Initial Comments at 9–12; Elevate
Reply Comments at 7–9.
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do transmission customers receive
benefits that are commensurate with the
charges for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range. Moreover, as discussed further
below, battery storage resources, like all
other generating facilities, still have the
opportunity to seek to recover their
costs through sales of energy and
capacity, and the Commission’s actions
here do not undercut those
opportunities.313
105. Similarly, regarding NEI’s
assertion that nuclear generating
facilities incur disproportionate
degradation from the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range, we find that to the
extent there are de minimis variable
costs associated with providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range, generating facilities in RTO/ISO
markets could seek to recover such costs
through energy and capacity markets.
Transmission providers are responsible
for maintaining voltage levels within
their regions and have authority to
direct generating facilities to operate at
appropriate power factors to ensure
system reliability.314
106. In response to Clean Energy
Associations’ assertion that reactive
power is not always coupled with real
power,315 we reiterate that the final
determination addresses only
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range and that producing
solely reactive power (i.e., a power
factor of zero) entails reactive power
production outside of the standard
power factor range. As such, we find
Clean Energy Associations’ concerns
outside the scope of this final
determination.
107. We also find that compensation
for the provision of reactive power
313 PJM IMM Reply Comments at 4–5 (‘‘The
NOPR does not require a finding that generators
recover all of their cost in markets. Markets do not
include such guarantees. In competitive markets,
generation owners may overrecover their costs in
markets at times and generators may underrecover
their costs at times. The point is that when markets
provide an opportunity to recover all costs, those
same costs should not be recovered in a separate
cost of service rate. The same investment should
not be recoverable and recovered in two parallel
regulatory regimes. That result is plainly unjust and
unreasonable.’’).
314 See MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 11–12 (citing VAR–002–3— Generator
Operation for Maintaining Network Voltage
Schedules, North American Electric Reliability
Corporation, at 2 (Aug. 1, 2014), https://
www.nerc.com/pa/Stand/Reliability%20Standards/
VAR-002-3.pdf (‘‘R2 . . . Generator Operator shall
maintain the generator voltage or Reactive Power
schedule (within each generating Facility’s
capabilities).’’).
315 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
7.
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within the standard power factor range
could result in undue compensation and
other market distortions.316 In response,
Reactive Service Providers assert that
generating facilities cannot be receiving
windfalls from reactive power
compensation because many generating
facilities across multiple regions are
retiring due to economic factors.317
However, these statements confuse
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range with
general cost recovery for generating
facilities, which involves many other
revenue streams. Our findings here are
that generating facilities incur no
incremental fixed costs and at most de
minimis variable costs incremental to
the cost of providing real power,
because no additional equipment is
required to provide reactive power and
variable costs are limited to the fuel
costs (in synchronous facilities) or
foregone direct current power (in nonsynchronous facilities) necessary to
provide the reactive power required to
safely inject real power into the
transmission system and comply with
reliability requirements. Similarly,
Indicated Trade Associations 318
contend that separate reactive power
compensation cannot lead to market
distortions because such rates have been
approved by the Commission. But this
argument ignores the final
determination’s central logic that such
rates lack a sufficient economic basis,
and the comments in this proceeding
have not refuted that central logic.
108. As discussed further below, any
purported de minimis variable costs
associated with providing reactive
within the standard power factor range
can be recovered through other
means.319
C. Cost Recovery
109. In the NOPR, the Commission
preliminarily found that separate
compensation for providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range is not necessary for generating
facilities to recover their costs.320 The
Commission noted that, although the
prospect of receiving separate, fixed
reactive power payments may be
beneficial for developing certain
generating facilities, resource
developers continue to develop new
generating facilities in regions without
such payments.321 Furthermore, the
NOPR explained that the basis for these
payments has always been
comparability rather than
compensability.322
110. Instead, in the context of RTO/
ISO markets, the Commission
preliminarily found it would be more
efficient for generating facilities to seek
to recover any identified costs to
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range, to the
extent they exist, through energy and
capacity sales, because competition
between generating facilities may
incentivize efficiency and increase
transparency.323
111. The Commission noted that it
has previously and repeatedly rejected
arguments that generating facilities need
separate reactive power payments,
because the incremental cost of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range is minimal.324 Therefore,
consistent with those findings, the
NOPR preliminarily found that
eliminating compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range would not compromise the ability
of IPPs in non-RTO/ISO regions to
recover their costs associated with
producing reactive power within the
range because generating facilities have
the opportunity to seek to recover such
costs in other ways, such as through
higher power sales rates or through
320 NOPR,
316 See,
e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4
(‘‘The current rules create strong incentives for
generators to attempt to maximize the allocation of
capital costs to reactive in order to maximize
guaranteed, nonmarket revenues. Those nonmarket
revenues provide a nonmarket advantage to those
generators who receive them. This is a return to
using the regulatory process for advantage rather
than competing in the market. That advantage is
arbitrary, not market based and therefore
distortionary.’’).
317 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
27.
318 Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 9.
319 See infra II.C.2; see also Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 16 (‘‘Finally, there is no reason
to believe incremental costs of reactive power could
not be recovered in the same way other costs are
recovered. This could be through capacity markets
and through power sales, depending on the regional
characteristics of how generators cover other
costs.’’).
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186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 45.
example, as of February 21, 2024, there
were 453 total generating facilities in the CAISO
interconnection queue, 440 of which were nonsynchronous generating facilities. This corresponds
to 122,885 MW of capacity, 120,043 MW of which
comes from the non-synchronous generating
facilities in the queue. See CAISO, Formatted
Generator Interconnection Queue Report, https://
rimspub.caiso.com/rimsui/logon.do (last visited
Feb. 21, 2024). Similarly, as of February 21, 2024,
there were 947 total generating facilities in the SPP
interconnection queue, 770 of which were nonsynchronous generating facilities. This corresponds
to 175,243 MW of capacity, 141,879 MW of which
comes from the non-synchronous generating
facilities in the queue. See SPP, Generator
Interconnection Active Requests, https://
opsportal.spp.org/Studies/GIActive (last visited
Feb. 21, 2024).
322 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 45.
323 Id.
324 Id. P 47 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P
21).
321 For
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power purchase agreements (PPA).325
The Commission further noted that the
experiences of CAISO, SPP, MISO, and
non-RTO/ISO regions where generating
facilities do not receive separate
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range and the evidence in
the record demonstrate that: (1)
eliminating compensation has not led to
an insufficient supply of reactive power
in those regions and that (2) generating
facilities in these regions have been able
to recover any purported costs
associated with the production of
reactive power.326
112. In the NOPR, the Commission
sought comment on whether, and if so
how, the elimination of separate
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power range would affect
generating facilities’ ability to recover
their costs—if any.327
1. Comments
113. Several Commenters argue that
the record supports the finding that
generating facilities can recover any
purported costs of providing reactive
power in the standard power factor
range through their sales of energy and
capacity.328 TAPS contends that the
Commission is not required to guarantee
that generating facilities recover their
incremental costs of providing reactive
power in the standard power factor
range (to the extent those costs exist),
but rather the ‘‘opportunity to recover
costs is all that is required.’’ 329 TAPS
explains that the Commission has never
required payment of separate, costbased reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor range
to all interconnecting generators in all
circumstances, but has rather given
325 Id.
326 Id.
P 48.
P 49.
328 See AEP Initial Comments at 4–6; Joint
Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 7–8
(‘‘[Joint Consumer Advocates] assert that PJM
generators will still have a more than ample
opportunity to recover the costs associated with
their provision of reactive power’’); Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 15 (‘‘Generators have other
means of covering costs incurred to meet
interconnection design requirements.’’); Joint
Customers Reply Comments at 15; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 16–17;
MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 15
(‘‘Moreover, transmission providers have
mechanisms for maintaining system reliability in
the face of premature retirements, including
identifying resources as ‘‘system support
resources.’’) (citations omitted)); Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 5 (‘‘Ohio . . . supports competitive
markets to induce efficiency and control costs’’).
329 TAPS Initial Comments at 7 & n.19 (citing
CXA La Paloma, LLC v. CAISO, 165 FERC ¶ 61,148,
at P 71 (2018) (‘‘The Commission has been clear
that suppliers in competitive wholesale electricity
markets are not guaranteed full cost recovery, but
only the opportunity to recover their costs.’’)).
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327 Id.
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transmission providers the option to
provide for such reactive power
compensation for its own generation,
provided all generators on its system
were treated comparably, and
transmission providers could also
eliminate such compensation for itself
and others on a comparable basis.330
New England Consumer Advocates
states that any final determination
should ensure that ratepayer costs for
reactive power compensation are
sufficiently justified, and that ISO–NE
should articulate specific benefits and
compare those benefits with the cost of
compensation.331
114. Ohio FEA states that it supports
prohibiting, as expeditiously as
possible, the inclusion in transmission
rates of charges related to the provision
of reactive power within the standard
power factor range because generators
have an opportunity to recover all costs,
including reactive power costs, through
PJM markets.332
115. Several commenters argue that
the NOPR’s proposal would resolve cost
causation issues that result from the
current practice of providing separate
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range.333 Joint
Customers, Ameren, TAPS, and MISO
Transmission Owners argue that the
current incentive to provide payment
based on reactive power capability
results in the building of unnecessary
capabilities in locations it may not be
needed and does not allocate costs
associated with reactive power in a
manner that is roughly commensurate
330 Id. at 6–7 & n.18 (citing MISO, 182 FERC
¶ 61,033 at P 53 (‘‘MISO [Transmission Owners] do
not have an obligation to continue to compensate
an independent generator for reactive power within
the standard power factor range when its own or
affiliated generators are no longer being
compensated.’’); Id. (citing PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088
at P 29; Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103, P 20
(2022); BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S.
LLC, 119 FERC ¶ 61,340 at P 15; Entergy Servs., Inc.,
113 FERC ¶ 61,040 at P 38) (‘‘Commission’s
precedent allows transmission providers to
eliminate compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range for all generators,
regardless of whether the generator is owned by or
otherwise affiliated with a transmission owner or is
independent.’’)).
331 New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 4–6. See also id. at 5 (‘‘To the extent
. . . benefits are achieved by compliance with a
generating facility’s interconnection agreement and/
or as ‘good utility practice,’ [New England
Consumer Advocates] agree[] with the Commission
that ratepayers should not be paying separately for
the costs to produce a joint reactive power
product.’’).
332 Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5.
333 Ameren Initial Comments at 3; Joint
Customers Initial Comments at 12–13; TAPS Initial
Comments at 4–5; MISO Transmission Owners
Reply Comments at 11–12; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 5; PGE Initial
Comments at 3–4.
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93435
with the benefits received.334 They
assert that the current scheme results in
a proliferation of charges for reactive
power that is disconnected from the
actual benefits received.335
116. MISO Transmission Owners
argue that, contrary to some
commenters’ claims, the NOPR’s
proposed changes do not violate cost
causation principles because generating
facilities will still be compensated for
the reactive power their generating
facilities supply when they are required
to operate outside the standard power
factor range.336 MISO Transmission
Owners state that ‘‘cost causation
involves customers paying for a cost
that they cause, not suppliers receiving
compensation for services provided,’’
and assert that some ‘‘commenters
attempt to turn this concept on its head’’
by ‘‘plac[ing] the focus on the service
provider rather than the paying
customer in an attempt to require
payment for a service they are already
obligated to provide as a condition of
interconnection.’’ 337 MISO
334 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12–13;
Ameren Initial Comments at 3; TAPS Initial
Comments at 4–5; MISO Transmission Owners
Reply Comments at 11–13. See also Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 5–6 (‘‘The Commission’s policy
of looking strictly to capability for determining cost
recovery for Reactive Service incentivized
overbuilding of capability beyond what was
required based on interconnection requirements.
This policy of not considering need or requiring a
demonstration of need by the transmission owner
has resulted in compensation for reactive capability
without an actual demonstrated benefit to
transmission system customers. This disconnect
between capability and any actual demonstrated
benefit highlights serious concerns that charges to
customers are not related to any benefits received.’’
(citations omitted)).
335 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12–13;
Ameren Initial Comments at 3; TAPS Initial
Comments at 4–5; MISO Transmission Owners
Reply Comments at 11–13. See also MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 15
(‘‘Moreover, transmission providers have
mechanisms for maintaining system reliability in
the face of premature retirements. When generators
advise MISO of a planned retirement via
Attachment Y of the MISO Tariff, MISO completes
a review to determine whether any Transmission
System reliability concerns are caused by the
retirement. If voltage concerns arise in the
Attachment Y study, options to address the voltage
concerns are reviewed and ultimately a permanent
solution is identified. If the permanent solution
cannot be implemented before the planned
retirement date, then the MISO Tariff has a
designation for ‘‘system support resources,’’ under
which generators are eligible to receive cost-based
compensation to support their continued operation
until an alternative solution to the reliability
problem posed by the resources’ retirement is
developed.’’ (citations omitted)).
336 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 11.
337 Id. at 12 (citing K N Energy, Inc. v. FERC, 968
F.2d 1295, 1300 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (‘‘[A]ll approved
rates [must] reflect to some degree the costs actually
caused by the customer who must pay them.’’);
Entergy Ark., LLC v. FERC, 40 F.4th 689, 692 (D.C.
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Transmission Owners argue that
commenters’ claims that the NOPR’s
proposed changes violate cost causation
principles is a collateral attack on
principles first promulgated in Order
No. 2003 and its progeny because that
series of orders required generators to
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range without
compensation, with few exceptions.338
MISO Transmission Owners argue that
the NOPR’s proposed changes do not
change generating facilities’ obligation
to provide reactive power within the
deadband, but rather they remove the
unnecessary costs associated with
payments to generating facilities.339
117. Ohio FEA and New England
Consumer Advocates state that they
support the Commission’s efforts to
mitigate escalating transmission costs
for customers, particularly when those
costs provide no incremental benefit to
the customers who pay them.340
118. Joint Customers acknowledge
that the Commission generally allows
for flexibility to account for regional
differences. However, Joint Customers
argue that such regional variations do
not undermine the general rule against
compensation for meeting
interconnection requirements related to
the standard power factor range.341 Joint
Customers contend that ‘‘[t]here is a
sufficient record for a determination
that compensation for meeting
interconnection requirements related to
the standard power factor range should
be prohibited as a general matter, with
the understanding that generators
directed to operate outside that range
Cir. 2022) (‘‘In assessing whether a rate is ‘just and
reasonable,’ FERC and the courts determine, among
other things, whether the rate comports with the
‘cost-causation principle’ which requires that the
rates charged for electricity reflect the costs of
providing it.’’ (citing Old Dominion Elec. Coop. v.
FERC, 898 F.3d 1254, 1255 (D.C. Cir. 2018))).
338 Id. at 11–13. See also MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 16 (‘‘As the
Commission explains, compensation for providing
reactive power within the deadband is unnecessary,
as resources are otherwise able to recover their
costs. The Commission is correct in finding that
there are many other mechanisms through which
generators may recover the costs of reactive power
service, if they need to. This is consistent with
Commission precedent that has repeatedly
highlighted how generators have the opportunity to
recover any legitimate costs through other means.
The Commission has found generators may recover
such costs through power purchase agreements or
capacity and energy market offers. As the
Commission found when accepting the elimination
of reactive power compensation in MISO,
generators can still include the costs of reactive
service in energy offers or capacity offers, even if
subject to market power mitigation.’’ (citations
omitted)).
339 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 12–13.
340 Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 4; New England
Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 3–4.
341 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 14–15.
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will continue to be compensated.’’ 342
Joint Customers witness Dr. Bresmer
argues that a generating facility
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range is simply
meeting its interconnection obligations
and not providing an ancillary
service.343
119. Several commenters 344 argue
that there is not sufficient evidence to
support the conclusion that energy
markets or capacity markets could or
should be used to recover the costs of
providing reactive power. Glenvale 345
and Indicated Reactive Power
Suppliers 346 each state that reactive
power and capacity are two distinct
types of services and should not be
combined. Glenvale argues that energy
markets do not necessarily provide
revenue opportunities due to
competition and long-term contracts
that do not allow certain generators
access to these energy markets for
several years. Indicated Trade
Associations note that certain types of
resources may not even participate in
the capacity market.347 For example,
Glenvale argues that some generators
that provide reactive power but choose
not to participate in the capacity market
will not be able to recover lost reactive
revenues.
120. Some commenters argue that
generating facilities will be unable to
recover reactive power costs in their
PPAs.348 Indicated Trade Associations
argue that generators may have relied on
342 Id.
at 15.
e.g., Joint Customers Initial Comments,
Affidavit of Dr. Albert W. Bremser at 6:3–7 (‘‘When
a generating facility is operating within the
standard power factor range, the generating facility
is meeting its responsibility to maintain appropriate
operational voltage levels for real power moving
onto the transmission system. It is only when a
generating facility is called upon to operate outside
the standard power factor range that it is providing
an ancillary service.’’ (citations omitted)).
344 See, e.g., Clean Energy Associations Initial
Comments at 8–9; EDPR Initial Comments at 4–5;
Elevate Initial Comments at 8–9; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 18–19; Glenvale
Initial Comments at 5–6, 8–9; Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 14; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 3, 15; ISO–
NE Initial Comments at 1–2; NAGF Initial
Comments at 1; NEI Initial Comments at 12–13;
NEPGA Reply Comments at 1, 4–6; NHA Initial
Comments at 6–7; PSEG Initial Comments at 2–3,
6, 14–15; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 56–62, 77.
345 Glenvale Initial Comments at 6.
346 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 11–12.
347 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 15 (citing PJM OATT, Attachment DD,
§ 6.6A(c) (0.0.0) (providing a categorical exception
from the capacity must-offer obligation for certain
types of resources)).
348 EDPR Initial Comments at 4–5; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 19; Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 18; Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 59–62.
343 See,
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existing reactive power compensation
policies when they structured their
PPAs, bilateral arrangements, and
behind the meter arrangements.349
Indicated Trade Associations 350 and
Generation Developers 351 each claim
that the notion that PPA counterparties
will be willing to renegotiate their
contracts to allow them to charge a
higher rate to recover the costs of a
different service belies a basic
understanding of wholesale markets.
121. Some commentators 352 point to
RTO/ISO market rules as potential
barriers to recouping reactive power
costs. Indicated Trade Associations
assert that the Commission has required
RTOs and ISOs to implement energy
offer caps based on generators’ verifiable
marginal costs.353 Generation
Developers argue that the Commission
should require RTOs/ISOs to revise
their tariffs to eliminate existing barriers
to the recovery of reactive power costs
and permit generating facilities to
accurately reflect their investments in
reactive power capability in their
capacity offers.354
122. Generation Developers argue that
energy markets allow resources to sell
energy on a day-ahead and real-time
basis, with prices generally reflecting
variable costs that are insufficient to
allow resources to recover their fixed
costs.355 Generation Developers state
that RTO/ISO market mitigation rules
generally prohibit generating facilities
from reflecting fixed costs in their
mitigated energy offer costs, often
referred to as the ‘‘missing money
problem,’’ and eliminating reactive
power compensation would exacerbate
this issue.356 Generation Developers
argue that relying on capacity markets
for reactive power compensation would
result in arbitrary differences in the
ability of resources to recover their costs
because they would be required to
provide reactive power regardless of
whether they clear the capacity
market.357 Generation Developers also
349 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 17–18.
350 Id.
351 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 19.
352 Id. at 18–19, 34–35; Glenvale Initial Comments
at 6; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments
at 12–15; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 77.
353 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 12–13 (citing Offer Caps in Mkts.
Operated by Reg’l Transmission Orgs. and Indep.
Sys. Operators, Order No. 831, 81 FR 87770 (Dec.
5, 2016), 157 FERC ¶ 61,115, at PP 5, 7 (2016), on
reh’g, Order No. 831–A, 82 FR 53403 (Nov. 16,
2017), 161 FERC ¶ 61,156 (2017)).
354 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
34–35.
355 Id. at 18.
356 Id.
357 Id. at 19.
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assert that there is no nexus between the
capacity value assigned to a generating
facility and its reactive power
capability.358 In addition, Generation
Developers state that ‘‘[t]he Commission
has a statutory obligation to ensure that
[Commission]-jurisdictional rates are
just, reasonable, and not unduly
discriminatory or preferential’’ and
assert that this requirement ‘‘prohibits
the Commission from denying utilities
the opportunity to recover their costs,
plus a reasonable rate of return.’’ 359
123. Indicated Trade Associations
argue that including reactive power
costs in energy offers would increase a
generator’s risk of not clearing in the
energy market. Indicated Trade
Associations further contend that
capacity markets do not provide for
recovery of reactive power costs because
capacity offers from existing resources
are limited to avoidable or going
forward costs and do not allow for
inclusion of costs that have already been
incurred to provide reactive power.360
124. Some commenters 361 argue that
the NOPR violates the cost causation
and beneficiary pays principles because
customers benefit from reactive power,
including reactive power provided
within the standard power factor range,
and thus generating facilities should be
compensated for this service.362
Generation Developers argue that while
the cost causation principle does not
require ‘‘exact precision,’’ it does
require that Commission-approved rates
‘‘be based on the costs of providing the
service to the utility’s customers, plus a
just and fair return on equity.’’ 363
Generation Developers and Reactive
Service Providers assert that the NOPR’s
proposal would insulate transmission
providers and customers from any
responsibility to pay for costs associated
with the services they are receiving,
which is ‘‘precisely the type of free
ridership that the [FPA] and the cost
causation principle are intended to
prevent.’’ 364 Generation Developers
argue that the Commission is essentially
directing generating facilities to recover
358 Id.
359 Id.
at 6.
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360 Indicated
Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 14.
361 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 9; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 4, 9–12; Reactive Service Providers
Initial Comments at 62–63.
362 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 9; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 4, 9–12; Reactive Service Providers
Initial Comments at 62–63.
363 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 9–
10 (citing Sithe/Indep. Power Partners, L.P. v. FERC,
285 F.3d 1, 5 (D.C. Cir. 2002)).
364 Id. at 10; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 62–63.
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the costs of reactive power from
customers purchasing energy and
capacity, rather than the transmission
customers that benefit from the reactive
service.365
125. Several commenters 366 who
oppose the NOPR assert that removing
compensation within the standard
power factor range would result in
discriminatory treatment between
generating facilities and transmission
owners. These commenters argue that,
under the NOPR, generating facilities
would be prohibited from recovering
their costs to provide reactive power
under Schedule 2, yet transmission
owners that install reactive power
equipment and assets as part of their
transmission system would be able to
recover the costs of those assets through
transmission rates charged to
transmission service customers. They
contend that transmission owners
would have guaranteed cost recovery for
the very same service that generating
facilities would be prohibited from
collecting under this NOPR.367 ACORE
asserts that reactive power provides the
same benefit to the system, regardless of
who owns the capacitor banks.368
126. NEI and PSEG both argue that the
2005 Staff Report recognized this
discriminatory concern and contend
that the Commission therefore
recommended that all providers of
reactive power should be paid on a
nondiscriminatory basis.369 Reactive
Service Providers add that unless and
until the Commission proposes to also
eliminate the opportunity for
transmission providers to collect costs
associated with providing reactive
service, the NOPR’s proposal is per se
discriminatory and preferential, in
violation of the FPA.370 Indicated Trade
Associations suggest that by
disincentivizing generators from
competing to provide reactive power
service, the NOPR creates a preference
for higher-cost transmission solutions
365 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
10–13.
366 ACORE Initial Comments at 3; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 8–9; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 27; NEI
Initial Comments at 2, 16; PSEG Initial Comments
at 1–3, 17; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 63–64.
367 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 25–27; Reactive Service Providers
Initial Comments at 64; PSEG Initial Comments at
17; ACORE Initial Comments at 3.
368 ACORE Initial Comments at 3.
369 NEI Initial Comments at 16 (citing 2005 Staff
Report at 4); PSEG Initial Comments at 17 (citing
same).
370 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
64.
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93437
installed by transmission owners, which
will harm consumers.371
127. Relatedly, Reactive Service
Providers and Indicated Trade
Associations assert that the NOPR raises
competition concerns.372 Reactive
Service Providers argue that even if the
transmission provider elects to no
longer pay generating facilities for
reactive power service, the transmission
provider will still be able to collect the
costs of generation-based reactive power
service through retail rates.373 Reactive
Service Providers assert that this ‘‘is a
sweet deal that allows the Transmission
Provider to lean on the IPP to provide
the service for free under the
[Commission]’s jurisdiction, with the
utility simply shifting to another forum
to recover the same generation-based
costs.’’ 374 Reactive Service Providers
argue that the NOPR undermines the
competition that the Commission sought
to facilitate in Order No. 2003, and
while IPPs are disadvantaged by losing
a revenue stream, utility-generation is
able to make that revenue stream up
through retail rates, thereby putting
utility generation in a stronger position
to compete.375 To the extent that
reactive power service costs are
recoverable by transmission owners
through state retail rates, NEI recognizes
that such rates are outside the
Commission’s jurisdiction.376 NEI
asserts, however, that this does not
excuse the Commission from
considering transmission owners’ ability
to recover their reactive power costs at
the state level when the Commission is
setting its own jurisdictional wholesale
rates.377
371 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 24–26; Indicated Trade Associations
Reply Comments at 16; NEI Initial Comments at 17.
372 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 14; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 45–46
373 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
45–46.; Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 14 (arguing that including reactive
power costs in energy offers would increase a
generating facility’s risk of not clearing in the
energy market, and that this risk is ‘‘particularly
acute in jurisdictions where independent power
producers compete with vertically integrated
utilities whose generators recover costs through
state-jurisdictional retail rates.’’ (citations omitted)).
374 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
46.
375 Id.
376 NEI Initial Comments at 16.
377 Id. at 16–17 & n.47. NEI asserts that the
‘‘Commission still has an obligation to consider
whether wholesale rates (or as here, proposed rates)
are unduly discriminatory when considered in
relation to retail rates, even though the latter is not
subject to Commission jurisdiction.’’ Id. (citing Fed.
Power Comm’n v. Conway Corp., 426 U.S. 271
(1976); Commonwealth Edison Co., 8 FERC
¶ 61,277, at 61,848 (1979); Sunoco, Inc. (R&M) v.
Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp., 114 FERC
¶ 61,180 at P 28 & n.20 (2006)).
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128. NEI contends that the proposed
replacement rate would result in undue
discrimination against nuclear
generators by imposing disproportionate
burdens on them without fair
compensation.378 NEI states that the
Commission has an obligation to
consider whether the proposed rates are
unduly discriminatory, meaning that the
Commission must consider transmission
owners’ ability to recover their reactive
power costs at the state level.379 Elevate
argues that the NOPR is inconsistent
with the spirit of Order No. 841, which
required that energy storage resources
‘‘be eligible to provide services that the
RTOs/ISOs do not procure through an
organized market mechanism (such as
blackstart service, primary frequency
response service, and reactive power
service) if they are technically capable
of providing those services.’’ 380 Elevate
argues that the unique physical and
operational characteristics of energy
storage resources correspond with the
unique revenue profile of energy storage
resources.
129. Indicated Trade Associations
argue that the Commission must ensure
that it adopts comprehensive transition
plans that account for the specific
market design and rules of each RTO/
ISO and direct each RTO/ISO to make
filings identifying modifications to be
made to existing market rules to
implement the NOPR.381 Indicated
Trade Associations contend that the
Commission must clarify how
generating facilities will be
compensated for reactive power
dispatch outside the standard power
factor range and note that Consolidated
Edison Company of New York, Inc.
requires newly connecting generating
facilities to be able to provide reactive
power 0.85 lagging to 0.95 leading.382
The NHA further argues that the
Commission should allow individual
RTOs/ISOs to retain their reactive
power compensation frameworks, as
they are better suited to address regional
reliability needs, and to develop
compensation mechanisms to reflect
locational needs.383 Reactive Service
Providers contend that there is no
evidence that generating facilities are
being sited without respect to whether
378 Id.
at 2.
at 16–17.
380 Elevate Initial Comments at 12–13 (citing Elec.
Storage Participation in Mkts. Operated by Reg’l
Transmission Orgs. & Indep. Sys. Operators, Order
No. 841, 83 FR 9580 (Mar. 6, 2018), 162 FERC
¶ 61,127, at P 79 (2018), order on reh’g, Order No.
841–A, 167 FERC ¶ 61,154 (2019)).
381 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 30.
382 Id. at 31–32.
383 NHA Initial Comments at 5–7.
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there is a geographic need for reactive
power, or that costs are no longer
commensurate with benefits.384
130. Several commenters also
submitted RTO/ISO-specific comments
addressing cost recovery. As discussed
above, ISO–NE, NESCOE, NEPGA, and
NEPOOL argue that ISO–NE’s Schedule
2 VAR compensation program should
not be disturbed.385 ISO–NE notes that
the Commission denied Maine Public
Utilities Commission’s complaint to
only allow reactive power compensation
outside the power factor range, as VAR
payments were a ‘‘negotiated value and
is not equal to, nor is it intended to
recover, the cost of service of any
particular generating Resource.’’ 386
131. NEPOOL explains that three
factors specific to Schedule 2 contribute
to the reliability benefits of reactive
service in New England: (1) the
generator must be dispatchable and
ready to respond to the ISO’s instruction
to produce or absorb reactive power; (2)
to be designated as a Qualified Reactive
Resource,387 a generator must have
automatic voltage regulation equipment
and telemetry in place to enable the ISO
to determine that it is providing
‘‘measurable dynamic reactive power
voltage support to the New England
Transmission System’’; and (3)
Schedule 2 requires reactive power
testing of Qualified Reactive Resources
in accordance with the applicable ISO–
NE Operating Procedures.388 NEPOOL
argues that these three factors show that
any final determination should allow
flexibility for transmission providers,
such as ISO–NE, to maintain
compensation mechanisms that pay for
reactive power across the full power
factor range when payment is
contingent on the reactive power
resource meeting enhanced reliabilityrelated requirements.
132. NEPGA states that ISO–NE’s
wholesale energy and capacity markets
do not compensate for reactive power
capability or costs, but rather
transmission rates compensate for
reactive power capability through ISO–
NE’s Schedule 2 rate design.389 NEPGA
argues that the Tariff provisions
384 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
31–34.
385 ISO–NE Initial Comments at 1–2; NESCOE
Reply Comments at 2; NEPGA Reply Comments at
6–7; NEPOOL Reply Comments at 6–7.
386 ISO–NE Initial Comments at 9–10 (citing Me.
Pub. Util. Comm’n v. ISO New England Inc., 126
FERC ¶ 61,090 (2009)).
387 In ISO–NE, a generating facility may submit a
request, including documentation, to ISO–NE to
receive additional compensation based on their
verified leading and lagging reactive capability. See
ISO–NE Schedule 2, § 3.1 (10.0.0).
388 NEPOOL Reply Comments at 9–11.
389 NEPGA Reply Comments at 4–6.
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Frm 00030
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
governing capacity market offers in
ISO–NE do not allow a generator to
include the costs for providing reactive
power in its offer prices nor does the
capacity market value reactive power
capability. Further, NEPGA states that
ISO–NE’s energy market offer-price
rules (both day-ahead and in real-time)
likewise limit costs to those necessary to
produce real power versus reactive
power. Therefore, NEPGA contends that
ISO–NE’s wholesale markets do not, as
the Commission suggests, provide an
opportunity to recover the costs of the
capability to provide reactive power and
the actual costs to deliver reactive
power.
133. NYISO states that it supports the
NOPR’s objective to avoid
administratively burdensome processes
and procedures to determine
individualized cost-of-service reactive
power rates for generation facilities.390
As discussed above, NYISO and IPPNY
argue that NYISO’s existing reactive
power and VSS compensation structure,
which uses a flat dollars per MVAr-year
structure, is just and reasonable.391
NYISO and IPPNY each assert that
NYISO’s flat rate compensation
structure for VSS has been effective for
over 20 years, ensuring adequate
reactive power capability and system
reliability in the New York Control Area
at a reasonable cost to consumers.392
NYISO explains that the structure,
accepted by the Commission since 1999,
was developed with stakeholder input
and Commission approval, with
significant revisions in 2016 to include
leading and lagging reactive power
capabilities.393 NYISO maintains that
this structure aligns costs directly with
services provided, ensuring reliability
benefits commensurate with
expenses.394
134. NYISO states that its flat rate
compensation provides market-like
incentives, encouraging resources to
offer reactive power cost-effectively by
rewarding increased capability and
maintaining necessary equipment.395
NYISO explains that this approach
reduces the need for complex,
individualized cost-based payments and
integrates reactive power support
efficiently into the broader market
framework, promoting economic
efficiency and reliability.396
135. NYISO contends that as the
current system ensures direct
390 NYISO
Initial Comments at 1.
at 2; IPPNY Reply Comments at 1–2.
392 NYISO Initial Comments at 2; IPPNY Reply
Comments at 1–2.
393 NYISO Initial Comments at 2–5.
394 Id.
395 Id. at 7–8.
396 Id.
391 Id.
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compensation for reactive power that is
critical for maintaining system
reliability, altering the compensation
mechanism could lead to increased
costs and complicate market operations,
undermining the efficiency and
effectiveness of its existing
framework.397
136. NYISO emphasizes that as the
resource mix evolves with more
asynchronous and renewable resources,
its flexible compensation structure is
crucial for maintaining and enhancing
reactive power support.398 NYISO
argues that this adaptability will ensure
ongoing system reliability amidst
changing resource dynamics.
137. Lastly, NYISO and IPPNY each
highlight the need for continued
flexibility in adjusting compensation
rules to incentivize maximum reactive
power capability and minimize out-ofmarket commitments.399 NYISO
contends that a uniform implementation
approach is not suitable given the
varying regional needs and existing
effective compensation frameworks.400
138. PJM states that the NOPR would
largely eliminate a number of problems
that PJM and its stakeholder processes
have identified. PJM explains that given
that PJM stakeholders have been unable
to reach consensus on a new rate
paradigm after two years of work, PJM
supports the proposed reforms
identified in the NOPR and encourages
the Commission to adopt them as
proposed.401 As discussed further
below, PJM also proposes that RTOs/
ISOs be allowed to implement any
needed conforming changes to their
market rules as part of the compliance
process.402
139. The PJM IMM states that the
NOPR would extend a just and
reasonable, pro competition policy to all
jurisdictional markets and public
utilities while protecting PJM customers
from unjust and unreasonable charges
for reactive capability that generation
owners are already required to
provide.403 The PJM IMM also argues
that power suppliers, not customers, are
397 Id.
at 8–11.
at 11–13.
399 Id. at 13–14; IPPNY Reply Comments at 2.
400 NYISO Initial Comments at 14.
401 PJM Initial Comments at 3–4.
402 Id. at 6–7.
403 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1–2. See also
id.at 4 (‘‘[T]here is no reason that part of those
capital costs should be paid directly in a
nonmarket, guaranteed, riskless revenue stream
rather than in the market.’’); id. at 6 (‘‘Elimination
of the reactive revenue requirement and the reactive
revenue offset would increase prices in the capacity
market. The VRR curve, or demand curve, would
shift to the right, the maximum VRR price would
increase and offer caps in the capacity market
would increase.’’).
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responsible for the regulatory risk
related to their PPAs.404
140. The PJM IMM adds that
generating facilities in PJM incur other
obligations, such as primary frequency
response, as a condition of
interconnection without separate
compensation for such obligations.405
The PJM IMM maintains that:
There is no evidence that units are built as
a result of reactive [power] revenue. There is
no evidence that sources of revenue are not
fungible and that a decrease in reactive
[power] revenues could be not replaced with
other sources of revenue. There is no basis
for adding new resources to the already very
crowded interconnection queue solely based
on out of market subsidies from reactive
revenues.406
2. Commission Determination
141. Based on the record here, we
adopt the NOPR’s preliminary findings
and conclude that separate
compensation for providing reactive
power within the standard power factor
range is not necessary for generating
facilities to have the opportunity to
recover their costs. As explained above,
for both synchronous and nonsynchronous generating facilities, real
and reactive power are joint products,
with joint costs and there are no
identifiable fixed costs incurred by
404 PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5 (‘‘When
buyers and sellers enter into power purchase
agreements, the contracting parties define and
assign regulatory risk. Customers are not
responsible to manage or pay for suppliers’ risks.’’).
405 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 8 (‘‘Reactive
power is not the only design obligation that
generation interconnection customers assume.
Generators are also obligated to provide primary
frequency response capability ‘‘by installing,
maintaining, and operating a functioning governor
or equivalent controls . . .’’ Primary frequency
response capability is required for the reliable
operation of the system. The PJM OATT does not,
however, provide for an out of market payment for
such capability. The provision of primary frequency
capability is treated as an obligation assumed by
generation interconnection customers for receiving
interconnection service.’’) (citations omitted)); Id. at
9 (‘‘The PJM OATT includes a number of other
obligations on generation interconnection
customers, many of which are important and
impose costs, but does so without including any
special provisions for out of market
compensation.’’); PJM IMM Reply Comments at 6
(‘‘The fundamental logic of the obligation to
provide reactive service, frequency control service
and other essential elements of interconnecting to
the power grid is that the grid is a network. All
generators who connect to the grid benefit from that
network effect. All generators who connect to the
grid have corresponding obligations to the grid that
permit the grid to function as an effective and
reliable network. It has always been the case that
there are standards for interconnecting to the
network. Meeting those standards is part of being
a resource on the network. The actual costs of
interconnecting to the grid can be significant for
resources but those costs are part of the cost of
building a resource and part of the investment
decision for resource owners and not a reason for
a separate guaranteed payment.’’).
406 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12–13.
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93439
generating facilities to provide reactive
power within the standard power factor
range beyond the investments in
equipment already necessary to generate
and supply real power to the
transmission system. Further, the record
demonstrates that there are at most de
minimis variable costs, such as fuel and
maintenance costs, associated with
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range. Given that
the primary function of a generating
facility is to produce real power, and
that the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range
is necessary to the provision of real
power, we find that a generating
facility’s fixed and variable costs are
appropriately recovered through
payments for real power, such as energy
and/or capacity sales, whether in
organized or bilateral markets.407
Accordingly, we find that this final
determination does not prevent a
generating facility from seeking to
recover its costs because resource
owners have the opportunity to recover
any of their appropriate fixed and
variable costs through other revenue
streams, including the opportunity to
make up for lost revenues, if any, from
the cessation of reactive power
compensation.408 We find that such an
407 We emphasize that our findings in this final
determination do not affect any party’s filing rights
under section 205 of the FPA, including the right
of generating facilities to seek cost recovery for the
provision of reactive power outside the standard
power factor range. See supra II.A.2.
408 See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1–2,
4, 6, 9, 12–13; PJM IMM Reply Comments at 2–5;
Joint Customers Initial Comments at 16; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 16–17;
Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 3, 5; Joint Consumer
Advocates Initial Comments at 7–8; TAPS Initial
Comments at 7–8; see also MISO Rehearing Order,
184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 42 (‘‘On rehearing, we
conclude that Vistra has still not adequately
explained why generators cannot include the costs
attributable to Reactive Service in energy offers or
capacity offers, even if subject to market power
mitigation, . . . . As to capacity offers, among the
‘‘going forward’’ costs that can be recovered are
‘‘mandatory capital expenditures necessary to
comply with federal . . . reliability requirements,’’
which would appear to include any (hypothetical)
capital investments and expenditures associated
with Reactive Service capability. As to energy
offers, Vistra does not explain the basis for its
assertion that the Tariff bars including any
incremental costs associated with Reactive Service
capability (e.g., fuel costs, short-term variable
operations and maintenance) in such offers.
Moreover, while Vistra claims that ‘‘a generation
resource that attempts to recover its fixed costs of
reactive power through its energy or capacity offers
runs the risk that it will trigger application of
MISO’s market power mitigation rules,’’ even
assuming this were correct, this would not preclude
generators from recovering such costs in the
capacity market, but rather would require that they
verify the costs with the independent market
monitor. The cases Vistra cites also do not establish
that where Schedule 2 compensation for Reactive
Service is not available, seeking compensation
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outcome is not only appropriate given
the nature of the costs but also more
efficient because competition between
generating facilities may incentivize
efficiency.409
142. We recognize, however, the
current interplay between existing
reactive power revenue compensation
mechanisms and energy and capacity
market rules in ISO–NE, NYISO, and
PJM,410 and, as a result, the RTOs/ISOs
may request, by setting forth the specific
bases and reasoning therefore for the
Commission’s consideration an effective
date for their compliance filings that
allows them to develop and propose
changes to their markets that are
necessary in order to accommodate this
final determination’s elimination of
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range. As recognized in the
NOPR and affirmed in the comments,
the existing capacity market rules in
PJM, ISO–NE and NYISO reflect the
existence of generator payments under
Schedule 2 through a revenue offset and
reduce capacity market revenues
accordingly. For example, as PJM and
the PJM IMM explain, the PJM capacity
market rules currently reflect a reactive
power revenue offset in both the market
seller offer caps and the Net Cost of New
Entry (CONE) for the reference resource,
which affects the shape of PJM’s
capacity market demand curve.
Therefore, both PJM and the PJM IMM
argue that the market rules will have to
be revised to reflect the impacts of this
final determination.411 Similarly,
NYISO and ISO–NE may need to
propose changes to market rules to
reflect the elimination of reactive power
revenues resulting from this final
determination. Therefore, as discussed
below, we recognize that ISO–NE,
NYISO, and PJM may need to develop
and propose changes to their markets
that may be necessary to accommodate
this final determination’s elimination of
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range.412 For the reasons
explained above, we also disagree with
those commenters who argue that there
is not sufficient evidence to support the
conclusion that energy markets or
through other mechanisms is impermissible.’’
(citations omitted)).
409 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1–6, 9, 12–13;
PJM IMM Reply Comments at 2–5.
410 See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6.
411 See PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6
(‘‘Elimination of the reactive revenue requirement
and the reactive revenue offset would increase
prices in the capacity market. The VRR curve, or
demand curve, would shift to the right, the
maximum VRR price would increase and offer caps
in the capacity market would increase.’’).
412 See infra III.B.2.
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capacity markets could or should be
used to seek to recover the costs
currently recovered through payments
for reactive power, as well as those
commenters that argue that because
capacity and reactive power service are
separate products, their costs should
likewise be recovered separately under
Schedule 2. Given the same equipment
is used for real and reactive power and
the incremental variable costs of
reactive power service within the
deadband are minimal, as explained in
the section above, we disagree with
commenters’ claims that costs, if any,
currently recovered through reactive
power payments cannot be recovered
through other markets, especially given
the transition period provided in this
final determination, which addresses
concerns about existing market rules
that may impact cost recovery from
those markets.413 Furthermore, our
finding here is supported both by
experience in CAISO, SPP, MISO and
certain non-RTO regions where
generating facilities do not receive
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range, and the evidence in
the record to date.414 Specifically,
experience and evidence demonstrate
that: (1) eliminating compensation has
not led to an insufficient supply of
413 See III.B.2; see, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order,
184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP 40–42; BPA, 120 FERC
¶ 61,211 at P 21 (finding that the argument that it
is not feasible for IPPs to recover their costs through
higher power sales rates ‘‘lacks plausibility’’ ‘‘since
the incremental cost of reactive power service
within the deadband is minimal,’’ and ‘‘[t]he
purpose for which generation assets are built
(including reactive power capability to maintain
voltage levels for generation entering the grid) is to
make sales of real power’’). See also Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 15 (‘‘Generators have other
means of covering costs incurred to meet
interconnection design requirements.’’); MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 16 (‘‘As
the Commission explains, compensation for
providing reactive power within the deadband is
unnecessary, as resources are otherwise able to
recover their costs. The Commission is correct in
finding that there are many other mechanisms
through which generators may recover the costs of
reactive power service, if they need to. This is
consistent with Commission precedent that has
repeatedly highlighted how generators have the
opportunity to recover any legitimate costs through
other means. The Commission has found generators
may recover such costs through power purchase
agreements or capacity and energy market offers. As
the Commission found when accepting the
elimination of reactive power compensation in
MISO, generators can still include the costs of
reactive service in energy offers or capacity offers,
even if subject to market power mitigation.’’
(citations omitted)).
414 See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4
(‘‘[T]here is no reason that part of those capital costs
should be paid directly in a nonmarket, guaranteed,
riskless revenue stream rather than in the market.’’);
Joint Customers Initial Comments at 15
(‘‘Generators have other means of covering costs
incurred to meet interconnection design
requirements.’’).
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reactive power in those regions; and (2)
generating facilities in these regions
have been able to recover their fixed and
variable costs through other means.415
For example, CAISO ‘‘has seen no
evidence to this point that resources
cannot comply with reactive power
dispatch instructions because they have
insufficient funds for the equipment to
meet the reactive power dispatch.’’ 416
Rather, ‘‘the lack of separate reactive
power compensation in CAISO or SPP
means that all costs have to be
recovered through the applicable PPA,
which also means that those PPA prices
are higher, all other variables being
equal, than they would otherwise
be.’’ 417
143. We also find it of no
consequence that a generating facility
participates in only the energy market,
as no commenter has demonstrated why
these joint costs could not be recovered
via energy sales, as these costs are
necessary for the production and
delivery of real power. However, as
discussed herein, to the extent that
current RTO/ISO market rules require
generating facilities to subtract their
separate revenue streams for reactive
power from the avoidable costs they are
permitted to reflect in their capacity
market offers, we encourage RTOs/ISOs
to propose any necessary conforming
changes to their market rules in section
205 filings accompanying their
compliance filings to this final
determination.418
144. The NHA asserts that capacity
markets are unequipped to situate
reactive power where it is most needed
because capacity markets do not allow
for granular clearing prices based on
specific geographic locations. In turn,
the NHA argues that RTOs/ISOs should
instead develop reactive power
compensation rules to reflect locational
requirements.419 However, we find that
generating facilities are required to
provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range as a matter
of good utility practice and to meet the
obligations under their interconnection
agreements under Order No. 2003,
415 AEP Initial Comments at 4–6; Joint Consumer
Advocates Initial Comments at 7–8; Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 15–18; Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 5 (‘‘Through the PJM markets,
generators have an opportunity to recover all costs,
including reactive power costs.’’). See also MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 15–17
(‘‘The Commission is correct in finding that there
are many other mechanisms through which
generators may recover the costs of reactive power
service, if they need to.’’).
416 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 48 (citing
CAISO Initial Comments to NOI at 5–6).
417 Id. (citing LRE/UCS Initial Comments to NOI
at 16).
418 See PJM Initial Comments at 6–7; infra III.B.2.
419 NHA Initial Comments at 5–7.
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regardless of location.420 For that
reason, Order No. 2003 does not contain
a location-specific component for the
provisions of reactive power within the
standard power factor range. Any
additional reactive power capability
required to satisfy specific local
reliability needs, as well as the
compensation for costs incurred to
provide that capability (e.g., capacitors,
synchronous condensers), are for the
transmission provider to determine and
are beyond the scope of this final
determination.421
145. In response to commenters 422
who argue that generating facilities will
be unable to recover through their
existing PPAs costs that are currently
recovered through separate reactive
power payments, the record lacks any
concrete evidence showing whether,
and to what extent, generating facilities
factored reactive power revenues into
their PPAs. Even if a generator were able
to demonstrate that eliminating
compensation under our rule might
impact some generating facility’s
profitability, we do not believe that
potential disrupted expectations weigh
in favor of a different outcome in this
situation. As a general matter, the risk
of regulatory change is inherent in any
long-term PPA.423 Moreover, as
explained above, because no generating
facility could have reasonably relied on
an inherent right to separate
compensation for reactive power
capability within the standard power
factor range since Order Nos. 2003 and
2003–A (i.e., because such
compensation is required only to ensure
‘‘comparability’’), there has always been
some risk in relying on compensation,
because market rules can change.424
Indeed, developers and generating
facilities have been on notice since at
least 2003 that the Commission regards
reactive power compensation within the
standard power factor range as noncompensable (other than where the
comparability standard applies) —a
conclusion that was patent in those
orders, and reinforced repeatedly in
subsequent Commission orders
accepting transmission owner filings
under section 205 that eliminated
reactive power compensation within the
standard power factor range.425
Additionally, the Commission rejected
reliance arguments in the MISO
Rehearing Order 426 and PNM.427 We
similarly find unsupported Generation
Developers’428 concerns about energy
markets being insufficient to recover
fixed costs and Indicated Trade
Associations’ 429 concerns about not
clearing the energy market when
including reactive power costs in energy
market bids. The record demonstrates
that, in regions such as MISO, where
separate compensation for the provision
of reactive power within the standard
power factor range has been eliminated,
generating facilities continue to be
developed, indicating that such
developers believe there to be sufficient
opportunity to recover their costs,
including any costs associated with the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range.430 In light
420 See supra II.A.2; MISO Transmission Owners
Reply Comments at 12–13 (‘‘That series of orders
required, among other things, that interconnecting
generators be able to provide reactive power within
the deadband without compensation.’’).
421 See MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 15 (‘‘Moreover, transmission
providers have mechanisms for maintaining system
reliability in the face of premature retirements.
When generators advise MISO of a planned
retirement via Attachment Y of the MISO Tariff,
MISO completes a review to determine whether any
Transmission System reliability concerns are
caused by the retirement. If voltage concerns arise
in the Attachment Y study, options to address the
voltage concerns are reviewed and ultimately a
permanent solution is identified. If the permanent
solution cannot be implemented before the planned
retirement date, then the MISO Tariff has a
designation for ‘system support resources,’ under
which generators are eligible to receive cost-based
compensation to support their continued operation
until an alternative solution to the reliability
problem posed by the resources’ retirement is
developed.’’ (citations omitted)).
422 EDPR Initial Comments at 4–5; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 19; Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 18; Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 59–62.
423 See, e.g., PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5
(‘‘When buyers and sellers enter into power
purchase agreements, the contracting parties define
and assign regulatory risk. Customers are not
responsible to manage or pay for suppliers’ risks.’’).
424 See MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 33 (‘‘Sophisticated parties, like
independent power producers, have the ability to
manage risks of this sort in entering long-term
arrangements rather than assuming that this
compensation will be available in perpetuity.’’).
425 See, e.g., Nev Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103;
PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP 26–36; SPP, 119
FERC ¶ 61,199 at PP 20, 30–33.
426 See MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 33 (‘‘[W]e find that generators’
assumption that such compensation will continue
to be available does not give rise to reliance
interests that justify requiring that such
compensation continue to be provided.’’).
427 PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at P 33 (‘‘[B]y
designing its generating facility to have the
capability to provide reactive support, Aragonne
Wind is only meeting the conditions of
interconnection required of all generators and is not
entitled to compensation unless the transmission
provider pays its own or affiliated generators for
reactive power within the established range.’’).
428 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 18.
429 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 14.
430 See MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 14 (‘‘Moreover, all charges under
Schedule 2 of the MISO Tariff for the provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor
range were eliminated in the MISO region effective
December 1, 2022. MISO has since experienced no
reliability issues as a result and generator
interconnection applications, the first step of a
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93441
of this evidence, Indicated Trade
Associations’ and Generation
Developers’ arguments that organized
markets do not provide sufficient
opportunities for generating facilities to
recover their costs fall flat.
146. We agree with Generation
Developers that ‘‘[t]he Commission has
a statutory obligation to ensure that
[Commission]-jurisdictional rates are
just, reasonable, and not unduly
discriminatory or preferential.’’ 431
Indeed, our actions here do nothing to
deny generating facilities their
‘‘opportunity to recover their costs, plus
a reasonable rate of return.’’ 432 As noted
above, generating facilities have an
opportunity to recover appropriately
recoverable fixed and variable costs
through other markets, including the
opportunity to potentially make up for
lost revenue from the cessation of
reactive power compensation within the
standard power factor range.433 And if
market rules in RTOs/ISOs currently
inhibit such recovery, as discussed
herein, we are permitting the RTOs/
ISOs to request additional time to
update those market rules, as may be
appropriate and consistent with this
final determination.
147. Regarding ISO–NE’s 434 reliance
on the Commission’s denial of the
Maine Public Utilities Commission’s
complaint to support its assertion that
ISO–NE’s reactive power scheme was,
and continues to be, just and reasonable,
we acknowledge that our findings in
this final determination represent a
change in policy from prior Commission
findings on compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range. However,
as discussed above, we find that the
record in this proceeding demonstrates
that such a change is appropriate.
process that ends with execution of an
interconnection agreement that obligates the
generator to provide reactive power within the
deadband, remain high.’’ (citations omitted)).
431 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 6.
432 Id.
433 See, e.g., N. Am. Elec. Reliability Corp., 183
FERC ¶ 61,222 (2023) (explaining that the FPA
requires only that Commission-jurisdictional rates
provide an opportunity for the recovery of
prudently incurred costs necessary to comply with
reliability standards—not that all entities have
identical outcomes) (citing ISO New England Inc.,
132 FERC ¶ 61,044, at P 28 (2010) (‘‘[R]esources are
provided only an opportunity to recover their costs,
not a guarantee that they will recover those costs.’’);
Bridgeport Energy, LLC, 113 FERC ¶ 61,311, at P 29
(2005) (‘‘[T]he Commission has no obligation in a
competitive marketplace to guarantee Bridgeport its
full traditional cost-of-service. Rather, in a
competitive market, the Commission is responsible
only for assuring that Bridgeport is provided the
opportunity to recover its costs.’’) (emphasis in
original).
434 ISO–NE Initial Comments at 10.
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148. We disagree with
commenters’ 435 contention that
eliminating compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range would violate the cost causation
principle. As discussed above, real and
reactive power are provided as joint
products, with joint costs, and are
produced using the same equipment;
therefore, a separate cost compensation
mechanism for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range is not necessary.436 We are not
persuaded that eliminating
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range violates
cost causation.
149. Additionally, we disagree with
claims that transmission customers are
the sole beneficiaries and cost-causers,
as well as assertions 437 that eliminating
compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range would
insulate transmission providers and
customers from paying for any costs
associated with the services they are
receiving—essentially requiring
generating facilities to recover the costs
of reactive power from energy and
capacity market customers, rather than
the transmission customers that benefit
from the reactive power service. These
arguments fail because they are
inconsistent with Commission
precedent that explains that providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range enables generating
facilities to reliably deliver real power
to the transmission system (i.e., make
real power sales).438 In effect, these
costs are ‘‘caused’’ by the operating
requirements of the generating facilities
to deliver real power, not by the
separate needs of the transmission
customers.
150. We similarly disagree with
commenters’439 assertions that
435 ACORE Initial Comments at 3; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 4, 9–12; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 27; NEI
Initial Comments at 2, 16; PSEG Initial Comments
at 1–3, 17; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 62–64; Indicated Reactive Power
Suppliers Initial Comments at 9.
436 See II.B.2.
437 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 24–26; Indicated Trade Associations
Reply Comments at 16; NEI Initial Comments at 17.
438 See SPP Rehearing Order, 121 FERC ¶ 61,196
at P 15 (‘‘As we have previously explained, reactive
power is required for an interconnecting generator
to deliver its power and reactive power produced
within the [standard power factor range] and is,
therefore, generally not compensable.’’ (emphasis
added)); BPA Rehearing Order, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211
at P 21 (‘‘The purpose for which generation assets
are built (including reactive power capability to
maintain voltage levels for generation entering the
grid) is to make sales of real power.’’); see supra
II.A.2.
439 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 24–27; Reactive Service Providers
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eliminating compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range would result in undue
discrimination between generating
facilities and transmission assets, where
owners of the latter would still have
guaranteed recovery of their costs of
reactive power assets through
transmission rates. The Commission has
long held that reactive power supply
from transmission facilities is distinct
from reactive power supply from
generating facilities, with the former
constituting a basic part of transmission
service.440 This is because generating
facilities must produce reactive power
within the standard power factor range
to allow the generating facilities’ real
power to reliably flow onto the
transmission system, while transmission
provider investment in capacitor banks
is to control transmission system voltage
levels to provide reliable transmission
service.441 These findings also address
similar arguments raised by NEI and
PSEG.442
151. Similarly, we find without merit
Reactive Service Providers’ and
Indicated Trade Associations’ argument
that transmission owners that own
generation will have a competitive
advantage over IPPs by virtue of their
ability to recover their costs through
retail rates. Putting aside that
commenters provide no support for
their contention that transmission
owners that own generation will be able
to recover their reactive power costs
through retail rates,443 the Commission
has rejected similar arguments on
multiple occasions. In SPP and BPA, the
Commission explained ‘‘that merchant
Initial Comments at 64; PSEG Initial Comments at
17; ACORE Initial Comments at 3; NEI Initial
Comments at 2, 16.
440 Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ¶ 31,036
at 31,706 (‘‘We accept NERC’s identification of two
ways of supplying reactive power and controlling
voltage. One is to install facilities, usually
capacitors, as part of the transmission system. We
will consider the cost of these facilities as part of
the cost of basic transmission service. Providing
reactive power and voltage control in this way is
not a separate ancillary service. The second is to
use generating facilities to supply reactive power
and voltage control. This use is the service named
here, which must be unbundled from basic
transmission service.’’).
441 Id. (‘‘NERC further distinguishes reactive
supply services based on the source of the need for
the service: (1) reactive supply needed to support
the voltage of the transmission system; and (2)
reactive supply needed to correct for the reactive
portion of the customer’s load at the delivery
point.’’); see also supra n.439.
442 NEI Initial Comments at 16 (citing 2005 Staff
Report at 4); PSEG Initial Comments at 17 (citing
same).
443 SPP Order on Rehearing, 121 FERC ¶ 61,196
at P18 (‘‘[T]ransmission owners’ generators are not
entitled to charge retail customers retail rates that
guarantee full recovery of their costs; rather, they
must first justify their rates to state authorities’’).
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generators are free to negotiate rates that
they charge their customers for real
power that are sufficient to compensate
them for any costs that they may incur
in producing reactive power within
their deadbands, just as affiliated
generators may seek to negotiate rates
that they charge their customers that are
sufficient to compensate them for the
costs of any reactive power that they
provide within their deadbands.’’ 444
The Commission also observed that
‘‘[i]n this regard, all that the protestors
have done is to note that an incumbent
utility’s generators may be able to make
up the revenue that they previously
might have earned through a separate
charge for reactive power within the
deadband in other ways—such as
through higher power sales rates. But
merchant generators are no differently
situated and their ability to recover such
costs has not been compromised. They,
equally, may be able to recover the costs
for reactive power within the deadband
in other ways—such as through higher
power sales rates of their own.’’ 445 As
in those other cases, we believe that our
action here ‘‘maintains a level playing
field for all generators subject to
Commission jurisdiction, such that
compensation for reactive power
support is separately paid when reactive
power outside the deadband is
dispatched to the point on the
transmission system where it is needed,
and in the magnitude required to ensure
a stable grid.’’ 446
152. Regarding Elevate’s assertion that
Commission precedent, including Order
No. 841, requires compensation for any
service that a generating facility is
technically capable of providing, we
note that many regions do not provide
separate compensation for each
obligation of interconnection. For
example, as the PJM IMM notes,
generating facilities in PJM are required
to provide primary frequency response
and other essential transmission system
services as a condition of
interconnection without a separate,
dedicated revenue stream.447
Furthermore, as explained above,
444 BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 21 (citing SPP,
119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 39).
445 Id.
446 SPP, 119 FERC ¶ 61,199 at P 38. See N. Am.
Elec. Reliability Corp., 183 FERC ¶ 61,222 (rejecting
claims that reliability standard gives vertically
integrated utilities a competitive advantage;
explaining that, while the approval of the new
standard may have different implications for
different entities depending on their existing
compensation mechanisms, the FPA requires only
that Commission-jurisdictional rates provide an
opportunity for the recovery of prudently incurred
costs necessary to comply with reliability
standards—not that all entities have identical
outcomes).
447 Supra n.415.
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generating facilities have an opportunity
to recover their appropriate fixed and
variable costs through other markets,
including the opportunity to make up
for lost revenue from the cessation of
reactive power compensation within the
standard power factor range.
153. Although ISO–NE and NYISO
argue to maintain their existing reactive
power compensation schemes, as
discussed above, these arguments ignore
the findings in this final determination,
which apply equally to flat-rate
compensation regimes like ISO–NE’s
and NYISO’s, as to the compensation
regimes of PJM and certain non-RTO
regions. That is, generating facilities
incur no incremental fixed costs and at
most de minimis variable costs
incremental to the cost of providing real
power, because no additional
equipment is required to provide
reactive power and variable costs are
limited to the fuel costs (in synchronous
facilities) or foregone direct current
power (in non-synchronous facilities)
necessary to provide the reactive power
required to safely inject real power into
the transmission system and comply
with reliability requirements.448
154. These commenters argue that
transparency, administrative burden,
and preventing double recovery
problems are reduced or eliminated in
either ISO–NE, NYISO, or both.
However, all those arguments suppose
that compensation is due, and thus that
a compensation method is needed. But,
if no separate compensation is due, all
compensation methodologies will
necessarily result in unjust and
unreasonable rates.449 Furthermore, we
agree with New England Consumer
Advocates,450 who argue that any
payment for reactive power capability
within the standard power factor range
must yield some roughly commensurate
incremental benefit above and beyond
that which would accrue absent
payment.451 Given those arguments,
transmission customers in ISO–NE and
NYISO, just like transmission customers
in PJM and non-RTO regions, do not
receive benefits that are commensurate
with the costs of reactive power charges,
even if the compensation methods used
in these regions are less
448 See,
II.B.2.
II.A.2.
450 New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 5 (‘‘To the extent . . . benefits are
achieved by compliance with a generating facility’s
interconnection agreement and/or as ‘good utility
practice,’ [New England Consumer Advocates]
agree[] with the Commission that ratepayers should
not be paying separately for the costs to produce a
joint reactive power product.’’).
451 See, e.g., supra n.140.
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administratively burdensome than the
methods used in other regions.452
D. Reliability
155. The NOPR preliminarily found
that ‘‘compensation for providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range is unnecessary to
maintain reliability’’ and that ‘‘requiring
transmission providers to continue
paying for reactive power already
required by a generating facility’s
interconnection agreement is not
necessary to ensure that generating
facilities provide reactive power when
required.’’ 453 In addition to noting that
multiple RTOs, ISOs, and non-RTO/ISO
transmission providers have elected not
to compensate generating facilities for
the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range under
Schedule 2 of the OATT,454 the NOPR
observed that CAISO has not seen major
issues of concern with the level of
reactive power in its region despite not
providing separate compensation for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range. The Commission
also preliminarily found in the NOPR
that requiring transmission providers to
continue paying for reactive power
already required by a generating
facility’s interconnection agreement is
not necessary to ensure that generating
452 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 5–6 (‘‘The
Commission’s policy of looking strictly to capability
for determining cost recovery for Reactive Service
incentivized overbuilding of capability beyond
what was required based on interconnection
requirements. This policy of not considering need
or requiring a demonstration of need by the
transmission owner has resulted in compensation
for reactive capability without an actual
demonstrated benefit to transmission system
customers. This disconnect between capability and
any actual demonstrated benefit highlights serious
concerns that charges to customers are not related
to any benefits received.’’ (citations omitted)).
453 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 43 (citing
Essential Reliability Servs. & the Evolving BulkPower Sys. Frequency Response, Order No. 842, 83
FR 9639 (Mar. 6, 2018), 162 FERC ¶ 61,128, at P
121, order on reh’g and clarification, 164 FERC
¶ 61,135 (2018) (‘‘While the Commission has
approved specific compensation for discrete
services that require substantial identifiable costs,
such as for frequency regulation and operating
reserves, the Commission has not required specific
compensation for all reliability-related costs. We
agree with those commenters who observe that
minimal reliability-related costs such as those
incurred to provide primary frequency response, are
reasonably considered to be part of the general cost
of doing business, and are not specifically
compensated.’’)).
454 Id. P 15 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at
PP 52–53; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 26; PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088, at PP
29–31; Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103 at PP 20–
21; BPA, 120 FERC ¶ 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC,
119 FERC ¶ 61,340 at P 15; Entergy Servs., Inc., 113
FERC ¶ 61,040 at P 38); see also id. P 18 (noting
that CAISO, SPP, and MISO do not pay separately
for reactive power within the standard power factor
range).
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facilities provide reactive power within
the standard power factor range.455
156. The NOPR sought comment on
the reliability impact of prohibiting
transmission providers from including
in their transmission rates any charges
associated with the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range from a generating facility in
regions where generating facilities
currently receive such compensation.456
1. Comments
157. Many commenters do not expect
to see an impact on reliability under the
NOPR proposal.457 For example, ‘‘MISO
has not experienced reliability concerns
since December 1, 2022 due to the
elimination of compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor
range.’’ 458 Furthermore, several
commenters observe that regions like
MISO, which implemented similar
reforms, and CAISO, which does not
compensate for reactive power service,
have not experienced related reliability
concerns.459 The PJM IMM argues that
‘‘there is no evidence that expanding the
just and reasonable approach to
compensation already in place in
CAISO, SPP, and MISO to PJM will have
any adverse impact on reliability in
PJM’’ and that ‘‘[t]he salient difference
between PJM and CAISO, SPP, and
MISO is that PJM customers paid
$388,044,837.00 in out of market
payments for reactive capability in
2023, and customers in CAISO, SPP and
MISO, paid $0.00’’ 460 for the same
service. Joint Customers agree with the
NOPR that the Commission’s
‘‘precedent is crystal clear that
compensation is not required’’ 461 for
455 Id.
456 Id.
P 44.
e.g., Joint Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 6–8; Joint Customers Reply Comments
at 1–2; MISO Initial Comments at 2; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 12–16;
New England Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 4–5; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 4;
PGE Initial Comments at 2–3; PJM IMM Initial
Comments at 11–12.
458 MISO Initial Comments at 2.
459 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 2–6;
MISO Initial Comments at 2; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 14–15; TAPS Initial
Comments at 5.
460 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11–12.
461 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 2; see also
id. at 3 (‘‘The Commission is, in fact, in an enviable
position where the pro forma revisions
contemplated in the NOPR have recently been
implemented on a large regional scale. For the
purposes of establishing record support for the
NOPR and addressing transition, discussed below,
the MISO proceeding essentially point by point
addresses the arguments recycled to oppose the
NOPR. The same is true with respect to the
arguments concerning reliability, which were
extensively addressed in the MISO order and order
on rehearing. But with respect to reliability, MISO
457 See,
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generators meeting interconnection
requirements of providing reactive
service within the standard power factor
range. In addition, MISO Transmission
Owners assert that eliminating reactive
power compensation will not adversely
affect reliability because generators are
required to provide reactive power
pursuant to their interconnection
agreements,462 NERC requirements,463
and Order No. 2003.464 Joint Customers
argue that there is a ‘‘lack of concrete
evidence of adverse reliability impacts
(including in regions where this exact
change has been implemented)’’ in the
record and the commenters’ concern
that ‘‘if there is not an unjustifiable free
revenue stream ostensibly related to
reactive service and capability, there
will not be sufficient generation for real
power and capacity at some unspecified
point in the future’’ is ‘‘speculative to
the point of incoherence.’’ 465
158. MISO Transmission Owners
refute the claim that the transmission
system will face increased retirements
due to the loss of reactive power
revenue by arguing that transmission
providers have mechanisms for
maintaining system reliability in the
face of premature retirements.466
Relatedly, Joint Consumer Advocates,
MISO Transmission Owners, and TAPS
each point to ample backlogs in
generator interconnection queues
nationwide as protection against any
threat to reliability from eliminating
reactive power compensation.467
159. MISO Transmission Owners also
counter fears 468 of inadequate
incentives to make the necessary capital
is dispositive not only for its precedential value, but
also in setting up a real-world test of the
countervailing predictions regarding the impact of
eliminating compensation for reactive service
within the standard power factor range.’’ (citations
omitted)); id. at 4 (‘‘MISO’s experience validates the
Commission’s conclusions in approving the MISO
Transmission Owners’ proposed tariff revisions, as
well as the Commission’s skepticism regarding
speculative warnings of reliability impacts. It
similarly validates PJM’s support for the NOPR and
the conclusions of the PJM Independent Market
Monitor that amending Schedule 2 of the PJM Tariff
will not lead to reliability concerns.’’ (internal
citations omitted)).
462 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 4–6;
MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at
12–16; MISO Transmission Owners Reply
Comments at 3–4; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 4;
PGE Initial Comments at 2–4.
463 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 12.
464 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 6 (citing Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ¶ 61,103 at
P 546; Order No. 2003–A, 106 FERC ¶ 61,220 at PP
410, 416).
465 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 4–6.
466 Supra n.448.
467 Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
7–8; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 12–16; TAPS Initial Comments at 5.
468 See, e.g., Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 21.
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investments to provide reactive power
by explaining that generators are
incented by their own operating and
reliability requirements to install the
equipment that is most likely to keep
their projects online and delivering real
power.469
160. Other commenters express
general reliability concerns under the
NOPR proposal.470 Commenters also
argue that specific types of resources
especially benefit from reactive power
revenue, including energy storage,471
hydro,472 and nuclear.473 Elevate
explains that ‘‘[b]ecause energy storage
resources ‘have the capability to operate
at any power factor, they are
exceptionally valuable as reactive power
resources.’’’ 474
161. Generation Developers argue
that, without the reactive power
capability of generating facilities,
transmission providers will need to
further invest in transmission
equipment capable of providing reactive
support.475 Indicated Trade
Associations assert that eliminating a
source of stable, expected reactive
power compensation could lead to more
retirements.476 Relatedly, Indicated
Trade Associations also state that, while
CAISO does not currently compensate
reactive power service, it has had to rely
on reliability must-run (RMR)
agreements to maintain the needed
reactive power.477 NEI emphasizes the
469 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 11 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 35 n.116 (‘‘[G]enerators have
incentives to install equipment to ensure that their
generation remains online and delivering real
power.’’)).
470 See, e.g., Clean Energy Associations Initial
Comments at 5; Elevate Initial Comments at 4–9;
Elevate Reply Comments at 4–6; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 2–6; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 18–19;
NAGF Initial Comments at 2; NEI Initial Comments
at 2; NEPGA Reply Comments at 2–3 (citing ISO–
NE Initial Comments at 6–7); NESCOE Reply
Comments at 2–3 (citing ISO–NE Initial Comments
at 5–8); NHA Initial Comments at 1–2, 4; NYISO
Initial Comments at 8–11; PSEG Initial Comments
at 4–5, 8, 16–20, 22–24; Reactive Service Providers
Initial Comments at 22.
471 Elevate Initial Comments at 4–9; Elevate Reply
Comments at 4–6.
472 NHA Initial Comments at 2.
473 Id. at 6.
474 Elevate Initial Comments at 5 (citing
Meyersdale Storage, LLC Proposed Revenue
Requirement under PJM Interconnection, L.L.C.
Open Access Transmission Tariff, Schedule 2,
Reactive Supply and Voltage Control From
Generation Sources Service, Docket No. ER21–864–
000, Exh. No. MEY–0001 at 11:19–22 (filed Jan. 11,
2021)).
475 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 2–
3.
476 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 18–19; Indicated Trade Associations
Reply Comments at 12.
477 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 19–20.
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
importance of reactive power, noting
Chairman Wood’s statement that proper
reactive power management would have
‘‘delayed’’ or possibly prevented the
2003 August blackout,478 and NERC’s
finding that ‘‘reactive power is critical
to the reliable and efficient operation of
the power system.’’ 479 NEPOOL argues
that payment for reactive power
broadens the base of resources willing to
seek to become Qualified Reactive
Resources and support reliability in
ISO–NE.480
162. Indicated Trade Associations
also argue that eliminating
compensation for reactive power service
within the standard power factor range
will hamper generators’ ability to
provide reactive power service outside
the standard power factor range because
such events do not happen with enough
regularity to warrant the capital costs
associated with such capability.481
Similarly, Indicated Trade Associations
argue that the increasing reliance on
non-synchronous resources makes it
even more important to ensure that
generators have incentives to go beyond
the bare minimum requirements
outlined in their interconnection
agreements.482
163. NYISO and IPPNY warn that
transitioning away from NYISO’s
current reactive power compensation
structure could introduce reliability
risks and operational complexities.483
NYISO asserts that its reactive power
compensation supports electric system
reliability because it requires resources
to undergo annual capability tests and
maintain automatic voltage control
equipment to ensure consistent reactive
power support.484 NYISO explains that
these resources dynamically produce or
absorb reactive power, supporting the
electric system within and beyond
standard power factor ranges without
operator intervention. NYISO
emphasizes that this automatic and
478 NEI Initial Comments at 3 (citing Letter from
FERC Chairman Pat Wood, III, 1 (Feb. 4, 2005),
https://www.ferc.gov/sites/default/files/2020-05/
20050310144430-02-04-05-rp-letter-wood.pdf; 2005
Staff Report at 3 (‘‘Inadequate reactive power has
led to voltage collapses and has been a major cause
of several recent major power outages
worldwide.’’)).
479 NEI Initial Comments at 3–4 citing NERC,
Essential Reliability Services Task Force Measures
Framework Report 16 (Nov. 2015), https://
www.nerc.com/comm/Other/
essntlrlbltysrvcstskfrcDL/ERSTF%20
Framework%20Report%20-%20Final.pdf.
480 NEPOOL Reply Comments at 12.
481 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 21.
482 Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 12.
483 NYISO Initial Comments at 8–11; IPPNY
Reply Comments at 1–2.
484 NYISO Initial Comments at 5–7.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
dynamic support is essential for
maintaining system reliability.485
Reactive Service Providers explains that
inverter-based generation can and does
provide VAR support even when no
MW are sold.486 Generation Developers
and Reactive Service Providers highlight
the pivotal role in maintaining
reliability that transmission providers
with a dynamic source of reactive power
supply provide.487 NYISO is concerned
that eliminating compensation for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range will introduce
confusion among existing generators
and new generators, and, in the longer
term, introduce reliability issues onto
the electric system.488 NYISO also
believes that the final determination
will result in eliminating the price
signals and incentives for the reactive
power necessary to maintain system
reliability, instead blending those costs
and payments into payments made to all
capacity suppliers without a direct link
to provision of the reactive power
necessary to support a reliable electric
system.489
164. Elevate adds that international
electric markets recognize the
importance of energy storage resources
to maintaining long-term transmission
system reliability.490 For example,
Elevate states that in the United
Kingdom, the National Grid Electricity
System Operator (ESO) has entered into
a contract with the largest transmission
system connected battery project in
Europe to provide reactive power
support services to maintain system
voltages in the face of growing system
variability and the retirement of thermal
generation resources. Elevate states that
the ESO entered this contract despite
already providing compensation to
resources for providing or absorbing
reactive power as a condition of
interconnecting and through regular
solicitations to secure resources to
provide more reactive power than what
is required to interconnect to the
transmission system.491
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485 Id.
486 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
21–23.
487 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 25;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 21–
23.
488 NYISO Initial Comments at 7.
489 Id. at 9.
490 Elevate Reply Comments at 6–7 (citing Energy
Storage News, Europe’s largest transmissionconnected BESS begins ‘world first’ reactive power
services contract, (Feb. 13, 2023), https://
www.energy-storage.news/europes-largesttransmission-connected-bess-begins-world-firstreactive-power-services-contract/).
491 Id. at 7 (citing ESO, Obligatory Reactive Power
Service, https://www.nationalgrideso.com/industryinformation/balancing-services/reactive-powerservices/obligatory-reactive-power-
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2. Commission Determination
165. Based on our review of the
record, and consistent with the
preliminary finding in the NOPR,492 we
conclude that prohibiting transmission
providers from including in their
transmission rates any charges
associated with the provision of reactive
power from a generating facility within
the standard power factor range and
thereby eliminating compensation to
generating facilities for reactive power
within the standard power factor range,
would not negatively impact reliability.
The record in this proceeding affirms
our preliminary finding in the NOPR
that requiring transmission customers to
continue paying for reactive power
already required by a generating
facility’s interconnection agreement is
not necessary to ensure that generating
facilities provide reactive power when
required, as new and existing generating
facilities are, and will continue to be,
required to provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range
as a condition of obtaining and
maintaining interconnection.493 As
commenters note, these findings are
supported by the fact that generating
facilities in CAISO, SPP, MISO, and
certain non-RTO regions (e.g., BPA,
Arizona Public Service Company,
Southern Companies) do not receive
compensation for reactive power
capability within the standard power
factor range,494 and there is no evidence
in the record that the lack of reactive
power compensation anywhere has led
service#Document-Library (last visited June 26,
2024); ESO, Enhanced Reactive Power Service,
https://www.nationalgrideso.com/industryinformation/balancing-services/reactive-powerservices/enhanced-reactive-power-serviceerps#Document-library (last visited June 26, 2024)).
492 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 43.
493 Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
6–8; Joint Customers Reply Comments at 1–2; MISO
Initial Comments at 2; MISO Transmission Owners
Initial Comments at 12–16; New England Consumer
Advocates Initial Comments at 4–5; Ohio FEA
Initial Comments at 4; PGE Initial Comments at 2–
3; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11–12. See also
Order No. 842, 162 FERC ¶ 61,128 (‘‘[T]here are
interconnection requirements for generating
facilities in which the recovery of capital costs and
operating expenses are not necessarily ensured.’’).
494 See, e.g, MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 (accepting
MISO transmission owners’ proposal to eliminate
compensation for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range); Cal. Indep.
Sys. Operator Corp., 160 FERC ¶ 61,035 at P 19
(‘‘[A] separate payment for the provision of reactive
power capability inside the standard power factor
range is not required, and we see no reason to
require a separate cost recovery mechanism for
reactive power capability based on the record
here.’’); PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at P 29
(‘‘Consistent with Commission precedent, a
transmission provider may decide to eliminate
compensation for having the capability of providing
reactive service within the standard power factor
range.’’).
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93445
to an insufficient supply of reactive
power in those regions.
166. For these same reasons, we also
find speculative and without merit
claims that elimination of compensation
for reactive power within the standard
power factor range will mute investment
in real and reactive power capability,
hasten generating facility retirements
and/or RMR agreements and as a result,
negatively impact reliability and require
increased transmission provider
investment in transmission equipment
capable of providing reactive
support.495 We see no record evidence
supporting these concerns, and
substantial record evidence to the
contrary. For example, CAISO stated
that its current approach to not
compensate for reactive power provided
within the standard power factor range
has not resulted in major issues of
concern with respect to the level of
reactive power,496 and TAPS points out
that reliability has not suffered in
regions in which reactive power in the
standard power factor range is not
compensated, as confirmed by years of
experience in regions in which the
absence of such compensation is a longstanding practice.497 Reliability has not
been weakened in those regions because
the Commission’s 20 year old
requirement that interconnection
customers have equipment to provide
such reactive power ensures that
generating facilities can interconnect
reliably.498
495 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
5; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at
18–19; Indicated Trade Associations Reply
Comments at 12; NEPOOL Reply Comments at 12;
Elevate Initial Comments at 4–9; Elevate Reply
Comments at 4–6; NEI Initial Comments at 6, 15;
NHA Initial Comments at 2, 4.
496 CAISO Initial Comments to the NOI at 5–6
(explaining that despite the fact that it does not
compensate for reactive power within the standard
power factor range, CAISO ‘‘has seen no evidence
to this point that resources cannot comply with
reactive power dispatch instructions because they
have insufficient funds for the equipment to meet
the reactive power dispatch’’); MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 15 (‘‘The claim that
generators may have to retire units in the absence
of compensation for reactive power service within
the deadband is pure speculation. Prior to the
elimination of compensation for reactive power
within the deadband in MISO, a number of
generators in MISO operated without compensation
for reactive power within the deadband as they did
not file their revenue requirements for reactive
power when their projects came on-line.’’).
497 TAPS Initial Comments at 5.
498 See, e.g., Joint Customers Reply Comments at
6 (arguing that there is a ‘‘lack of concrete evidence
of adverse reliability impacts (including in regions
where this exact change has been implemented)’’ in
the record and that commenters’ concern that ‘‘if
there is not an unjustifiable free revenue stream
ostensibly related to reactive service and capability,
there will not be sufficient generation for real power
and capacity at some unspecified point in the
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167. In response to the reliability
concerns raised by ISO–NE and NYISO,
we find that their stated concerns are
not specific to the proposal being
adopted in this final determination—
that is, their arguments are not limited
to the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor
range—and as a result, we find their
concerns unpersuasive. ISO–NE and
NYISO allude generally to reliability
benefits from reactive power
compensation over the full range of a
generating facility’s capability to
provide reactive power. As such, ISO–
NE’s and NYISO’s comments appear to
address the reliability implications of
eliminating reactive power
compensation entirely—that is,
eliminating compensation both within
and outside of the standard power factor
range—rather than the narrower focus of
this final determination, which
addresses only the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range. However, as explained herein,
the long-existing obligation of
generating facilities to provide reactive
power within the standard power range
in order to reliably interconnect to the
transmission system remains
unchanged, as do the rules regarding the
provision of reactive power outside the
standard power factor range, which is
considered a compensable ancillary
service for transmitting power across the
transmission system to serve load.499
We also reject arguments about the
provision of reactive power service
beyond the requirements of generating
facilities’ interconnection
agreements,500 outside of the standard
power factor range,501 and Elevate’s
claims about the ESO’s decision to
future’’ is ‘‘speculative to the point of
incoherence’’); TAPS Initial Comments at 5; MISO
Initial Comments at 2 (explaining that it would not
expect to see any effect on reliability through
eliminating compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range and in fact, MISO
has not experienced reliability concerns since
December 1, 2022 due to the elimination of
compensation for reactive power within the
standard power factor range). See also Order No.
842, 162 FERC ¶ 61,128 at P 121 (‘‘While the
Commission has approved specific compensation
for discrete services that require substantial
identifiable costs, such as for frequency regulation
and operating reserves, the Commission has not
required specific compensation for all reliabilityrelated costs. We agree with those commenters who
observe that minimal reliability-related costs such
as those incurred to provide primary frequency
response, are reasonably considered to be part of
the general cost of doing business, and are not
specifically compensated.’’).
499 See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
¶ 61,022 at P 23 (citing METC Rehearing Order, 97
FERC at 61,852–53).
500 Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments
at 12.
501 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 21.
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double-compensate reactive power
service in the United Kingdom for
similar reasons.
168. We agree with NYISO’s 502 and
others’ 503 statements about the
importance of reactive power to
reliability, including statements of
dynamic reactive power sources,504 but
we note that such statements are equally
true with or without reactive power
compensation within the standard
power factor range. Once again,
requiring transmission customers to
continue paying for reactive power
within the standard power factor range
already required by a generating
facility’s interconnection agreement is
not necessary to ensure that generating
facilities provide reactive power when
required, as new and existing generating
facilities are, and will continue to be,
required to provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range
as a condition of obtaining and
maintaining interconnection.505
169. In response to NEI’s statements
about the importance of reactive power
in the 2005 Staff Report,506 and NERC’s
Essential Reliability Services Task Force
Measures Framework report,507 we note
that the 2005 Staff Report also explains
that ‘‘[i]nvestment that results in
reactive power capability by generation
facilities is driven by interconnection
requirements, historical inertia and
potential cost recovery for capacity.
There is little interaction between the
actual system need or value of reactive
power capability and its supply by
independent generation resources.’’ 508
Additionally, to support our finding
here, we are relying on more recent
evidence, which indicates that RTOs/
ISOs and non-RTO regions that have
eliminated compensation for reactive
power capability within the standard
power factor range are not experiencing
any adverse reliability impacts due to
absence of reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor
range.509
502 NYISO
Initial Comments at 5–7.
e.g., Joint Consumer Advocates Initial
Comments at 6–8; Joint Customers Reply Comments
at 1–2; MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 12–16.
504 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 25;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 21–
23.
505 See supra II.B.2.
506 Supra n.508.
507 Supra n.509.
508 See 2005 Staff Report at 69; see also APS, 94
FERC at 61,080 (‘‘We note that operating a
generating unit within the proposed [standard
power factor range] does not affect the generation
output of a unit.’’).
509 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 13–14 (‘‘When the MISO Transmission Owners
proposed to eliminate compensation for producing
reactive power within the deadband, the most
503 See,
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Sfmt 4700
E. Investment
170. The NOPR sought comment on
whether, and if so how, eliminating
separate reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor range
may affect investment decisions to
build, or finish building, generating
facilities, and whether, and if so, how
the elimination could otherwise affect
generating facilities’ business decisions
in those markets.510 The NOPR also
noted that in MISO, the Commission
rejected any reliance arguments,
reasoning in part that the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range required little or no
incremental investment.511
1. Comments
171. PGE argues that the NOPR
proposal would not have a measurable
impact on investment decisions.512
MISO Transmission Owners also reject
the claim that the proposed rule will
disincentivize investment in new
generating and storage resources.513
172. However, several commenters
claim that ending compensation for
reactive power service in the standard
power factor range would have a
negative impact on investment. Many
commenters claim that such an action
would be disruptive to generators and/
or their investors, who include forecasts
of such compensation as the basis for
financing arrangements.514
common protest from generators was that it would
impact the reliability of the grid. However, such
claims are not supported by evidence and distract
from the underlying fact that generators are
obligated to provide reactive power within the
deadband whether or not they are compensated for
it . . . MISO has since experienced no reliability
issues as a result and generator interconnection
applications, the first step of a process that ends
with execution of an interconnection agreement
that obligates the generator to provide reactive
power within the deadband, remain high.’’
(citations omitted)); PJM IMM Reply Comments at
5 (‘‘There is no evidence from any of the markets
where this policy already exists that it has created
a reliability issue.’’).
510 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 49.
511 Id. P 16 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184
FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 29); MISO Rehearing Order, 184
FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP 29–31 (finding that providing
reactive service requires ‘‘little or no incremental
investment’’ by both synchronous and nonsynchronous resources); PJM Interconnection,
L.L.C., 151 FERC ¶ 61,097 at PP 7, 28 (finding that
non-synchronous generating facilities are
comparable to traditional synchronous generating
facilities, in that there are for both types of
generating facilities very little if any incremental
costs incurred to provide reactive power).
512 PGE Initial Comments at 5.
513 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 3–7.
514 ACORE Initial Comments at 3–4; Calpine
Initial Comments at 2; Clean Energy Associations
Initial Comments at 4–5; Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 33; EDPR Initial Comments at
1, 3–4; Elevate Initial Comments at 6; Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 13–
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173. The PJM IMM maintains that:
There is no evidence that units are built as
a result of reactive [power] revenue. There is
no evidence that sources of revenue are not
fungible and that a decrease in reactive
[power] revenues could be not replaced with
other sources of revenue. There is no basis
for adding new resources to the already very
crowded interconnection queue solely based
on out of market subsidies from reactive
revenues.515
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174. Similarly, PGE notes that
transmission providers that have
eliminated reactive power
compensation have not observed a
decrease in proposed investment.516
MISO Transmission Owners assert that
Indicated Trade Associations’ claim that
reactive power revenue streams can
make the difference in overall
profitability is unsupported by
evidence.517 Moreover, MISO
Transmission Owners argue that
investors could not reasonably have
relied on reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor range
in perpetuity and should have
considered the risk of its elimination
when making investment decisions.518
Similarly, Joint Customers explain that
to the extent that generators voluntarily
and unilaterally installed greater
reactive capability than that required by
their respective interconnection
agreements, they did so at their own risk
and for their own strategies, none of
which mean that they should continue
to be compensated for costs that they
did not have to incur and which do not
benefit transmission customers.519
175. NEI, Calpine, Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers, and Generation
Developers argue that they relied on the
Commission’s longstanding precedent
and policy of allowing compensation for
reactive power within the standard
power factor range in making their
investment decisions and suggest that
the final determination would be highly
disruptive to market participants.520
PSEG asserts that the final
determination represents a significant
departure from existing Commission
14; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments
at 16; Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6;
NEI Initial Comments at 2, 5–6, 8; NHA Initial
Comments at 4–5.
515 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12–13.
516 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 4–6.
517 Id. at 3.
518 Id. at 7.
519 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 20.
520 NEI Initial Comments at 8; Calpine Initial
Comments at 2; Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
Initial Comments at 13; Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 33–34.
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18:54 Nov 25, 2024
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policy without an adequate
explanation.521
176. ACORE and Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers highlight the costs and
potential challenges of generators with
PPAs who may be unable to renegotiate
those agreements to include costs
related to reactive power service.522
ACORE and Calpine argue that the
NOPR proposal would impede project
development during a period of greater
need for generation resources.523
Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
states that the loss of reactive power
compensation could lead to generators
not developing other projects because
the revenue loss impacts these projects’
ability to leverage finite capital based on
this cash flow reduction.524 Middle
River Power also claims that the NOPR
proposal may prompt investors to
question the reliability and stability of
other Commission-approved rates and
markets.525 Indicated Trade
Associations argue that, given the
narrow margins for competitive
generators, small reactive power
revenue streams can make the difference
between whether a generator will be
profitable over its life or not.526
177. Clean Energy Associations argue
that the proposal is also disruptive to a
host of interconnection customers with
operating or near-completed projects
and extant PPAs.527 Clean Energy
Associations also argues that the NOPR
fails to consider IPP projects located in
PJM with reactive power rates that are
the result of Commission-approved
settlements. Clean Energy Associations
also argues that the Commission has not
adequately considered the fundamental
differences between IPP projects and
projects that are utility-owned.
2. Commission Determination
178. Based on the record, we find that
there is substantial evidence to support
the conclusion that prohibiting the
inclusion in transmission rates of
reactive power rates within the standard
power factor range will not have a
521 PSEG Initial Comments at 4, 20–22 (citing PJM
Providers Grp. v. FERC, 88 F.4th at 271–72 (quoting
FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. at
515); Ass’n of Oil Pipe Lines v. FERC, 876 F.3d 336,
342 (D.C. Cir. 2017)).
522 ACORE Initial Comments at 3–4; Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 14.
523 ACORE Initial Comments at 3–4; Calpine
Initial Comments at 2.
524 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 13–14.
525 Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6.
526 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 16.
527 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
4–5.
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93447
significant impact on investment in new
generating facilities.528
179. First, as stated above, generating
facilities in CAISO, SPP, MISO, and
certain non-RTO regions do not receive
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range,529 and, as MISO
Transmission Owners explain,530 there
is no evidence in the record that: (1)
these policies have led to an insufficient
supply of reactive power in those
regions, or (2) generating facilities in
these regions have been unable to
recover any costs associated with the
provision of such reactive power.
Because new and existing generating
facilities are required to provide reactive
service within the standard power factor
range as a condition of interconnection,
eliminating compensation for providing
that service would not negatively
impact investment.531
180. Second, we also agree with the
MISO Transmission Owners, who note
that because compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range has always
been based on comparability rather than
compensability, ‘‘[r]eactive power
compensation is not a given’’ and that
‘‘[t]he Commission has consistently
followed these principles, allowing
transmission providers across the nation
to eliminate compensation for reactive
power service within the deadband.’’ 532
528 See, e.g., MISO Transmission Owners Reply
Comments at 3–4, 5–7; PGE Initial Comments at 5;
PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12–13.
529 See Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator Corp., 160 FERC
¶ 61,035 at P 19 (‘‘[A] separate payment for the
provision of reactive power capability inside the
standard power factor range is not required, and we
see no reason to require a separate cost recovery
mechanism for reactive power capability based on
the record here.’’). See also PNM, 178 FERC
¶ 61,088 at P 29 (‘‘Consistent with Commission
precedent, a transmission provider may decide to
eliminate compensation for having the capability of
providing reactive service within the standard
power factor range.’’); Order No. 842, 162 FERC
¶ 61,128 (‘‘[T]here are interconnection requirements
for generating facilities in which the recovery of
capital costs and operating expenses are not
necessarily ensured.’’).
530 MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 3–4.
531 See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 55;
MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP
35–36; see also MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 9–10 (‘‘At the same time MISO was
experiencing a dramatic increase in the amounts
transmission customers paid for reactive power
service prior to its elimination of compensation for
reactive power service within the deadband, SEIA
highlighted that MISO was one of the two ‘most
lucrative’ regions for reactive power compensation,
where generators received millions of dollars in
compensation for having the capability to produce
reactive power within the deadband, a capability
that was already a condition of obtaining
interconnection.’’ (citations omitted)).
532 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 19. See also Joint Customers Reply Comments at
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As previously noted, developers have
been on notice since at least Order No.
2003 and Order No. 2003–A that
reactive power is not compensable
within the standard power factor range
(other than for comparability reasons),
and so could not have relied, reasonably
or otherwise, on the permanence of such
compensation for investment
purposes.533
181. Third, to the extent that
generating facilities may have incurred
costs by increasing their generating
facilities’ reactive power capabilities
beyond the requirements of their
interconnection agreements, we find
that it is unreasonable to charge
transmission customers for these costs
as they were not required for
interconnection and do not fit within
the least justifiable cost to customers.534
Further, as noted herein, this final
determination does not address
compensation for reactive power
provided outside of the standard power
factor range, which will continue to be
compensable.
182. Fourth and finally, as discussed
herein and further below, generating
facilities have other opportunities to
recover any de minimis variable costs of
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range, and this
final determination establishes a
transition mechanism to give RTOs/
ISOs time to adjust their market rules to
ensure that generating facilities
continue to have such other
opportunities after this final
determination.
183. Some commenters expressed
general concerns about generating
facilities and investors relying on
reactive power revenues for planning
6–7 (‘‘Additionally, claims that investors made
decisions relying on the revenue stream associated
with the capability to provide reactive power
within the deadband fail to contend with the many
instances in which the Commission accepted
transmission providers’ elimination of
compensation for reactive power within the
deadband. Sophisticated investors could not
reasonably have relied on compensation for
providing reactive power within the deadband in
perpetuity, but rather should have considered the
risk of elimination of this revenue stream when
making investment decisions.’’ (citations omitted)).
533 See BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ¶ 61,273,
at P 15 & n.24 (‘‘[N]either affiliated nor nonaffiliated generators have an inherent right to any
compensation for reactive power inside the
deadband.’’).
534 See Joint Customers Initial Comments at 20
(‘‘To the extent that generators voluntarily and
unilaterally installed greater reactive capability
than that required by their respective
interconnection agreements, they did so at their
own risk and for their own strategies, none of which
mean that they should continue to be compensated
for costs that they did not have to incur and which
do not benefit transmission customers.’’).
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purposes,535 including concerns of
interconnection customers with nearcompleted or operating projects, and
extant PPAs,536 as well as with IPP
projects located in PJM with reactive
power rates that are the result of
Commission-approved settlements.537
However, we reiterate that in this final
determination 538 we have rejected any
reliance arguments, reasoning in part
that the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range
requires no incremental investment or
fixed costs and at most de minimis
incremental variable costs.
184. Relatedly, Indicated Trade
Associations 539 argue that narrow profit
margins mean that the loss of reactive
power revenues could tip generating
facilities out of profitability. We
reiterate our finding above that the
variable and incremental costs of
providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range requires no
or at most a de minimis increase in
variable costs beyond the cost of
providing real power 540 and that
generating facilities can recover any de
minimis variable costs through other
means. Additionally, no commenter
provided any evidence that the loss of
reactive power compensation would
make a project that was otherwise
profitable, unprofitable.
185. Further, we disagree with PSEG’s
assertions that the NOPR represents a
significant departure from existing
Commission policy without an adequate
explanation and refer PSEG to the
evidence and reasoning presented
herein that we are relying upon in this
final determination.541 Consequently,
we are revising the pro forma Schedule
2, pro forma LGIA, and pro forma SGIA
to prohibit the inclusion in transmission
rates of unjust and unreasonable charges
related to the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range by generating facilities. As courts
of appeals have articulated on several
occasions, ‘‘[t]he APA does not require
‘regulatory agencies [to] establish rules
of conduct to last forever,’ ’’ but rather,
535 See, e.g., ACORE Initial Comments at 3–4;
Calpine Initial Comments at 2; Clean Energy
Associations Initial Comments at 4–5; EDPR Initial
Comments at 1, 3–4; Elevate Initial Comments at 6;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 33;
Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 14; Indicated Trade Associations
Initial Comments at 16; Middle River Power Initial
Comments at 6; NHA Initial Comments at 4–5.
536 See Clean Energy Associations Initial
Comments at 5.
537 Id.
538 See supra II.C.2.
539 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 16.
540 See supra II.B.2.
541 See supra II.A.2, II.B.2, II.C.2.
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‘‘agencies may ‘adapt their rules and
policies to the demands of changing
circumstances.’ ’’ 542
186. Similarly, in response to Middle
River Power’s 543 claims about the
reliability and stability of other
Commission-approved rates and
markets, we note when the Commission
finds that a rate is unjust and
unreasonable, as we do here, the
Commission has not only the right but
the obligation under section 206 of the
FPA to modify that rate in order to
ensure it is just and reasonable.544 As
the PJM IMM,545 Joint Consumer
Advocates,546 and Dr. Bremser,547 note
the Commission has previously changed
compensation policies when it has
determined that existing practices were
resulting in unjust and unreasonable
rates.548
F. Additional Comments
1. Comments
187. Ameren asserts that it was the
right decision to eliminate
compensation for reactive power
542 Solar Energy Indus. Ass’n v. FERC, 80 F.4th
956, 979 (9th Cir. 2023) (citing Motor Vehicle Mfrs.
Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
463 U.S. at 43).
543 Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6.
544 16 U.S.C. 824e(a) (‘‘Whenever the
Commission, after a hearing held upon its own
motion or upon complaint, shall find that any rate,
charge, or classification, demanded, observed,
charged, or collected by any public utility for any
transmission or sale subject to the jurisdiction of
the Commission, or that any rule, regulation,
practice, or contract affecting such rate, charge, or
classification is unjust, unreasonable, unduly
discriminatory or preferential, the Commission
shall determine the just and reasonable rate, charge,
classification, rule, regulation, practice, or contract
to be thereafter observed and in force, and shall fix
the same by order.’’).
545 PJM IMM Reply Comments at 6 (‘‘Such attacks
on the rules and standards can be disregarded
because they are collateral attacks on final rules and
standards that are not within the scope of this
proceeding. Reactive Service Providers arguments
challenging longstanding Commission policy and
multiple Commission orders are also beside the
point.’’).
546 Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
8 (‘‘[S]ection 206 of the FPA requires that the
Commission act to eliminate unjust and
unreasonable rates where and when it finds them.
There is no statutory authorization to allow an
unjust and unreasonable rate to continue.’’)
547 Joint Customers Reply Comments, Reply
Affidavit of Dr. Albert W. Bremser at 4:1–3 (‘‘My
second conclusion is that permanent reliance on
[Commission]-jurisdictional practices as never
changing is not consistent with the typical
experience of [Commission]-jurisdictional entities
and ratepayers.’’; id. at 10:2–6 (‘‘In terms of reliance
on Commission past practices or what the
Commission has allowed, it is my experience that
the Commission can and does change its practices
and what it allows. This can impact the rates
charged to ratepayers and the rates collected by
companies.’’).
548 See, e.g., Indep. Mkt. Monitor for PJM v. PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C., 176 FERC ¶ 61,137 (2021);
order on reh’g, 178 FERC ¶ 61,121 (2022).
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capability in MISO, as evident by the
numerous reactive power cases in
which Ameren intervened from 2018–
2022 that were set for hearing and
settlement judge procedures, with
resulting revenue requirements reduced
substantially from what the filing
generator proposed, and in some cases
by over 50%.549
188. The NHA asserts that individual
RTOs/ISOs should develop and/or
improve upon reactive power capability
compensation market rules to reflect
locational requirements.550
189. Indicated Trade Associations
request that the Commission clarify that
the NOPR will not be applied in
determining refunds in cases where the
Commission has established settlement
and hearing judge proceedings for
reactive rates.551
190. Indicated Trade Associations
argue that the Commission should not
implement the NOPR proposal.552
Indicated Trade Associations assert that
the NOPR is not supported by the NOI
record, which they argue was focused
on changes and improvements to the
methodology used to determine
appropriate reactive power
compensation, rather than the NOPR’s
proposal to eliminate reactive power
compensation within the standard
power factor range altogether.553
191. Glenvale avows that some
generators provide reactive power
within the power factor range but
outside of the requirements of their
interconnection agreements, such as
solar generators that are not
synchronized to the transmission
system but still provide reactive power
service.554
192. Clean Energy Associations also
proposes their own reactive power
compensation format in which the
Commission would develop a new,
objective, cost-based, technology-neutral
rate for reactive power to encourage the
proliferation of reactive power resources
in a non-discriminatory way.555
193. Reactive Service Providers also
argue that a ± 0.95 standard power
factor range is arbitrary. As support,
they claim that it is not NERCmandated, that many generating
facilities are not actually satisfying it,
549 Ameren Initial Comments at 5 (citing Docket
Nos. ER21–1046, ER21–2329, ER21–2695, ER21–
2892, ER22–526, ER22–616, ER22–615, ER22–1554,
ER22–1610, ER22–1815).
550 NHA Initial Comments at 6–7.
551 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 32.
552 Id. at 1, 7.
553 Id. at 5–6.
554 Glenvale Initial Comments at 8.
555 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
9–10.
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and that ‘‘it is in essence a mandate to
create headroom if and when it is
needed by the Transmission
Provider.’’ 556 Reactive Service
Providers argue that there is no
difference operationally between
operating within and outside the
standard power factor range because
that distinction does not reflect the
operational realities of an integrated
transmission system, where the
transmission provider is ‘‘balancing all
resources instantaneously such that all
load everywhere benefits.’’ 557
194. Clean Energy Associations asks
that, should the Commission proceed
with its proposal, that the Commission
should clarify that interconnection
agreements cannot adopt a standard
power factor range other than 0.95
leading and lagging and specify that
compensation must be provided for
reactive power provided outside of the
range.558
195. ACORE recommends that instead
of removing all compensation within
the standard power factor range, a costbased, technology-neutral rate be
established for reactive power, with a
focus on reducing the administrative
burdens of the AEP Methodology.559
196. Joint Customers highlight the
burdens associated with the
individualized review of reactive rate
filings arguing that it leads to higher
costs for customers without
corresponding benefits and that the
case-by-case approach using the AEP
Methodology is resource-intensive and
results in inconsistent outcomes.560
197. Liberty states that it believes the
current methodology has resulted in
ambiguity on cost formation and could
lead to unjust rates for customers.561
Liberty explains that it would generally
support a cost recovery methodology
change that results in reasonable rates
for customers that are not duplicative in
nature, in line with industry standards,
and sufficiently compensates reactive
power capability services.
198. Middle River Power argues that
the AEP Methodology has consistently
produced just and reasonable rates for
Middle River Power-affiliated
generation and others and that if
administrative burden were a problem
that must be remedied, the solution
would be to reform the administrative
556 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
24–29.
557 Id. at 35–36.
558 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
2–3.
559 ACORE Initial Comments at 4.
560 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 7–11.
561 Liberty Initial Comments at 1.
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93449
process by which just and reasonable
rates are determined.562
199. NEI suggests that the
Commission should continue to support
the AEP Methodology.563 NEI notes that
while there are implementation
challenges to the AEP Methodology, as
highlighted by NEI previously, such
process-related concerns do not render
it unjust and unreasonable.564
200. TAPS argues that the AEP
Methodology that many generators use
in their reactive power compensation
filings, and which was derived many
years ago for synchronous generators, is
not well-suited for non-synchronous
generators to which the methodology is
now being applied.565 For example,
TAPS explains that TAPS members
have found it very difficult to verify the
inputs to the AEP Methodology for a
specific generator based on publicly
available data, because many generators
seeking compensation do not submit a
FERC Form No. 1.
2. Commission Determination
201. We appreciate the concerns
raised by numerous commenters
requesting that we undertake various
initiatives, as set forth above. However,
we find that the requested initiatives go
beyond the scope of this rulemaking,
which addresses only compensation for
reactive power service within the
standard power factor range.
Accordingly, we will not address those
concerns here.
III. Compliance Procedures
A. Revisions To Eliminate
Compensation for Reactive Power
Supply Within the Standard Power
Factor Range
202. To effectuate the changes
discussed herein, we are taking the
following four actions.
1. Revise Schedule 2 of the
Commission’s Pro Forma OATT
203. We revise Schedule 2 of the
Commission’s pro forma OATT to
include the following sentence at the
end of Schedule 2: ‘‘However, such rates
shall not include any charges associated
with the compensation to a generating
facility for the supply of reactive power
within the power factor range specified
in its interconnection agreement.’’ This
revision prohibits separate
compensation for the provision of
reactive power within the standard
power factor range specified in an
interconnection agreement.
562 Middle
River Power Initial Comments at 5.
Initial Comments at 5.
564 Id. at 11.
565 TAPS Initial Comments at 4.
563 NEI
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2. Revise Section 9.6.3 of the Pro Forma
Large Generator Interconnection
Agreement
204. We revise section 9.6.3 of the pro
forma LGIA to remove the proviso:
‘‘provided that if Transmission Provider
pays its own or affiliated generators for
reactive power service within the
specified range, it must also pay
Interconnection Customer.’’
Accordingly, under our proposal here,
section 9.6.3 of the pro forma LGIA
would read as follows: ‘‘Payment for
Reactive Power. Transmission Provider
is required to pay Interconnection
Customer for reactive power that
Interconnection Customer provides or
absorbs from the Large Generating
Facility when Transmission Provider
requests Interconnection Customer to
operate its Large Generating Facility
outside the range specified in Article
9.6.1. Payments shall be pursuant to
Article 11.6 or such other agreement to
which the Parties have otherwise
agreed.’’ Along with the other proposed
revisions, this proposed revision
prohibits a transmission provider from
including in its transmission rates any
charges associated with the supply of
reactive power within the specified
power factor range from a generating
facility. Accordingly, transmission
providers would be required to pay an
interconnection customer for reactive
power only when the transmission
provider requests the interconnection
customer to operate its facility outside
the power factor range set forth in its
interconnection agreement.
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3. Revise Section 1.8.2 of the Pro Forma
Small Generator Interconnection
Agreement
205. We similarly are revising section
1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA to remove
the following sentence: ‘‘In addition, if
the Transmission Provider pays its own
or affiliated generators for reactive
power service within the specified
range, it must also pay the
Interconnection Customer.’’
Accordingly, under our proposal here,
section 1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA
would read as follows: ‘‘The
Transmission Provider is required to
pay the Interconnection Customer for
reactive power that the Interconnection
Customer provides or absorbs from the
Small Generating Facility when the
Transmission Provider requests the
Interconnection Customer to operate its
Small Generating Facility outside the
range specified in article 1.8.1.’’
4. Compliance Procedures
206. To effectuate these changes, we
require each transmission provider to
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submit a compliance filing as discussed
below to make changes to their
Schedule 2s or other OATT provisions
relating to charges and payments for
reactive power, as well as to their pro
forma LGIAs and pro forma SGIAs in
their OATTs. To the extent that any
transmission provider believes that it
already complies with the reforms
adopted in this final determination, the
transmission provider is required to
demonstrate how it complies in the
compliance filing required 60 days after
the effective date of the final
determination. In reviewing compliance
filings proposed by non-RTO/ISO
transmission providers, the Commission
will apply the ‘‘consistent with or
superior to’’ standard to deviations from
the adopted pro forma Schedule 2 566
and to deviations from the pro forma
LGIA and pro forma SGIA.567 In
evaluating compliance filings made by
RTOs/ISOs, the Commission will apply
the ‘‘consistent with or superior to’’
standard to deviations from the adopted
pro forma Schedule 2 and the
‘‘independent entity variation standard’’
to deviations from the pro forma LGIA
and pro forma SGIA.568
B. Transition Period
207. In the NOPR, the Commission
proposed to require each transmission
provider to submit a compliance filing
within 60 days of the effective date of
the final determination. The
Commission further proposed to allow
90 days from the date of the compliance
filing for implementation of the
proposed reforms to become
effective.569 The NOPR sought comment
on whether a transition period beyond
the 90-day implementation period
proposed was necessary and for what
duration any transition period should
last.570 Specifically, the NOPR asked if
any factors, such as potential business
or investment impacts, should be
considered in determining whether any
transition period is appropriate and
what transition mechanisms other than
delaying the implementation date of the
final determination would minimize
such disruptions.
208. The NOPR also sought comment
on whether existing generating facilities
that have previously received
compensation for reactive power
capability should be allowed to
continue to receive compensation for a
limited period, as an interim rate during
a transition period, while prohibiting
new generating facilities from receiving
reactive power capability
compensation.571 The NOPR asks how it
should determine eligibility for
continued compensation.
209. In addition, for regions that have
an established capacity market, the
NOPR sought comment on whether
transmission providers should be
allowed to make the implementation of
their compliance filing align with the
region’s capacity market timelines to
allow costs associated with reactive
power production, if any, to be
incorporated into capacity market
bids.572 For regions without a capacity
market, the NOPR sought comment on
whether a different transition
mechanism, if any, would be necessary
and whether it would be unduly
discriminatory or preferential to set
different implementation dates for the
final determination in different markets
and regions.
1. Comments
210. Several commenters who support
the NOPR assert that no transition
beyond the 90-day transition period in
the NOPR is necessary.573 MISO
Transmission Owners urge the
Commission to neither provide a
transition period nor compensate
generators that previously received
reactive power compensation for a
limited period.574 MISO Transmission
Owners urge the Commission to adopt
the NOPR’s proposed rule to be effective
immediately.575 While Joint Customers
oppose a transition period, citing
Commission policy and precedent,576
they state that only a brief transition
period, if any, is necessary for the
implementation of the NOPR reforms.577
211. PGE states that it does not
believe the decision to implement these
provisions in the 90-day
implementation period will have a
measurable impact on business or
investment decisions.578
212. Joint Customers and MISO
Transmission Owners suggest that
571 Id.
572 Id.
566 See
Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs.
¶ 31,036 at 31,760–63.
567 See Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ¶ 61,103 at PP
822–27; Order No. 2006, 111 FERC ¶ 61,220 at PP
546–50).
568 See Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs.
¶ 31,036 at 31,760–63; Order No. 2003, 104 FERC
¶ 61,103 at PP 822–27; Order No. 2006, 111 FERC
¶ 61,220 at PP 546–50).
569 NOPR, 186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 54.
570 Id. P 56.
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573 See PGE Initial Comments at 5; TAPS Initial
Comments at 8; PGE Initial Comments at 5.
574 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 17–19.
575 Id. at 2.
576 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 7–8
(citing PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at P 32; MISO, 182
FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 67; MISO Rehearing Order, 184
FERC ¶ 61,022 at PP 32–33.)
577 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 18–21.
578 PGE Initial Comments at 5.
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generators should have made business
or investment decisions in anticipation
of the potential elimination of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range.579 Joint Customers explain that
the move towards these reforms has
been ongoing for years, providing ample
time for market participants to adjust
their investment strategies.580 Similarly,
MISO Transmission Owners assert that
generators have been on notice of the
prospect of the elimination of reactive
power since Order No. 2003 and
reminded of it routinely since then.581
213. MISO Transmission Owners and
TAPS both oppose a transition period so
that reduced rate relief can be provided
to customers.582 MISO Transmission
Owners emphasize that the Commission
found that by eliminating compensation
for reactive power within the standard
power factor range MISO would ‘‘reduce
charges to MISO’s transmission
customers.’’ 583 MISO Transmission
Owners further state that the
Commission should not compensate
generators that previously received
reactive power compensation for a
limited period for such reasons.584
MISO Transmission Owners add that,
under the current compensation
scheme, generating facilities are able to
‘‘gold-plate their reactive capabilities to
the detriment of ratepayers,’’ so the
Commission ‘‘should refrain from
imposing any transition period or
vintaging carve-outs that allow
capability-based compensation to
continue.’’ 585 TAPS claims that
customers, including TAPS members,
have been harmed by excessive reactive
power compensation thus far and
accompanying inefficient,
administratively burdensome, case-bycase determinations.586 Therefore, TAPS
argues against a transition period
because generators should no longer
benefit from currently unjust and
unreasonable rates.587 Likewise, Joint
Customers noted the Commission has
previously rejected the continuation of
579 Joint Customers Reply Comments at 9–10;
MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at
18–19 (noting that generating facilities have been on
notice of the prospect of the elimination of reactive
power compensation since Order No. 2003 and
reminded of it routinely since then).
580 Joint Customers Initial Comments at 21.
581 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 18–19.
582 Id.; TAPS Initial Comments at 8.
583 MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments
at 18 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ¶ 61,033 at P 67;
MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ¶ 61,022 at P 55
n.186 (rejecting an argument that the Commission
should have declined to waive the 60-day notice
requirement)).
584 Id.at 17–18.
585 Id. at 19.
586 TAPS Initial Comments at 8.
587 Id.
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compensation beyond the tariff effective
date.588
214. Calpine and Indicated Trade
Associations oppose the NOPR proposal
and request that if the Commission were
to move forward, the Commission
exempt existing resources, applying the
proposed reforms only to new resources.
Calpine reasons that the Commission
exempted existing resources from new
requirements in Order Nos. 827 and 842
and that exemptions would support
market stability and investments needed
for reliability.589 Indicated Trade
Associations further assert that in
addition to existing resources, the
exemption should also be allowed for
resources in advanced stages of
development.590 Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers state that Commissionapproved cost-based tariffs should last
the remaining life, transfer of
ownership, or expiration of PPAs for
existing resources.591 Middle River
Power requests that the Commission
consider implementing a legacy rate
provision for generators that have
existing reactive rate tariffs to mitigate
adverse impacts on its current
investments and contends that the
Commission has a history of adopting
similar measures under similar
circumstances.592 Reactive Service
Providers state that the Commission
should consider grandfathering the
agreements of existing or nearcompletion generating facilities.593
Generation Developers argue that the
Commission should not eliminate
reactive power compensation for
resources receiving compensation
pursuant to a rate schedule or tariff in
effect prior to the effective date of any
final determination in this
proceeding.594 EDPR also proposes that
facilities which have already concluded
long-term PPAs but do not yet have an
established rate be allowed to prove that
588 Joint
Customers Reply Comments at 8.
Initial Comments at 2–3.
590 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 29–30.
591 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 2; Glenvale Initial Comments at 6–7.
592 Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6–7
(citing Indicated Energy Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 24; PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 110
FERC ¶ 61,053, at P 61, order on reh’g, 112 FERC
¶ 61,031 (2005) (finding it appropriate to
grandfather units for which construction
commenced in reliance on a prior rule), order on
reh’g, 114 FERC ¶ 61,302 (2006); Tenn. Gas Pipeline
Co., 62 FERC ¶ 61,062 (1993) (explaining that, the
Commission had decided to ‘‘grandfather’’ prior
storage arrangements ‘‘in light of the fact that . . .
historical customers have already made their
conversion elections in reliance on access to this
storage’’)).
593 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
67–76.
594 Generation Developers Initial Comments at
33–34.
589 Calpine
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93451
the long-term PPA for a facility seeking
reactive power compensation was
executed prior to the issuance of the
NOPR.595
215. In absence of an exemption for
existing resources, or grandfathering of
existing rates and generator agreements,
commenters who oppose the proposal
advocate for a transition period to
comply with the final determination.
Eagle Creek 596 recommends a transition
period of at least three to five years,
Reactive Service Providers 597 a period
of five years, and Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers 598 a period of seven to
ten years respectively. Other
commenters who ask for a transition
period include AEP, requesting at least
120 days,599 and ACORE, requesting a
five to ten-year transition period.600
Calpine 601 and AEP 602 both expressed
concerns of affected generators’ ability
to recover their costs as justification for
a transition period and cite times that
the Commission has approved of a
transition period in the past.
216. EDPR proposes a 10-year
transition period for existing rates and
PPAs. EDPR explains that it will under
collect its revenues under PPAs that
include an offset for reactive power
compensation.603 Therefore, EDPR
proposes that facilities with an
established reactive rate schedule
should be allowed to keep that
established rate on file during a 10-year
transition period. Similarly, Reactive
Service Providers argue that the
595 EDPR
Initial Comments at 5.
Creek Initial Comments at 5.
597 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
75–76.
598 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 2–3.
599 AEP Initial Comments at 7–8.
600 ACORE Initial Comments at 4.
601 Calpine Initial Comments at 4.
602 AEP Initial Comments at 7–8 (citing PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C., 117 FERC ¶ 61,331, at P 73
(2006) (‘‘The adoption of a transition period must
strike a reasonable balance between the need to
implement RPM to generate relevant prices, and the
provision of some period to enable parties to
understand and make adjustments to the new
market.’’), order on reh’g, 119 FERC ¶ 61,318 (2007);
Midcontinent Independent System Operator, 180
FERC ¶ 61,141, at PP 248–249 (2022) (‘‘The
transition period appropriately balances the need to
implement the SAC methodology with the
recognition that resource owners and LSEs may
need to adjust their operations—including outage
timing—and their contractual arrangements to
maximize their potential SAC values.’’); PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C., 155 FERC ¶ 61,157, at PP
150–151 (2016) (accepting a phase-in of PJM’s
capacity performance requirements as just and
reasonable because the benefits of providing
relevant entities adequate time to adjust Fixed
Resource Requirement plans based on the new rules
were weighed in conjunction with the interest in
applying the requirements in an even-handed
manner)).
603 EDPR Initial Comments at 3–4.
596 Eagle
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Commission should allow PPAs to be
reevaluated.604
217. Glenvale requests that if cost
recovery is not possible for certain
projects, the run-off for legacy projects
be extended to 10 years. Glenvale
explains that eligible projects would be
those which are unable to access
revenue in the substitute market
designated by the Commission, and
reasonably rely on the current tariff.605
Glenvale claims that an extension
would motivate these generators to
build technologies that both support the
transmission system and are a low cost
to consumers.606
218. Several commenters argue that a
transition period is necessary for RTOs/
ISOs to implement the NOPR. The NHA
explains that a transition period would
allow RTOs/ISOs to adjust their tariffs
and market designs accordingly.607
Generation Developers assert that the
Commission should direct RTOs/ISOs to
propose a transition period that
accounts for discrepancies between
implementation of any market rule
changes and when resources will be
able to benefit from these changes.608
Similarly, NAGF states that a transition
period specific to each market based on
their design and rules allows generators
to evaluate lost revenue, cost recovery
options, and the possibility of retiring,
all while also providing time for
planners to contemplate other
generation options.609 Clean Energy
Associations ask that the Commission,
should it proceed with its proposal,
implement a transition period that takes
into consideration regional and market
differences.610 Additionally, Indicated
Trade Associations state that PJM, ISO–
NE, and NYISO each currently subtract
expected energy and ancillary services
revenues, including reactive power
revenues, from the Net CONE value
used to develop demand curves for
capacity market auctions.611 Relatedly,
Reactive Service Providers explain that
PJM, ISO–NE, and NYISO have
completed capacity auctions and
assigned capacity obligations for years
from now and that the Commission
cannot reopen those auctions to make
up for lost revenue.612
604 Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 2.
605 Glenvale Initial Comments at 5.
606 Id.
607 NHA Initial Comments at 9–10.
608 Generation Developers Initial Comments at 35.
609 NAGF Initial Comments at 2.
610 Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
2–3, 9–10.
611 Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 14–15.
612 Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
57.
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219. NYISO notes that shifting to
event-specific reactive power
compensation only when a resource is
instructed to operate outside its
standard power factor range would
require complex market design rules—
including developing market rules,
incorporating reactive power into the
NYISO’s co-optimization of real power
(i.e., energy to meet load), operating
reserves, and regulation service which
would require extensive software
changes that would take years to
develop and implement based on
current obligations and initiatives.613
PJM requests that as part of their
compliance filings implementing the
new rate paradigm, RTOs/ISOs be
permitted to propose rules around
testing, monitoring, and penalties. PJM
argues that this is to ensure that
generators provide the reactive power
capability that they are required to
provide under their Commissionjurisdictional interconnection
agreements when called upon, as
correctly identified in the NOPR.614
220. NAGF 615 and PJM 616 both
propose allowing transmission
providers the flexibility to propose
effective dates on compliance that will
align with regional capacity market
timelines. PJM further notes that
compliance dates should align with
billing and settlements timelines as
well.617 In a similar manner, Calpine
suggests that in PJM, any new reactive
service compensation policy should
take effect no sooner than the first
delivery year of the first PJM capacity
auction administered under
comprehensively updated new rules.618
613 NYISO
Initial Comments at 9–10.
Initial Comments at 6.
615 NAGF Initial Comments at 3.
616 PJM Initial Comments at 4–6.
617 Id. (requesting that ‘‘transmission providers in
regions with centralized capacity markets such as
PJM be permitted flexibility to propose effective
dates on compliance that will align with applicable
capacity market and billing and settlements
timelines’’ to ‘‘allow costs associated with reactive
power production to be incorporated into capacity
market bids, and also ensure alignment with
applicable billing and settlements dates.’’)
618 Calpine Initial Comments at 4 & n.7 (noting
that the Commission has recently approved a
transition period associated with PJM’s
implementation of generator interconnection
reforms (citing PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 181
FERC ¶ 61,162, at PP 8, 60 (2022))); PJM Initial
Comments at 4–6 (explaining that a transition
period could be ‘‘to permit generators who are
currently receiving reactive power revenues under
Tariff, Schedule 2 to continue to do so until the
Delivery Year of the first Base Residual Auction
(‘‘BRA’’) where the removal of these reactive
revenues from the Energy and Ancillary Services
(‘‘E&AS’’) offset can be reflected in the auction
parameters. This concept would be based on the
idea that these generators submitted their bids in
prior auctions without the knowledge that Tariff,
Schedule 2 revenues would no longer exist, which
614 PJM
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NAGF explains that alignment with
capacity market timelines would allow
costs associated with reactive power
production to be incorporated into
capacity market bids if the capacity
market reforms permit recovery and to
allow generators to better evaluate their
cost recovery process and probability.619
Likewise, PJM argues that such timeline
alignments will permit generators
currently receiving reactive power
revenues to continue to do so until the
related offsets are removed from the
capacity market auction parameters.620
221. The PJM IMM recommends a
transition period as short as possible,
emphasizing that a faster transition will
speed up benefits to customers and
reduced revenues to generation
owners.621 The PJM IMM recommends
reducing current approved rates under
Schedule 2 that exceed the E&AS Offset
to the level of the E&AS Offset that was
applicable to the auctions for each RPM
Delivery Year. The PJM IMM also
suggests that pending reactive filings
submitted prior to the NOPR proposal
should not be approved exceeding the
same aforementioned level of the E&AS
Offset. The PJM IMM proposes that the
E&AS Offset be reduced to zero dollars
and removed from the rules
immediately. As for Schedule 2 to the
PJM OATT, the PJM IMM believes it
should be revised to immediately
remove the ability to file for new
reactive capability rates and then
eliminated in its entirety effective at the
start of the first Delivery Year where the
E&AS Offset included in the capacity
market base residual auctions for such
Delivery Year is zero dollars.622
222. The PJM IMM makes similar
recommendations if PJM eliminates the
E&AS Offset as a component of the
market seller offer caps in the capacity
market prior to the end of the proposed
transition period: (1) that the E&AS
Offset be reduced to zero dollars and
removed from the rules immediately; (2)
that Schedule 2 be eliminated from the
OATT.623
may have impacted the bids they ultimately
submitted.’’).
619 NAGF Initial Comments at 3.
620 PJM Initial Comments at 4–6.
621 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 14.
622 PJM IMM Initial Comments at 15 (‘‘Given the
schedule for upcoming capacity market auctions in
PJM, the timing for the transition will be a direct
result of the effective date of a final determination.
Given this schedule, there will be a significant lag
before the Offset can be removed for an identified
delivery year. For example, if the effective date of
the final determination were March 1, 2025, the
Offset could be eliminated and payments under
Schedule 2 eliminated effective June 1, 2027, the
start of the delivery year for the base residual
auction scheduled to be run in June 2025.’’).
623 Id.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
223. PJM states that it would like
flexibility to implement an interim rate
during the transition period.624 PJM
notes that it contemplates a number of
different scenarios, including
disallowing any units without existing
reactive power rate schedules to collect
reactive power revenue or an interim
flat rate per MVAr of capability.
2. Commission Determination
224. For all transmission providers in
an RTO/ISO or non-RTO/ISO region, we
direct a compliance filing within 60
days of the effective date of the final
determination, including a proposed
effective date within 90 days from the
date of the compliance filing, as
proposed by the NOPR.625 We find that
the NOPR’s proposal to only allow 90
days from the date of the compliance
filing for implementation of the
proposed reforms to become effective is
appropriate. However, in recognition of
the concerns raised by commenters with
respect to the interplay between existing
reactive power revenue compensation
mechanisms and energy and capacity
market rules in ISO–NE, NYISO, and
PJM, we will permit those RTOs/ISOs to
each request a later effective date,626 for
the Commission’s consideration, in
order to allow them to develop and
propose any changes to their market
rules that may be necessary in order to
accommodate this final determination’s
elimination of compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range. With any
such request, the RTO/ISO must
affirmatively demonstrate why such a
requested effective date is necessary,
given, for example, its existing market
rules, and what market rule changes the
RTO/ISO believes may be needed to
accommodate this final determination.
We find that this approach reasonably
balances concerns about expediently
addressing unjust and unreasonable
transmission rates for reactive power
with concerns raised by commenters
about existing cost recovery rules in the
organized markets and will ensure that
the ability of generating facilities to seek
624 PJM
Initial Comments at 4–6.
186 FERC ¶ 61,203 at P 54.
626 Any RTO/ISO that proposes an effective date
longer than 90 days from the date of the compliance
filing must include an indeterminate 12/31/9998
effective date in eTariff with their compliance filing
and must provide the Commission with an estimate
of when the changes will become effective and must
make a filing with the Commission if they are
unable to meet their estimated effective date.
Further, the RTO/ISO must also notify the
Commission at least 7 days prior to the effective
date of their proposed changes so that Commission
staff may make the required changes in eTariff.
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625 NOPR,
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any appropriate cost recovery will not
be impeded.
225. This flexibility would
accommodate the potential section 205
filings that some RTOs/ISOs mentioned
may accompany any final determination
compliance filings, such as PJM’s
adjustments to market rules to remove
the offset in auction parameters as well
as ‘‘propose rules around testing,
monitoring, and penalties, to ensure that
generators actually provide the reactive
power capability that they are required
to provide under their Commissionjurisdictional interconnection
agreements when called upon.’’ 627 The
Commission welcomes these and
similar section 205 filings to adapt
markets to accommodate the final
determination as well as to clarify each
RTO’s/ISO’s compensation scheme for
reactive power service outside of the
standard power factor range, if
necessary.628
226. We decline to adopt a transition
period in non-RTO/ISO regions beyond
the 90-day implementation period
proposed in the NOPR. Some generating
facilities in non-RTO/ISO regions
contend that the compliance period
should extend until the termination of
existing PPAs or request that we require
all PPAs to be reevaluated to cover the
foregone revenue. As explained above,
the record lacks any concrete evidence
showing whether, and to what extent,
generating facilities factored reactive
power revenues into their PPAs. And
even if a generating facility were able to
demonstrate that eliminating
compensation under our rule might
impact some generating facility’s
profitability, which they have not, we
do not believe that potential disrupted
expectations weigh in favor of a
different outcome in this situation. As a
general matter, the risk of regulatory
change is inherent in any long-term
PPA.629 Moreover, as explained above,
we are skeptical of any purported
627 PJM
Initial Comments at 7.
Developers Initial Comments at
34–35 (‘‘Additionally, as part of any compliance
filings submitted in response to a final rule in this
proceeding, the Commission should require RTOs
and [ISOs] to make revisions to their tariffs
eliminating existing barriers to the recovery of
reactive power costs through sales of other
products. This would include, for instance,
requiring RTOs/ISOs with organized capacity
markets to revise their tariffs to permit resources to
accurately reflect their investment in reactive power
in their capacity offers. The Commission also
should require RTOs/ISOs to revise their market
power mitigation frameworks to permit generation
resources to reflect reactive power costs in their
cost-based energy curves.’’).
629 See, e.g., PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5
(‘‘When buyers and sellers enter into power
purchase agreements, the contracting parties define
and assign regulatory risk. Customers are not
responsible to manage or pay for suppliers’ risks.’’).
628 Generation
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93453
reliance interests given that generating
facilities have not had an inherent right
to separate compensation for reactive
power capability within the standard
power factor range since Order Nos.
2003 and 2003–A (i.e., because such
compensation is required only to ensure
‘‘comparability’’). Finally, developers
and generating facilities have been on
notice since at least 2003 that the
Commission regards reactive power
compensation within the standard
power factor range as non-compensable
(other than where the comparability
standard applies)—a conclusion that
was patent in those orders, and
reinforced repeatedly in subsequent
Commission orders accepting
transmission owner filings under
section 205 that eliminated reactive
power compensation within the
standard power factor range.630
227. We disagree with commenters
who request that generating facilities
with reactive rates on file prior to the
effective date of the final determination
be provided legacy treatment.631 Given
that the Commission finds above that
allowing transmission providers to
compensate generating facilities,
affiliated and unaffiliated, for providing
reactive power within the standard
power factor range has resulted in
unjust and unreasonable transmission
rates, it would raise undue
discrimination concerns to continue to
provide payment through Schedule 2 for
reactive power supply within the
standard power factor range to
generating facilities with rates already
on file when those rates have been
found to be unjust and unreasonable.632
Although commenters point to other
situations where the Commission has
provided legacy treatment for existing
rates, in those situations the existing
rate had not been found to be unjust and
unreasonable.633
630 See, e.g., Nev Power Co., 179 FERC ¶ 61,103;
PNM, 178 FERC ¶ 61,088 at PP 26–36; SPP, 119
FERC ¶ 61,199 at PP 20, 30–33.
631 Calpine Initial Comments at 2–3; EDPR Initial
Comments at 5; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 33–34; Glenvale Initial Comments at
6–7; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments
at 29–30; Middle River Power Initial Comments at
6–7; Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
67–76.
632 See Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc. v. FERC,
633 F.3d 1122.
633 See, e.g., Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 67–76 (citing Order No. 2003, 104
FERC ¶ 61,103; Order No. 661, 111 FERC ¶ 61,353;
Order No. 827, 155 FERC ¶ 61,277; Order No. 2023,
184 FERC ¶ 61,054; Cal. Indep. Sys. Op., 124 FERC
¶ 61,031, at PP 12, 13, 20 (2008); Midcontinent
Independent System Operator, Inc., 158 FERC
¶ 61,003, at PP 44, 45, 59 (2017); Sw. Power Pool,
Inc., 167 FERC ¶ 61,275, at P 19 (2019)) (noting that
‘‘[i]t is common for the Commission to allow
grandfathering of existing agreements and rate
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IV. Information Collection Statement
228. The Office of Management and
Budget’s (OMB) regulations require
approval of certain information
collection requirements imposed by
agency rules. Upon approval of a
collection(s) of information, OMB will
assign an OMB control number and an
expiration date. Respondents subject to
the filing requirements of a rule will not
be penalized for failing to respond to
these collections of information unless
the collections of information display a
valid OMB control number.
229. This final determination will
amend the Commission’s regulations
pursuant to section 206 of the FPA, to
eliminate compensation to generating
facilities for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor
range set forth in each generating
facility’s individual interconnection
agreement. To accomplish this, the
Commission proposes to require each
transmission provider to amend the pro
forma LGIA, the pro forma SGIA, and
Schedule 2 in its OATT to implement
the reforms proposed in this final
determination. Such filings should be
made under Part 35 of the Commission’s
regulations. Subsequently, the final
determination would revise the
following currently approved
information collections: FERC 516H
(OMB control. No. 1902–0303): Pro
Forma Open Access Transmission
Tariff, FERC 516 (OMB control No.
1902–0096): Electric Tariff Filings, and
FERC 516A (OMB control No. 1902–
0203): Standardization of Small
Generator Interconnection Agreements
and Procedures [SGIA and SGIP].
230. The Commission is submitting
these reporting requirements to OMB for
its review and approval under section
3507(d) of the Paperwork Reduction
Act. Comments are accepted on whether
the information will have practical
utility, the accuracy of provided burden
estimates, ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected, and any suggested methods
for minimizing the respondent’s burden,
including the use of automated
information techniques.
231. Please send comments
concerning the collection of information
and the associated burden estimates to:
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, 725 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20503, Attention: Desk
Officer for the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission. Due to security
concerns, comments should be sent
electronically to the following email
address: oira_submission@omb.eop.gov.
Comments submitted to OMB should
refer to OMB Control No. 1902–0303,
1902–0096, or 1902–0203.
232. Please submit a copy of your
comments on the information collection
to the Commission via the eFiling link
on the Commission’s website at https://
www.ferc.gov. If you are not able to file
comments electronically, please send a
copy of your comments to: Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission,
Secretary of the Commission, 888 First
Street NE, Washington, DC 20426.
Comments on the information collection
that are sent to FERC should refer to
Docket No. RM22–2–000.
233. Title: FERC 516H: Pro Forma
Open Access Transmission Tariff, FERC
B.
Number of
respondents
A.
Collection
C.
Annual
number of
responses per
respondent
516: Electric Tariff Filings, and FERC
516A: Standardization of Small
Generator Interconnection Agreements
and Procedures [SGIA and SGIP].
234. Action: Revision of the
information collection in accordance
with Docket No. RM22–2–000.
235. OMB Control No.: 1902–0303,
1902–0096, 1902–0203
236. Respondents for this
Rulemaking: Public utility transmission
providers, including RTOs/ISOs.
237. Frequency of Information
Collection: One-time compliance filing.
238. Necessity of Information: The
final determination will require that
transmission providers submit to the
Commission a one-time compliance
filing proposing tariff revisions.
239. Internal Review: The
Commission has reviewed the changes
and has determined that such changes
are necessary. These requirements
conform to the Commission’s need for
efficient information collection,
communication, and management
within the energy industry in support of
the Commission’s ensuring just and
reasonable rates. The Commission has
specific, objective support for the
burden estimates associated with the
information collection requirements.
240. Public Reporting Burden: The
Commission’s estimate consists of our
estimated effort related to updating the
proposed revisions to the pro forma
OATT, and subsequent revisions to the
pro forma LGIA and pro forma SGIA,
and the effort related to submitting a
one-time compliance filing.
241. The Commission estimates
burden 634 and cost 635 as follows:
E.
Average
burden
Hrs. &
cost per
response
D.
Total
number of
responses
(Column B ×
Column C)
F.
Total annual
Hr. burdens &
total annual cost
G.
Cost per
respondent
(Column D × Column
E)
(Column F ÷
Column B)
FERC 516H: Pro Forma Open Access Transmission Tariff
Transmission Providers (Schedule 2 one-time compliance filing).
40
1
40
4 hrs.; $400 ..........
160 hrs.; $16,000 .......
$400
43
4 hrs.; $400 ..........
172 hrs.; $17,200 .......
400
FERC 516: Electric Tariff Filings
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Transmission Providers (pro forma LGIA one-time
compliance filing).
43
schedules when making sweeping industry
changes,’’ that the Commission ‘‘has long
implemented new Tariff rules in view of the
economic impact to late-stage projects,’’ and
‘‘woven throughout each transition period ordered
by the [Commission] is a need to carefully balance
interests and preserve the expectations of the
parties’’)); Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 29–30 (citing PJM Interconnection,
L.L.C., 110 FERC ¶ 61,053 at P 61; Tenn. Gas
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1
Pipeline Co., 62 FERC at 61,306) (noting that when
the Commission eliminated an exemption from
market power mitigation, the Commission provided
legacy treatment for units that commenced
construction in reliance of the rule)).
634 ‘‘Burden’’ is the total time, effort, or financial
resources expended by persons to generate,
maintain, retain, or disclose or provide information
to or for a Federal agency. For further explanation
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of what is included in the estimated burden, refer
to 5 CFR 1320.3.
635 Commission staff estimates that the
respondents’ skill set (and wages and benefits) for
Docket No. RM22–2–000 are comparable to those of
Commission employees. Based on the
Commission’s Fiscal Year 2024 average cost of
$207,786/year (for wages plus benefits, for one fulltime employee), $100/hour is used.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
B.
Number of
respondents
A.
Collection
C.
Annual
number of
responses per
respondent
E.
Average
burden
Hrs. &
cost per
response
D.
Total
number of
responses
(Column B ×
Column C)
93455
F.
Total annual
Hr. burdens &
total annual cost
G.
Cost per
respondent
(Column D × Column
E)
(Column F ÷
Column B)
FERC 516A: Standardization of Small Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures
Transmission Providers (pro forma SGIA one-time
compliance filing).
Totals ..................................................................
V. Environmental Analysis
242. The Commission is required to
prepare an Environmental Assessment
or an Environmental Impact Statement
for any action that may have a
significant adverse effect on the human
environment.636 We conclude that
neither an Environmental Assessment
nor an Environmental Impact Statement
is required for this final determination
under § 380.4(a)(15) of the
Commission’s regulations, which
provides a categorical exemption for
approval of actions under sections 205
and 206 of the FPA relating to the filing
of schedules containing all rates and
charges for the transmission or sale of
electric energy subject to the
Commission’s jurisdiction, plus the
classification, practices, contracts, and
regulations that affect rates, charges,
classification, and services.637
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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243. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980 (RFA) 638 generally requires a
description and analysis of proposed
rules that will have significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The Small
Business Administration (SBA) sets the
threshold for what constitutes a small
business. Under SBA’s size
standards,639 transmission providers
under the category of Electric Bulk
Power Transmission and Control
(NAICS code 221121), have a size
threshold of 950 employees (including
the entity and its associates).640
244. We estimate that there are 43
transmission providers that are affected
by the reforms proposed in this final
determination, based on the NERC
636 Reguls. Implementing the Nat’l Env’t Pol’y
Act, Order No. 486, 52 FR 47897 (Dec. 17, 1987),
FERC Stats. & Regs. Preambles 1986–1990 ¶ 30,783
(1987) (cross-referenced at 41 FERC ¶ 61,284).
637 18 CFR 380.4(a)(15).
638 5 U.S.C. 601–612.
639 13 CFR 121.201.
640 The RFA definition of ‘‘small entity’’ refers to
the definition provided in the Small Business Act,
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1
43
4 hrs.; $400 ..........
172 hrs.; $17,200 .......
400
......................
..........................
......................
...............................
504 hrs.; $50,400 .......
......................
Active Compliance Registry Matrix as of
January 11, 2024.641 The Commission
used a combination of sources to
determine the number of employees
within each entity using open-source
data and information provided by Dunn
& Bradstreet. We estimate that 6 of the
43 transmission providers,
approximately 14% (rounded), are small
entities.
245. We estimate that one-time costs
(in Year 1) associated with the reforms
proposed in this final determination for
one transmission provider (as shown in
the table above) would be $1,200 to
submit the compliance filing. Following
Year 1, the Commission estimates no
ongoing costs associated with this final
determination.
246. According to SBA guidance, the
determination of significance of impact
‘‘should be seen as relative to the size
of the business, the size of the
competitor’s business, and the impact
the regulation has on larger
competitors.’’ 642 We do not consider the
estimated cost of $1,200 to be a
significant economic impact for any of
the entities that would be impacted by
this final determination. As a result, we
certify that the reforms proposed in this
final determination would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
VII. Document Availability
247. In addition to publishing the full
text of this document in the Federal
Register, the Commission provides all
interested persons an opportunity to
view and/or print the contents of this
document via the internet through the
Commission’s Home Page (https://
www.ferc.gov).
which defines a ‘‘small business concern’’ as a
business that is independently owned and operated
and that is not dominant in its field of operation.
The Small Business Administrations’ regulations at
13 CFR 121.201 define the threshold for a small
Electric Bulk Power Transmission and Control
entity (NAICS code 221121) to be 500 employees.
See 5 U.S.C. 601(3) (citing to Section 3 of the Small
Business Act, 15 U.S.C. 632).
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248. From the Commission’s Home
Page on the internet, this information is
available on eLibrary. The full text of
this document is available on eLibrary
in PDF and Microsoft Word format for
viewing, printing, and/or downloading.
To access this document in eLibrary,
type the docket number excluding the
last three digits of this document in the
docket number field.
249. User assistance is available for
eLibrary and the Commission’s website
during normal business hours from
FERC Online Support at 202–502–6652
(toll free at 1–866–208–3676) or email at
ferconlinesupport@ferc.gov, or the
Public Reference Room at (202) 502–
8371, TTY (202)502–8659. Email the
Public Reference Room at
public.referenceroom@ferc.gov.
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional
Notification
250. These regulations are effective
January 27, 2025. The Commission has
determined, with the concurrence of the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of
OMB, that this rule is not a ‘‘major rule’’
as defined in section 351 of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996.
By the Commission. Commissioner Chang
is not participating.
Issued: October 17, 2024
Debbie-Anne A. Reese,
Secretary.
Note: The following appendices will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Appendix A: Abbreviated Names of
Commenters
641 NERC, NCR Active Entities List, (Jan. 12,
2024), NERC_Compliance_Registry_Matrix_
Excel.xlsx.
642 U.S. Small Business Administration, A Guide
for Government Agencies How to Comply with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 18 (Aug. 2017), https://
cdn.advocacy.sba.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/
06/21110349/How-to-Comply-with-the-RFA.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\26NOR2.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Abbreviation
Commenter(s)
ACORE ........................................................
AEP ..............................................................
Ameren ........................................................
Calpine .........................................................
Clean Energy Associations .........................
C T Gaunt ....................................................
Eagle Creek .................................................
EDPR ...........................................................
Elevate .........................................................
Generation Developers ................................
Glenvale .......................................................
IPPNY ..........................................................
Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers ...........
American Council on Renewable Energy.
American Electric Power Service Corporation.
Ameren Service Company.
Calpine Corporation.
Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) and American Clean Power Association.
Dr. Charles Trevor Gaunt.
Eagle Creek Reactive Generators.
EDP Renewables North America LLC.
Elevate Renewables F7, LLC.
Vistra Corp. and Dynegy Marketing and Trade, LLC.
Glenvale LLC.
Independent Power Producers of New York, Inc.
KMC Thermo, LLC, Bitter Ridge Wind Farm, LLC, Guernsey Power Station LLC, Moxie Freedom
LLC, Safe Harbor Water Power Corporation, BIF III Holtwood LLC, Brookfield Power Piney &
Deep Creek LLC, Erie Boulevard Hydropower, L.P., Carr Street Generating Station, L.P., Bear
Swamp Power Company LLC, Brookfield White Pine Hydro LLC, Brookfield Renewable Trading
and Marketing LP, and Reworld Waste, LLC f/k/a Covanta.
Electric Power Supply Association, The PJM Power Providers Group the New England Power Generators Association, Inc., Independent Power Producers of New York, Inc., the Coalition of Midwest Power Producers.
ISO New England Inc.
Illinois Attorney General, Illinois Citizens Utility Board, Maryland Office of People’s Counsel, the
New Jersey Division of Rate Counsel, the North Carolina Utilities Commission Public Staff, the
Office of the People’s Counsel for the District of Columbia, and the West Virginia Consumer Advocate Division of the Public Service Commission.
Old Dominion Electric Cooperative, Northern Virginia Electric Cooperative, Inc., and Dominion Energy Services, Inc. on behalf of Virginia Electric and Power Company d/b/a Dominion Energy Virginia.
Liberty Utilities.
Middle River Power LLC.
Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc.
Ameren Services Company, as agent for Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren Missouri, Ameren
Illinois Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois, and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois; Arkansas
Electric Cooperative Corporation; City Water, Light & Power; Cooperative Energy; Dairyland
Power Cooperative; East Texas Electric Cooperative; Entergy Arkansas, LLC; Entergy Louisiana,
LLC; Entergy Mississippi, LLC; Entergy Texas, Inc.; Great River Energy; Indianapolis Power &
Light Company; Lafayette Utilities System; MidAmerican Energy Company; Minnesota Power
(and its subsidiary Superior Water, L&P); Missouri River Energy Services; Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.; Northern States Power Company, a Minnesota corporation, and Northern States Power
Company, a Wisconsin corporation, subsidiaries of Xcel Energy Inc.; Northwestern Wisconsin
Electric Company; Otter Tail Power Company; Prairie Power, Inc.; Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Company (d/b/a CenterPoint Energy Indiana South); and Southern Minnesota Municipal
Power Agency.
North American Generator Forum.
New England Power Generators Association, Inc.
New England Power Pool.
New England States Committee on Electricity.
Office of Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell, the Connecticut Office of Consumer Counsel, the Maine Office of Public Advocate, the New Hampshire Office of Consumer
Advocate, and the Rhode Island Division of Public Utilities and Carriers
Nuclear Energy Institute.
New York Independent System Operator, Inc.
National Hydropower Association.
Ohio Office of the Federal Energy Advocate of the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Onward Energy Holdings, LLC.
Portland General Electric Company.
PJM Interconnection, L.L.C.
Monitoring Analytics, LLC, acting in its capacity as the Independent Market Monitor for PJM.
Public Service Electric and Gas Company, PSEG Power LLC, and PSEG Energy Resources &
Trade LLC, and each wholly-owned, direct or indirect subsidiaries of Public Service Enterprise
Group Incorporated.
CIP, D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments, L.L.C., Invenergy Renewables LLC, Leeward Renewable
Energy, LLC, Lightsource Renewable Energy Operations, LLC, NextEra Energy Resources,
LLC,1 ;rsted Wind Power North America, LLC, and RWE Clean Energy, LLC.
Transmission Access Policy Study Group.
Indicated Trade Associations ......................
ISO–NE ........................................................
Joint Consumer Advocates .........................
Joint Customers ...........................................
Liberty ..........................................................
Middle River Power .....................................
MISO ............................................................
MISO Transmission Owners .......................
NAGF ...........................................................
NEPGA ........................................................
NEPOOL ......................................................
NESCOE ......................................................
New England Consumer Advocates ...........
NEI ...............................................................
NYISO ..........................................................
NHA .............................................................
Ohio FEA .....................................................
Onward Energy ............................................
PGE .............................................................
PJM ..............................................................
PJM IMM .....................................................
PSEG ...........................................................
Reactive Service Providers .........................
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with RULES2
TAPS ...........................................................
[FR Doc. 2024–24528 Filed 11–25–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 228 (Tuesday, November 26, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 93410-93456]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-24528]
[[Page 93409]]
Vol. 89
Tuesday,
No. 228
November 26, 2024
Part II
Department of Energy
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Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
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18 CFR Part 35
Compensation for Reactive Power Within the Standard Power Factor Range;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 26, 2024 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 93410]]
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DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
18 CFR Part 35
[Docket No. RM22-2-000; Order No. 904]
Compensation for Reactive Power Within the Standard Power Factor
Range
AGENCY: Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final determination.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this final determination, the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission (Commission) finds that allowing transmission providers to
charge transmission customers for a generating facility's provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor range is unjust and
unreasonable. The Commission, therefore, is revising Schedule 2 of its
pro forma open-access transmission tariff (OATT), section 9.6.3 of its
pro forma large generator interconnection agreement (LGIA), and section
1.8.2 of its pro forma small generator interconnection agreement (SGIA)
to prohibit the inclusion in transmission rates of any charges related
to the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor
range by generating facilities.
DATES: Effective January 27, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paul Robinson (Technical Information), Office of Energy Market
Regulation, 888 First Street NE, Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-8460,
[email protected]
Jennifer Enos (Legal Information), Office of the General Counsel, 888
First Street NE, Washington, DC 20426, (202) 502-6247,
[email protected]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph
Nos.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Background............................................... 3
A. Historical Framework Including Order Nos. 888 and 3
2003...................................................
B. Notice of Inquiry and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.. 16
II. Discussion.............................................. 20
A. Need for Reform...................................... 27
1. Comments............................................. 29
2. Commission Determination............................. 49
B. Cost of Producing Reactive Power..................... 62
1. Comments............................................. 66
2. Commission Determination............................. 89
C. Cost Recovery........................................ 109
1. Comments............................................. 113
2. Commission Determination............................. 141
D. Reliability.......................................... 155
1. Comments............................................. 157
2. Commission Determination............................. 165
E. Investment........................................... 170
1. Comments............................................. 171
2. Commission Determination............................. 178
F. Additional Comments.................................. 187
1. Comments............................................. 187
2. Commission Determination............................. 201
III. Compliance Procedures.................................. 202
A. Revisions to Eliminate Compensation for Reactive 202
Power Supply Within the Standard Power Factor Range....
1. Revise Schedule 2 of the Commission's Pro Forma OATT. 203
2. Revise Section 9.6.3 of the Pro Forma Large Generator 204
Interconnection Agreement..............................
3. Revise Section 1.8.2 of the Pro Forma Small Generator 205
Interconnection Agreement..............................
4. Compliance Procedures................................ 206
B. Transition Period.................................... 207
1. Comments............................................. 210
2. Commission Determination............................. 224
IV. Information Collection Statement........................ 228
V. Environmental Analysis................................... 242
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act.............................. 243
VII. Document Availability.................................. 247
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification......... 250
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. In this final determination, pursuant to section 206 of the
Federal Power Act (FPA), the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission finds
that allowing public utility transmission providers (transmission
providers) \1\ to charge transmission customers for a generating
facility's provision of reactive power within the standard power factor
range is unjust and unreasonable. The Commission, therefore, is
revising Schedule 2 of the
[[Page 93411]]
Commission's pro forma OATT to prohibit transmission providers from
including in their transmission rates any charges associated with the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range from
generating facilities and requiring transmission providers to make
compliance filings to update Schedule 2 of their OATTs accordingly.\2\
The final determination further revises the Commission's pro forma LGIA
and pro forma SGIA to remove the requirement that a transmission
provider pay an interconnection customer for reactive power within the
standard power factor range if the transmission provider pays its own
or affiliated generating facilities for the same service, and the final
determination requires transmission providers to make compliance
filings to update their pro forma interconnection agreements
accordingly. As a result of this final determination, transmission
providers will be required to pay an interconnection customer for
reactive power only when the transmission provider requests or directs
the interconnection customer to operate its facility outside the
standard power factor range set forth in its interconnection agreement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 201(e) of the FPA, 16 U.S.C. 824(e), defines
``public utility'' to mean ``any person who owns or operates
facilities subject to the jurisdiction of the Commission under this
subchapter.'' As stated in the Order No. 888 pro forma OATT,
``transmission provider'' is a ``public utility (or its Designated
Agent) that owns, controls, or operates facilities used for the
transmission of electric energy in interstate commerce and provides
transmission service under the Tariff.'' Promoting Wholesale
Competition Through Open Access Non-Discriminatory Transmission
Servs. by Pub. Utils.; Recovery of Stranded Costs by Pub. Utils. &
Transmitting Utils., Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036
(1996) (cross-referenced at 75 FERC ] 61,080), order on reh'g, Order
No. 888-A, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,048 (cross-referenced at 78 FERC
] 61,220), order on reh'g, Order No. 888-B, 81 FERC ] 61,248 (1997),
order on reh'g, Order No. 888-C, 82 FERC ] 61,046 (1998), aff'd in
relevant part sub nom. Transmission Access Pol'y Study Grp. v. FERC,
225 F.3d 667 (D.C. Cir. 2000), aff'd sub nom. N.Y. v. FERC, 535 U.S.
1 (2002); Pro forma OATT section I.1 (Definitions). The term
``transmission provider'' includes a public utility transmission
owner when the transmission owner is separate from the transmission
provider, as is the case in regional transmission organizations
(RTO) and independent system operators (ISO).
\2\ Operating ``inside the standard power factor range'' refers
to a generating facility providing reactive power within the power
factor range set forth in the generating facility's interconnection
agreement when the unit is online and synchronized to the
transmission system. The standard power factor range is sometimes
referred to as the ``deadband.'' Compensation for Reactive Power
Within the Standard Power Factor Range, Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, 89 FR 21,454 (Mar. 28, 2024) (cross-referenced at 186
FERC ] 61,203, at P 2 n.1) (NOPR).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. As discussed below, the Commission has a statutory duty to
ensure that transmission rates are and remain just and reasonable. We
find that this reform will ensure that transmission providers do not
pass onto transmission customers unjust and unreasonable charges that
lack a sufficient economic basis or justification and yield no
commensurate benefit for ratepayers.
I. Background
A. Historical Framework Including Order Nos. 888 and 2003
3. Almost all bulk electric power is generated, transported, and
consumed in alternating current (AC) networks. Reactive power, which is
measured in megavolt-amperes reactive (MVAr),\3\ is a critical
component of operating an AC electricity system and is required to
control system voltage within appropriate ranges for efficient and
reliable operation of the transmission system. Reactive power supports
the voltages that must be controlled to provide for delivery of real
power and for system reliability. Reactive power can be produced or
absorbed \4\ by generating facilities, power electronic equipment such
as flexible AC transmission system devices, transmission lines and
equipment, and load. As relevant here, generating facilities must
either produce or absorb reactive power for the transmission system to
maintain voltage levels required to reliably supply real power from
generation to load.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ MVAr is the typical unit of measurement for reactive power.
\4\ A generating facility's leading reactive power indicates its
ability to absorb reactive power, and its lagging reactive power
indicates its ability to produce reactive power.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. In Order No. 888, the Commission required that reactive supply
and voltage control from generating facilities be offered as a discrete
ancillary service by transmission providers and, to the extent
feasible, charged for on the basis of the amount required.\5\ The
Commission explained that there are two ways of supplying reactive
power and controlling voltage. One is to install facilities as part of
the transmission system, the cost of which is part of the cost of basic
transmission service. The second is to use generating facilities to
supply reactive power and voltage control, which must be unbundled from
basic transmission service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036, at 31,705-07 &
n.359.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. With respect to compensation, the Commission stated that the
transmission provider's ``rates for ancillary services should be cost-
based.'' \6\ The Commission expected, however, that transmission
customers would be able to change the amount of reactive power service
they required. The Commission also identified the possibility that
reactive power could potentially be supplied by ``a competitive market
for such service'' if ``technology or industry changes'' made such a
market possible.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Id. at 31,720.
\7\ Id. at 31,707 & n.359.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. The Commission's policy on reactive power compensation has
evolved since issuing Order No. 888 in 1996.\8\ In Order No. 2003, the
Commission adopted a standard agreement for the interconnection of
large generating facilities (the pro forma LGIA), and specifically
addressed the circumstances under which a transmission provider must
pay an interconnection customer for reactive power depending upon
whether such reactive power was inside or outside the standard power
factor range.\9\ This standard agreement included the requirement that
interconnection customers maintain a composite power delivery at a
continuous rate of power output at the generating facility's point of
interconnection at a power factor within the range of 0.95 leading to
0.95 lagging when synchronized to the transmission system, unless the
transmission provider has established a different power factor
range.\10\ Order No. 2003 required that a transmission provider
compensate an interconnection customer for reactive power when the
transmission provider requests that the interconnection customer
operate its generating facility outside the established power factor
range. With respect to reactive power within the established power
factor range, the Commission concluded in Order No. 2003 that the
interconnection customer should not be compensated for reactive power
when operating within the range established in the interconnection
agreement because doing so ``is only meeting [the generating
facility's] obligation.'' \11\ However, in Order No. 2003-A, the
Commission clarified that ``if the Transmission Provider pays its own
or its affiliated generators for reactive power within the established
range, it must also pay the Interconnection Customer.'' \12\ This
standard is generally referred to as the ``comparability standard.''
\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Id. at 31,705-07 & n.359.
\9\ Standardization of Generator Interconnection Agreements &
Procs., Order No. 2003, 68 FR 49846 (Aug. 19, 2003), 104 FERC ]
61,103, at P 546 (2003), order on reh'g, Order No. 2003-A, 69 FR
15932 (Mar. 26, 2004), 106 FERC ] 61,220, order on reh'g, Order No.
2003-B, 70 FR 265 (Jan. 4, 2005), 109 FERC ] 61,287 (2004), order on
reh'g, Order No. 2003-C, 70 FR 37661 (June 30, 2005), 111 FERC ]
61,401 (2005), aff'd sub nom. Nat'l Ass'n of Regul. Util. Comm'rs v.
FERC, 475 F.3d 1277 (D.C. Cir. 2007).
\10\ The power factor is the ratio of a generating facility's
real power to its apparent power, where apparent power is the total
power output of the system (both real and reactive power). Power
factors can range from 1.0 to 0.0, with 1.0 representing only real
power and 0.0 representing only reactive power.
\11\ Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at P 546.
\12\ Order No. 2003-A, 106 FERC ] 61,220 at P 416. Order No.
2003-A also exempted wind generating facilities from maintaining the
established power factor range. Id. P 34.
\13\ In Order No. 2006, the Commission adopted identical power
factor and compensation requirements for small generating facilities
(those with a capacity of 20 MW or less) and initially exempted
small wind generating facilities from the reactive power requirement
before Order No. 827 eliminated such exemptions. Reactive Power
Requirements for Non-Synchronous Generation, Order No. 827, 81 FR
40793 (June 23, 2016), 155 FERC ] 61,277, order on clarification and
reh'g, 157 FERC ] 61,003 (2016); Standardization of Small Generator
Interconnection Agreements & Procs., Order No. 2006, 111 FERC ]
61,220, order on reh'g, Order No. 2006-A, 70 FR 71760 (Nov. 30,
2005), 113 FERC ] 61,195 (2005), order granting clarification, Order
No. 2006-B, 71 FR 42587 (July 27, 2006), 116 FERC ] 61,046 (2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 93412]]
7. Order No. 661 established technical requirements for
interconnecting large wind resources and maintained the exemption from
providing reactive power, except where the transmission provider
showed, through a system impact study, that reactive power capability
was required to ensure safety or reliability.\14\ In Order No.
2006,\15\ the Commission adopted identical power factor and
compensation requirements for small generating facilities (facilities
that have a capacity of no more than 20 megawatts (MW)) but exempted
small wind generating facilities from the reactive power requirement.
Subsequently, in Order No. 827,\16\ the Commission eliminated the
exemptions for both small and large wind generating facilities, thus
requiring those facilities to provide reactive power. The Commission
explained that it had previously exempted wind generators from the
uniform reactive power requirement because, historically, the costs to
design and build a wind generator that could provide reactive power
were high and could have created an obstacle to the development of wind
generation. But the Commission found in Order No. 827 that, due to
technological advancements since the establishment of those exemptions,
the cost of providing reactive power no longer presented an obstacle to
the development of wind generation, and therefore found that the
exemptions had become unjust and unreasonable.\17\ The Commission
therefore required all newly interconnecting non-synchronous generating
facilities to provide reactive power within the range of 0.95 leading
to 0.95 lagging at the high-side of the generator substation
transformer as a condition of interconnection.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Interconnection for Wind Energy, Order No. 661, 70 FR 34993
(June 16, 2005), 111 FERC ] 61,353, order on reh'g, Order No. 661-A,
70 FR 75005 (Dec. 19, 2005), 113 FERC ] 61,254 (2005).
\15\ Order No. 2006, 111 FERC ] 61,220.
\16\ Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277.
\17\ See also PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 151 FERC ] 61,097, at
P 28 (2015) (finding that, since Order No. 661, the cost of the
technology necessary for a non-synchronous resource to provide
reactive power has lessened such that the cost of installing
equipment that is capable of providing reactive power is comparable
to the costs of a traditional generator).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
8. In sum, ``Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A establish a reactive power
compensation policy that, in the first instance, treats the provision
of reactive power inside the [standard power factor range] as an
obligation of good utility practice rather than as a compensable
service and permits compensation inside the [standard power factor
range] only as a function of comparability.'' \18\ ``Put differently,
reactive support by generating facilities operating within the standard
power factor range ensures that when these facilities inject real
power--the product that their facilities exist to create and sell--onto
the grid under normal conditions, they can do their part to maintain
adequate voltages and to not threaten reliability.'' \19\ By contrast,
reactive power provided outside of the standard power factor range is
considered an ancillary service for transmitting power across the
transmission system to serve load,\20\ and thus, the Commission has
required compensation for such service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Bonneville Power Admin. v. Puget Sound Energy, Inc., 120
FERC ] 61,211 (2007) (BPA), order denying reh'g and granting
clarification, 125 FERC ] 61,273, at P 18 (2008) (BPA Rehearing
Order). See also BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273 at P 15 &
n.24 (``[N]either affiliated nor non-affiliated generators have an
inherent right to any compensation for reactive power inside the
deadband.''). Accord., Midcontinent Indep. Sys. Operator, Inc., 182
FERC ] 61,033 (MISO), order on reh'g, 184 FERC ] 61,022, at P 23
(2023) (MISO Rehearing Order); Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 119 FERC ]
61,199 (SPP), order on reh'g, Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 121 FERC ]
61,196, at 61,968 (2007) (SPP Order on Rehearing) (``[R]eactive
power is required for an interconnecting generator to deliver its
power and reactive power produced within the deadband and is,
therefore, generally not compensable.''); Mich. Elec. Transmission
Co., 97 FERC ] 61,187, at 61,852-53 (2001) (METC Rehearing Order)
(``Providing reactive power within design limitations is not
providing an ancillary service; it is simply ensuring that a
generator lives up to its obligations.''); Consumers Energy Co., 94
FERC ] 61,230, at 61,834 (2000) (affirming the Commission's
rejection of generators' request for reactive power compensation
when operating within a facility's reactive power design limitation,
stating that as a condition of interconnecting to the transmission
provider's system, ``to ensure system security,'' the generator was
required to provide equipment, ``at its own cost, to meet its
reactive power obligations as provided for in [its interconnection
agreement].''(emphasis added)); cf. Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc.,
125 FERC ] 61,280, at P 16 (2008) (``Reactive power is a localized
service that is quickly used by transmission system components and
cannot be transported over long distances.'').
\19\ MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 23.
\20\ See, e.g., id. at PP 23-24 (citing METC Rehearing Order, 97
FERC at 61,852-53).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
9. Consistent with Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A and Commission
precedent that pre-dated those Orders, the Commission has permitted
transmission providers to eliminate separate compensation for
generating facilities providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range.\21\ In these cases, the Commission affirmed its
determination that the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range is not compensable except as a matter of
comparability. For example, in BPA, the Commission granted a complaint
filed by Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) arguing that the rate
schedules of certain independent power producers (IPP) for reactive
power within the standard power factor range, often referred to as a
``deadband,'' were no longer just and reasonable given BPA's decision
to no longer pay its own or affiliated generators for providing this
service.\22\ The Commission found that ``Commission policy clearly
allows BPA to discontinue paying all its merchants for inside the
deadband reactive power service,'' explaining that ``[t]he Commission's
policy is not new; we confirmed it in Order No. 2003, when we stated
that an interconnecting generator `should not be compensated for
reactive power when operating its Generating Facility within the
established power factor range, since it is only meeting its
obligation.'' \23\
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\21\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at PP 52-53; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 26-27; Pub. Serv. Co. of
N.M., 178 FERC ] 61,088, at PP 29-31 (2022) (PNM); Nev. Power Co.,
179 FERC ] 61,103, at PP 20-21 (2022); BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P
20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119 FERC ] 61,340, at P 15 (2007); Entergy
Servs., Inc., 113 FERC ] 61,040, at P 38 (2005).
\22\ BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at PP 19-20; BPA Rehearing Order,
125 FERC ] 61,273 at PP 10-11.
\23\ BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at PP 19-20 (citing Order No. 2003,
FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,146 at P 546); METC Rehearing Order, 97
FERC at 61,852 (``Providing reactive power within design limitations
is not providing an ancillary service; it is simply ensuring that a
generator lives up to its obligations.'').
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10. The Commission has also found that a transmission provider's
decision to end compensation for reactive power within the standard
power factor range does not compromise a generating facility's ability
to recover costs that it may incur in producing reactive power within
this range.\24\ For example, the Commission has observed that
generating facilities ``may be able to recover the costs for reactive
power within the deadband in other ways--such as through higher power
sales rates of their own.'' \25\ In response to arguments by certain
independent power producers that such recovery is infeasible because of
competition, the Commission has found that ``since the incremental cost
of reactive power service within the deadband is minimal, the
infeasibility argument lacks plausibility. The purpose for which
generation assets are built (including reactive power capability to
maintain voltage levels for generation entering the grid) is to make
sales of real power.'' \26\
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\24\ Id. PP 19-22.
\25\ Id. P 21 (citing Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 119 FERC ] 61,199,
at P 39).
\26\ Id.
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11. The Commission made similar findings in MISO, wherein it
accepted an FPA section 205 application by
[[Page 93413]]
Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc. (MISO) transmission
owners to end generator compensation for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range.\27\ In accepting MISO
transmission owners' proposal, the Commission reiterated its
longstanding policy ``that the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is, in the first instance, an obligation of
the interconnecting generator and good utility practice,'' such that
``MISO [transmission owners] do not have an obligation to continue to
compensate an independent generator for reactive power within the
standard power factor range when its own or affiliated generators are
no longer being compensated.'' \28\ The Commission also rejected any
reliance arguments, reasoning in part that the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range required little or no
incremental investment given that, for both synchronous and non-
synchronous generating facilities,\29\ the same equipment is used for
the production of real power and reactive power.\30\ In addition, the
Commission found that generating facilities have other opportunities,
beyond Schedule 2, to seek to recover their costs of providing reactive
power.\31\
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\27\ MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 53 (``Bearing in mind that the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
is, in the first instance, an obligation of the interconnecting
generator and good utility practice, MISO [transmission owners] do
not have an obligation to continue to compensate an independent
generator for reactive power within the standard power factor range
when its own or affiliated generators are no longer being
compensated.'' (citation omitted)); see also PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088
at PP 29, 33 (accepting PNM's revisions to eliminate compensation
for reactive service under Schedule 2 and rejecting generators'
arguments that it is ``just and reasonable for it to be compensated
for investments made'' to provide reactive support consistent with
interconnection requirements even though PNM elected to no longer
pay its own or affiliated generators for such reactive power).
\28\ MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 53. The Commission found
``those protests that challenge these well-established policies to
be collateral attacks on these earlier determinations.'' Id.
\29\ Synchronous generating facilities (e.g., coal, gas, nuclear
resources) produce electricity in sync with the transmission system
at the system frequency. Non-synchronous generating facilities
(e.g., solar, wind, battery storage resources) produce electricity
that is initially not in sync with the transmission system and use
inverters to convert their electrical output to synchronize with the
transmission system. See FERC, Payment for Reactive Power, 7 (Apr.
22, 2014) (2014 Staff Report), https://www.ferc.gov/sites/default/files/2020-05/04-11-14-reactive-power.pdf.
\30\ MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 29-30 (citing
S. Co. Servs., Inc., 80 FERC ] 61,318, at 62,091 (1997) (noting also
that the primary function of a generating plant is to produce real
power; thus, if costs were allocated based on the ``predominant''
function of the equipment, ``all of the costs of generation would
thus be assigned to real power production and there would be no
basis for any separate reactive power charge''); BPA, 120 FERC ]
61,211 at P 21 (finding that the incremental cost of reactive power
service within the standard power factor range is minimal); METC
Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53 (``[R]eactive power provided,
not as an ancillary service, but rather as a `no cost' service
within reactive design limitations, may therefore, be provided
without compensation.'').
\31\ MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 40-42; SPP,
119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 39 (stating that IPPs ``are free to negotiate
rates that they charge their customers for real power that are
sufficient to compensate them for any costs that they may incur in
producing reactive power within their deadbands, just as affiliated
generators may seek to negotiate rates that they charge their
customers that are sufficient to compensate them for the costs of
any reactive power that they provide within their deadbands.'').
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12. Consistent with Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A and other Commission
precedent, multiple RTOs/ISOs and non-RTO/ISO transmission providers
have elected not to compensate generating facilities for providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range under Schedule 2
of their OATTs.\32\
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\32\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at PP 52-53; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 26; PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088
at PP 29-31; Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ] 61,103 at PP 20-21; BPA, 120
FERC ] 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119 FERC ] 61,340 at P 15;
Entergy Servs., Inc., 113 FERC ] 61,040 at P 38.
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13. Of the six Commission-jurisdictional RTOs/ISOs, only three
currently compensate generating facilities for reactive power provided
within the standard power factor range. Generating facilities in PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C. (PJM) \33\ generally use the cost-based AEP
Methodology to calculate cost-of-service rates for the production of
reactive power.\34\ Because the same generation equipment contributes
to the production of both real power and reactive power, the AEP
Methodology allocates the costs of each piece of equipment to real
power service and reactive power service by assigning the cost of each
piece of equipment to either real power service, reactive power
service, or both. ISO New England Inc. (ISO-NE) \35\ and New York
Independent System Operator, Inc. (NYISO) \36\ compensate generating
facilities for reactive power under flat rate designs that are adjusted
for inflation.\37\
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\33\ PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., Intra-PJM Tariffs, OATT
Schedule 2, (Reactive Supply and Voltage Control from Generation or
Other Sources Service) (4.0.0).
\34\ The AEP Methodology derives its name from Opinion No. 440,
where the Commission approved AEP's, a vertically integrated
utility, method for calculating the costs of synchronous generation
equipment associated with the production of reactive power. See Am.
Elec. Power Serv. Corp., Opinion No. 440, 88 FERC ] 61,141 (1999),
order on reh'g, 92 FERC ] 61,001 (2000). In WPS Westwood, the
Commission recommended that all generating facilities that have
actual cost data and support documentation use the AEP Methodology.
See WPS Westwood Generation, LLC, 101 FERC ] 61,290, at P 14 (2002).
\35\ ISO New England Inc., ISO New England Inc. Transmission,
Markets and Services Tariff, Schedule 2 (Reactive Supply and Voltage
Control Service) (8.0.0).
\36\ New York Independent System Operator, Inc., NYISO Tariffs,
NYISO OATT, Sec. 6.2 OATT Schedule 2 (Charges For Voltage Support
Service) (6.0.0).
\37\ Both ISO-NE and NYISO proposed their respective reactive
power capability compensation mechanisms pursuant to section 205
filings. See ISO New England Inc., 122 FERC ] 61,056, at P 1 (2008)
(settling, in part, for a new flat rate in $/kVAR-yr). N.Y. Indep.
Sys. Operator, Inc., Docket No. ER02-617-000 (Feb. 5, 2002)
(delegated order accepting NYISO's amended Rate Schedule 2 of the
Market Administration and Control Area Services Tariff).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. California Independent System Operator Corporation (CAISO),\38\
Southwest Power Pool, Inc. (SPP),\39\ and MISO \40\ do not pay
separately for reactive power within the standard power factor range.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ CAISO never provided compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range. See Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator
Corp., 160 FERC ] 61,035, at P 7 (2017) (explaining that CAISO
considered the possibility of compensating generating facilities for
reactive power in its stakeholder process, but decided against it,
reasoning that the ability to provide reactive power is part of a
generator's fixed costs, which are recovered through power purchase
agreements).
\39\ SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 30.
\40\ MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at PP 52-66; MISO Rehearing Order,
184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 23-55.
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15. Outside the RTOs/ISOs, transmission providers that pay for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
generally use the AEP Methodology to set reactive power compensation on
an individual generating facility basis. Many non-RTO/ISO transmission
providers do not pay separately for reactive power provided within the
standard power factor range.\41\
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\41\ See, e.g., Arizona Public Service Company, FERC Electric
Tariff Vol. No. 2, Schedule 2 (Reactive Supply and Voltage Control
from Generation or Other Sources Service) (6.0.0) (``This service
will be provided at no charge until [Arizona Public Service Company]
has developed a rate that has been filed with the Commission and
allowed to be implemented; however, Transmission Customers taking
service at transmission voltage levels shall be responsible for
maintaining a power factor of 95.0%, and Transmission
Customers taking service at distribution voltage levels shall
maintain a power factor of not less than 90% lagging but in no event
leading, unless agreed to by [Arizona Public Service Company].'');
Public Service Company of New Mexico, PNM Open Access Transmission
Tariff, Schedule 2 (Reactive Supply and Voltage Control from
Generation or Other Sources Service) (2.1.0) (``As of October 1,
2021, the Effective Date of this Schedule 2, the Transmission
Provider is not charging for Reactive Supply and Voltage Control
from Generation or Other Sources Service from its own resources. As
a result, there will be no separate charge for such service.'').
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[[Page 93414]]
B. Notice of Inquiry and Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
16. On November 18, 2021, the Commission issued a Notice of Inquiry
(NOI) \42\ in this proceeding, seeking comment on various issues
regarding reactive power compensation and market design as a result of
the significant changes that have taken place in the electric industry
in the last two decades, including changes in the generation resource
mix and a general shift away from cost-of-service rates for generating
facilities selling into Commission-jurisdictional markets. Generally,
the Commission sought to ``examine whether the current regime for
reactive power capability compensation requires revisions to ensure
that payments for reactive power capability accurately reflect the
costs associated with reactive power capability.'' \43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Reactive Power Capability Compensation, Notice of Inquiry,
177 FERC ] 61,118 (2021) (NOI).
\43\ Id. P 19.
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17. On March 21, 2024, the Commission issued a NOPR in this same
proceeding. Based on a review of the comments submitted in response to
the Commission's NOI in the instant docket, as well as the Commission's
experience in the years since the issuance of Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-
A, the NOPR preliminarily found that where transmission providers
require transmission customers to pay for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range, transmission rates may be
unjust and unreasonable, as they include costs without a sufficient
economic basis or justification. In support of such preliminary
finding, the NOPR explained that generating facilities provide reactive
power within the standard power factor range at no cost or de minimis
cost, and that providing reactive power within the standard power
factor range is already an obligation of the generating facility as an
interconnection customer and consistent with good utility practice.\44\
The NOPR also stated that current compensation may result in undue
compensation or other market distortions. The NOPR proposed, pursuant
to FPA section 206,\45\ that a just and reasonable replacement rate was
to prohibit transmission providers from including in their transmission
rates any charges associated with the supply of reactive power within
the standard power factor range from a generating facility.
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\44\ Real power, which accomplishes useful work (e.g., runs
motors), is typically measured in MWs.
\45\ 16 U.S.C. 824e.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
18. Specifically, the NOPR proposed to add the following sentence
to the end of Schedule 2 of the pro forma OATT: \46\ ``However, such
rates shall not include compensation to generating facilities for the
supply of reactive power within the power factor range specified in its
interconnection agreement.'' Second, the NOPR proposed to remove the
following clause from section 9.6.3 of the pro forma LGIA: \47\
``provided that if Transmission Provider pays its own or affiliated
generators for reactive power service within the specified range, it
must also pay Interconnection Customer.'' Third, the NOPR proposed to
remove the following sentence from section 1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA:
\48\ ``In addition, if the Transmission Provider pays its own or
affiliated generators for reactive power service within the specified
range, it must also pay the Interconnection Customer.''
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\46\ See pro forma OATT, Schedule 2.
\47\ See pro forma LGIA, Sec. 9.6.3.
\48\ See pro forma SGIA, Sec. 1.8.2.
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19. Comments on the NOPR were due on June 26, 2024. Thirty-one
parties filed comments.\49\ Comments were submitted by RTOs/ISOs and
other transmission providers, generating facilities, generation
developers, transmission owners, load-serving entities (LSE),
Monitoring Analytics, LLC, acting in its capacity as the Independent
Market Monitor for PJM (PJM IMM), trade associations representing
specific generation technologies, and consumer advocates. Of these, and
with few exceptions, transmission owners, LSEs, the PJM IMM,
independent filers,\50\ and consumer advocates supported or did not
oppose the NOPR proposal to eliminate compensation in the standard
power factor range,\51\ while generating facilities, generation
developers, and trade associations representing specific generation
technologies oppose the NOPR proposal.\52\
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\49\ See app. A.
\50\ C T Gaunt states that reactive power cannot be delivered
and also that it cannot be lost in transmission through a
transformer or power system. Thus, C T Gaunt claims that there are
no grounds for arguing against the Commission's determination in the
NOPR. C T Gaunt Reply Comments at 2-3.
\51\ American Electric Power Service Corporation (AEP) (on
behalf of itself and its affiliates, including Appalachian Power
Company, Indiana Michigan Power Company, Kentucky Power Company,
Kingsport Power Company, Ohio Power Company, Wheeling Power Company,
Public Service Company of Oklahoma, Southwestern Electric Power
Company, AEP Appalachian Transmission Company, Inc., AEP Indiana
Michigan Transmission Company, Inc., AEP Kentucky Transmission
Company, Inc., AEP Ohio Transmission Company, Inc., AEP West
Virginia Transmission Company, Inc., AEP Oklahoma Transmission
Company, Inc., and AEP Southwestern Transmission Company, Inc.);
Ameren Service Company (Ameren) (on behalf of Ameren Illinois
Company d/b/a Ameren Illinois, Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren
Missouri and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois); C T Gaunt;
New England Consumer Advocates (consisting of the Office of
Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell, the Connecticut
Office of Consumer Counsel, the Maine Office of Public Advocate, the
New Hampshire Office of Consumer Advocate, and the Rhode Island
Division of Public Utilities and Carriers); Joint Consumer Advocates
(including the Illinois Attorney General, Illinois Citizens Utility
Board, Maryland Office of People's Counsel, the New Jersey Division
of Rate Counsel, the North Carolina Utilities Commission Public
Staff, the Office of the People's Counsel for the District of
Columbia, and the West Virginia Consumer Advocate Division of the
Public Service Commission), Joint Customers (including Old Dominion
Electric Cooperative, Northern Virginia Electric Cooperative, Inc.,
and Dominion Energy Services, Inc. on behalf of Virginia Electric
and Power Company d/b/a Dominion Energy Virginia); Liberty Utilities
(Granite State Electric) Corp. d/b/a Liberty (Liberty); MISO; MISO
Transmission Owners (including Ameren, as agent for Union Electric
Company d/b/a Ameren Missouri, Ameren Illinois Company d/b/a Ameren
Illinois, and Ameren Transmission Company of Illinois; Arkansas
Electric Cooperative Corporation; City Water, Light & Power;
Cooperative Energy; Dairyland Power Cooperative; East Texas Electric
Cooperative; Entergy Arkansas, LLC; Entergy Louisiana, LLC; Entergy
Mississippi, LLC; Entergy Texas, Inc.; Great River Energy;
Indianapolis Power & Light Company; Lafayette Utilities System;
MidAmerican Energy Company; Minnesota Power (and its subsidiary
Superior Water, L&P); Missouri River Energy Services; Montana-Dakota
Utilities Co.; Northern States Power Company, a Minnesota
corporation, and Northern States Power Company, a Wisconsin
corporation, subsidiaries of Xcel Energy Inc.; Northwestern
Wisconsin Electric Company; Otter Tail Power Company; Prairie Power,
Inc.; Southern Indiana Gas & Electric Company (d/b/a CenterPoint
Energy Indiana South); and Southern Minnesota Municipal Power
Agency); the Ohio Office of the Federal Energy Advocate of the
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (Ohio FEA); Portland General
Electric Company (PGE); PJM; the PJM IMM; the Transmission Access
Policy Study Group (TAPS) (an association of transmission dependent
utilities in 35 states). For convenience, we have listed each
commenter and the parties they represent. For brevity, for the
remainder of this rule, we will refer to each commenter by their
abbreviated names as defined in this footnote.
\52\ The American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE); Calpine
Corporation (Calpine); Eagle Creek Reactive Generators (including
Mahoning Creek Hydroelectric Company, LLC, York Haven Power Company,
LLC, Eagle Creek Reusens Hydro, LLC, Great Falls Hydroelectric
Company Limited Partnership, Lake Lynn Generation, LLC, PE Hydro
Generation, LLC, Black River Hydroelectric, LLC, All Dams
Generation, LLC, and Eagle Creek Hydro Power, LLC); EDP Renewables
North America LLC (EDPR); Elevate Renewables F7, LLC (Elevate);
Generation Developers (including Vistra Corp. and Dynegy Marketing
and Trade, LLC); Glenvale LLC (Glenvale); Indicated Reactive Power
Suppliers (including KMC Thermo, LLC, Bitter Ridge Wind Farm, LLC,
Guernsey Power Station LLC, Moxie Freedom LLC, Safe Harbor Water
Power Corporation, BIF III Holtwood LLC, Brookfield Power Piney &
Deep Creek LLC, Erie Boulevard Hydropower, L.P., Carr Street
Generating Station, L.P., Bear Swamp Power Company LLC, Brookfield
White Pine Hydro LLC, Brookfield Renewable Trading and Marketing LP,
and Reworld Waste, LLC f/k/a Covanta; Independent Power Producers of
New York, Inc. (IPPNY); Indicated Trade Associations (including
Electric Power Supply Association, The PJM Power Providers Group the
New England Power Generators Association, Inc., Independent Power
Producers of New York, Inc., the Coalition of Midwest Power
Producers); ISO-NE; Middle River Power LLC (including Coalition of
Midwest Power Producers, the Electric Power Supply Association, the
PJM Power Providers Group, the New England Power Generators
Association, Inc., and the Independent Power Producers of New York,
Inc.); National Hydropower Association (NHA) (a national trade
association with over 320 member companies); New England Power
Generators Association, Inc. (NEPGA); New England Power Pool
(NEPOOL); New England States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE);
Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI); North American Generator Forum
(NAGF); NYISO; Onward Energy Holdings, LLC (Onward Energy); PSEG
(including Public Service Electric and Gas Company, PSEG Power LLC,
and PSEG Energy Resources & Trade LLC, and each wholly owned, direct
or indirect subsidiaries of Public Service Enterprise Group
Incorporated) (PSEG); Reactive Service Providers (including CIP, D.
E. Shaw Renewable Investments, L.L.C., Invenergy Renewables LLC,
Leeward Renewable Energy, LLC, Lightsource Renewable Energy
Operations, LLC, NextEra Energy Resources, LLC,1 [Oslash]rsted Wind
Power North America, LLC, and RWE Clean Energy, LLC); Clean Energy
Associations (including Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA)
and American Clean Power Association (ACP)). For brevity, for the
remainder of this rule, we will refer to each commenter by their
abbreviated names as defined in this footnote.
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[[Page 93415]]
II. Discussion
20. In this final determination, the Commission adopts the NOPR as
proposed, except with respect to the timing of the compliance
procedures and implementation. Based on our review of the record, we
find there is substantial evidence to support the conclusion that
allowing transmission providers to charge transmission customers for a
generating facility's provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range results in unjust and unreasonable transmission
rates. As explained in the NOPR, generating facilities providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range are only meeting
their obligations under their interconnection agreements and in
accordance with good utility practice, and in doing so, incur no or at
most de minimis variable costs beyond the cost of providing real power.
Moreover, providing compensation for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range risks overcompensation and
market distortion in ways that did not exist prior to the existence of
organized markets.
21. We find that these reforms will not adversely impact
reliability. We also find that generating facilities have the
opportunity to seek to recover any costs associated with providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range through their
rates for selling real power, including energy or capacity sales,
whether in organized or bilateral markets. Given that the primary
function of a generating facility is to produce real power and that the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range is
necessary for the provision of real power, we find that the existing
means of cost recovery for real power are not only reasonable but also
the most logical outcome.
22. Based on more than two decades of experience since Order No.
2003, and the record developed in this proceeding, we find that, even
as a function of comparability, charging transmission customers under
Schedule 2 for the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range has become unjust and unreasonable. As explained
above and for the reasons discussed below, in Order No. 2003, the
Commission found generators should not receive compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor as it was
an obligation of good utility practice. Based on rehearing requests, in
Order No. 2003-A, the Commission agreed that where vertically
integrated transmission owners continued to have rate schedules
providing payment to their affiliated generating facilities for
reactive power service within the standard power factor range, such
transmission owners were also required to pay non-affiliated
interconnection customers for the same provision of reactive power. At
the time of Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A, functional unbundling of
transmission service \53\ and the development of organized wholesale
electricity markets \54\ were relatively nascent, and so too was the
Commission's experience with the impacts of establishing the
comparability standard for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range. At the time, establishing the
comparability standard appeared consistent with Order No. 2003's stated
intent of ``minimiz[ing] opportunities for undue discrimination and
expedit[ing] the development of new generation, while protecting
reliability and ensuring that rates are just and reasonable.'' \55\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,654 (``We
conclude that functional unbundling of wholesale services is
necessary to implement non-discriminatory open access
transmission.'').
\54\ Regional Transmission Orgs., Order No. 2000, FERC Stats. &
Regs. ] 31,089 (1999) (cross-referenced at 89 FERC ] 61,285) (``We
conclude that properly structured RTOs throughout the United States
can provide significant benefits in the operation of the
transmission grid.''), order on reh'g, Order No. 2000-A, FERC Stats.
& Regs. ] 31,092 (2000) (cross-referenced at 90 FERC ] 61,201),
aff'd sub nom. Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 of Snohomish Cty. v. FERC, 272
F.3d 607 (D.C. Cir. 2001).
\55\ See, e.g., Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at P 12
(explaining that standard interconnection procedures and a standard
agreement will: ``(1) limit opportunities for Transmission Providers
to favor their own generation; (2) facilitate market entry for
generation competitors by reducing interconnection costs and time;
and (3) encourage needed investment in generator and transmission
infrastructure'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. Since Order No. 2003, however, many industry changes have
occurred. Some vertically integrated utilities have divested their
generation. Competitive markets have developed, leading many generators
to recover their costs through market-based rather than cost-based
rates. The development of competitive markets makes even more
challenging any allocation of costs between real power production,
under market-based rates, and reactive power service, under cost of
service rates.\56\ When rates are market-based, challenges in
allocation will affect the competitive positions of the entities.\57\
New technologies have developed that provide reactive power through
different means and to which the AEP Methodology that predates these
technologies does not squarely apply. With fewer vertically integrated
utilities, the continued development of competitive markets, and new
technologies, the initial justification for compensation (i.e., that
the Commission required separate compensation on a comparable basis
because vertically integrated transmission owners continued to have
rate schedules providing payment to their affiliated generating
facilities for reactive power service) is no longer broadly applicable.
Indeed, the wide-ranging rates for reactive power resulting from cost-
of-service proceedings further undermine the principle of comparability
as some generating facilities now receive substantially higher rates
for the provision of reactive power within the
[[Page 93416]]
standard power factor range than others.\58\
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\56\ See In re Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390 U.S. at 804
(``There is ample support for the Commission's judgment that the
apportionment of actual costs between two jointly produced
commodities, only one of which is regulated by the Commission, is
intrinsically unreliable.''); A.A. Poultry Farms, Inc. v. Rose Acre
Farms, Inc., 881 F.2d 1396, 1400 (7th Cir. 1989) (``How does one
allocate the cost of activities that have joint products? Agencies
engaged in ratemaking struggle with these problems for years, even
decades, without producing clear answers.''); Richard A. Posner,
Natural Monopoly and Its Regulation, 21 Stan. L. Rev. 548, 595
(1969) (``where services involve joint or common costs a rational
allocation is impossible even in theory. How much of the cost of a
telephone handset is assignable to local and how much to interstate
telephone service?'').
\57\ When both real power and reactive power rates were cost-
based, the only effect of the allocation was to change the
allocation of costs and the rates for transmission and generation
service; the transmission provider would not exceed its total
revenue requirement.
\58\ The PJM IMM notes that total settled reactive power revenue
requirements for oil-fueled steam units average $993/MW-year whereas
other units have settled reactive power revenue requirements as high
as $18,750/MW-year. IMM Initial Comments at 5.
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24. All of these changes taken together, coupled with the record
developed here, make clear that separate compensation for the provision
of reactive power within the standard power factor range results in
unjust and unreasonable rates to transmission customers, because such
compensation is not necessary for comparability or to ensure continued
investment in the capability of generating facilities to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range.\59\ We
acknowledge that this final determination represents a change in
policy,\60\ a change we find appropriate based on the record before us,
as explained in detail herein.\61\
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\59\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11-12 (``The salient
difference between PJM and CAISO, SPP, and MISO is that PJM
customers paid $388,044,837.00 in out of market payments for
reactive capability in 2023, and customers in CAISO, SPP and MISO,
paid $0.00''); For Schedule 2 service in 2023, PJM paid $388
million, NYISO paid $75 million, and ISO-NE paid $18 million. See
PJM 2023 Annual Report at 5, https://services.pjm.com/annualreport2023/); 2023 NYISO Voltage Support Service Rates,
https://www.nyiso.com/documents/20142/35126567/2023-OATT-MST-Schedule-2-VSS-Rates-FINAL-for-posting.pdf/f59317b0-41c6-9f41-5d61-e7f502af82c2); 2023 Annual Markets Report at 154, iso-ne.com/static-assets/documents/100011/2023-annual-markets-report.pdf.
\60\ See Order No. 2003-C, 111 FERC ] 61,401 at P 42 (finding
that because providing reactive power within the established range
is an ``important service,'' payment for such service does not
constitute a ``windfall'').
\61\ PJM Power Providers Grp. v. FERC, 88 F.4th 250, 271-72 (3d
Cir. 2023), amended sub nom. PJM Power Provisers Grp. v. FERC, No.
21-3068, 2024 WL 259448 (3d Cir. Jan. 24, 2024) (``An agency may
alter its `view of what is in the public interest.' The fact that
contrary agency precedent exists `gives us no more power than usual
to question the Commission's substantive determinations.' The agency
need not establish that `the reasons for the new policy are better
than the reasons for the old one; it suffices that the new policy is
permissible under the statute, that there are good reasons for it,
and that the agency believes it to be better.' '') (citing FCC v.
Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515 (2009)); In re
Permian Basin Area Rate Cases, 390 U.S. 747, 784 (1968) (Permian
Basin); see also Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of U.S., Inc. v. State
Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42 (1983) (``[W]e fully
recognize that regulatory agencies do not establish rules of conduct
to last forever.'') (internal quotations omitted); Greater Bos.
Television Corp. v. FCC, 444 F.2d 841, 852 (D.C. Cir. 1970) (an
agency may change its course as long as it ``suppl[ies] a reasoned
analysis indicating that prior policies and standards are being
deliberately changed, not casually ignored.''), cert. denied, 403
U.S. 923 (1971)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
25. Accordingly, we are modifying Schedule 2 of the pro forma OATT,
section 9.6.3 of the pro forma LGIA, and section 1.8.2 of the pro forma
SGIA, and we are requiring transmission providers to make corresponding
revisions to their OATTs and pro forma interconnection agreements, to
prohibit transmission providers from including in their transmission
rates any charges associated with the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range from generating facilities.
26. We discuss below the issues raised in the comments.
A. Need for Reform
27. The NOPR preliminarily found that where transmission providers
require transmission customers to pay for generating facilities'
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range,
transmission rates may be unjust and unreasonable, as such rates may
include costs without a sufficient economic basis or justification and
such costs may not result in transmission customers receiving
commensurate reliability benefits.\62\ In support of the need for
reform, the NOPR preliminarily found that generating facilities
providing reactive power within the standard power factor range are
only meeting their obligations under their interconnection agreements
and in accordance with good utility practice, and in doing so, incur no
or at most a de minimis increase in variable costs beyond the cost of
providing real power.\63\ The NOPR also highlighted various adverse
impacts of the Commission's policy on reactive power compensation,
which have been exacerbated by the increasing volume of filings for
reactive power compensation and in turn, increasing reactive power-
related costs to transmission customers.\64\ For example, in many
regions, generating facilities are sited without regard to where there
is a geographic need for reactive power, which is significant given
that unlike real power, reactive power cannot be efficiently
transmitted long distances.\65\ Additionally, adjudicating cost-of-
service reactive power rates has become increasingly administratively
burdensome and may result in inconsistent rate treatment across
generating facilities.\66\ Furthermore, in regions where generating
facilities may seek to recover their costs by participating in
organized competitive wholesale markets, providing separate
compensation for the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range risks overcompensation and market distortion in ways
that did not exist prior to the existence of organized markets.\67\
Finally, as explained in the NOPR, the costs to transmission customers
have increased substantially without any commensurate increase in
benefits.\68\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\62\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at PP 25, 40.
\63\ Id. PP 28-33.
\64\ Id. PP 34-40.
\65\ Id. P 35.
\66\ Id. PP 36-38.
\67\ Id. P 39.
\68\ Id. P 40.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
28. The NOPR also preliminarily found that cessation of payments
for reactive power within the standard power factor range for
generating facilities does not compromise a generating facility's
ability to recover costs-if any-that it may incur in producing reactive
power within such range because generating facilities have the
opportunity to seek to recover such costs in other ways, such as
through energy or capacity sales.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ Id. P 42.
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1. Comments
29. AEP, Ameren, Joint Consumer Advocates, Joint Customers, MISO
Transmission Owners, New England Consumer Advocates, Ohio FEA, PGE,
PJM, the PJM IMM, and TAPS agree there is a need for reform and,
accordingly, support the NOPR proposal to eliminate compensation for
reactive power within the standard power factor range.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ AEP Initial Comments at 1-2; Ameren Initial Comments at 2-
3; Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 1; Joint Customers
Initial Comments at 2; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at
1, 5; New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6; Ohio FEA
Initial Comments at 3; PGE Initial Comments at 1; PJM Initial
Comments at 1, 3; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 2; TAPS Initial
Comments at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
30. Many commenters argue that there is substantial evidence to
support the conclusion that allowing transmission providers to charge
transmission customers for a generating facility's provision of
reactive power from within the standard power factor range results in
unjust and unreasonable transmission rates.\71\ They also agree that
current generator compensation for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range lacks sufficient economic basis
or justification,\72\ and that customers may
[[Page 93417]]
not be receiving commensurate reliability benefits.\73\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ See, e.g., Joint Customers Reply Comments at 10-11
(``Standing on its own, the record in this proceeding is sufficient
to justify the conclusion that compensating generators, any
generators, for reactive service within the standard power factor
range is not just and reasonable. Through the NOI comments, the
development of the NOPR, and comments to the NOPR, the Commission
has supported its conclusions and addressed potential concerns.'').
\72\ Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 1, 5; Joint
Customers Initial Comments at 5-6; Joint Customers Reply Comments at
1-2; MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 2; PGE Initial
Comments at 5; TAPS Initial Comments at 3.
\73\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 13-17; MISO
Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 8, 19; New England Consumer
Advocates Initial Comments at 4-6; TAPS Initial Comments at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
31. Joint Customers maintain, for example, that the NOPR builds on
longstanding Commission policy, reaffirmed since Order No. 2003, that
no compensation is appropriate for reactive service within the standard
power factor range and that challenges to the sufficiency of the record
or the process are unfounded.\74\ Joint Customers explain that ``[t]he
only change the Commission is making in the NOPR is to determine that
transmission providers no longer should have the option to compensate,
affiliate and non-affiliate alike. And for that discrete change, that
the exception to the general rule on compensation should be closed, the
Commission has plainly created a sufficient record.'' \75\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\74\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 10-11.
\75\ Id. at 11 (emphasis in original).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
32. PJM supports the NOPR and asserts that it would largely
eliminate the problems with the current reactive power compensation
regime in PJM, including the resource-intensive administrative burdens
of reactive power rate proceedings and the ``black box'' settlements
that ``seem[ ] at odds with the Commission's general precedent on
efficient energy and ancillary service price formation.'' \76\ MISO
explains that it has not experienced reliability concerns since
eliminating compensation for reactive power within the standard power
factor range in December 2022 \77\ and that it would not expect to see
any effect on reliability through eliminating compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor range.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\76\ PJM Initial Comments at 1-3.
\77\ MISO Initial Comments at 2.
\78\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
33. MISO Transmission Owners support the need for reform, arguing
that the current framework for reactive power compensation is neither
just nor reasonable given that it results in transmission customers
being required to pay for a service that generators already are
required to provide and that costs them little or nothing to
provide.\79\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
34. Many commenters agree that the current reactive power framework
does not result in commensurate reliability benefits.\80\ First, many
commenters agree that compensation for providing reactive power within
the standard power factor range is unnecessary to maintain
reliability.\81\ Second, many commenters also agree with the NOPR that
under the current framework, compensation for reactive power within the
standard power factor range is not tied to whether there is a
particular geographic need for reactive power.\82\ TAPS, for example,
contends that the existing approach to reactive power capability
compensation does not adequately consider a generator's actual
contribution to reliability or lack thereof and thus requires consumers
to pay excessive charges for reactive power that may not be needed or
is in the wrong location.\83\ Similarly, Joint Customers contend that
``[t]his incentive structure to provide payment based on reactive
capability results in the building of unnecessary capabilities in
locations it is not or may not be needed and does not allocate the
costs associated with reactive capability in a manner that is at least
roughly commensurate with the benefits received.'' \84\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\80\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 19; MISO Transmission Owners Reply
Comments at 3-5; New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at
4-6; TAPS Initial Comments at 3-5.
\81\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11-12 (``There will
be no adverse reliability impacts in PJM (or other similarly
situated regions) for the same reasons that . . . there have been no
observable impacts in regions that do not compensate generating
facilities for the supply of reactive power with the standard power
factor range. As in the case of CAISO, SPP and MISO, new and
existing generating facilities in PJM are required to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range as a condition
of obtaining and maintaining interconnection service. There is no
evidence that expanding the just and reasonable approach to
compensation already in place in CAISO, SPP and MISO to PJM will
have any adverse impact on reliability in PJM.''); MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 13 (``When the MISO Transmission Owners
proposed to eliminate compensation for producing reactive power
within the deadband, the most common protest from generators was
that it would impact the reliability of the grid. However, such
claims are not supported by evidence and distract from the
underlying fact that generators are obligated to provide reactive
power within the deadband whether or not they are compensated for
it.'' (citations omitted)).
\82\ See, e.g., Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5 (``As a result,
in areas like PJM, generators currently receive compensation
regardless of proximity to locations on the transmission system
where there is an actual need for additional reactive power.'');
Joint Customers Initial Comments at 17 (``Further, the failure to
account for transmission system needs or grid geography in the
current regime in regions like PJM undermine the reliability
benefits of generators that interconnect to the system with reactive
capabilities, whether meeting or exceeding their baseline
interconnection requirements. The current paradigm has resulted in
the development and deployment of generator based reactive
capability that is ill-suited to the needs of the transmission
system, and specifically that is well in excess of needs.
Eliminating the incentive to overbuild reactive capability will not
negatively impact reliability.'').
\83\ TAPS Initial Comments at 4-5.
\84\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12 (citing Ill. Com.
Comm'n. v. FERC, 576 F.3d 470, 477 (7th Cir. 2009)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
35. Further, like PJM, many commenters agree with the NOPR
regarding the administrative burden for all parties to determine
Schedule 2 rates.\85\ Joint Consumer Advocates argue that ``the
existing compensation framework for generators that supply reactive
power has led to unjust and unreasonable rates'' and note that ``[d]ue
to limited resources, the [Joint Consumer Advocates] have generally
been unable to participate in the numerous reactive proceedings and
assist the Commission with the review and scrutiny of generator
submissions. But such review and scrutiny are essential given the sheer
number of filings and the absence of standardized accounting for the
costs claimed in them by generators.'' \86\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ AEP Initial Comments at 4-6; Joint Customers Initial
Comments at 1-5; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 9.
\86\ Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 7. See also
PJM IMM Initial Comments at 9 (``Applying cost of service rules is
costly, burdensome and unnecessary. Most reactive proceedings for
generators in PJM are resolved in black box settlements that require
substantial time and resources from all parties, fail to address the
merits of the cost support provided, result from an unsupported
split the difference approach, and that produce a wide, unreasonable
and discriminatory disparity among the rates per paid per MW-year
for the same service.''); Joint Customers Initial Comments at 7
(``As well documented in comments to the NOI and described in the
NOPR, the current individualized consideration of reactive filings
purporting to apply the AEP [M]ethodology places a heavy burden on
customers, Transmission Providers, and the Commission while
resulting in customer charges with dubious connection to any clear
benefits to the customers paying those charges. This combination
created an intolerable condition necessitating Commission action to
reform the compensation structure.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
36. AEP states that it supports the Commission's proposal to
prospectively terminate reactive power compensation to generators for
maintaining the ability to produce reactive power within the standard
power factor range because it ``will more equitably balance the
interests of customers and generators, ensure that reactive power will
continue to be provided as a requirement of interconnection, and
significantly decrease the administrative burdens associated with
individualized, opaque, and inconsistent cost-of-service reactive power
rate proceedings.'' \87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ AEP Initial Comments at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
37. Similarly, New England Consumer Advocates state that
``[t]ransmission rates have been rising in recent years and costs are
only expected to increase in the near term to accommodate projected
future transmission system
[[Page 93418]]
needs. At this time of increasingly onerous retail energy costs,
particularly in New England, the Commission must ensure that
transmission providers are passing on to consumers only those costs
which are just and reasonable, and for which consumers receive
commensurate benefit.'' \88\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 3-4. See
also PJM IMM Initial Comments at 5 (``Most recent cases settled
prior to issuance of the NOPR have settled for costs well in excess
of the average cost and well in excess of the ARR offset amount. The
issue is growing in significance.''); MISO Transmission Owners
Initial Comments at 5 (``The Commission's preliminary findings that
led to the changes proposed in the NOPR are accurate. The current
framework for reactive power compensation can result in transmission
customers being required to pay for a service that generators
already are required to provide and that costs them little or
nothing to provide. Therefore, the current framework allows for
compensation that is neither just nor reasonable.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
38. The PJM IMM argues that opposing comments come largely from
generation owners opposed to the removal of subsidies that have
benefited them, even though such subsidies are primarily the result of
the ``nonsensical, wasteful and unworkable'' attempts to allocate a
portion of costs recoverable in markets to a guaranteed reactive
payment based on an outdated and arbitrary cost-of-service approach
referred to as the AEP Methodology.\89\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ PJM IMM Reply Comments at 1-2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
39. Other commenters opposed the NOPR, arguing that existing
reactive power rates remain just and reasonable.\90\ Reactive Service
Providers argue that ``changes to cost allocation'' following Order No.
888 (i.e., functional unbundling) do not warrant a change to reactive
power compensation.\91\ Reactive Service Providers contend that
reactive power supply being unaffected in regions where transmission
providers no longer pay for reactive power is not evidence that
reactive power compensation is unjust and unreasonable,\92\ that the
``comparability'' policy cannot be used as a basis to end
compensation,\93\ that administrative burden is not a basis to find
that compensation is unjust and unreasonable,\94\ and that inconsistent
rate treatment across generating facilities does not mean that
compensation is unjust and unreasonable.\95\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\90\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 2-3;
Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 16; NEI Initial
Comments at 1.
\91\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 4, 29-34.
\92\ Id. at 41-43.
\93\ Id. at 43-48.
\94\ Id. at 48-52.
\95\ Id. at 53-54.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
40. Reactive Service Providers argue that the Commission should
study individual generating facilities to determine if reactive power
is still needed.\96\ Reactive Service Providers also argue that the
Commission must ensure that compensation for providing reactive power
outside the standard power factor range is adequate.\97\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ Id. at 76-77.
\97\ Id. at 77.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
41. Indicated Trade Associations assert that the NOPR would grant
transmission providers unlawfully preferential treatment, creating a
preference for higher cost transmission solutions, and suggest that the
Commission should withdraw the NOPR proposal and refocus its efforts on
improving the methodologies used to determine reactive power rates.\98\
Further, Indicated Trade Associations assert that concerns raised about
the AEP Methodology being burdensome and a lack of refund protections
for customers do not justify eliminating reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor range altogether.\99\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\98\ Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 16-17.
\99\ Id. at 8-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
42. ISO-NE argues that ISO-NE's Schedule 2 VAR compensation program
should not be disturbed.\100\ ISO-NE asserts that its treatment of
reactive power is distinct from its energy and capacity markets.\101\
ISO-NE further states that its VAR service is not based on cost-of-
service and is different from the standard AEP Methodology but is
instead based on a resource's capability to provide reactive power.
ISO-NE explains that its VAR service compensates resources at a uniform
payment rate (i.e., a single rate for reactive power provided within
and outside of the standard power factor range) and is not resource-
intensive to calculate.\102\ ISO-NE adds that total VAR payments
amounted to 0.25% of the total energy, ancillary services, and capacity
markets combined (or approximately 18-20 million dollars) for the same
given period. NEPOOL argues that one of the reasons Schedule 2 has
worked well for New England is that it provides a simple fixed rate for
the main component of VAR service, which pays part of the costs of a
reactive power resource's capability to provide VAR service to the
transmission system when needed. NEPOOL explains that this same fixed
rate is provided to all qualified resources without further analysis
of, or dispute about, resource-specific costs.\103\ NEPOOL argues that
one of the reasons Schedule 2 has worked well for New England is that
it provides a simple fixed rate for the main component of VAR service,
which pays part of the costs of a reactive power resource's capability
to provide VAR service to the transmission system when needed, without
further analysis of, or dispute about, resource-specific costs.\104\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\100\ ISO-NE Initial Comments at 1-2, NESCOE Reply Comments at
2; NEPGA Reply Comments at 6-7; NEPOOL Reply Comments at 6-7. ISO-NE
explains that its VAR service consists of four components: (1) the
fixed Capacity Cost (CC) rate, under which Qualified Reactive
Resources are eligible to receive VAR payments for their measurable
capability to provide VAR service to the New England Transmission
System; (2) the variable Lost Opportunity Cost, which compensates
for the value of a resource's lost opportunity in the wholesale
energy market in situations where a resource that would otherwise be
economically dispatched is directed by the ISO to reduce real power
output to provide more reactive power; (3) the variable Cost of
Energy Consumed, which compensates for the cost of energy consumed
by the resource solely to provide reactive power; and (4) the Cost
of Energy Produced, which compensates for the difference between the
locational marginal price and a resource's offer price, if the
locational marginal price is lower than the offer price, for each
hour the resource provides reactive power. ISO-NE Initial Comments
at 3-4. ISO-NE notes that the components other than the CC component
may occur infrequently and are far less than the CC rate component.
ISO-NE Initial Comments at 4 n.5.
\101\ ISO-NE Initial Comments at 1-2.
\102\ Id. at 3-5, 14. The ISO New England Ancillary Service
Schedule 2 Business Procedure is available on the ISO-NE website:
https://www.iso-ne.com/static-assets/documents/rules_proceds/operating/gen_var_cap/schedule_2_var_business_procedure.pdf.
Operating Procedures include primarily: ISO New England Operating
Procedure No. 12--Voltage and Reactive Control, available at https://www.iso-ne.com/static-assets/documents/rules_proceds/operating/isone/op12/op12_rto_final.pdf; and ISO New England Operating
Procedures No. 23--Generating Resource Auditing, available at https://www.iso-ne.com/static-assets/documents/rules_proceds/operating/isone/op23/op23_rto_final.pdf.
\103\ NEPOOL Reply Comments at 6-7.
\104\ Id. at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
43. NYISO challenges the Commission's preliminary conclusion that
compensating generating facilities for providing reactive power within
the standard power factor range has resulted in unjust and unreasonable
transmission rates and urges the Commission to allow NYISO to maintain
its current reactive power compensation program.\105\ NYISO states that
it supports the NOPR's objective to avoid administratively burdensome
processes and procedures to determine individualized cost-of-service
reactive power rates for generation facilities. NYISO adds that NYISO's
existing reactive power and Voltage Support Service (VSS) compensation
structure, which uses a flat dollars per MVAr-year structure, is just
and reasonable.\106\ NYISO maintains that this structure aligns costs
directly with services provided, ensures reliability benefits
[[Page 93419]]
commensurate with expenses,\107\ provides market-like incentives, and
encourages resources to offer reactive power cost-effectively by
rewarding increased capability and maintaining necessary
equipment,\108\ which reduces the need for complex, individualized
cost-based payments and integrates reactive power support efficiently
into the broader market framework, promoting economic efficiency and
reliability.\109\ NYISO contends that a uniform implementation approach
is not suitable given the varying regional needs and existing effective
compensation frameworks.\110\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ NYISO Initial Comments at 1.
\106\ Id. at 2; IPPNY Reply Comments at 1-2.
\107\ NYISO Initial Comments at 2-5.
\108\ Id. at 7-8.
\109\ Id. at 7-8.
\110\ Id. at 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
44. Indicated Trade Associations, Generation Developers, NEI and
PSEG raise constitutional claims with respect to the NOPR proposal.
Indicated Trade Associations argue that the proposed rule violates the
Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States
Constitution.\111\ They argue that public utilities have the statutory
and constitutional right to compensation for the services they provide,
including reactive power, and the Commission cannot deprive public
utilities of just and reasonable compensation simply by characterizing
the provision of reactive power as a condition of interconnection,
particularly where it was the Commission that established this
condition. Similarly, Generation Developers argue that forcing
generators to supply an identifiable portion of the reactive power they
generate, without any compensation, as a condition of interconnection
to the transmission system, falls squarely within the kinds of takings
prohibited by the Takings Clause.\112\ PSEG states that, in accordance
with the FPA and the Supreme Court precedent in Hope, the Commission
has a duty to protect public utilities from rates that are
confiscatory.\113\ PSEG argues that the proposed rule, not unlike the
Commission denying transmission owners the opportunity to earn a return
on network upgrades in Ameren, essentially compels generators to
provide a service without the ability to recover their fixed associated
costs, which is unjust and unreasonable, unduly discriminatory, and
confiscatory and in violation of the FPA and judicial precedent.\114\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 22-24
(citing Smyth v. Ames, 169 U.S. 466, 546 (1898)).
\112\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 26 (citing Horne
v. Dept. of Ag., 576 U.S. 350, 359, 367 (2015); FPC v. Hope Nat. Gas
Co., 320 U.S. 591, 603 (1944); Bluefield Waterworks & Improvement
Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n, 262 U.S. 679, 690 (1923)).
\113\ PSEG Initial Comments at 18-19 (citing Bluefield
Waterworks & Improvement Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n, 262 U.S. at 690;
Duquesne Light Co. v. Barash, 488 U.S. 299, 308 (1989) (``If the
rate does not afford sufficient compensation, the State has taken
the use of the utility property without paying just
compensation.'')).
\114\ PSEG Initial Comments at 19-20 (citing Ameren Servs. Co.
v. FERC, 880 F.3d 571, 581-82 (D.C. Cir. 2018)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
45. MISO Transmission Owners disagree with commenters arguing that
the NOPR proposal constitutes an unconstitutional taking.\115\ They
contend that the commenters' claim that the Order No. 2003 requirement
for generators to provide reactive power within the standard power
factor range violates the Takings Clause of the U.S. Constitution is a
collateral attack on Order No. 2003. They contend that, while some
contractual rights are considered ``property'' within the meaning of
the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the contractual relationship
entered into when a generator interconnects with a transmission system
does not implicate a taking that must be compensated.\116\ MISO
Transmission Owners state that the Commission determined in Order No.
2003 that generators ``should not be compensated for reactive power
when operating [their] Generating Facilit[ies] within the established
power factor range, since [they are] only meeting [their] obligation.''
Moreover, they state that ``as `legislation [that] readjust[s] rights
and burdens is not unlawful solely because it upsets otherwise settled
expectations,' the Commission's action implementing the changes in the
NOPR would not constitute an unconstitutional taking just because the
changes would `impact the benefits and burdens' of the agreement
entered into by generators interconnecting with the Transmission
System.'' \117\ They contend that ``[g]enerators have only a unilateral
expectation of payment for the provision of reactive power and not a
legitimate claim of entitlement to compensation.'' \118\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 12 n.33.
\116\ Id. (citing Transmission Plan. & Cost Allocation by
Transmission Owning & Operating Pub. Utils., Order No. 1000-A, 77 FR
32184 (May 31, 2012), 139 FERC ] 61,132, at P 368 (citing Connolly
v. Pension Guar. Corp., 475 U.S. 211, 224 (1986)), order on reh'g
and clarification, Order No. 1000-B, 77 FR 64890 (Oct. 24, 2012),
141 FERC ] 61,044 (2012), aff'd sub nom. S.C. Pub. Serv. Auth. v.
FERC, 762 F.3d 41 (D.C. Cir. 2014)).
\117\ Id. (citing Order No. 1000-A, 139 FERC ] 61,132 at P 369
(citing Connolly v. Pension Guar. Corp., 475 U.S. at 223)).
\118\ Id. (citing Bd. of Regents of State Coll. v. Roth, 408
U.S. 564, 577 (1972) (``To have a property interest in a benefit, a
person clearly must have more than an abstract need or desire for
it. He must have more than a unilateral expectation of it. He must,
instead, have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it.''); Del.
Riverkeeper Network v. FERC, 895 F.3d 102, 108-09 (D.C. Cir. 2018)
(citing Town of Castle Rock, Colo. v. Gonzales, 545 U.S. 748, 756
(2005)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
46. Eagle Creek and the NHA both assert that existing reactive
service rates enjoy the Mobile-Sierra presumption. The NHA asserts
that, in order for the Commission to disallow the existing reactive
service rates, each rate on-file must be demonstrated by the Commission
to ``seriously harm the public interest.'' \119\ Eagle Creek and the
NHA both note that, given the highly localized nature of reactive
power, it is unclear how the Commission could assess these individual
contracts without conducting a case-by-case analysis through individual
section 206 proceedings.\120\ Eagle Creek and the NHA claim that absent
such proceedings, generating facilities would be deprived of their
current just and reasonable compensation and previous investments made
by generating facilities would be compromised.\121\ The NHA and Eagle
Creek assert that, by relying on a generic rulemaking to effectively
cancel all reactive power rates, the NOPR is an ``act of convenience''
and ``an indirect attempt to strip the value of existing rates without
facing the legal challenge that the Mobile-Sierra doctrine presents.''
\122\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\119\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4; NHA Initial Comments at
8-9.
\120\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4; NHA Initial Comments at
8.
\121\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4-5; NHA Initial Comments
at 8.
\122\ NHA Initial Comments at 8-9; see also Eagle Creek Initial
Comments at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
47. Joint Customers disagree with Eagle Creek and the NHA's
argument that the Commission cannot eliminate compensation within the
standard power factor range without initiating individual rate
proceedings.\123\ Joint Customers explain that precedent cases, such as
PNM and MISO, demonstrate that changes to the underlying Schedule 2
tariff provisions effectively eliminate compensation for third-party
generators without separate rate challenges.\124\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\123\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 13-14.
\124\ Id. (``There is no validity to the argument that
individual rate challenges must be pursued by the Commission or
complainants, and it is well established that a change to the
underlying Schedule 2 in a transmission provider's tariff, as
proposed by the Commission in the NOPR, will contemporaneously end
compensation to third-party generators with no further action
required.''); see also PJM IMM Initial Comments at 9 (``The NOPR
does not propose a new Commission policy. Rather, it extends and
makes uniform policies that have long applied in jurisdictional
markets.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
48. Reactive Service Providers and Generation Developers argue that
the NOPR violates the D.C. Circuit's holding
[[Page 93420]]
in Atlantic City.\125\ They assert that by using the Commission's
authority under section 206 of the FPA to eliminate reactive power
compensation, the NOPR essentially strips generating facilities of
their ability to make filings under section 205 of the FPA to recover
the costs of the reactive power service that they provide.\126\
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\125\ Atl. City Elec. Co. v. FERC, 295 F.3d 1 (D.C. Cir. 2002)
(Atl. City).
\126\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 31-32 (citing
Atl. City, 295 F.3d at 9-10); Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 54.
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2. Commission Determination
49. Based on our review of the record, we find that there is
substantial evidence to support the conclusion that transmission rates
are unjust and unreasonable to the extent they include charges
associated with the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range. We therefore adopt the preliminary findings in the
NOPR concerning the need for reform \127\ and, pursuant to section 206
of the FPA, conclude that certain revisions to Schedule 2 of the pro
forma OATT, pro forma LGIA, and pro forma SGIA are necessary to ensure
rates that are just, reasonable, and not unduly discriminatory or
preferential.
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\127\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at PP 24-27, 28.
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50. We agree with commenters that the current framework allows for
transmission rates that are ``neither just nor reasonable'' and ``can
result in transmission customers being required to pay for a service
that generators already are required to provide and that costs them
little or nothing to provide.'' \128\ As reflected in the record,
absent reform, transmission customers would be required to continue to
pay charges associated with generating facilities' provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor range even though such
charges are without a sufficient economic basis and do not result in
transmission customers receiving commensurate reliability benefits. The
need for reform is particularly acute given that ``transmission rates
have been rising in recent years and costs are only expected to
increase in the near term to accommodate projected future transmission
system needs.'' \129\
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\128\ See, e.g., MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 5;
Joint Customers Initial Comments at 6-16, PJM IMM Initial Comments
at 1-4, 6-9; PJM IMM Reply Comments at 2-3, 6-7; Ameren Initial
Comments 2-3; AEP Initial Comments at 4-5; Ohio FEA Initial Comments
at 5-6; TAPs Initial Comments at 1, 3-8; PGE Initial Comments at 3-
4.
\129\ See, e.g., New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments
at 3 & n.7 (citing, e.g., Massachusetts Attorney General Maura
Healey, Initial Comments, Docket No. RM21-17-000, at 28 (filed Aug.
17, 2022); see also New England States Committee on Electricity, New
England States' Vision for a Clean, Affordable, and Reliable 21st
Century Regional Electric Grid (2020), https://nescoe.com/resource-center/vision-stmt-oct2020/).
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51. As described below, most commenters agree or do not dispute
that real and reactive power are provided as joint products,\130\ with
joint costs.\131\ Similarly, most commenters agree or do not dispute
that, under their interconnection agreements and in accordance with
good utility practice, generating facilities have a long-standing
obligation to provide reactive power within the standard power factor
range in order to interconnect reliably to the transmission system.
Most commenters agree or do not dispute that generating facilities must
produce reactive power within the standard power factor range to allow
the generating facilities' real power to reliably flow to load.\132\ As
such, we disagree with some commenters who challenge the Commission's
preliminary finding that providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range has no or de minimis costs \133\ and find, as
discussed in greater detail below, that there is substantial evidence
to conclude that in satisfying such obligations generating facilities
incur no incremental investment, or fixed costs, and at most de minimis
variable costs over and above those needed to provide real power.\134\
This is because no additional equipment is required to provide reactive
power; rather the same equipment that is needed to produce, and is used
to produce, real power also provides reactive power functions, at no
additional capital cost. Variable costs, if any, are limited to the
fuel costs (in synchronous facilities) or the cost of foregone direct
current power (in non-synchronous facilities) necessary to provide the
reactive power and to reliably inject real power into the transmission
system.\135\ For example, in Panda Stonewall the annual revenue
requirement of $2,051,894 included just $10,018 of identified variable
costs.\136\ In light of this evidence, we find that charging
transmission customers for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range results in unjust and unreasonable
rates.\137\
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\130\ See PSC VSMPO-Avisma Corp. v. U.S., 688 F.3d 751, 756
(Fed. Cir. 2012) (``[J]oint products [are] two dissimilar end
products that are produced from a single production process.'')
(citing Robert A. Anthony & James S. Reece, Accounting Principles
442 (5th ed. 1983).
\131\ A joint cost is an expenditure that benefits more than one
product, and for which it is not possible to separate the
contribution to each product. Permian Basin, 390 U.S. at 761 n.25
(citing Accounting Tools, The Supply and Price of Natural Gas 25
(1962)) (``Joint costs `are incurred when products cannot be
separately produced.'''); https://www.accountingtools.com/articles/joint-cost.
\132\ See SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199, at P 28 (``[I]f a generator is
to sell (and be able to deliver) its power to a customer, reactive
power is essential to the transaction. Thus, it is hardly surprising
that the Commission has concluded, . . . , that the provision of
sufficient reactive power is an obligation of a generator
interconnected to the system, and that, . . . , a generator is not
entitled to separate compensation for providing reactive power
within its deadband.'').
\133\ See, e.g., Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3-4; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 7; ACORE Initial Comments at
2; Elevate Renewables Initial Comments at 9-12; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 13; Glenvale Initial Comments at 9-
10; Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 2, 9-10;
Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 2, 6; Middle River
Power Initial Comments at 2-3; NEI Initial Comments at 4-5, 8-9; NHA
Initial Comments at 2, 4-5.
\134\ Although the Commission found in the MISO Rehearing Order,
and earlier, that ``Reactive Service requires little or no
incremental investment'' see, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ]
61,022 at P 29 (emphasis added), we note that beyond vague
assertions that incremental fixed costs are incurred, no evidence of
investment or fixed costs specific to providing reactive power was
provided in response to requests for such costs in the MISO
Rehearing Order, the NOI, or the NOPR. As such, the Commission
concludes below that there are no incremental or fixed costs to
provide reactive power beyond those to provide real power.
\135\ Under certain transmission system conditions, the
generating facility may operate at a power factor of 1.0, which
represents zero incremental variable costs and thus zero total costs
of providing reactive power. A generating facility operating at any
reactive power level (i.e., a power factor other than 1.0) will
incur some amount of incremental fuel cost, but the Commission
generally considers these costs de minimis within the standard power
factor range. See, e.g., APS, 94 FERC at 61,080 (``We note that
operating a generating unit within the proposed [standard power
factor range] does not affect the generation output of a unit.'');
Commission Staff Report, Principles for Efficient and Reliable
Reactive Power Supply and Consumption, Docket No. AD05-1-000, at 96
(2005 Staff Report) (2005) (``The marginal cost of providing
reactive power from within a generator's capability curve (D-curve)
is near zero.'').
\136\ Panda Stonewall, LLC, 176 FERC ] 61,072, at P 6 n.9
(2021). We note that the heating losses component reflects the
incremental fuel cost of providing reactive power. See, e.g., Panda
Stonewall, LLC, 174 FERC ] 61,266, at P 155 (2021) (``The AEP
methodology already has a means in place to provide compensation for
the small amount of additional fuel used during the production of
reactive power, which is a heating loss calculation based on the MW-
hours of actual reactive power production and the usage charges for
fuel.'').
\137\ See Belmont Mun. Light Dep't v. FERC, 38 F.4th at 173,
179, 186 (2022) (finding that the Commission's approval of a portion
of ISO-NE's Inventoried Energy Program ``was not reasoned
decisionmaking'' and ``thwart[ed] the [Commission's] own
`longstanding policy that rate incentives must be prospective and
that there must be a connection between the incentive and the
conduct meant to be induced''' because it would compensate market
participants for conduct they already engage in as part of standard
business operations).
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52. ISO-NE and NYISO oppose the NOPR and seek flexibility to
preserve their existing reactive power compensation regimes. We deny
their requests. ISO-NE and NYISO principally argue that their flat-rate
[[Page 93421]]
compensation regimes are transparent, not administratively burdensome,
designed to prevent double-recovery, and able to procure significant
reliability benefits at ``reasonable'' or ``low'' cost. However, these
arguments ignore the preliminary findings of the NOPR, namely that
generating facilities providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range are only meeting their obligations under their
interconnection agreements in accordance with good utility practice,
and in doing so incur no or at most a de minimis increase in variable
costs beyond the cost of providing real power. As explained in this
final determination and decades of prior Commission precedent, in order
to reliably interconnect to the transmission system and deliver real
power to customers, generating facilities must be capable of
maintaining voltage levels for injecting real power into the
transmission system.\138\ As relevant here, these findings apply
equally to flat-rate compensation regimes like ISO-NE's and NYISO's, as
well as the compensation regimes of PJM and certain non-RTO regions.
Thus, the ISO-NE and NYISO regimes, while easier to implement
administratively, also impose unreasonable and unsupportable costs on
transmission customers.
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\138\ See, e.g., BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21 (``The purpose
for which generation assets are built (including reactive power
capability to maintain voltage levels for generation entering the
grid) is to make sales of real power.''); SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at
P 28 (``[I]f a generator is to sell (and be able to deliver) its
power to a customer, reactive power is essential to the
transaction''). See also PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 145 FERC ]
61,280, at P 17 (2013) (approving tariff revisions that require
interconnection customers to pay for upgraded telecommunication
equipment (phasor measurement units) as the ``data is integral to
improved communication and to the reliability of the system and, as
such, benefits both the system and the generators'').
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53. ISO-NE's and NYISO's claims regarding transparency,
administrative burden, and preventing double recovery all presuppose
that compensation is due, and thus that a compensation method is
needed. But, where compensation is found to be unjust and unreasonable,
as we find here, such a compensation methodology will necessarily
result in unjust and unreasonable rates and thus is not permissible.
54. Additionally, we agree with New England Consumer
Advocates,\139\ who argue that any payment for reactive power
capability within the standard power factor range must yield some
roughly commensurate incremental benefit above and beyond that which
would accrue absent payment.\140\ As discussed below,\141\ ISO-NE and
NYISO allude generally to reliability benefits from reactive power
compensation over the full range of a resource's capability to provide
reactive power--that is, both within and outside of the standard power
factor range--rather than the narrower focus of this final
determination. And, in both ISO-NE (except for certain circumstances as
explained by ISO-NE) \142\ and NYISO, as everywhere, generating
facilities must provide reactive power within the standard power factor
range to make sales of real power regardless of whether they receive
separate compensation.\143\
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\139\ New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 5 (``To
the extent . . . benefits are achieved by compliance with a
generating facility's interconnection agreement and/or as `good
utility practice,' [New England Consumer Advocates] agree[] with the
Commission that ratepayers should not be paying separately for the
costs to produce a joint reactive power product.'').
\140\ See, e.g., Ill. Com. Comm'n. v. FERC, 576 F.3d at 476
(``[The Commission] is not authorized to approve a pricing scheme
that requires a group of utilities to pay for facilities from which
its members derive no benefits, or benefits that are trivial in
relation to the costs sought to be shifted to its members.'').
\141\ See infra II.D.2.
\142\ ISO-NE notes that not all generating facilities are
obligated to provide reactive power within the standard power factor
range. ISO-NE Initial Comments at 9. Specifically, ISO-NE notes that
several older generating facilities in New England have
interconnection agreements that pre-date the obligation to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range. Id. ISO-NE
states that these resources choose to participate in the Schedule 2
VAR compensation program, incurring an obligation to maintain and
provide VAR service in New England. Id. Any generating facilities
with individualized bilateral contracts providing for reactive power
compensation within the standard power factor range may pursue
claims that they have an independent contractual right to reactive
power compensation within the standard power factor range, but we
express no opinion here as to whether any such generator would be
entitled to such compensation.
\143\ See, e.g., BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21 (``The purpose
for which generation assets are built (including reactive power
capability to maintain voltage levels for generation entering the
grid) is to make sales of real power.''); SPP Order on Rehearing,
121 FERC ] 61,196 at P 15 (``As we have previously explained,
reactive power is required for an interconnecting generator to
deliver its power and reactive power produced within the [standard
power factor range] and is, therefore, generally not compensable.''
(emphasis added)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
55. We do not dispute that the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range provides reliability benefits, only
that there are no incremental fixed costs other than joint costs that
are also associated with the production of real power and at most de
minimis incremental variable costs that would warrant a separate
compensation mechanism. We also find that there is substantial evidence
to conclude that, under the current reactive power compensation
framework, reactive power-related transmission charges are not tied to
geographic need and result in excess reactive power capability that is
not required for interconnection and does not provide transmission
customers with commensurate reliability benefits.\144\ Accordingly, we
deny ISO-NE's and NYISO's respective requests for flexibility to
include in transmission rates charges associated with the provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor range.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\144\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12 (``This incentive
structure to provide payment based on reactive capability results in
the building of unnecessary capabilities in locations it is not or
may not be needed and does not allocate the costs associated with
reactive capability in a manner that is at least roughly
commensurate with the benefits received.'' (citing Ill. Com. Comm'n.
v. FERC, 576 F.3d at 477)); MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 8 (``Moreover, the capability-based compensation
methodology currently permitted by the Commission . . . allows and
even incentivizes generators to add as much reactive equipment as
they desire, i.e., to gold plate a facility's reactive capability,
regardless of whether that reactive support is needed at that point
on the grid.''); TAPS Initial Comments at 4-5 (``Nor can customers
be assured they are receiving reliability benefits commensurate to
the reactive power compensation paid under the current approach. The
existing approach to reactive power capability compensation does not
adequately consider a generator's actual contribution to
reliability, or lack thereof. For example, that approach does not
account for relevant factors such as location, the need for reactive
power, deliverability to where reactive power may be needed,
possible degradation in generator performance or other changes over
time. The result is that the current approach to reactive power
compensation requires consumers to pay excessive charges for
reactive power that may not be needed or is in the wrong location.''
(citations omitted)). See Belmont Mun. Light Dep't v. FERC, 38 F.4th
at 187-90 (finding that the Commission's acceptance of ISO-NE's
Inventoried Energy Program ``was not reasoned decision making''
because record evidence indicated that certain types of generating
facilities ``would not change their behavior in response to
payments.'').
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56. We reject commenters' arguments that the final determination
violates the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the U.S. Constitution.
The final determination's elimination of reactive power payments for
the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
is not confiscatory and would not amount to a taking of property. As
noted above, generating facilities incur no or at most a de minimis
increase in variable costs beyond the cost of providing real power and
have the opportunity to seek recovery of any costs they do incur. In
addition, commenters' arguments that the obligation to provide reactive
power within the standard power factor range is unconstitutional are
impermissible
[[Page 93422]]
collateral attacks on our prior determinations and unpersuasive.\145\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\145\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 12 n.33
(``Moreover, as `legislation [that] readjust[s] rights and burdens
is not unlawful solely because it upsets otherwise settled
expectations,' the Commission's action implementing the changes in
the NOPR would not constitute an unconstitutional taking just
because the changes would `impact the benefits and burdens' of the
agreement entered into by generators interconnecting with the
Transmission System. Generators have only a unilateral expectation
of payment for the provision of reactive power and not a legitimate
claim of entitlement to compensation.'') (citations omitted). See
also MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 62; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
] 61,022 at PP 52-54 (``Vistra has not persuaded us that it has a
property interest in continued Reactive Service compensation under
the Tariff, nor that MISO TOs' proposal would unconstitutionally
deprive generators of that putative property interest under the
Takings Clause or Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.'').
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57. The Commission has repeatedly held that ``the provision of
sufficient reactive power is an obligation of a generator
interconnected to the system, and . . . as a general matter, a
generator is not entitled to separate compensation for providing
reactive power within its deadband.'' \146\ A generating facility must
in fact produce reactive power to move real power from the generating
facility to the transmission system to deliver its real power to
customers, while maintaining system reliability.\147\ It is only by
virtue of comparability that generating facilities were previously
entitled to reactive power compensation.\148\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\146\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 62 (citing SPP,
119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 28); MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022
at P 52 (finding that protesters constitutional claims were
impermissible collateral attacks on the Commission's prior
determinations given ``[t]he obligation to provide Reactive Service
exists independent of, and was not altered by, MISO TOs' proposal:
it was stated in Order No. 2003 and applies to individual generators
through their GIAs.'').
\147\ See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 53
(``[T]he function of generators' Reactive Service is to ensure that
generators' real power can enter the transmission grid while
maintaining system reliability.''); SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 28
(explaining that if a generator is to sell (and be able to deliver)
its power to a customer, reactive power is essential to the
transaction).
\148\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 4 (citing Order No. 2003-A,
106 FERC ] 61,220 at P 416). See also MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC
] 61,022 at P 26 (``On rehearing, we continue to reject, as
collateral attacks on that longstanding policy, arguments that
stand-alone compensation for Reactive Service is generically
required--for example, to ensure that generators can recover their
costs for Reactive Service capability. These arguments would negate
the conclusions in Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A that such compensation
should not be provided, except as required by the comparability
standard.'').
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58. Simply stated, the obligation to provide reactive power within
the standard power range exists independent of, and was not altered by,
the NOPR's proposal: it was stated in Order No. 2003 and applies to
individual generating facilities through their interconnection service
agreements. This final determination changes only the allowance for
transmission providers to provide compensation at their discretion to
their own and affiliated generating facilities, and then to third-party
generating facilities under the comparability standard for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range.
This change eliminates a stream of revenue under Schedule 2, but we
find here that such elimination is just and reasonable given that the
record demonstrates that generating facilities incur no or at most a de
minimis increase in variable costs beyond the cost of providing real
power.\149\ Moreover, to the extent that generating facilities have any
costs associated with providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range, generating facilities may seek to recover these
costs through energy or capacity sales.\150\ Accordingly, and
consistent with precedent, commenters have not persuaded us that they
have a property interest in continued compensation under Schedule 2, or
that this final determination would unconstitutionally deprive
generating facilities of that putative property interest under the
Takings Clause or Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\149\ See MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 6 (``The
MISO Transmission Owners' experience supports the Commission's
preliminary finding that providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range requires little or no cost to
generators. Generators incur little or no costs beyond what is
already needed to produce real power because the same equipment used
to produce real power includes reactive power functions.''
(citations omitted)); PJM IMM Reply Comments at 3 (``Neither the
[Indicated Trade Associations] nor any other opposing commenter, nor
any of the precedent relied upon by opposing commenters, identify
any additional costs or more than de minimis costs incurred by
generators in order to provide reactive capability.'').
\150\ MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 53; BPA, 120
FERC ] 61,211 at P 20; BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273 at P
11; see also NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 24; see also MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 6; PJM IMM Reply Comments at
3.
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59. We disagree with Eagle Creek's and the NHA's assertions that
most reactive service rate schedules on file enjoy the Mobile-Sierra
presumption and as a result, in order for the Commission to disallow
the existing reactive service rates, each rate on file must be
demonstrated by the Commission to ``seriously harm the public
interest.'' \151\ While the Mobile-Sierra doctrine establishes a more
rigorous application of the just and reasonable standard when the
Commission proposes to change an individual contract negotiated at
arms-length,\152\ reactive power-related transmission rates are not
individually negotiated contract rates, but rather transmission owner
tariff-based rates of general applicability reflected in the
transmission owner's Schedule 2.\153\ The fact that the Commission has
accepted generating facilities' rate filings setting forth reactive
power rates covering the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range establishes only the rate at which the
generating facility is obligated to sell reactive power to a
transmission provider; that rate does not establish an obligation for
the transmission provider to purchase such reactive power. Those
individual rates establish only the charges that transmission providers
will include in transmission rates if, and only if the transmission
providers' OATTs require the payment of compensation for reactive
power.\154\
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\151\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 4; NHA Initial Comments at
8-9.
\152\ The Commission has explained that the Mobile-Sierra
``public interest'' presumption applies to an agreement only if the
agreement has certain characteristics that justify the presumption.
In ruling on whether the characteristics necessary to justify a
Mobile-Sierra presumption are present, the Commission must determine
whether the agreement at issue embodies either: (1) individualized
rates, terms, or conditions that apply only to sophisticated parties
who negotiated them freely at arm's length; or (2) rates, terms, or
conditions that are generally applicable or that arose in
circumstances that do not provide the assurance of justness and
reasonableness associated with arm's-length negotiations. Unlike the
latter, the former constitute contract rates, terms, or conditions
that necessarily qualify for a Mobile-Sierra presumption. E.g.,
Linden VFT, LLC v. Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 161 FERC ] 61,264, at
P 27 (2017); PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 161 FERC ] 61,262, at P 18
(2017); Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 144 FERC ] 61,059, at P 127 (2013),
order on reh'g and compliance, 149 FERC ] 61,048, at P 94 (2014)
(citations omitted); Midwest Indep. Transmission Sys. Operator,
Inc., 142 FERC ] 61,215, at P 177 (2013), order on reh'g and
compliance, 147 FERC ] 61,127, at P 108 (2014) (citations omitted).
\153\ See, e.g., Wabash Valley Power Ass'n, Inc. v. FERC, 45
F.4th 115, 120 (D.C. Cir. 2022) (``[A] contract requiring the
purchaser to pay a utility's `going rate' on file with FERC, without
more, does not eliminate review under the ordinary just-and-
reasonable standard.'').
\154\ Cf. Whitetail Solar 3, LLC, Opinion No. 583, 184 FERC ]
61,145, at P 45 (2023) (affirming the Presiding Judge's finding that
Schedule 2, not Applicants' interconnection agreements, determines
whether generating facilities are eligible for compensation,
therefore, ``there is no reason for the Commission to amend the
[interconnection agreements] of all existing distribution-connected
generation, as Applicants suggest would be necessary in light of the
Initial Decision.''); see also MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 63 (``As
described above, MISO [Transmission Owners] have the unilateral
right to change Schedule 2 through an FPA section 205 filing and by
doing so, they automatically change the rate payable for Reactive
Service that generators contractually agreed to in section 9.6.3 of
their GIAs.'' (citations omitted)).
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60. As discussed above, the final determination requires revisions
to
[[Page 93423]]
Schedule 2 to prohibit the inclusion in transmission rates of charges
associated with reactive power in the standard power factor range and,
for consistency, also requires conforming revisions to the pro forma
LGIA and pro forma SGIA to remove language related to the comparability
standard. Since Schedule 2 is a tariff-based rate, that rate can be
modified under the ordinary just and reasonable standard.\155\ However,
this final determination does not affect the ability of generating
facilities to pursue claims that they have an independent contractual
right to reactive power compensation within the standard power factor
range, based on a bilateral agreement with the relevant transmission
owner.\156\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\155\ See Joint Customers Reply Comments at 14 (``There is no
validity to the argument that individual rate challenges must be
pursued by the Commission or complainants, and it is well
established that a change to the underlying Schedule 2 in a
transmission provider's tariff, as proposed by the Commission in the
NOPR, will contemporaneously end compensation to third-party
generators with no further action required.'').
\156\ For example, ISO-NE and NEPOOL claim that certain
agreements exist that do not obligate certain non-generator
resources to provide reactive power either within or outside of the
standard power factor range and are still entitled to compensation.
See supra n.142; ISO-NE Initial Comments at 9; NEPOOL Reply Comments
at 9. We express no opinion here as to whether any such generating
facility, such as those situations noted by ISO-NE and NEPOOL, would
be entitled to such compensation under such agreements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
61. We also find that Generation Developers' and Reactive Service
Providers' \157\ assertions that the final determination would violate
Atlantic City by depriving generating facilities of their FPA section
205 filing rights lack merit. The Commission is not depriving
generating facilities of their filing rights. The commenters' arguments
fundamentally misunderstand generating facility compensation under the
Commission's pro forma OATT and interconnection agreements. The final
determination is not adjusting, overturning, or reducing to zero any
generating facility's rate for reactive power within the standard power
factor range. The final determination addresses only the justness and
reasonableness of transmission rates chargeable to transmission
customers under Schedule 2 and by extension, payable to the
transmission providers' own generating facilities or affiliated
generating facilities and third-party generating facilities under the
comparability standard, consistent with their interconnection
agreements, not any independent right of generating facilities to
establish a rate under FPA section 205. While this does result in
generating facilities, affiliated and non-affiliated, no longer being
entitled to compensation for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range as a function of comparability, the
Commission has found that such an outcome does not undermine the
generating facilities' FPA section 205 filing rights.\158\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\157\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 31-32 (citing
Atl. City, 295 F.3d at 9-10); Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 54.
\158\ Cf. MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 65 (``[W]e find that MISO
TOs' proposal does not restrict independent power producers' FPA
section 205 rights to file a rate for reactive power; instead, the
proposal addresses only the rates chargeable to transmission
customers under Schedule 2 and by extension, payable to resources
consistent with their GIAs, not any independent right of generators
to seek compensation under FPA section 205.''); Opinion No. 583, 184
FERC ] 61,145 at P 45 (``Applicants' [interconnection agreements] do
not establish an independent right outside the context of Schedule 2
to reactive power compensation for merely meeting the technical
requirements required for interconnection.''); see also Joint
Customers Initial Comments at 14 (``Without comparability as an
issue, it is existing Commission policy that it is inappropriate to
compensate within the standard power factor range. The Order No.
2003 determination that compensation should not be paid for reactive
service meeting interconnection requirements remains well
supported.'' (emphasis in original)). We also note that individual
generating facility reactive power tariffs themselves do not
establish a payment obligation, only the rate that a buyer will pay
if it takes service. A tariff rate is an offer to sell service at
the stated rate; it does not establish an obligation on any party to
pay that rate. See 18 CFR 35.2(c)(1) (``The term tariff as used
herein shall mean a statement of (1) electric service as defined in
paragraph (a) of this section offered on a generally applicable
basis) (emphasis added)); Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 149 FERC ] 61,048 at
P 106 (``The Commission's use of the term `tariff rates' as
generally applicable rates is justified by the definition of the
term `tariff' set forth in the Commission's regulations under the
FPA, which state, in part, that a tariff is `a statement of . . .
electric service . . . offered on a generally applicable basis.'
''). In order to constitute an obligation, a party must sign a pro
forma or other service agreement. See Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator
Corp., 100 FERC ] 61,234, at 61,834 (2002) (``[T]he Commission moved
to a paradigm of standard agreements in which terms and conditions
that are included in a public utility's OATT and bilateral contracts
are replaced by pro forma service agreements''). Therefore, if
transmission providers revise their Schedule 2's to eliminate
compensation for the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range, no party will exist to pay the generating
facility's filed tariff rate. See, e.g., PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088
(finding that the transmission owner is not required to pay for
reactive power, but not instituting section 206 proceedings to
cancel reactive power tariffs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Cost of Producing Reactive Power
62. The NOPR preliminarily found that providing compensation for
the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
is unjust and unreasonable. The Commission relied on three key points
to support this preliminary finding.
63. First, the NOPR relied on the Commission's prior findings that,
for both synchronous and non-synchronous generating facilities, because
all equipment used to produce reactive power is also necessary to
produce and deliver real power to the transmission system, there are no
incremental fixed costs associated with the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range.\159\ The NOPR also explained
that the Commission has repeatedly found, that ``[v]ariable costs of
generating reactive power are de minimis'' and ``generally limited to
changes in losses within the generating facility which are part of the
overall efficiency of the resource and, as such, are typically captured
in the resource offers.'' \160\ Thus, by providing reactive power
within the standard power factor range, both synchronous and
nonsynchronous facilities incur no additional fixed costs and at most
de minimis variable costs beyond which they already incur to provide
real power.\161\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\159\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at PP 29-31 (``[S]ynchronous and
non-synchronous resources provide real and reactive power as joint
products, with joint costs.'').
\160\ Id. P 31.
\161\ Id. PP 8, 28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
64. Second, the NOPR relied on the fact that all generating
facilities must provide reactive power within the standard power factor
range as an obligation of good utility practice and to meet the
obligations under their interconnection agreements.\162\
[[Page 93424]]
Additionally, the NOPR emphasized that ``reactive support by generating
facilities operating within the standard power factor range ensures
that when these facilities inject real power--the product that their
facilities exist to create and sell--onto the grid under normal
conditions, they can do their part to maintain adequate voltages and to
not threaten reliability.'' \163\ In other words, a generating facility
must produce reactive power within the standard power factor range in
order to generate and safely inject real power into the transmission
system and comply with reliability requirements. As such, providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range can be regarded
as a joint product with providing real power, with joint costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\162\ Id. P 33 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 53
(``Bearing in mind that the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is, in the first instance, an obligation
of the interconnecting generator and good utility practice, MISO
[transmission owners] do not have an obligation to continue to
compensate an independent generator for reactive power within the
standard power factor range when its own or affiliated generators
are no longer being compensated.'' (citations omitted)); id. P 54
(``We find unpersuasive protesters' arguments that it is not just
and reasonable to eliminate compensation for Reactive Service within
the standard power factor range because generators have come to rely
on the compensation for Reactive Service in order for the generators
to remain financially viable. The Commission has previously rejected
such arguments, finding that all newly interconnecting generators
are required to provide reactive power within the power factor range
of 0.95 leading to 0.95 lagging as a condition of interconnection.''
(citations omitted)); PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088 at PP 29, 33 (rejecting
generating facility's arguments that it is ``just and reasonable for
it to be compensated for investments made'' to provide reactive
support consistent with interconnection requirements even though
transmission provider elected to no longer pay its own or affiliate
generators for such reactive power); Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ]
61,103 at P 22 (finding that the generating facility's argument,
``that it is not just and reasonable to eliminate their compensation
for reactive service because they made investments in their
generating facilities based on the expectation that they would
receive compensation for reactive service,'' unpersuasive because
all newly interconnecting generators are required to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range as a condition
of interconnection); Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at P 546.
\163\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 13 (citing MISO Rehearing
Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 23).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
65. Third, the NOPR noted that in regions where generating
facilities recover their costs by participating in organized
competitive wholesale markets, providing separate compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
risks overcompensation and market distortions in ways that did not
exist prior to the existence of organized markets.\164\ The NOPR
explained that the AEP Methodology was created in an era of vertically
integrated utilities, when most utilities filed FERC Form No. 1s, used
the Uniform System of Accounts (USofA) to classify their costs, and
recovered those costs through cost-based rates.\165\ Today, however,
most generating facilities recover their costs through competitive
markets in both RTO/ISO and non-RTO/ISO regions, so the imprecision of
the AEP Methodology, the NOPR explained, becomes more significant
because it can lead to arbitrary increases in the utility's total
recovery when cost-based reactive power payments are added to any
market recoveries.\166\ The NOPR added that this is especially true
when markets fail to account for separate, cost-based reactive power
revenues by using standard rate making techniques.\167\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\164\ Id. at P 39.
\165\ Id.
\166\ Id.
\167\ Id. at 39 & nn.100-02. The Commission noted that, in PJM
for example, while the capacity market rules currently account for
reactive power payments to resources by assuming average reactive
power compensation of $2,546 per MW-year, reactive power revenue
requirements in PJM range from roughly $1,000 per MW-year to $13,000
per MW-year. The Commission noted that this wide range of actual
compensation, which is both above and below the assumed reactive
power compensation in the capacity market rules, can lead to market
distortions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Comments
66. Many commenters support the NOPR's finding that transmission
charges for generating facilities' provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range are unjust and unreasonable.\168\
Likewise, many commenters support the NOPR's preliminary finding that
generating facilities already provide reactive power within the
standard power factor range at no cost or de minimis cost.\169\ Ameren
and MISO Transmission Owners agree with the NOPR that providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range requires little
or no cost to generators because the same equipment used to produce
real power includes reactive power functions.\170\ In support, MISO
Transmission Owners point to MISO and the MISO Rehearing Order wherein
the Commission also concluded that, based on that record, reactive
power service within the standard power factor range required little or
no incremental investment. MISO Transmission Owners add that, as the
Commission found in the MISO Rehearing Order, even newer wind turbines
use inverters that allow generating facilities to produce and control
reactive power without costly additional equipment.\171\ MISO
Transmission Owners also state that generating facility equipment
typically comes with reactive power capabilities that not only meet the
standard range requirements (i.e., 0.95 leading and 0.95 lagging) but
exceed them (e.g., 0.80-0.90).\172\ MISO Transmission Owners argue that
since generating facilities bear no or at most de minimis incremental
costs to provide reactive power within the standard power factor range,
one must consider what the actual purpose is of compensating generating
facilities for such service.\173\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\168\ AEP; Ameren; Joint Consumer Advocates; Joint Customers;
MISO Transmission Owners; New England Consumer Advocates; Ohio FEA;
PGE; PJM; the PJM IMM; the Transmission Access Policy Study Group.
\169\ See Ameren Initial Comments at 3; Joint Customers Reply
Comments at 11-13; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 5-7;
New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 4-6; PJM IMM
Initial Comments at 4.
\170\ Ameren Initial Comments at 3 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ]
61,211 at P 21 (``Evidence from numerous reactive power rate filings
demonstrates newly interconnecting resources have the capability to
provide reactive power, some well in excess of the required 0.95
leading to 0.95 lagging. It is also well-documented that the same
equipment used to produce real power includes reactive power
functions and thus there is little, if any, incremental cost
associated with providing reactive power.'')); MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 5-7 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P
55; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 25 n.76, 29-30,
34, 41-42 (``[T]he record establishes, that Reactive Service
requires little or no incremental investment.'')); MISO Transmission
Owners Reply Comments at 9; see also Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 3.
\171\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 7 & n.18
(citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 30 n.98
(``[O]lder wind generators could not produce and control reactive
power without the use of costly equipment [ ] `because they did not
use inverters like other non-synchronous generators' but modern
turbines now use inverters and newer wind generators now can.'')).
\172\ Id. at 7.
\173\ Id. at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
67. Joint Customers state that attempts to undermine the NOPR, such
as challenging the assertion that incremental costs of providing
reactive service within the standard power factor range are de minimis,
are meritless.\174\ Joint Customers argue that the costs incurred by
generators to meet interconnection requirements are necessary for safe
and reliable grid operations and that arguments against the de minimis
designation often misrepresent the incremental costs involved in
meeting interconnection requirements versus providing additional
reactive capability.\175\ Joint Customers note that claims of excessive
costs for non-synchronous generators to comply with power factor
requirements are collateral attacks on prior Commission orders,
particularly Order No. 827.\176\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\174\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 11-13.
\175\ Id.
\176\ Id. at 13 (citing Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277 at P 11
(``Prior to Order No. 827, non-synchronous generators were exempt
from complying with power factor requirements. The entire point of
Order No. 827 was to find that technological advancements had
reduced the cost of compliance such that non-synchronous generators
no longer needed the exemption. The order also explicitly maintained
the compensation scheme for reactive power, with all that means for
the elimination of compensation if not justified by
comparability.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
68. The PJM IMM, MISO Transmission Owners, and several other
commenters assert that providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range is an obligation of interconnection and consistent
with good utility practice.\177\ The PJM IMM asserts that the
Commission has a long
[[Page 93425]]
standing policy that ``treats the provision of reactive power inside
the [standard power factor range] as an obligation of good utility
practice rather than as a compensable service and permits compensation
inside the [standard power factor range] only as a function of
comparability.'' \178\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\177\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6-9 (citing PJM, OATT,
Attachment O, Sec. Sec. 4.7.1.1.1., 4.7.1.2. (3.0.0)); Joint
Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6-7; MISO Transmission Owners
Reply Comments at 4; TAPS Initial Comments at 6; Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 5; Joint Customers Initial Comments at 14-16; PGE
Initial Comments at 4 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 53
(noting that in the acceptance of the MISO Transmission Owners
application to end compensation within the standard power
application, the Commission reiterated its policy ``that the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
is, in the first instance, an obligation of the interconnecting
generator and good utility practice.'')).
\178\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6-8 (citing NOPR, 186 FERC ]
61,203 at P 5 (citing BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273 at P
18)); see also MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 10-12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
69. The PJM IMM states that reactive power is not the only design
obligation the generation interconnection customers assume.\179\ The
PJM IMM notes, for example, that generating facilities are required to
provide primary frequency response capability, but the PJM OATT does
not provide an out of market payment for such service because it is
treated as an obligation assumed by generation interconnection
customers for receiving interconnection service.\180\ MISO Transmission
Owners also point out that the SEIA, the national trade association for
the U.S. solar industry, has acknowledged that reactive power
compensation does not affect a generator's operations and that
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range is
required regardless of compensation.\181\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\179\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 8.
\180\ Id. (citing PJM, OATT, Attachment O Sec. 4.7.2. (3.0.0)).
\181\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 9 & n.24
(citing SEIA, Reactive Power Compensation: How to Unlock New Revenue
Opportunities for Solar and Storage Projects, Solar Energy
Industries Association 4 (July 29, 2020), https://old.seia.org/sites/default/files/2023-01/Speaker%20Q&A%20-%20Reactive%20Power%20Compensation%20Webinar.pdf (also attached as
Exhibit I) (``Filing for and receiving reactive revenues has no
impact on the generator's operating profile. The ISO/RTOs have a
right to dispatch generators to provide reactive service as needed
to maintain reliability.'')). The MISO Transmission Owners also add
that ``[a]t the same time MISO was experiencing a dramatic increase
in the amounts transmission customers paid for reactive power
service prior to its elimination of compensation for reactive power
service within the deadband, SEIA highlighted that MISO was one of
the two `most lucrative' regions for reactive power compensation,
where generators received millions of dollars in compensation for
having the capability to produce reactive power within the deadband,
a capability that was already a condition of obtaining
interconnection.'' Id. at 9-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
70. Additionally, MISO Transmission Owners agree that the
Commission's line of precedent since Order No. 2003 has required
interconnecting generators to be able to provide reactive power within
the standard power factor range without compensation, with few
exceptions.\182\ MISO Transmission Owners argue that generators are
incented by their own reliability requirements to install the equipment
that will help keep their projects on-line and delivering real power,
and that ``skimping'' on equipment that can provide reactive power
across a range of operating conditions is not in generators' best
operational interests or consistent with good utility practice.\183\
MISO Transmission Owners state that generating facilities are also
required by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC)
reliability standards to operate in automatic voltage control mode and
maintain a voltage set point provided by the transmission
provider.\184\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\182\ Id. at 10-11 (citing Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at
P 546; Order No. 2003-A, 106 FERC ] 61,220 at PP 410, 416; Order No.
827, 155 FERC ] 61,277 at P 59).
\183\ Id. at 11 & n.29 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ]
61,022 at P 35 n.116 (``[G]enerators have incentives to install
equipment to ensure that their generation remains online and
delivering real power.'')).
\184\ Id. at 11-12 (citing Reliability Standard VAR-002-3--
Generator Operation for Maintaining Network Voltage Schedules), at 2
(Aug. 1, 2014), https://www.nerc.com/pa/Stand/Reliability%20Standards/VAR-002-3.pdf (``R2 . . . Generator Operator
shall maintain the generator voltage or Reactive Power schedule
(within each generating Facility's capabilities).'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
71. MISO Transmission Owners and the PJM IMM agree with the NOPR's
preliminary finding that the current reactive power compensation
framework allows for undue compensation and potential market
distortions, and they argue that the current compensation framework
leads to ``black-box'' settlements that lack transparency and result in
vastly disparate rates.\185\ The PJM IMM argues that separately
compensating resources based on a judgment-based allocation of capital
costs is not appropriate in the PJM markets.\186\ The PJM IMM argues
that cost-of-service compensation for reactive power distorts markets
and undermines competition.\187\ The PJM IMM asserts that the current
rules create strong incentives for generating facilities to attempt to
maximize the allocation of capital costs to reactive service in order
to maximize guaranteed, nonmarket revenues.\188\ The PJM IMM claims
that there is no reasonable basis for the disparity in the price to
customers from different types of generators for the same service and
that reactive power is a homogeneous product which should have the same
price for all sellers. The PJM IMM notes that the most recent reactive
power rate cases settled prior to issuance of the NOPR have resulted in
costs well in excess of the reactive power revenue offset assumed in
PJM's capacity market.\189\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\185\ Id. at 8; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4-6; see also Joint
Customers Initial Comments at 4-6.
\186\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 3-4.
\187\ Id. at 4-6.
\188\ Id. at 4. The PJM IMM asserts that these revenues provide
a nonmarket advantage to generating facilities that receive them,
resulting in an arbitrary and nonmarket-based advantage (i.e.,
distortionary).
\189\ Id. at 6 (explaining that in PJM's capacity market, ``the
parameters that define the demand curve . . . are based on the costs
of new entry of a reference generating unit, less net revenues from
other PJM markets'' such as reactive power revenues). The PJM IMM
explains that the level of these net revenues that are subtracted,
or offset, from the costs of new entry, are based on a calculation
from the PJM IMM of the average Schedule 2 payment for reactive done
in 2008 and based on reactive rates from prior years. However, the
PJM IMM states that ``[m]ost recent cases settled prior to issuance
of the NOPR have settled for costs well in excess of the average
cost and well in excess of the [] offset amount'' and that ``[t]he
issue is growing in significance.'' Id. at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
72. Many other commenters, in contrast, challenge the Commission's
preliminary finding that providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range has no or de minimis costs.\190\ The Indicated Trade
Associations and Generation Developers emphasize that the costs of
equipment and production associated with reactive power, particularly
for renewable resources, are substantial and involve significant
capital investments.\191\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers, NEPGA,
and Reactive Service Providers assert that eliminating compensation for
reactive power within the standard power factor range is unjust and
unreasonable, given the substantial capital costs incurred by
generators.\192\ They argue that the NOPR's proposal fails to account
for these costs as well as for lost opportunities for real power
generation and renewable energy credits.\193\ They assert that the
[[Page 93426]]
Commission's proposal is inconsistent with the FPA's purpose of
ensuring just and reasonable returns on investment, particularly for
inverter-based resources, which incur distinct incremental costs for
reactive power provision.\194\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\190\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3-4; Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 7; ACORE Initial Comments at 2;
Elevate Renewables Initial Comments at 9-12; Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 13; Glenvale Initial Comments at 9-10; Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 2, 9-10; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 2, 6; Middle River Power
Initial Comments at 2-3; NEI Initial Comments at 4-5, 8-9; NHA
Initial Comments at 2, 4-5. Indicated Trade Associations also assert
that prior Commission orders cited by the NOPR to support the
assertion that no costs or de minimis costs are incurred to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range do not provide
evidence to support the conclusion. Indicated Trade Associations
Initial Comments at 8 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21; BPA
Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273 at P 7 n.7; Ariz. Pub. Serv. Co.,
94 FERC ] 61,027, at 61,080 (2001) (APS)); Onward Energy Reply
Comments at 2.
\191\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 10;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 13.
\192\ Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 6-7; NEPGA
Reply Comments at 3 (citing Indicated Trade Association Initial
Comments, Affidavit of Michael Borgatti, Docket No. RM22-2-000 at 9-
10 (filed May 28, 2024)); Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 37-40.
\193\ See Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 11-12
(``[F]or renewable resources, having to back down generation in
order to produce reactive power would also result in lost renewable
electricity production tax credits, renewable energy certificates,
and similar benefits''); Generation Developers Initial Comments at
13.
\194\ See Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 7;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 13, 20-21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
73. Some commenters argue that there is an insufficient legal
foundation under section 206 of the FPA to demonstrate that all
existing reactive power rates are unjust and unreasonable.\195\
Generation Developers assert that the fact that many generators are
required to provide reactive power as a condition of receiving
interconnection service and consistent with good utility practice does
not provide a basis for concluding that the compensation received by
generating facilities is unjust and unreasonable.\196\ Generation
Developers assert that the Commission's reasoning improperly assumes
that generating facilities investing in reactive power capability are
not performing a service that benefits the transmission system, but is
instead only needed to support their own deliveries.\197\ Generation
Developers assert that the NOPR's categorical determination that the
just and reasonable reactive power rate is zero, and thus all reactive
rates that are not zero are unjust and unreasonable, fails to comply
with the requirements of section 206 of the FPA.\198\ NEI adds that the
Commission failed to meet its section 206 burden because the NOPR does
not offer substantial evidence that reactive power costs are zero or
minimal, cost allocation is inappropriate, or reducing reactive power
compensation to zero would allow generators to recover their costs,
plus a reasonable rate of return.\199\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\195\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 24-25; Middle
River Power Initial Comments at 4; NEI Initial Comments at 7; PSEG
Initial Comments at 2-3, 11-12; Reactive Service Providers Initial
Comments at 7-54; NYISO Initial Comments at 1.
\196\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 25.
\197\ Id.
\198\ Id. at 31; PSEG Initial Comments at 12-13.
\199\ NEI Initial Comments at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
74. Generation Developers assert that the Commission ignores well-
documented evidence that certain types of generating facilities, namely
inverter-based generating facilities, incur distinct, incremental costs
associated with providing reactive power.\200\ Generation Developers
assert that, when the Commission first required that generating
facilities be capable of supplying reactive power within the standard
power factor range in Order No. 2003, it explicitly exempted wind
generating facilities from that requirement because most wind
generators could not maintain the power factor range.\201\ Generation
Developers state that the Commission also generally exempted wind
generators from operating within the standard power factor range in
Order No. 661 because ``for wind plants, reactive power capability is a
significant added cost.'' \202\ Generation Developers assert that while
the Commission removed this exemption in Order No. 827 \203\ after
finding that technological advancements made it so the cost of reactive
power no longer presented an obstacle to the development of wind
generation, it ``notably did not find that there were no such costs or
even de minimis costs associated with the provision of reactive power
by wind resources.'' \204\ Instead, Generation Developers argue that
the Commission removed this exemption based on its finding that
imposing an obligation on non-synchronous generating facilities to
provide reactive power within the standard power factor range was
necessary to support transmission service and reliability.\205\
Generation Developers add that, even if costs have declined over the
years, the Commission has not demonstrated that it would be just and
reasonable to nullify the rate schedules of facilities that came online
years before the technological advancements referenced in Order No. 827
and had to make incremental investments to its facility to produce
reactive power within the standard power factor range.\206\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\200\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 13-17.
\201\ Id. at 13 (citing Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103
(noting that the Commission exempted wind generation from the
requirement because ``wind generators for the most part cannot
maintain the required power factor, simply because the necessary
technology does not exist for wind generators'')).
\202\ Id. at 13-14 (citing Order No. 661, 111 FERC ] 61,353 at P
46; Order No. 661-A, 113 FERC ] 61,254). Generation Developers add
that in Order No. 661, the Commission was presented with evidence
that ``wind turbines cannot meet the proposed power factor standard
over the full range of real power output, and that dynamic VAR
control (DVAR) banks or static capacitors would have to be installed
at an additional expense to meet the proposed power factor over the
entire range.'' Generation Developers Initial Comments at 13 (citing
Order No. 661-A, 113 FERC ] 61,254 at P 45 (emphasis added)).
Generation Developers state that while Order No. 661 was limited to
wind resources, the Commission extended the exemption to other non-
synchronous resources on a case-by-case basis. Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 14 (citing Nev. Power Co., 130 FERC ] 61,147, at
P 27 (2010)).
\203\ Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277 at P 21.
\204\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 14.
\205\ Id. (citing Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277 at P 4)
(``The Commission instead made its decision to apply reactive power
requirements to non-synchronous resources based on its `balancing
the costs to newly-interconnecting non-synchronous generators of
providing reactive power with the benefits to the transmission
system of having another source of reactive power.' '').
\206\ Id. at 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
75. Generation Developers argue that the 2014 Staff Report is the
most recent and comprehensive evidence on the costs that non-
synchronous generating facilities incur in providing reactive
power.\207\ Generation Developers assert that the NOPR does not provide
any evidence to support that the costs of providing reactive power have
changed since the Commission's observations in the 2014 Staff Report,
but instead relies on a rehearing order in a proceeding concerning the
MISO transmission owners' proposal to eliminate reactive power
compensation within the standard power factor range for the proposition
that non-synchronous generating facilities have no or de minimis
costs.\208\ Generation Developers assert that the Commission's reliance
on a statement from the MISO Rehearing Order, and the purported failure
of parties in that proceeding to demonstrate costs of non-synchronous
facilities, does not satisfy the Commission's burden in this case.\209\
Generation Developers add that the Commission's reliance on cases that
pre-date the emergence of non-synchronous generating facilities for the
proposition that all generating facilities have no or de minimis costs
is misplaced.\210\ For example, Generation Developers contend that the
Commission erred in citing Duke Energy Corporation's comments to the
NOI in support of its finding that the inverter is the most critical
equipment for the production of reactive power from non-synchronous
resources.\211\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\207\ Id. at 14-15 (citing 2014 Staff Report (``[M]ost dynamic
reactive power, which is crucial to transmission system reliability,
is provided by generators.''). Specifically, Generation Developers
state that the 2014 Staff Report made the following findings: ``(1)
the costs of reactive power equipment for wind generators range from
3.18% to 4% of their capital costs; and (2) the costs of adding
reactive power capability to solar photovoltaic generators range
from 2% to 20% of a project's total costs, depending on project
size.'' Id. at 15 (citing 2014 Staff Report app. 2 at 2-3).
\208\ Id. at 15 (citing NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 29 n.70
(citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 30)).
\209\ Id.
\210\ Id. at 16 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211; METC Rehearing
Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53; APS, 94 FERC at 61,080).
\211\ Id. at 16-17 n.52 (citing Duke Energy Corporation Initial
Comments to the NOI at 4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
76. PSEG similarly notes that the Commission has long used the AEP
Methodology to allocate costs associated
[[Page 93427]]
with the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor
range.\212\ PSEG witness Dr. Dumais observes that the AEP Methodology
identifies four categories of equipment costs that are involved in the
production of reactive power from synchronous generating
facilities.\213\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\212\ PSEG Initial Comments at 9.
\213\ Id., Prepared Testimony of Dr. Paul A. Dumais at 11, 1:11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
77. Indicated Trade Associations argue that the cases cited to in
the NOPR to support the finding that there are no or de minimis costs
associated with producing reactive power do not support the
Commission's assertion.\214\ For example, Indicated Trade Associations
assert that in BPA, the Commission summarily stated without evidence
that ``the incremental cost of reactive power service within the
deadband is minimal.'' \215\ Indicated Trade Associations assert that,
on rehearing, however, when a party argued that `` `only the short-run
marginal cost of producing the next increment of reactive power `can
logically be described as minimal' because it excludes capability
costs,' . . . the Commission sidestepped this issue, stating that `the
issue of whether or not the cost is minimal is not relevant to whether
the independent power producers are entitled to compensation.' '' \216\
Indicated Trade Associations argue that in APS, another order cited in
the NOPR, ``the Commission simply noted that intervenors `have not
demonstrated that [the proposed reactive power] requirement will limit
the real power output of a generating unit and therefore will not
result in any lost opportunity costs.' '' \217\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\214\ Indicated Trade Association Initial Comments at 7-8.
\215\ Id. at 8 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21).
\216\ Id. (citing BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273 at
n.7).
\217\ Id. (quoting APS, 94 FERC at 61,080; citing NOPR, 186 FERC
] 61,203 at P 29 n.70).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
78. Elevate and Glenvale further argue that the Commission's
assumption that all resource classes, including energy storage
resources, incur no or minimal costs is unsupported by evidence.\218\
Elevate asserts that recurring capital investments are required to
address battery degradation caused by the provision of reactive
power.\219\ Specifically, Elevate argues that while the level of
degradation increases as the reactive power to real power ratio moves
further from unity, even the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range contributes to the degradation of the
storage resource's capability.\220\ Elevate states that energy storage
resources must make significant and recurring capital investments to
address this degradation, which, in Elevate's experience, costs
approximately one percent of the resource's original capital investment
annually.\221\ Elevate asserts that the record is devoid of any
evidence that energy storage resources incur no or de minimis costs to
provide reactive power.\222\ Glenvale argues that there are marginal,
operational, and replacement costs associated with providing reactive
power within the power factor range for solar generating
facilities.\223\ Specifically, Glenvale asserts that, at the capital
investment stage, there are different inverter options that allow
generating facilities to provide reactive service outside of generating
hours (e.g., allowing solar generating facilities to provide reactive
power at night) and that this incurs additional costs which would not
be required if the generating facility were not set up to provide
reactive power at night.\224\ Glenvale also asserts that inverters use
electricity to provide reactive power, explaining that when a
generating facility is synchronized, this presents as reduced
generation, and when a generating facility is not synchronized, the
generator must either use an alternate power source or it presents as
negative generation (both of which Elevate states result in additional
costs).\225\ Glenvale also states that the provision of reactive power
can result in a reduced inverter service life.\226\ Glenvale notes that
it is difficult to allocate these costs among each of the three service
conditions--within the standard power factor range while synchronized,
within the standard power factor range at night, and outside the
standard power factor range at all times--but Glenvale asserts that at
least some of the costs are attributable to providing reactive power
within the standard power factor range.\227\ NEI asserts that there are
real costs for nuclear generating facilities to provide and maintain
reactive power capability, including: properly sized generators,
maintenance associated with normal operations to preserve reactive
power capability, and additional repairs that may be needed to address
age-related degradation to equipment that might otherwise impair
reactive power capability.\228\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\218\ Elevate Initial Comments at 9-12; Elevate Reply Comments
at 7-9; Glenvale Initial Comments at 9-10.
\219\ Elevate Initial Comments at 9-12; Elevate Reply Comments
at 7-9.
\220\ Elevate Reply Comments at 8.
\221\ Id.
\222\ Elevate Initial Comments at 12.
\223\ Glenvale Initial Comments at 9-10.
\224\ Id. at 9.
\225\ Id.
\226\ Id. at 9-10 & n.29 (citing Ramanathan Thiagarajan, Adarsh
Nagarajan, Peter Hacke, and Ingrid Repins, Effect of Reactive Power
on Photovoltaic Inverter Reliability and Lifetimes (2019), https://www.nrel.gov/docs/fy19osti/73648.pdf.) (``One characterization in
recent research is that providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range reduces service life by one year, and that
providing reactive power outside of the standard range reduces
service life by a second year.'')).
\227\ Id. at 10.
\228\ NEI Initial Comments at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
79. Relatedly, NEI explains that nuclear generators are most likely
to be called upon to provide reactive power services and thus are the
generators most likely to face accelerated degradation and damage to
reactive power equipment.\229\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\229\ Id. at 14-16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
80. Reactive Service Providers argue that there is no evidence to
support the claim that providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range requires no incremental investment, and that even if
the investment needed were de minimis, that would not be a reason to
not provide compensation.\230\ Reactive Service Providers further
contend that there is no evidence that the costs of providing reactive
service have increased since the advent of RTOs and IPPs \231\ or that
generating facilities are recovering their costs in regions where
transmission providers do not provide compensation.\232\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\230\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 37-40.
\231\ Id. at 31-34.
\232\ Id. at 37-41.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
81. Eagle Creek criticizes the Commission's determination that
there are no or de minimis costs associated with the provision of
reactive power in the standard power factor range as flawed based on
its own tariff cases under the AEP Methodology and argues that
eliminating compensation for reactive power would be arbitrary and
capricious.\233\ ACORE, Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers, and Middle
River Power similarly argue that their facilities have demonstrated
just and reasonable compensation covering actual reactive power costs
during settlement negotiations.\234\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\233\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3-4. Eagle Creek argues
that, for each of its tariff cases, it submitted evidence
documentation of the fixed and sunk costs that it invested to
increase its reactive power generation. Id.
\234\ ACORE Initial Comments at 2; Indicated Reactive Power
Suppliers Initial Comments at 9; Middle River Power Initial Comments
at 2-3 (noting that Middle River Power owns 19 fossil-fired
generating facilities that recover approximately $4.5 million in
annual reactive power revenues through their reactive service
tariffs on file with Commission, which it argues were ``demonstrated
in rigorous proceedings before the Commission'' to be just and
reasonable compensation covering actual costs).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 93428]]
82. Indicated Trade Associations assert that the Commission fails
to reconcile the NOPR's insistence that there are no segregable costs
associated with the provision of reactive power with its longstanding
precedent of the AEP Methodology, where the Commission approved
isolating costs of providing reactive power.\235\ NEI asserts that,
rather than point to actual data that demonstrates generating facility
costs for providing reactive power, the NOPR relies on the misplaced
theory that ``because both synchronous and non-synchronous resources
provide real and reactive power as joint products, with joint costs, .
. . any allocation of joint fixed costs between real and reactive power
could be viewed as inherently arbitrary.'' \236\ NEI and Generation
Developers argue that the AEP Methodology compensates generators based
on their actual costs and reactive capabilities, providing them with a
just and reasonable opportunity to recover their investments in
reactive service capability, and asserts that the Commission has
repeatedly confirmed this cost allocation methodology and its
underlying factual predicates in numerous proceedings.\237\ Generation
Developers suggest that the Commission has allocated real and reactive
power costs using the AEP Methodology for over two decades \238\ and
has rejected arguments that the AEP Methodology results in an improper
allocation of costs or is used merely as a matter of administrative
convenience.\239\ The NHA asserts that the Commission correctly
identifies real power and reactive power as jointly produced
commodities, but it incorrectly attributes the cost of all generation
equipment to be predominantly for the production of real power.\240\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\235\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 9; see
also id. (citing Va. Elec. & Power Co., 114 FERC ] 61,318, at P 3
(2006)) (``[T]he Commission expressly instructed generators to use
the AEP Methodology `to compute the portion of plant investment
attributable to reactive power production . . . Because these
production plants produce real and reactive power, AEP developed an
allocation factor to segregate the reactive production function from
the real power production function. The allocation factor is used to
determine the amount of investment allocable to reactive power.' '')
(emphasis added by Indicated Trade Associations)).
\236\ NEI Initial Comments at 10 (citing NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203
at P 30)
\237\ Id. at 10-11; Generation Developers Initial Comments at 7-
9.
\238\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 8-9 (citing
Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc., 125 FERC ] 61,280 at P 11;
Bluegrass Generation Co., L.L.C., 118 FERC ] 61,214, order on reh'g,
121 FERC ] 61,018, at P 12 (2007)).
\239\ Id. (citing Bluegrass Generation Co., 121 FERC ] 61,018 at
P 12 (``This policy is not a matter of administrative convenience .
. . but the result of the Commission's deliberate determination that
the AEP methodology is a just and reasonable manner of calculating a
reactive power revenue requirement'').
\240\ NHA Initial Comments at 4-5 (noting that ``[t]here is no
basis for this assumption, especially if the Commission believes the
AEP Methodology is incapable of isolating real and reactive
cost.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
83. Clean Energy Associations assert that reactive power is not
always coupled with real power as they believe the Commission states in
the NOPR.\241\ Middle River Power argues that the Commission's
statement that generating facilities are being asked to provide
reactive power in order to offset the impact of the power they inject
into the system is incorrect.\242\ Similarly, Middle River Power
asserts that the Commission has previously found that generators are
being asked to supply reactive power to support load. Clean Energy
Associations argues that the Commission conflates the cost of equipment
with the cost of providing an essential transmission service and that
providing reactive power--even within the standard power factor range--
comes at the expense of providing real power.\243\ Clean Energy
Associations note that a possible solution to this problem could be
that the Commission distinguish ``reactive power capability'' from the
``reactive power service.'' \244\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\241\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 7.
\242\ Middle River Power Initial Comments at 3.
\243\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 6-7.
\244\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
84. ACORE asserts that a requirement to provide a service does not
negate the fact that costs are incurred to provide that service.\245\
Similarly, Elevate and Indicated Trade Associations argue that, even if
it were true that resources do not incur distinct costs associated with
reactive power, the Commission fails to point to precedent to support
its conclusion that the lack of distinct costs is an appropriate basis
on which to deny resources the ability to recover those costs.\246\ The
Indicated Trade Associations assert that the NOPR's assumption that
there are no or minimal costs associated with the provision of reactive
power directly contradicts Order No. 888, which Indicated Trade
Associations argue found that reactive service from generating
facilities must be priced at cost, thereby acknowledging that there are
distinguishable costs associated with the provision of reactive
power.\247\ Middle River Power argues that the Commission has
historically required compensation for reactive power as a separate
ancillary service.\248\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\245\ ACORE Initial Comments at 2.
\246\ Elevate Initial Comments at 9-10; Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 9.
\247\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 9 (citing
Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,720-21).
\248\ Middle River Power Initial Comments at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
85. Reactive Service Providers assert that the Commission has not
supported its claim that generating facilities (and specifically IPP)
already have an obligation to provide reactive service within the
standard power factor range.\249\ Reactive Service Providers argue that
the NOPR's finding is contrary to decades of Commission precedent,\250\
and the Commission ``lost its way as it proceeded to Order No. 2003 and
beyond, caught up in a myopic view that unbundling and the emergence of
the IPP industry somehow transferred the `obligation' to provide
reactive service within the standard range from the Transmission
Provider to the IPP generator.'' \251\ Reactive Service Providers
assert that transmission providers alone have the obligation to
maintain a reliable and stable transmission system, and generating
facilities are purely a tool that transmission providers use to fulfill
this obligation.\252\ Reactive Service Providers assert that in Order
No. 888, the Commission determined that various ancillary services
support the transmission system so that load can be served, but the
Commission notably did not find that generating facilities have this
obligation.\253\ Instead, Reactive Service Providers argue that the
Commission merely recognized that generating facilities were a critical
tool that transmission providers can use to maintain the safe and
reliable operation of the transmission system.\254\ Reactive Service
Providers assert that, for Reactive Supply and Voltage Control from
Generation Sources (which
[[Page 93429]]
ultimately became Schedule 2), the Commission noted that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\249\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 7 (citing
NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 5).
\250\ Id. at 9.
\251\ Id. at 8.
\252\ Id. at 8-9 (citing Affidavit of Dennis W. Bethel).
\253\ Id. at 9 (citing Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ]
31,036 at 31,349 (noting that the Commission adopted the following
definition of ancillary services: ``Those services that are
necessary to support the transmission of capacity and energy from
resources to load while maintaining reliable operation of the
Transmission Provider's Transmission System in accordance with Good
Utility Practice'' and that the Commission determined that ``A
control area is part of an interconnected power system with a common
generation control system. It may contain one or several utilities.
The operator of the control area is responsible for balancing
generation and load and for maintaining reliable system
operation.'')).
\254\ Id.
NERC states that reactive supply is provided from both
generation resources and transmission facilities (e.g., capacitors),
and lists its provision as two services, distinguished by the
facilities that supply them. NERC further distinguishes reactive
supply service based on the source of the need for the service: (1)
reactive supply needed to support the voltage of the transmission
system; and (2) reactive supply needed to correct for the reactive
portion of the customer's load at the delivery point.\255\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\255\ Id. at 10 (citing Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ]
31,036 at 31,355).
Reactive Service Providers assert that NERC did not identify the
impact of generating facilities to the transmission system as a reason
or need for reactive supply, but instead only identified the
transmission system and load as needing the reactive service, noting
that generating facilities would serve those needs at the point of
interconnection.\256\ Reactive Service Providers assert that, while
both before and after Order No. 888, transmission providers
holistically relied on generation- and transmission-based reactive
assets to fulfill their obligations to maintain the voltage of the
transmission system, generating facilities never had an independent
obligation to provide reactive service, as the Commission asserts in
the NOPR.\257\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\256\ Id.
\257\ Id. at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
86. Reactive Service Providers assert that when the Commission
issued Order No. 2003, it summarily stated that, as a condition to
obtain interconnection service, the generating facility must provide
reactive service within the standard power factor range.\258\ Reactive
Service Providers argue that the Commission did not amass any evidence
in the Order No. 2003 proceeding to explain why generating facilities
have an obligation to provide reactive service within the standard
power factor range and posit that the Commission may have come to this
conclusion in Order No. 2003 and the NOPR ``because the Transmission
Provider has always relied on generators as one of its tools to enable
the Transmission Provider to fulfill its obligation to maintain the
Transmission System in a safe and reliable manner.'' \259\ Reactive
Service Providers assert that none of the transmission system
operators, NERC, and the Commission, in nearly all precedent, have ever
concluded that generation has an ``obligation'' to provide reactive
service within the standard range; the Commission's statement in Order
No. 2003 is an outlier.\260\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\258\ Id. at 11-12.
\259\ Id. at 12.
\260\ Id. at 12-19 (citing Order No. 661, 111 FERC ] 61,353 at
PP 50-51 (``this Final Rule requires the wind plant to maintain the
required power factor range only if the Transmission Provider shows
through the System impact Study, that such capability is required of
that plant to ensure safety or reliability. . . . ``[B]ecause the
Transmission Provider is responsible for the safe and reliable
operation of its transmission system (pursuant to NERC and regional
reliability council standards), it is in the best position to
establish if reactive power is needed in individual
circumstances.''); Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277 at P 35
(``balancing the costs to newly-interconnecting non-synchronous
generators of providing reactive power with the benefits to the
transmission system of having another source of reactive power'')
(emphasis added by Reactive Service Providers)); id. at 18 (``[I]n
Order No. 901, the [Commission] continued the clear distinction
between a Transmission Provider that has the obligation to plan and
operate the Transmission System and generation that is a tool that
Transmission Providers must account for and uses to fulfill its
obligation to plan and operate the Transmission System.'') (citing
Reliability Standards to Address Inverter-Based Res., Order No. 901,
88 FR 74250 (Oct. 30, 2023) 185 FERC ] 61,042, at P 174 (2023)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
87. Similarly, Reactive Service Providers assert that ``good
utility practice'' does not entail an obligation for generating
facilities to provide reactive power for free, and the Commission has
not explained why it believes such obligation exists.\261\ Reactive
Service Providers argue that the current compensation scheme for
reactive power is consistent with the Commission's definition of good
utility practice because it includes practices that ``could have been
expected to accomplish the desired result at a reasonable cost
consistent with good business practices, reliability, safety and
expedition.'' \262\ Reactive Service Providers assert that good utility
practice does not address what the electric industry (i.e., the
transmission provider) can achieve for free, but rather a cost that the
transmission provider must pay as a matter of ``good business
practices'' in order to fulfill its obligation.\263\ Indicated Trade
Associations argue that the Commission cannot deprive public utilities
from just and reasonable compensation for reactive power within the
standard power factor range by simply classifying it as a condition of
interconnection, particularly when the Commission established that
condition.\264\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\261\ Id. at 19.
\262\ Id. at 19-20 (quoting at Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103
at P 56) (emphasis added by Reactive Service Providers). Reactive
Service Providers assert that the Commission adopted the same
definition of ``good utility practice'' in Order No. 2003 as it did
in Order No. 888. Id. at 19.
\263\ Id. at 20.
\264\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 23
(citing Banton v. Belt Line Ry. Corp., 268 U.S. 413, 420 (1925)
(``[t]he commission under the guise of regulation may not compel the
use and operation of the company's property for public convenience
without just compensation.''); Gulf Power Co. v. U.S., 187 F.3d
1324, 1331 (11th Cir. 1999) (``[c]haracterizing the mandatory access
provision as a regulatory condition . . . cannot change the fact
that it effects a taking by requiring a utility to submit to a
permanent, physical occupation of its property'')).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
88. Generation Developers assert that the NOPR errs in concluding
that separate compensation for reactive power may result in a windfall
to generators. Generation Developers note that many generators across
markets are in fact increasingly unable to recover their costs.\265\
Indicated Trade Associations similarly refute the NOPR's preliminary
conclusion that separate compensation for reactive power within the
standard power factor range may result in market distortions,
contending that all rates are approved by the Commission and that any
distortions are a result of PJM's capacity market rules.\266\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\265\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 27 (citing
CAISO, 2022 Annual Report on Market Issues & Performance 15 (July
11, 2023), https://www.caiso.com/market/Pages/MarketMonitoring/AnnualQuarterlyReports/Default.aspx; PJM, Energy Transition in PJM:
Resource Retirements, Replacements and Risks 10 (Feb. 24, 2023),
https://insidelines.pjm.com/pjm-details-resource-retirements-replacements-and-risks.).
\266\ Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Commission Determination
89. Based on our review of the record, we conclude that
compensation for the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range is unjust and unreasonable because: (1) the
provision of such reactive power requires either no or at most a de
minimis increase in variable costs beyond the cost of providing real
power; (2) such compensation may result in undue compensation and other
market distortions; and (3) the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is an obligation of the generating facility
as an interconnection customer and consistent good utility
practice.\267\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\267\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6-9; Joint Consumer Advocates
Initial Comments at 6-7; MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at
4; TAPS Initial Comments at 6; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5; Joint
Customers Initial Comments at 14-16; PGE Initial Comments at 4
(citing MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 53 (noting that in the
acceptance of the MISO Transmission Owners application to end
compensation within the standard power application, the Commission
reiterated its policy ``that the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range is, in the first instance, an
obligation of the interconnecting generator and good utility
practice.'')).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
90. As explained in the NOPR, because real and reactive power are
provided as joint products with joint costs produced from the same
[[Page 93430]]
equipment, any allocation of joint fixed costs between real and
reactive power could be viewed as inherently arbitrary.\268\ And while
the production of reactive power within the standard power factor range
can result in certain incremental variable costs such as fuel,
maintenance, and potentially other costs, we continue to find, based on
the record and past precedent, that variable costs of generating
reactive power within the standard power factor range are at most de
minimis.\269\ With respect to fixed costs, for synchronous generating
facilities, ``the same equipment is used to provide real and reactive
power.'' \270\ Non-synchronous generating facilities use a different
physical process to produce reactive power, but ``the most critical
element in VAR production, the inverter,'' \271\ is also necessary for
non-synchronous generating facilities to produce real power that can be
reliably injected into AC systems.\272\ In other words, for both
synchronous and non-synchronous generating facilities, ``[t]here are
few if any identifiable costs incurred by generators in order to
provide reactive power'' \273\ beyond the investments in equipment
already necessary to generate and supply real power to the transmission
system.\274\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\268\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 30; (citing PJM IMM Initial
Comments to the NOI at 2 (``There is no reason to include complex
rules that arbitrarily segregate a portion of a resource's capital
costs as related to reactive power and that require recovery of that
arbitrary portion through guaranteed revenue requirement payments
based on burdensome cost of service rate proceedings.''); id. at 3,
5, 21, 24; Permian Basin, 390 U.S. at 804 (``There is ample support
for the Commission's judgment that the apportionment of actual costs
between two jointly produced commodities, only one of which is
regulated by the Commission, is intrinsically unreliable.'');
Richard A. Posner, Natural Monopoly and Its Regulation, 21 Stan. L.
Rev. 548, 595 (1969) (``[W]here services involve joint or common
costs a rational allocation is impossible even in theory. How much
of the cost of a telephone handset is assignable to local and how
much to interstate telephone service?''); see also A.A. Poultry
Farms, Inc. v. Rose Acre Farms, Inc., 1400 (7th Cir. 1989) (``How
does one allocate the cost of activities that have joint products?
Agencies engaged in ratemaking struggle with these problems for
years, even decades, without producing clear answers.'')).
\269\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 31 (citing SPP Initial
Comments to NOI at 2; PJM IMM Initial Comments to NOI at 4.).
\270\ Ameren Initial Comments at 3; MISO Transmission Owner
Reply Comments at 9. See also NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 29
(citing Edison Electric Institute Initial Comments to the NOI at 6).
\271\ Duke Energy Corporation Initial Comments to the NOI at 4.
\272\ See, e.g., MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 7
(``[E]ven newer wind turbines use inverters that allow for the
generator to produce and control reactive power without costly
additional equipment.); see also MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ]
61,022 at P 30 (``As to non-synchronous resources, the principal
piece of equipment required for non-synchronous resources to produce
reactive power is the inverter, which is already necessary to
convert the direct current produced by non-synchronous resources to
alternating current--i.e., to supply real power that can be injected
into alternating current power systems. On rehearing and in earlier
protests, no party points to any other equipment costs incurred by
non-synchronous generating facilities that are attributable to
providing Reactive Service.'' (citations omitted)).
\273\ PJM IMM Initial Comments to the NOI at 4; see also MISO
Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 7-8.
\274\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 6 (``The MISO
Transmission Owners' experience supports the Commission's
preliminary finding that providing reactive power within the
standard power factor range requires little or no cost to
generators. Generators incur little or no costs beyond what is
already needed to produce real power because the same equipment used
to produce real power includes reactive power functions.''
(citations omitted)); PJM IMM Reply Comments at 3 (``Neither
[Indicated Trade Associations] nor any other opposing commenter, nor
any of the precedent relied upon by opposing commenters, identify
any additional costs or more than de minimis costs incurred by
generators in order to provide reactive capability.''); MISO
Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 9-10 & n.29. See also, BPA,
120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21 (finding that the incremental cost of
reactive power service within the deadband is minimal); METC
Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53 (``[R]eactive power provided,
not as an ancillary service, but rather as a ``no cost'' service
within reactive design limitations, may therefore, be provided
without compensation.''); APS, 94 FERC at 61,080 (rejecting
generators' arguments for reactive power compensation for operating
within standard power factor range because the generators failed to
demonstrate that ``such a requirement will limit the real power
output of a generating unit and therefore will not result in any
lost opportunity costs'' or that operating a generating unit within
the proposed standard power factor range will ``affect the
generation output of a unit'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
91. While most commenters agree or do not dispute that all
equipment used to produce reactive power, for both synchronous and non-
synchronous generating facilities, is also necessary in order to
produce and deliver to the transmission system real power, several
commenters dispute the NOPR's findings that both synchronous and non-
synchronous facilities incur no or at most a de minimis increase in
costs beyond the cost of providing real power.\275\ However, these
commenters do not identify any specific costs beyond those incurred to
ensure that real power can be reliably injected into the transmission
system.\276\ For example, Indicated Trade Associations, Generation
Developers, and Glenvale emphasize that there are costs of equipment
and production associated with reactive power, but they provide only
vague references to those specific equipment costs and identify no
distinct equipment (apart from equipment already needed for real power
production).\277\ Many of the commenters opposing the rule also
conflate the cost of providing reactive power capability within and
outside the standard power factor range.\278\ For example, commenters
suggest that there are opportunity costs to provide reactive power
capability, even within the standard power factor range, because doing
so requires a generating facility to forgo real power production.\279\
As explained in the NOPR and in other Commission precedent, however,
reactive power opportunity costs are an issue only when providing
reactive power outside the standard power factor range. This is
because, unlike operating within the standard power factor range,
generating facilities operating outside the standard power factor range
forgo generating more real power output and thus, forgo sales of real
power.\280\ Importantly, commenters do not provide any evidence to
support their assertion that operating within the standard power factor
range will limit the real power output of their generating facilities.
To the contrary, rather than limiting real power output, real power
cannot be supplied from a generating facility unless that facility is
producing reactive power within the standard power factor range to
generate and safely inject real power into the
[[Page 93431]]
transmission system and comply with reliability requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\275\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at PP 8, 28.
\276\ The only incremental costs identified in the NOPR were
heating losses. NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 28 & n.74.
\277\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3-4; Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 13; Glenvale Initial Comments at 9-10 Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 7-12; Middle River Power
Initial Comments at 2-3.
\278\ See Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 6-7
(``However, during certain generating facility and grid operating
conditions, when the generator provides an actual service (i.e.,
injects reactive power to support voltage) it could come at the cost
of production of real power. During that time, reactive power is
prioritized and real power generated by the plant may be limited. In
such a case the generation facility is prioritizing the utilization
of their asset to assist or enhance grid stability at the cost of
their revenue, which is primarily obtained from real power sales.
The Commission should consider this opportunity cost in the context
of interconnection customers that participate in regional wholesale
markets.'')
\279\ See, e.g., Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 10 (``Stripping generators of the ability to be
compensated for reactive power supply, including lost opportunity
costs, within the [standard power factor range] is not just and
reasonable and not supported by the record.''); Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 11 (``The NOPR also completely
ignores the fact that the provision of reactive power within the
deadband represents a lost opportunity to produce real power,
thereby resulting in lost opportunity costs.'').
\280\ See, e.g., NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 32 (``[I]f the
transmission provider requires a generating facility to provide
reactive power outside of the standard power factor range, the
generating facility may have to `reduce its MW output in order to
comply with such an instruction[,]' which could limit the generating
facility's opportunity to receive compensation for real power
sales.'') (citing CAISO Initial Comments to NOI at 4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
92. Like in MISO, the commenters here fail to identify any
incremental fixed costs associated with the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range and identify only de minimis
variable costs.\281\ In MISO, the MISO transmission owners proposed to
eliminate all charges under Schedule 2 for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range. Like here, protesters
opposing MISO's proposal challenged the conclusion that reactive power
within the standard power factor range required little or no
incremental investment. The Commission rejected their protests, finding
that they had failed to identify any record evidence demonstrating that
there are more than minimal capital expenditures on equipment or
additional operations and maintenance costs attributable to providing
such reactive power. Like here, protesters alluded to alleged
opportunity costs and operation and maintenance costs but failed to
point to any evidence of such costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\281\ See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 29
(``We continue to conclude, and the record establishes, that
Reactive Service requires little or no incremental investment.'');
METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53 (``[R]eactive power
provided, not as an ancillary service, but rather as a ``no cost''
service within reactive design limitations, may therefore, be
provided without compensation.''); APS, 94 FERC at 61,080 (rejecting
generators' arguments for reactive power compensation for operating
within standard power factor range because the generators failed to
demonstrate that ``such a requirement will limit the real power
output of a generating unit and therefore will not result in any
lost opportunity costs'' or that operating a generating unit within
the proposed standard power factor range will ``affect the
generation output of a unit''); BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21
(``[T]he incremental cost of reactive power service within the
[standard power factor range] is minimal.''). See also S. Co.
Servs., Inc., 80 FERC at 62,091 (noting also that the primary
function of a generating plants is to produce real power; thus, if
costs were allocated based on the ``predominant'' function of the
equipment, ``all of the costs of generation would thus be assigned
to real power production and there would be no basis for any
separate reactive power charge'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
93. Although Generation Developers claim that the report is the
most recent and comprehensive evidence on the costs of non-synchronous
generating facilities to provide reactive power, Generation Developers'
arguments regarding the evidence in the 2014 Staff Report ignore that
the Commission found in the MISO Rehearing Order that even newer wind
turbines use inverters that allow generating facilities to produce and
control reactive power without costly additional equipment,\282\ and
has found elsewhere \283\ that the provision of reactive power requires
no or at most de minimis variable costs beyond the cost of producing
real power.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\282\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 7 (citing
MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 30 n.98 (``[O]lder wind
generators could not produce and control reactive power without the
use of costly equipment [ ] because they did not use inverters like
other non-synchronous generators but modern turbines now use
inverters and newer wind generators now can.'')).
\283\ METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
94. Generation Developers also assert that the Commission's
reliance on a statement from the MISO Rehearing Order, and the
purported failure of parties in that proceeding to demonstrate
significant incremental costs of non-synchronous facilities, does not
satisfy the Commission's burden in this case.\284\ Generation
Developers add that the Commission's reliance on cases that pre-date
the emergence of non-synchronous generating facilities for the
proposition that all generating facilities have no or de minimis costs
is misplaced.\285\ Indicated Trade Associations similarly argue that
Commission precedent cited in the NOPR (i.e., BPA and APS) does not
support the conclusion that the incremental costs of the provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor range are at most de
minimis.\286\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\284\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 15.
\285\ Id. at 16 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211; METC Rehearing
Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53; APS, 94 FERC at 61,080).
\286\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 8 (citing
BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21; BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ]
61,273 at P 7 n.7; APS, 94 FERC at 61,080).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
95. We disagree with Indicated Trade Associations and Generation
Developers. Commenters provide no support for the contention that
decades of Commission precedent are irrelevant for purposes of
supporting our findings here, including precedent from after the
emergence of non-synchronous generating facilities.\287\ As
demonstrated by the decades of Commission precedent cited in the NOPR
and here, many of the findings in this final determination are not new.
The Commission has reached similar conclusions based on similar
evidence (or lack thereof) in other proceedings, including with respect
to the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor
range by non-synchronous generating facilities.\288\ This precedent
coupled with the evidence in this record, supports this final
determination, including with respect to non-synchronous generating
facilities.\289\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\287\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033; PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088
at PP 29-31.
\288\ See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP
29-31 (finding that providing reactive service requires ``little or
no incremental investment'' by both synchronous and non-synchronous
resources); PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 151 FERC ] 61,097 at PP 7,
28 (finding that non-synchronous generating facilities are
comparable to traditional synchronous generating facilities, in that
there are for both types of generating facilities very little if any
incremental costs incurred to provide reactive power); 2005 Staff
Report at 96 (``The marginal cost of providing reactive power from
within a generator's capability curve (D-curve) is near zero.'').
\289\ We also note that Order No. 827, which was issued in 2016,
after the 2014 Commission Staff Report, removed the exemption for
wind generating facilities to provide reactive power because of
``declining costs'' resulting from ``improvements in technology.''
Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277 at P 24. In Order No. 827, the
Commission noted that other types of non-synchronous generating
facilities were not exempt from the requirement to provide reactive
power and that Order No. 827's findings applied to all newly
interconnecting non-synchronous generating facilities. Id. P 22.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
96. Glenvale contends that certain types of non-synchronous
generating facilities incur additional costs to provide reactive power
when not providing real power, such as for solar generating facilities
providing reactive power at night.\290\ However, as these capabilities
relate to the provision of reactive power when not providing real
power, such costs necessarily are for the provision of reactive power
outside the standard power factor range and thus are not impacted by
and are beyond the scope of this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\290\ Glenvale Initial Comments at 9-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
97. Similarly, some commenters point to capital investments that
expand a generating facility's reactive power capability beyond the
standard power factor range,\291\ but that capability, and thus that
investment, does not address the relevant issue of whether transmission
charges associated with the provision of reactive power within the
standard range are just and reasonable.\292\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\291\ See, e.g., Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 3 (``Where
Eagle Creek Reactive Generators made specific capital investments
that enhanced reactive service--for example, by installing upgraded
exciters with demonstrable power factor improvements--their related
reactive compensation case was necessarily strengthened.'').
\292\ We note that the additional capabilities are not required
as a condition of interconnection. Furthermore, all generating
facilities are allowed to seek compensation when directed to provide
reactive power beyond the standard power factor range. This final
determination does not change the ability of generating facilities
to seek compensation associated with providing reactive power
outside the standard power factor range.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
98. Eagle Creek and others argue that rates calculated using the
AEP Methodology are themselves evidence of significant reactive-power-
related capital investments.\293\ Putting aside
[[Page 93432]]
that these commenters provide no support for their contentions, the AEP
Methodology is a cost allocation methodology only; it is not designed
to, and does not, establish ``evidence of significant reactive-power-
related capital investments.'' To the contrary, were it possible to
identify discrete, incremental capital investments made to provide
reactive power within the standard power range, the AEP Methodology
could be utilized to allocate such reactive power costs incurred by the
generator; however, no such incremental capital costs exist here, and
so the AEP Methodology is inapplicable. In addition, as noted in the
NOPR, the AEP Methodology originated in an era of vertically integrated
utilities that recovered both generation and transmission costs
entirely through cost-based rates and classified those costs under
USofA accounting requirements.\294\ The Commission accepted the AEP
Methodology as a way to assign these costs using a cost-of-service
allocation method for assigning joint costs between the generation and
transmission functions. As the PJM IMM explains ``The AEP Method[ology]
is not about identifying incremental costs incurred to provide reactive
power . . . [but rather] allocates the costs of an integrated power
plant between reactive power and real power.'' \295\ As noted in the
Fern Initial Decision, ``The standard techniques for addressing a
facility that operates in both a monopoly market and a competitive
market--cost allocation and revenue credit--have no connection to the
AEP [M]ethod[ology],'' and ``[a]uto-transporting a monopoly-era method
into an organized-market context--which is exactly what this
proceeding's witnesses do, what dozens of settlements do and what this
Initial Decision does--is not regulating based on physical facts.''
\296\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\293\ See, e.g., ACORE Initial Comments at 2 (``A requirement to
provide a service does not negate the fact that costs are incurred,
as demonstrated by the multiple settlements reached for payment of
this service.''); Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 9 (``[S]ubstantial cost support included with the
proposed reactive service tariffs of each of the Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers . . .meticulously demonstrate the fixed and sunk
costs allocable to reactive power production using the AEP
[M]ethodology'').
\294\ See, e.g., Joint Customers Reply Comments at 6-7; ELCON
Initial Comments at 5. As noted in the NOI, most of the filings at
the Commission seeking to establish rates for reactive power
compensation are made by generating facilities (both synchronous and
non-synchronous) that have received waivers of the Commission's
requirement to maintain their accounts under the USofA rules and to
file FERC Form No. 1.
\295\ PJM IMM Reply Comments at 3. See also PJM IMM Initial
Comments at 3 (``The AEP Method[ology] was based on three sentences
in testimony filed in 1993 that provide no logical, engineering or
economic support for allocating a part of generator capital
investment to reactive. That testimony was about a subjective
decision to reassign costs that were already fully accounted for and
not about any asserted costs to provide reactive power that were not
recovered elsewhere and not for any asserted additional costs of
providing reactive power.''); Joint Customers Reply Comments at 12
(``The amount of total plant cost that is allocated to the reactive
function based on a power factor for ratemaking purposes under the
AEP [M]ethodology is not at all indicative of actual incremental
costs for incremental levels of additional reactive capability.''
(emphasis in original)). See also 2005 Staff Report at 69 (``[T]he
allocation factor used in the AEP Methodology does not directly
relate to the incremental investment cost in providing reactive
capability or supply'').
\296\ Fern Solar LLC, 183 FERC ] 63,004, at P 937 (2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
99. We also disagree with those commenters that suggest that the
mere existence of joint products requires allocating costs to both real
and reactive power production. These assertions disregard longstanding
Commission precedent.\297\ PSEG, for example, relies on Dynegy Midwest
Generation, Inc. v. FERC for the proposition that ``the NOPR . . .
conflicts with Commission and judicial precedents that have long
recognized that there are specific fixed costs associated with the
production of reactive power.'' \298\ But the Commission explicitly
rejected this same argument when Dynegy made it in the MISO
proceeding.\299\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\297\ See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 26
(``[W]e continue to reject, as collateral attacks on that
longstanding policy, arguments that stand-alone compensation for
Reactive Service is generically required--for example, to ensure
that generators can recover their costs for Reactive Service
capability.''); Entergy Servs. Inc., 114 FERC ] 61,303, at P 14
(2006) (``In Order No. 2003, the Commission emphasized that an
interconnecting generator should not be compensated for reactive
power when operating its Generating Facility within the established
power factor range, since it is only meeting its obligation.
Generators interconnected to a transmission provider's system need
only be compensated where the transmission provider directs the
generator to operate outside the dead band.'' (internal citations
omitted)).
\298\ PSEG Initial Comments at 13 & n.33 (citing Dynegy Midwest
Generation, Inc. v. FERC, 633 F.3d 1122, 1126 (D.C. Cir. 2011)).
\299\ MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 31 (``Vistra
challenges the conclusion that Reactive Service requires little or
no incremental investment by claiming that the D.C. Circuit in
Dynegy rejected that conclusion. We disagree with Vistra's
interpretation of Dynegy. Rather, in Dynegy, the court concluded
that the Commission had not made any such finding in that case,
instead providing only a `glancing remark' to this effect, and that
the record in that case did not support such a finding. Here, in
addition to noting the Commission's previous conclusions that
Reactive Service capability requires little or no incremental
investment, we have further explained immediately above the basis
for this finding.'').
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100. Thus, based on the totality of the record, we agree with
Ameren that, for both synchronous and non-synchronous generating
facilities, ``it is [ ] well-documented that the same equipment used to
produce real power includes reactive power functions,'' and thus
``there is little, if any, incremental cost associated with providing
reactive power'' beyond the investments in equipment already necessary
to generate and supply real power to the transmission system.\300\ As
discussed below, we also find that the joint costs associated with the
production of real and reactive power are costs that generating
facilities must incur to provide the real power for which they are
compensated.\301\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\300\ See, e.g., Ameren Initial Comments at 3; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 6 (``Generators incur little or no costs
beyond what is already needed to produce real power.''); PJM IMM
Initial Comments at 4 (``There are few if any identifiable costs
incurred by generators in order to provide reactive power.
Separately compensating resources based on a judgment based
allocation of capital costs was never and is not now appropriate in
the PJM markets. Generating units are fully integrated power plants
that produce both the real and reactive power required for grid
operation . . . . [T]here is no reason to include complex rules that
arbitrarily segregate a portion of a resource's capital costs as
related to reactive power.'').
\301\ See PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12 (``The market approach
should be used, as it is overwhelmingly more efficient than the
current rate case, cost of service approach. Supporters of the cost
of service approach have never explained why a nonmarket approach is
required in PJM or why it is preferable to a market approach.'');
id. at 11-12 (``There is no evidence that units are built as a
result of reactive revenue. There is no evidence that sources of
revenue are not fungible and that a decrease in reactive revenues
could be not replaced with other sources of revenue. There is no
basis for adding new resources to the already very crowded
interconnection queue solely based on out of market subsidies from
reactive revenues.'').
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101. Reactive Service Providers argue that the Commission has not
supported its claim that generating facilities already have an
obligation to provide reactive service within the standard power factor
range. Specifically, Reactive Service Providers assert that when the
Commission issued Order No. 2003, it summarily stated that a generating
facility must provide reactive service within the standard power factor
range as a condition to obtain interconnection service, but it did not
amass any evidence to explain why generating facilities have this
obligation. Reactive Service Providers claim that Order No. 2003 is an
outlier among Commission precedent and that none of the transmission
system operators, NERC, or the Commission, in nearly all precedent, has
ever articulated such obligation. However, as discussed at length
above, outlined in the NOPR, and reiterated in recent Commission
decisions, the Commission has for decades stated that ``the provision
of reactive power within the standard power factor range is, in the
first instance, an obligation of the interconnecting generator and good
utility practice.'' \302\ We find Reactive
[[Page 93433]]
Service Providers' comments challenging this well-established policy to
be a collateral attack on Order No. 2003.\303\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\302\ MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at PP 53-54 (citing Order No.
2003-A, 106 FERC ] 61,220 at P 416; SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 28)
(``Accordingly, by designing their generating facilities to have the
capability to provide reactive support, interconnecting generators
are meeting the conditions of interconnection required of all
generators and as a general matter are not entitled to compensation
under the Commission's precedent unless the transmission provider
pays its own or affiliated generators for reactive power within the
standard power factor range.''); NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 16.
\303\ See e.g., ISO N. England Inc., 138 FERC ] 61,238, at P 17
(2012) (``[A] collateral attack is `[a]n attack on a judgment in a
proceeding other than a direct appeal,' and is `generally
prohibited.' '' (quoting N. England Conf. of Pub. Utils. Comm'rs v.
Bangor Hydro-Elec. Co., 135 FERC ] 61,140, at P 27 (2011))).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
102. Further, as the Commission has explained, to interconnect
reliably to the transmission system and deliver power to customers,
generating facilities must be capable of maintaining voltage levels for
injecting real power into the transmission system.\304\ Said
differently, ``if a generator is to sell (and be able to deliver) its
power to a customer, reactive power is essential to the transaction.''
\305\ Thus, standalone compensation for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range does not result in just and
reasonable transmission rates.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\304\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033; MISO Rehearing Order,
184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 23 (citing METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at
61,852-53); see also MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 11
(``Moreover, generators are incented by their own reliability
requirements to install the equipment that is most likely to keep
their projects on-line and delivering real power.'' (citations
omitted)); NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 33 (``For example, CAISO
states that ``[t]he rationale for the CAISO's existing approach to
reactive power compensation is that the reactive power ranges called
for in each interconnection agreement represent a reasonable range
of what a generator is expected to provide the CAISO without
additional compensation in accordance with good utility practice and
as a condition of being part of the CAISO markets and CAISO grid.'')
(citing CAISO Initial Comments to the NOI at 3).
\305\ SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 28. This has always been a
physical reality of the transmission system, even for wind
generating facilities that were exempted from providing reactive
service within the standard power factor range prior to Order No.
827. Specifically, in Order No. 827, the Commission ``exempted wind
generators from the uniform reactive power requirement because,
historically, the costs to design and build a wind generator that
could provide reactive power were high and could have created an
obstacle to the development of wind generation.'' Order No. 827, 155
FERC ] 61,277 at P 4 (emphasis added). During this period of
exemption, wind generating facilities would have had to rely on
dynamic reactive power service supplied by other generating
facilities and equipment on the transmission system capable of
providing reactive support to allow their real power to reliably
flow onto the transmission system. In essence, prior to Order No.
827, the Commission allowed the nascent wind industry to make up for
these reactive power deficiencies by relying on transmission
customers for reactive support because it determined that the costs
of requiring them to provide their own reactive power could have
been prohibitive. By the time of Order No. 827, that rationale for
the exemption no longer existed, and the Commission, in removing
this exemption for wind generating facilities in Order No. 827,
noted that ``[d]ue to technological advancements, the cost of
providing reactive power no longer presents an obstacle to the
development of wind generation.'' Id. Additionally, the Commission
expressed its concern ``that, as the penetration of non-synchronous
generators continues to grow, exempting a class of generators from
providing reactive power could create reliability concerns,
especially if those generators represent a substantial amount of
total generation in a particular region, or if many of the resources
that currently provide reactive power are retired from operation. In
addition, as noted above, maintaining the exemptions for wind
generators places an undue burden on synchronous generators to
supply reactive power without a reasonable technological or cost-
based distinction between synchronous and non-synchronous
generators.'' Id. P 25.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
103. Some commenters note that because Order No. 888 defined
voltage support as a distinct ancillary service, it must be compensated
separately.\306\ The Commission's policy on reactive power compensation
has evolved since issuing Order No. 888, which included provisions
regarding reactive power from generating facilities as an ancillary
service in Schedule 2 of the pro forma OATT.\307\ Specifically, in
Order No. 2003, when adopting the pro forma LGIA, the Commission
initially concluded that the interconnection customer should not be
compensated for reactive power when operating within the range
established in the interconnection agreement because doing so ``is only
meeting [the generating facility's] obligation.'' \308\ And in Order
No. 2003-A, the Commission clarified that ``if the Transmission
Provider pays its own or its affiliated generators for reactive power
within the established range, it must also pay the Interconnection
Customer.'' \309\ As a result, since Order No. 2003-A, the sole basis
for reactive power capability compensation within the standard power
factor range has been comparability (i.e., to ensure comparable
treatment between affiliated and unaffiliated generating facilities),
not compensability (i.e., an independent right to receive compensation
for reactive power within the standard power factor range).\310\ The
Commission has reiterated these findings in subsequent orders
permitting transmission providers to eliminate separate compensation
for generating facilities providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range.\311\ Accordingly, commenters' arguments in this
regard are without merit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\306\ See, e.g., Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments
at 9 (``This assumption is at odds with Order No. 888, which
expressly found that reactive service from generation facilities
must be priced at cost''); NEI Initial Comments at 4
(``Unsurprisingly, in Order No. 888 the Commission found that
reactive power is one of six ancillary services necessary to provide
basic transmission service within every control area. Schedule 2 of
the Open Access Transmission Tariff thus required that transmission
providers provide--and transmission customers pay for--reactive
power.''); PSEG Initial Comments at 13 (``The NOPR, if adopted,
would effectively eliminate reactive power as one of ancillary
services that the Commission has recognized since Order No. 888.'');
Middle River Power Initial Comments at 2-3 (citing Indicated Energy
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 21; Order No. 888, FERC
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,707 (``[T]ransmission customer actions
do not eliminate entirely the need for generator-supplied reactive
power.'' ``The transmission provider must provide at least some
reactive power from generation sources.'')).
\307\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 12; Order No. 888, FERC
Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,705-07 & n.359; see also BPA Rehearing
Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273 at P 18.
\308\ Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at P 546.
\309\ Order No. 2003-A, 106 FERC ] 61,220 at P 416; see also
MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 24 (``Order No. 2003
reflects the distinction between these two different reactive power
concepts. When the transmission provider asks the interconnecting
generator to operate its facility outside the established power
factor range, the transmission provider is required to pay the
interconnecting generator for the provision of such reactive power.
By contrast, compensation for reactive power when the generating
facility is operating within the established power factor range is
generally not required. The sole exception the Commission identified
was that `if the Transmission Provider pays its own or its
affiliated generators for reactive power within the established
range, it must also pay the Interconnection Customer.' '' (internal
citations omitted)).
\310\ BPA Rehearing Order 125 FERC ] 61,273 at P 18.
\311\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at PP 52-53; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 23-25, 41; PNM, 178 FERC ]
61,088 at PP 29-31; Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ] 61,103 at PP 20-21;
BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119 FERC ] 61,340 at
P 15; Entergy Servs., Inc., 113 FERC ] 61,040 at P 38.
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104. We also find Elevate's and Glenvale's arguments that some
resource classes incur additional costs, including Elevate's claims
about battery degradation, unpersuasive.\312\ Elevate highlights
battery degradation caused by the provision of reactive power, while
Glenvale notes the operational and replacement costs associated with
providing reactive power within the standard power factor range but
neither explains how or why such costs are different and separate from
the costs to provide real power. Degradation of components of a
generator, including degradation of batteries, is a natural and
inevitable result of power plant operation. As a result, the costs
incurred by a generator to address such degradation, like other costs
discussed above, are costs that generating facilities must incur to
provide the real power for which they may seek compensation; nor
[[Page 93434]]
do transmission customers receive benefits that are commensurate with
the charges for the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range. Moreover, as discussed further below, battery
storage resources, like all other generating facilities, still have the
opportunity to seek to recover their costs through sales of energy and
capacity, and the Commission's actions here do not undercut those
opportunities.\313\
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\312\ Elevate Initial Comments at 9-12; Elevate Reply Comments
at 7-9.
\313\ PJM IMM Reply Comments at 4-5 (``The NOPR does not require
a finding that generators recover all of their cost in markets.
Markets do not include such guarantees. In competitive markets,
generation owners may overrecover their costs in markets at times
and generators may underrecover their costs at times. The point is
that when markets provide an opportunity to recover all costs, those
same costs should not be recovered in a separate cost of service
rate. The same investment should not be recoverable and recovered in
two parallel regulatory regimes. That result is plainly unjust and
unreasonable.'').
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105. Similarly, regarding NEI's assertion that nuclear generating
facilities incur disproportionate degradation from the provision of
reactive power within the standard power factor range, we find that to
the extent there are de minimis variable costs associated with
providing reactive power within the standard power factor range,
generating facilities in RTO/ISO markets could seek to recover such
costs through energy and capacity markets. Transmission providers are
responsible for maintaining voltage levels within their regions and
have authority to direct generating facilities to operate at
appropriate power factors to ensure system reliability.\314\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\314\ See MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 11-12
(citing VAR-002-3-- Generator Operation for Maintaining Network
Voltage Schedules, North American Electric Reliability Corporation,
at 2 (Aug. 1, 2014), https://www.nerc.com/pa/Stand/Reliability%20Standards/VAR-002-3.pdf (``R2 . . . Generator Operator
shall maintain the generator voltage or Reactive Power schedule
(within each generating Facility's capabilities).'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
106. In response to Clean Energy Associations' assertion that
reactive power is not always coupled with real power,\315\ we reiterate
that the final determination addresses only compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range and
that producing solely reactive power (i.e., a power factor of zero)
entails reactive power production outside of the standard power factor
range. As such, we find Clean Energy Associations' concerns outside the
scope of this final determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\315\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
107. We also find that compensation for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range could result in undue
compensation and other market distortions.\316\ In response, Reactive
Service Providers assert that generating facilities cannot be receiving
windfalls from reactive power compensation because many generating
facilities across multiple regions are retiring due to economic
factors.\317\ However, these statements confuse compensation for
reactive power within the standard power factor range with general cost
recovery for generating facilities, which involves many other revenue
streams. Our findings here are that generating facilities incur no
incremental fixed costs and at most de minimis variable costs
incremental to the cost of providing real power, because no additional
equipment is required to provide reactive power and variable costs are
limited to the fuel costs (in synchronous facilities) or foregone
direct current power (in non-synchronous facilities) necessary to
provide the reactive power required to safely inject real power into
the transmission system and comply with reliability requirements.
Similarly, Indicated Trade Associations \318\ contend that separate
reactive power compensation cannot lead to market distortions because
such rates have been approved by the Commission. But this argument
ignores the final determination's central logic that such rates lack a
sufficient economic basis, and the comments in this proceeding have not
refuted that central logic.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\316\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4 (``The current
rules create strong incentives for generators to attempt to maximize
the allocation of capital costs to reactive in order to maximize
guaranteed, nonmarket revenues. Those nonmarket revenues provide a
nonmarket advantage to those generators who receive them. This is a
return to using the regulatory process for advantage rather than
competing in the market. That advantage is arbitrary, not market
based and therefore distortionary.'').
\317\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 27.
\318\ Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
108. As discussed further below, any purported de minimis variable
costs associated with providing reactive within the standard power
factor range can be recovered through other means.\319\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\319\ See infra II.C.2; see also Joint Customers Initial
Comments at 16 (``Finally, there is no reason to believe incremental
costs of reactive power could not be recovered in the same way other
costs are recovered. This could be through capacity markets and
through power sales, depending on the regional characteristics of
how generators cover other costs.'').
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C. Cost Recovery
109. In the NOPR, the Commission preliminarily found that separate
compensation for providing reactive power within the standard power
factor range is not necessary for generating facilities to recover
their costs.\320\ The Commission noted that, although the prospect of
receiving separate, fixed reactive power payments may be beneficial for
developing certain generating facilities, resource developers continue
to develop new generating facilities in regions without such
payments.\321\ Furthermore, the NOPR explained that the basis for these
payments has always been comparability rather than compensability.\322\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\320\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 45.
\321\ For example, as of February 21, 2024, there were 453 total
generating facilities in the CAISO interconnection queue, 440 of
which were non-synchronous generating facilities. This corresponds
to 122,885 MW of capacity, 120,043 MW of which comes from the non-
synchronous generating facilities in the queue. See CAISO, Formatted
Generator Interconnection Queue Report, https://rimspub.caiso.com/rimsui/logon.do (last visited Feb. 21, 2024). Similarly, as of
February 21, 2024, there were 947 total generating facilities in the
SPP interconnection queue, 770 of which were non-synchronous
generating facilities. This corresponds to 175,243 MW of capacity,
141,879 MW of which comes from the non-synchronous generating
facilities in the queue. See SPP, Generator Interconnection Active
Requests, https://opsportal.spp.org/Studies/GIActive (last visited
Feb. 21, 2024).
\322\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 45.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
110. Instead, in the context of RTO/ISO markets, the Commission
preliminarily found it would be more efficient for generating
facilities to seek to recover any identified costs to provide reactive
power within the standard power factor range, to the extent they exist,
through energy and capacity sales, because competition between
generating facilities may incentivize efficiency and increase
transparency.\323\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\323\ Id.
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111. The Commission noted that it has previously and repeatedly
rejected arguments that generating facilities need separate reactive
power payments, because the incremental cost of reactive power within
the standard power factor range is minimal.\324\ Therefore, consistent
with those findings, the NOPR preliminarily found that eliminating
compensation for reactive power within the standard power factor range
would not compromise the ability of IPPs in non-RTO/ISO regions to
recover their costs associated with producing reactive power within the
range because generating facilities have the opportunity to seek to
recover such costs in other ways, such as through higher power sales
rates or through
[[Page 93435]]
power purchase agreements (PPA).\325\ The Commission further noted that
the experiences of CAISO, SPP, MISO, and non-RTO/ISO regions where
generating facilities do not receive separate compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range and
the evidence in the record demonstrate that: (1) eliminating
compensation has not led to an insufficient supply of reactive power in
those regions and that (2) generating facilities in these regions have
been able to recover any purported costs associated with the production
of reactive power.\326\
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\324\ Id. P 47 (citing BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21).
\325\ Id.
\326\ Id. P 48.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
112. In the NOPR, the Commission sought comment on whether, and if
so how, the elimination of separate compensation for reactive power
within the standard power range would affect generating facilities'
ability to recover their costs--if any.\327\
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\327\ Id. P 49.
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1. Comments
113. Several Commenters argue that the record supports the finding
that generating facilities can recover any purported costs of providing
reactive power in the standard power factor range through their sales
of energy and capacity.\328\ TAPS contends that the Commission is not
required to guarantee that generating facilities recover their
incremental costs of providing reactive power in the standard power
factor range (to the extent those costs exist), but rather the
``opportunity to recover costs is all that is required.'' \329\ TAPS
explains that the Commission has never required payment of separate,
cost-based reactive power compensation within the standard power factor
range to all interconnecting generators in all circumstances, but has
rather given transmission providers the option to provide for such
reactive power compensation for its own generation, provided all
generators on its system were treated comparably, and transmission
providers could also eliminate such compensation for itself and others
on a comparable basis.\330\ New England Consumer Advocates states that
any final determination should ensure that ratepayer costs for reactive
power compensation are sufficiently justified, and that ISO-NE should
articulate specific benefits and compare those benefits with the cost
of compensation.\331\
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\328\ See AEP Initial Comments at 4-6; Joint Consumer Advocates
Initial Comments at 7-8 (``[Joint Consumer Advocates] assert that
PJM generators will still have a more than ample opportunity to
recover the costs associated with their provision of reactive
power''); Joint Customers Initial Comments at 15 (``Generators have
other means of covering costs incurred to meet interconnection
design requirements.''); Joint Customers Reply Comments at 15; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 16-17; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 15 (``Moreover, transmission providers
have mechanisms for maintaining system reliability in the face of
premature retirements, including identifying resources as ``system
support resources.'') (citations omitted)); Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 5 (``Ohio . . . supports competitive markets to induce
efficiency and control costs'').
\329\ TAPS Initial Comments at 7 & n.19 (citing CXA La Paloma,
LLC v. CAISO, 165 FERC ] 61,148, at P 71 (2018) (``The Commission
has been clear that suppliers in competitive wholesale electricity
markets are not guaranteed full cost recovery, but only the
opportunity to recover their costs.'')).
\330\ Id. at 6-7 & n.18 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 53
(``MISO [Transmission Owners] do not have an obligation to continue
to compensate an independent generator for reactive power within the
standard power factor range when its own or affiliated generators
are no longer being compensated.''); Id. (citing PNM, 178 FERC ]
61,088 at P 29; Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ] 61,103, P 20 (2022); BPA,
120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119 FERC ] 61,340 at P 15;
Entergy Servs., Inc., 113 FERC ] 61,040 at P 38) (``Commission's
precedent allows transmission providers to eliminate compensation
for reactive power within the standard power factor range for all
generators, regardless of whether the generator is owned by or
otherwise affiliated with a transmission owner or is
independent.'')).
\331\ New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 4-6.
See also id. at 5 (``To the extent . . . benefits are achieved by
compliance with a generating facility's interconnection agreement
and/or as `good utility practice,' [New England Consumer Advocates]
agree[] with the Commission that ratepayers should not be paying
separately for the costs to produce a joint reactive power
product.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
114. Ohio FEA states that it supports prohibiting, as expeditiously
as possible, the inclusion in transmission rates of charges related to
the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
because generators have an opportunity to recover all costs, including
reactive power costs, through PJM markets.\332\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\332\ Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
115. Several commenters argue that the NOPR's proposal would
resolve cost causation issues that result from the current practice of
providing separate compensation for reactive power within the standard
power factor range.\333\ Joint Customers, Ameren, TAPS, and MISO
Transmission Owners argue that the current incentive to provide payment
based on reactive power capability results in the building of
unnecessary capabilities in locations it may not be needed and does not
allocate costs associated with reactive power in a manner that is
roughly commensurate with the benefits received.\334\ They assert that
the current scheme results in a proliferation of charges for reactive
power that is disconnected from the actual benefits received.\335\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\333\ Ameren Initial Comments at 3; Joint Customers Initial
Comments at 12-13; TAPS Initial Comments at 4-5; MISO Transmission
Owners Reply Comments at 11-12; MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 5; PGE Initial Comments at 3-4.
\334\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12-13; Ameren Initial
Comments at 3; TAPS Initial Comments at 4-5; MISO Transmission
Owners Reply Comments at 11-13. See also Joint Customers Initial
Comments at 5-6 (``The Commission's policy of looking strictly to
capability for determining cost recovery for Reactive Service
incentivized overbuilding of capability beyond what was required
based on interconnection requirements. This policy of not
considering need or requiring a demonstration of need by the
transmission owner has resulted in compensation for reactive
capability without an actual demonstrated benefit to transmission
system customers. This disconnect between capability and any actual
demonstrated benefit highlights serious concerns that charges to
customers are not related to any benefits received.'' (citations
omitted)).
\335\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 12-13; Ameren Initial
Comments at 3; TAPS Initial Comments at 4-5; MISO Transmission
Owners Reply Comments at 11-13. See also MISO Transmission Owners
Initial Comments at 15 (``Moreover, transmission providers have
mechanisms for maintaining system reliability in the face of
premature retirements. When generators advise MISO of a planned
retirement via Attachment Y of the MISO Tariff, MISO completes a
review to determine whether any Transmission System reliability
concerns are caused by the retirement. If voltage concerns arise in
the Attachment Y study, options to address the voltage concerns are
reviewed and ultimately a permanent solution is identified. If the
permanent solution cannot be implemented before the planned
retirement date, then the MISO Tariff has a designation for ``system
support resources,'' under which generators are eligible to receive
cost-based compensation to support their continued operation until
an alternative solution to the reliability problem posed by the
resources' retirement is developed.'' (citations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
116. MISO Transmission Owners argue that, contrary to some
commenters' claims, the NOPR's proposed changes do not violate cost
causation principles because generating facilities will still be
compensated for the reactive power their generating facilities supply
when they are required to operate outside the standard power factor
range.\336\ MISO Transmission Owners state that ``cost causation
involves customers paying for a cost that they cause, not suppliers
receiving compensation for services provided,'' and assert that some
``commenters attempt to turn this concept on its head'' by ``plac[ing]
the focus on the service provider rather than the paying customer in an
attempt to require payment for a service they are already obligated to
provide as a condition of interconnection.'' \337\ MISO
[[Page 93436]]
Transmission Owners argue that commenters' claims that the NOPR's
proposed changes violate cost causation principles is a collateral
attack on principles first promulgated in Order No. 2003 and its
progeny because that series of orders required generators to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range without
compensation, with few exceptions.\338\ MISO Transmission Owners argue
that the NOPR's proposed changes do not change generating facilities'
obligation to provide reactive power within the deadband, but rather
they remove the unnecessary costs associated with payments to
generating facilities.\339\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\336\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 11.
\337\ Id. at 12 (citing K N Energy, Inc. v. FERC, 968 F.2d 1295,
1300 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (``[A]ll approved rates [must] reflect to some
degree the costs actually caused by the customer who must pay
them.''); Entergy Ark., LLC v. FERC, 40 F.4th 689, 692 (D.C. Cir.
2022) (``In assessing whether a rate is `just and reasonable,' FERC
and the courts determine, among other things, whether the rate
comports with the `cost-causation principle' which requires that the
rates charged for electricity reflect the costs of providing it.''
(citing Old Dominion Elec. Coop. v. FERC, 898 F.3d 1254, 1255 (D.C.
Cir. 2018))).
\338\ Id. at 11-13. See also MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 16 (``As the Commission explains, compensation for
providing reactive power within the deadband is unnecessary, as
resources are otherwise able to recover their costs. The Commission
is correct in finding that there are many other mechanisms through
which generators may recover the costs of reactive power service, if
they need to. This is consistent with Commission precedent that has
repeatedly highlighted how generators have the opportunity to
recover any legitimate costs through other means. The Commission has
found generators may recover such costs through power purchase
agreements or capacity and energy market offers. As the Commission
found when accepting the elimination of reactive power compensation
in MISO, generators can still include the costs of reactive service
in energy offers or capacity offers, even if subject to market power
mitigation.'' (citations omitted)).
\339\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 12-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
117. Ohio FEA and New England Consumer Advocates state that they
support the Commission's efforts to mitigate escalating transmission
costs for customers, particularly when those costs provide no
incremental benefit to the customers who pay them.\340\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\340\ Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 4; New England Consumer
Advocates Initial Comments at 3-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
118. Joint Customers acknowledge that the Commission generally
allows for flexibility to account for regional differences. However,
Joint Customers argue that such regional variations do not undermine
the general rule against compensation for meeting interconnection
requirements related to the standard power factor range.\341\ Joint
Customers contend that ``[t]here is a sufficient record for a
determination that compensation for meeting interconnection
requirements related to the standard power factor range should be
prohibited as a general matter, with the understanding that generators
directed to operate outside that range will continue to be
compensated.'' \342\ Joint Customers witness Dr. Bresmer argues that a
generating facility providing reactive power within the standard power
factor range is simply meeting its interconnection obligations and not
providing an ancillary service.\343\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\341\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 14-15.
\342\ Id. at 15.
\343\ See, e.g., Joint Customers Initial Comments, Affidavit of
Dr. Albert W. Bremser at 6:3-7 (``When a generating facility is
operating within the standard power factor range, the generating
facility is meeting its responsibility to maintain appropriate
operational voltage levels for real power moving onto the
transmission system. It is only when a generating facility is called
upon to operate outside the standard power factor range that it is
providing an ancillary service.'' (citations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
119. Several commenters \344\ argue that there is not sufficient
evidence to support the conclusion that energy markets or capacity
markets could or should be used to recover the costs of providing
reactive power. Glenvale \345\ and Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
\346\ each state that reactive power and capacity are two distinct
types of services and should not be combined. Glenvale argues that
energy markets do not necessarily provide revenue opportunities due to
competition and long-term contracts that do not allow certain
generators access to these energy markets for several years. Indicated
Trade Associations note that certain types of resources may not even
participate in the capacity market.\347\ For example, Glenvale argues
that some generators that provide reactive power but choose not to
participate in the capacity market will not be able to recover lost
reactive revenues.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\344\ See, e.g., Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
8-9; EDPR Initial Comments at 4-5; Elevate Initial Comments at 8-9;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 18-19; Glenvale Initial
Comments at 5-6, 8-9; Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial
Comments at 14; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 3,
15; ISO-NE Initial Comments at 1-2; NAGF Initial Comments at 1; NEI
Initial Comments at 12-13; NEPGA Reply Comments at 1, 4-6; NHA
Initial Comments at 6-7; PSEG Initial Comments at 2-3, 6, 14-15;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 56-62, 77.
\345\ Glenvale Initial Comments at 6.
\346\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 11-
12.
\347\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 15
(citing PJM OATT, Attachment DD, Sec. 6.6A(c) (0.0.0) (providing a
categorical exception from the capacity must-offer obligation for
certain types of resources)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
120. Some commenters argue that generating facilities will be
unable to recover reactive power costs in their PPAs.\348\ Indicated
Trade Associations argue that generators may have relied on existing
reactive power compensation policies when they structured their PPAs,
bilateral arrangements, and behind the meter arrangements.\349\
Indicated Trade Associations \350\ and Generation Developers \351\ each
claim that the notion that PPA counterparties will be willing to
renegotiate their contracts to allow them to charge a higher rate to
recover the costs of a different service belies a basic understanding
of wholesale markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\348\ EDPR Initial Comments at 4-5; Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 19; Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 18; Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 59-
62.
\349\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 17-18.
\350\ Id.
\351\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
121. Some commentators \352\ point to RTO/ISO market rules as
potential barriers to recouping reactive power costs. Indicated Trade
Associations assert that the Commission has required RTOs and ISOs to
implement energy offer caps based on generators' verifiable marginal
costs.\353\ Generation Developers argue that the Commission should
require RTOs/ISOs to revise their tariffs to eliminate existing
barriers to the recovery of reactive power costs and permit generating
facilities to accurately reflect their investments in reactive power
capability in their capacity offers.\354\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\352\ Id. at 18-19, 34-35; Glenvale Initial Comments at 6;
Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 12-15; Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 77.
\353\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 12-13
(citing Offer Caps in Mkts. Operated by Reg'l Transmission Orgs. and
Indep. Sys. Operators, Order No. 831, 81 FR 87770 (Dec. 5, 2016),
157 FERC ] 61,115, at PP 5, 7 (2016), on reh'g, Order No. 831-A, 82
FR 53403 (Nov. 16, 2017), 161 FERC ] 61,156 (2017)).
\354\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 34-35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
122. Generation Developers argue that energy markets allow
resources to sell energy on a day-ahead and real-time basis, with
prices generally reflecting variable costs that are insufficient to
allow resources to recover their fixed costs.\355\ Generation
Developers state that RTO/ISO market mitigation rules generally
prohibit generating facilities from reflecting fixed costs in their
mitigated energy offer costs, often referred to as the ``missing money
problem,'' and eliminating reactive power compensation would exacerbate
this issue.\356\ Generation Developers argue that relying on capacity
markets for reactive power compensation would result in arbitrary
differences in the ability of resources to recover their costs because
they would be required to provide reactive power regardless of whether
they clear the capacity market.\357\ Generation Developers also
[[Page 93437]]
assert that there is no nexus between the capacity value assigned to a
generating facility and its reactive power capability.\358\ In
addition, Generation Developers state that ``[t]he Commission has a
statutory obligation to ensure that [Commission]-jurisdictional rates
are just, reasonable, and not unduly discriminatory or preferential''
and assert that this requirement ``prohibits the Commission from
denying utilities the opportunity to recover their costs, plus a
reasonable rate of return.'' \359\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\355\ Id. at 18.
\356\ Id.
\357\ Id. at 19.
\358\ Id.
\359\ Id. at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
123. Indicated Trade Associations argue that including reactive
power costs in energy offers would increase a generator's risk of not
clearing in the energy market. Indicated Trade Associations further
contend that capacity markets do not provide for recovery of reactive
power costs because capacity offers from existing resources are limited
to avoidable or going forward costs and do not allow for inclusion of
costs that have already been incurred to provide reactive power.\360\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\360\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
124. Some commenters \361\ argue that the NOPR violates the cost
causation and beneficiary pays principles because customers benefit
from reactive power, including reactive power provided within the
standard power factor range, and thus generating facilities should be
compensated for this service.\362\ Generation Developers argue that
while the cost causation principle does not require ``exact
precision,'' it does require that Commission-approved rates ``be based
on the costs of providing the service to the utility's customers, plus
a just and fair return on equity.'' \363\ Generation Developers and
Reactive Service Providers assert that the NOPR's proposal would
insulate transmission providers and customers from any responsibility
to pay for costs associated with the services they are receiving, which
is ``precisely the type of free ridership that the [FPA] and the cost
causation principle are intended to prevent.'' \364\ Generation
Developers argue that the Commission is essentially directing
generating facilities to recover the costs of reactive power from
customers purchasing energy and capacity, rather than the transmission
customers that benefit from the reactive service.\365\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\361\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 9;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 4, 9-12; Reactive Service
Providers Initial Comments at 62-63.
\362\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 9;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 4, 9-12; Reactive Service
Providers Initial Comments at 62-63.
\363\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 9-10 (citing
Sithe/Indep. Power Partners, L.P. v. FERC, 285 F.3d 1, 5 (D.C. Cir.
2002)).
\364\ Id. at 10; Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
62-63.
\365\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 10-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
125. Several commenters \366\ who oppose the NOPR assert that
removing compensation within the standard power factor range would
result in discriminatory treatment between generating facilities and
transmission owners. These commenters argue that, under the NOPR,
generating facilities would be prohibited from recovering their costs
to provide reactive power under Schedule 2, yet transmission owners
that install reactive power equipment and assets as part of their
transmission system would be able to recover the costs of those assets
through transmission rates charged to transmission service customers.
They contend that transmission owners would have guaranteed cost
recovery for the very same service that generating facilities would be
prohibited from collecting under this NOPR.\367\ ACORE asserts that
reactive power provides the same benefit to the system, regardless of
who owns the capacitor banks.\368\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\366\ ACORE Initial Comments at 3; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 8-9; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at
27; NEI Initial Comments at 2, 16; PSEG Initial Comments at 1-3, 17;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 63-64.
\367\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 25-27;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 64; PSEG Initial
Comments at 17; ACORE Initial Comments at 3.
\368\ ACORE Initial Comments at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
126. NEI and PSEG both argue that the 2005 Staff Report recognized
this discriminatory concern and contend that the Commission therefore
recommended that all providers of reactive power should be paid on a
nondiscriminatory basis.\369\ Reactive Service Providers add that
unless and until the Commission proposes to also eliminate the
opportunity for transmission providers to collect costs associated with
providing reactive service, the NOPR's proposal is per se
discriminatory and preferential, in violation of the FPA.\370\
Indicated Trade Associations suggest that by disincentivizing
generators from competing to provide reactive power service, the NOPR
creates a preference for higher-cost transmission solutions installed
by transmission owners, which will harm consumers.\371\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\369\ NEI Initial Comments at 16 (citing 2005 Staff Report at
4); PSEG Initial Comments at 17 (citing same).
\370\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 64.
\371\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 24-26;
Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 16; NEI Initial
Comments at 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
127. Relatedly, Reactive Service Providers and Indicated Trade
Associations assert that the NOPR raises competition concerns.\372\
Reactive Service Providers argue that even if the transmission provider
elects to no longer pay generating facilities for reactive power
service, the transmission provider will still be able to collect the
costs of generation-based reactive power service through retail
rates.\373\ Reactive Service Providers assert that this ``is a sweet
deal that allows the Transmission Provider to lean on the IPP to
provide the service for free under the [Commission]'s jurisdiction,
with the utility simply shifting to another forum to recover the same
generation-based costs.'' \374\ Reactive Service Providers argue that
the NOPR undermines the competition that the Commission sought to
facilitate in Order No. 2003, and while IPPs are disadvantaged by
losing a revenue stream, utility-generation is able to make that
revenue stream up through retail rates, thereby putting utility
generation in a stronger position to compete.\375\ To the extent that
reactive power service costs are recoverable by transmission owners
through state retail rates, NEI recognizes that such rates are outside
the Commission's jurisdiction.\376\ NEI asserts, however, that this
does not excuse the Commission from considering transmission owners'
ability to recover their reactive power costs at the state level when
the Commission is setting its own jurisdictional wholesale rates.\377\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\372\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 14;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 45-46
\373\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 45-46.;
Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 14 (arguing that
including reactive power costs in energy offers would increase a
generating facility's risk of not clearing in the energy market, and
that this risk is ``particularly acute in jurisdictions where
independent power producers compete with vertically integrated
utilities whose generators recover costs through state-
jurisdictional retail rates.'' (citations omitted)).
\374\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 46.
\375\ Id.
\376\ NEI Initial Comments at 16.
\377\ Id. at 16-17 & n.47. NEI asserts that the ``Commission
still has an obligation to consider whether wholesale rates (or as
here, proposed rates) are unduly discriminatory when considered in
relation to retail rates, even though the latter is not subject to
Commission jurisdiction.'' Id. (citing Fed. Power Comm'n v. Conway
Corp., 426 U.S. 271 (1976); Commonwealth Edison Co., 8 FERC ]
61,277, at 61,848 (1979); Sunoco, Inc. (R&M) v. Transcontinental Gas
Pipe Line Corp., 114 FERC ] 61,180 at P 28 & n.20 (2006)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 93438]]
128. NEI contends that the proposed replacement rate would result
in undue discrimination against nuclear generators by imposing
disproportionate burdens on them without fair compensation.\378\ NEI
states that the Commission has an obligation to consider whether the
proposed rates are unduly discriminatory, meaning that the Commission
must consider transmission owners' ability to recover their reactive
power costs at the state level.\379\ Elevate argues that the NOPR is
inconsistent with the spirit of Order No. 841, which required that
energy storage resources ``be eligible to provide services that the
RTOs/ISOs do not procure through an organized market mechanism (such as
blackstart service, primary frequency response service, and reactive
power service) if they are technically capable of providing those
services.'' \380\ Elevate argues that the unique physical and
operational characteristics of energy storage resources correspond with
the unique revenue profile of energy storage resources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\378\ Id. at 2.
\379\ Id. at 16-17.
\380\ Elevate Initial Comments at 12-13 (citing Elec. Storage
Participation in Mkts. Operated by Reg'l Transmission Orgs. & Indep.
Sys. Operators, Order No. 841, 83 FR 9580 (Mar. 6, 2018), 162 FERC ]
61,127, at P 79 (2018), order on reh'g, Order No. 841-A, 167 FERC ]
61,154 (2019)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
129. Indicated Trade Associations argue that the Commission must
ensure that it adopts comprehensive transition plans that account for
the specific market design and rules of each RTO/ISO and direct each
RTO/ISO to make filings identifying modifications to be made to
existing market rules to implement the NOPR.\381\ Indicated Trade
Associations contend that the Commission must clarify how generating
facilities will be compensated for reactive power dispatch outside the
standard power factor range and note that Consolidated Edison Company
of New York, Inc. requires newly connecting generating facilities to be
able to provide reactive power 0.85 lagging to 0.95 leading.\382\ The
NHA further argues that the Commission should allow individual RTOs/
ISOs to retain their reactive power compensation frameworks, as they
are better suited to address regional reliability needs, and to develop
compensation mechanisms to reflect locational needs.\383\ Reactive
Service Providers contend that there is no evidence that generating
facilities are being sited without respect to whether there is a
geographic need for reactive power, or that costs are no longer
commensurate with benefits.\384\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\381\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 30.
\382\ Id. at 31-32.
\383\ NHA Initial Comments at 5-7.
\384\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 31-34.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
130. Several commenters also submitted RTO/ISO-specific comments
addressing cost recovery. As discussed above, ISO-NE, NESCOE, NEPGA,
and NEPOOL argue that ISO-NE's Schedule 2 VAR compensation program
should not be disturbed.\385\ ISO-NE notes that the Commission denied
Maine Public Utilities Commission's complaint to only allow reactive
power compensation outside the power factor range, as VAR payments were
a ``negotiated value and is not equal to, nor is it intended to
recover, the cost of service of any particular generating Resource.''
\386\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\385\ ISO-NE Initial Comments at 1-2; NESCOE Reply Comments at
2; NEPGA Reply Comments at 6-7; NEPOOL Reply Comments at 6-7.
\386\ ISO-NE Initial Comments at 9-10 (citing Me. Pub. Util.
Comm'n v. ISO New England Inc., 126 FERC ] 61,090 (2009)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
131. NEPOOL explains that three factors specific to Schedule 2
contribute to the reliability benefits of reactive service in New
England: (1) the generator must be dispatchable and ready to respond to
the ISO's instruction to produce or absorb reactive power; (2) to be
designated as a Qualified Reactive Resource,\387\ a generator must have
automatic voltage regulation equipment and telemetry in place to enable
the ISO to determine that it is providing ``measurable dynamic reactive
power voltage support to the New England Transmission System''; and (3)
Schedule 2 requires reactive power testing of Qualified Reactive
Resources in accordance with the applicable ISO-NE Operating
Procedures.\388\ NEPOOL argues that these three factors show that any
final determination should allow flexibility for transmission
providers, such as ISO-NE, to maintain compensation mechanisms that pay
for reactive power across the full power factor range when payment is
contingent on the reactive power resource meeting enhanced reliability-
related requirements.
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\387\ In ISO-NE, a generating facility may submit a request,
including documentation, to ISO-NE to receive additional
compensation based on their verified leading and lagging reactive
capability. See ISO-NE Schedule 2, Sec. 3.1 (10.0.0).
\388\ NEPOOL Reply Comments at 9-11.
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132. NEPGA states that ISO-NE's wholesale energy and capacity
markets do not compensate for reactive power capability or costs, but
rather transmission rates compensate for reactive power capability
through ISO-NE's Schedule 2 rate design.\389\ NEPGA argues that the
Tariff provisions governing capacity market offers in ISO-NE do not
allow a generator to include the costs for providing reactive power in
its offer prices nor does the capacity market value reactive power
capability. Further, NEPGA states that ISO-NE's energy market offer-
price rules (both day-ahead and in real-time) likewise limit costs to
those necessary to produce real power versus reactive power. Therefore,
NEPGA contends that ISO-NE's wholesale markets do not, as the
Commission suggests, provide an opportunity to recover the costs of the
capability to provide reactive power and the actual costs to deliver
reactive power.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\389\ NEPGA Reply Comments at 4-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
133. NYISO states that it supports the NOPR's objective to avoid
administratively burdensome processes and procedures to determine
individualized cost-of-service reactive power rates for generation
facilities.\390\ As discussed above, NYISO and IPPNY argue that NYISO's
existing reactive power and VSS compensation structure, which uses a
flat dollars per MVAr-year structure, is just and reasonable.\391\
NYISO and IPPNY each assert that NYISO's flat rate compensation
structure for VSS has been effective for over 20 years, ensuring
adequate reactive power capability and system reliability in the New
York Control Area at a reasonable cost to consumers.\392\ NYISO
explains that the structure, accepted by the Commission since 1999, was
developed with stakeholder input and Commission approval, with
significant revisions in 2016 to include leading and lagging reactive
power capabilities.\393\ NYISO maintains that this structure aligns
costs directly with services provided, ensuring reliability benefits
commensurate with expenses.\394\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\390\ NYISO Initial Comments at 1.
\391\ Id. at 2; IPPNY Reply Comments at 1-2.
\392\ NYISO Initial Comments at 2; IPPNY Reply Comments at 1-2.
\393\ NYISO Initial Comments at 2-5.
\394\ Id.
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134. NYISO states that its flat rate compensation provides market-
like incentives, encouraging resources to offer reactive power cost-
effectively by rewarding increased capability and maintaining necessary
equipment.\395\ NYISO explains that this approach reduces the need for
complex, individualized cost-based payments and integrates reactive
power support efficiently into the broader market framework, promoting
economic efficiency and reliability.\396\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\395\ Id. at 7-8.
\396\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
135. NYISO contends that as the current system ensures direct
[[Page 93439]]
compensation for reactive power that is critical for maintaining system
reliability, altering the compensation mechanism could lead to
increased costs and complicate market operations, undermining the
efficiency and effectiveness of its existing framework.\397\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\397\ Id. at 8-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
136. NYISO emphasizes that as the resource mix evolves with more
asynchronous and renewable resources, its flexible compensation
structure is crucial for maintaining and enhancing reactive power
support.\398\ NYISO argues that this adaptability will ensure ongoing
system reliability amidst changing resource dynamics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\398\ Id. at 11-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
137. Lastly, NYISO and IPPNY each highlight the need for continued
flexibility in adjusting compensation rules to incentivize maximum
reactive power capability and minimize out-of-market commitments.\399\
NYISO contends that a uniform implementation approach is not suitable
given the varying regional needs and existing effective compensation
frameworks.\400\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\399\ Id. at 13-14; IPPNY Reply Comments at 2.
\400\ NYISO Initial Comments at 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
138. PJM states that the NOPR would largely eliminate a number of
problems that PJM and its stakeholder processes have identified. PJM
explains that given that PJM stakeholders have been unable to reach
consensus on a new rate paradigm after two years of work, PJM supports
the proposed reforms identified in the NOPR and encourages the
Commission to adopt them as proposed.\401\ As discussed further below,
PJM also proposes that RTOs/ISOs be allowed to implement any needed
conforming changes to their market rules as part of the compliance
process.\402\
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\401\ PJM Initial Comments at 3-4.
\402\ Id. at 6-7.
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139. The PJM IMM states that the NOPR would extend a just and
reasonable, pro competition policy to all jurisdictional markets and
public utilities while protecting PJM customers from unjust and
unreasonable charges for reactive capability that generation owners are
already required to provide.\403\ The PJM IMM also argues that power
suppliers, not customers, are responsible for the regulatory risk
related to their PPAs.\404\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\403\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1-2. See also id.at 4
(``[T]here is no reason that part of those capital costs should be
paid directly in a nonmarket, guaranteed, riskless revenue stream
rather than in the market.''); id. at 6 (``Elimination of the
reactive revenue requirement and the reactive revenue offset would
increase prices in the capacity market. The VRR curve, or demand
curve, would shift to the right, the maximum VRR price would
increase and offer caps in the capacity market would increase.'').
\404\ PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5 (``When buyers and sellers
enter into power purchase agreements, the contracting parties define
and assign regulatory risk. Customers are not responsible to manage
or pay for suppliers' risks.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
140. The PJM IMM adds that generating facilities in PJM incur other
obligations, such as primary frequency response, as a condition of
interconnection without separate compensation for such
obligations.\405\ The PJM IMM maintains that:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\405\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 8 (``Reactive power is not the
only design obligation that generation interconnection customers
assume. Generators are also obligated to provide primary frequency
response capability ``by installing, maintaining, and operating a
functioning governor or equivalent controls . . .'' Primary
frequency response capability is required for the reliable operation
of the system. The PJM OATT does not, however, provide for an out of
market payment for such capability. The provision of primary
frequency capability is treated as an obligation assumed by
generation interconnection customers for receiving interconnection
service.'') (citations omitted)); Id. at 9 (``The PJM OATT includes
a number of other obligations on generation interconnection
customers, many of which are important and impose costs, but does so
without including any special provisions for out of market
compensation.''); PJM IMM Reply Comments at 6 (``The fundamental
logic of the obligation to provide reactive service, frequency
control service and other essential elements of interconnecting to
the power grid is that the grid is a network. All generators who
connect to the grid benefit from that network effect. All generators
who connect to the grid have corresponding obligations to the grid
that permit the grid to function as an effective and reliable
network. It has always been the case that there are standards for
interconnecting to the network. Meeting those standards is part of
being a resource on the network. The actual costs of interconnecting
to the grid can be significant for resources but those costs are
part of the cost of building a resource and part of the investment
decision for resource owners and not a reason for a separate
guaranteed payment.'').
There is no evidence that units are built as a result of
reactive [power] revenue. There is no evidence that sources of
revenue are not fungible and that a decrease in reactive [power]
revenues could be not replaced with other sources of revenue. There
is no basis for adding new resources to the already very crowded
interconnection queue solely based on out of market subsidies from
reactive revenues.\406\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\406\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Commission Determination
141. Based on the record here, we adopt the NOPR's preliminary
findings and conclude that separate compensation for providing reactive
power within the standard power factor range is not necessary for
generating facilities to have the opportunity to recover their costs.
As explained above, for both synchronous and non-synchronous generating
facilities, real and reactive power are joint products, with joint
costs and there are no identifiable fixed costs incurred by generating
facilities to provide reactive power within the standard power factor
range beyond the investments in equipment already necessary to generate
and supply real power to the transmission system. Further, the record
demonstrates that there are at most de minimis variable costs, such as
fuel and maintenance costs, associated with providing reactive power
within the standard power factor range. Given that the primary function
of a generating facility is to produce real power, and that the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range is
necessary to the provision of real power, we find that a generating
facility's fixed and variable costs are appropriately recovered through
payments for real power, such as energy and/or capacity sales, whether
in organized or bilateral markets.\407\ Accordingly, we find that this
final determination does not prevent a generating facility from seeking
to recover its costs because resource owners have the opportunity to
recover any of their appropriate fixed and variable costs through other
revenue streams, including the opportunity to make up for lost
revenues, if any, from the cessation of reactive power
compensation.\408\ We find that such an
[[Page 93440]]
outcome is not only appropriate given the nature of the costs but also
more efficient because competition between generating facilities may
incentivize efficiency.\409\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\407\ We emphasize that our findings in this final determination
do not affect any party's filing rights under section 205 of the
FPA, including the right of generating facilities to seek cost
recovery for the provision of reactive power outside the standard
power factor range. See supra II.A.2.
\408\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1-2, 4, 6, 9, 12-
13; PJM IMM Reply Comments at 2-5; Joint Customers Initial Comments
at 16; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 16-17; Ohio FEA
Initial Comments at 3, 5; Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments
at 7-8; TAPS Initial Comments at 7-8; see also MISO Rehearing Order,
184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 42 (``On rehearing, we conclude that Vistra
has still not adequately explained why generators cannot include the
costs attributable to Reactive Service in energy offers or capacity
offers, even if subject to market power mitigation, . . . . As to
capacity offers, among the ``going forward'' costs that can be
recovered are ``mandatory capital expenditures necessary to comply
with federal . . . reliability requirements,'' which would appear to
include any (hypothetical) capital investments and expenditures
associated with Reactive Service capability. As to energy offers,
Vistra does not explain the basis for its assertion that the Tariff
bars including any incremental costs associated with Reactive
Service capability (e.g., fuel costs, short-term variable operations
and maintenance) in such offers. Moreover, while Vistra claims that
``a generation resource that attempts to recover its fixed costs of
reactive power through its energy or capacity offers runs the risk
that it will trigger application of MISO's market power mitigation
rules,'' even assuming this were correct, this would not preclude
generators from recovering such costs in the capacity market, but
rather would require that they verify the costs with the independent
market monitor. The cases Vistra cites also do not establish that
where Schedule 2 compensation for Reactive Service is not available,
seeking compensation through other mechanisms is impermissible.''
(citations omitted)).
\409\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 1-6, 9, 12-13; PJM IMM Reply
Comments at 2-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
142. We recognize, however, the current interplay between existing
reactive power revenue compensation mechanisms and energy and capacity
market rules in ISO-NE, NYISO, and PJM,\410\ and, as a result, the
RTOs/ISOs may request, by setting forth the specific bases and
reasoning therefore for the Commission's consideration an effective
date for their compliance filings that allows them to develop and
propose changes to their markets that are necessary in order to
accommodate this final determination's elimination of compensation for
the provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range.
As recognized in the NOPR and affirmed in the comments, the existing
capacity market rules in PJM, ISO-NE and NYISO reflect the existence of
generator payments under Schedule 2 through a revenue offset and reduce
capacity market revenues accordingly. For example, as PJM and the PJM
IMM explain, the PJM capacity market rules currently reflect a reactive
power revenue offset in both the market seller offer caps and the Net
Cost of New Entry (CONE) for the reference resource, which affects the
shape of PJM's capacity market demand curve. Therefore, both PJM and
the PJM IMM argue that the market rules will have to be revised to
reflect the impacts of this final determination.\411\ Similarly, NYISO
and ISO-NE may need to propose changes to market rules to reflect the
elimination of reactive power revenues resulting from this final
determination. Therefore, as discussed below, we recognize that ISO-NE,
NYISO, and PJM may need to develop and propose changes to their markets
that may be necessary to accommodate this final determination's
elimination of compensation for the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range.\412\ For the reasons explained above,
we also disagree with those commenters who argue that there is not
sufficient evidence to support the conclusion that energy markets or
capacity markets could or should be used to seek to recover the costs
currently recovered through payments for reactive power, as well as
those commenters that argue that because capacity and reactive power
service are separate products, their costs should likewise be recovered
separately under Schedule 2. Given the same equipment is used for real
and reactive power and the incremental variable costs of reactive power
service within the deadband are minimal, as explained in the section
above, we disagree with commenters' claims that costs, if any,
currently recovered through reactive power payments cannot be recovered
through other markets, especially given the transition period provided
in this final determination, which addresses concerns about existing
market rules that may impact cost recovery from those markets.\413\
Furthermore, our finding here is supported both by experience in CAISO,
SPP, MISO and certain non-RTO regions where generating facilities do
not receive compensation for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range, and the evidence in the record to
date.\414\ Specifically, experience and evidence demonstrate that: (1)
eliminating compensation has not led to an insufficient supply of
reactive power in those regions; and (2) generating facilities in these
regions have been able to recover their fixed and variable costs
through other means.\415\ For example, CAISO ``has seen no evidence to
this point that resources cannot comply with reactive power dispatch
instructions because they have insufficient funds for the equipment to
meet the reactive power dispatch.'' \416\ Rather, ``the lack of
separate reactive power compensation in CAISO or SPP means that all
costs have to be recovered through the applicable PPA, which also means
that those PPA prices are higher, all other variables being equal, than
they would otherwise be.'' \417\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\410\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6.
\411\ See PJM IMM Initial Comments at 6 (``Elimination of the
reactive revenue requirement and the reactive revenue offset would
increase prices in the capacity market. The VRR curve, or demand
curve, would shift to the right, the maximum VRR price would
increase and offer caps in the capacity market would increase.'').
\412\ See infra III.B.2.
\413\ See III.B.2; see, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ]
61,022 at PP 40-42; BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21 (finding that the
argument that it is not feasible for IPPs to recover their costs
through higher power sales rates ``lacks plausibility'' ``since the
incremental cost of reactive power service within the deadband is
minimal,'' and ``[t]he purpose for which generation assets are built
(including reactive power capability to maintain voltage levels for
generation entering the grid) is to make sales of real power''). See
also Joint Customers Initial Comments at 15 (``Generators have other
means of covering costs incurred to meet interconnection design
requirements.''); MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 16
(``As the Commission explains, compensation for providing reactive
power within the deadband is unnecessary, as resources are otherwise
able to recover their costs. The Commission is correct in finding
that there are many other mechanisms through which generators may
recover the costs of reactive power service, if they need to. This
is consistent with Commission precedent that has repeatedly
highlighted how generators have the opportunity to recover any
legitimate costs through other means. The Commission has found
generators may recover such costs through power purchase agreements
or capacity and energy market offers. As the Commission found when
accepting the elimination of reactive power compensation in MISO,
generators can still include the costs of reactive service in energy
offers or capacity offers, even if subject to market power
mitigation.'' (citations omitted)).
\414\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Initial Comments at 4 (``[T]here is no
reason that part of those capital costs should be paid directly in a
nonmarket, guaranteed, riskless revenue stream rather than in the
market.''); Joint Customers Initial Comments at 15 (``Generators
have other means of covering costs incurred to meet interconnection
design requirements.'').
\415\ AEP Initial Comments at 4-6; Joint Consumer Advocates
Initial Comments at 7-8; Joint Customers Initial Comments at 15-18;
Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 5 (``Through the PJM markets,
generators have an opportunity to recover all costs, including
reactive power costs.''). See also MISO Transmission Owners Initial
Comments at 15-17 (``The Commission is correct in finding that there
are many other mechanisms through which generators may recover the
costs of reactive power service, if they need to.'').
\416\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 48 (citing CAISO Initial
Comments to NOI at 5-6).
\417\ Id. (citing LRE/UCS Initial Comments to NOI at 16).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
143. We also find it of no consequence that a generating facility
participates in only the energy market, as no commenter has
demonstrated why these joint costs could not be recovered via energy
sales, as these costs are necessary for the production and delivery of
real power. However, as discussed herein, to the extent that current
RTO/ISO market rules require generating facilities to subtract their
separate revenue streams for reactive power from the avoidable costs
they are permitted to reflect in their capacity market offers, we
encourage RTOs/ISOs to propose any necessary conforming changes to
their market rules in section 205 filings accompanying their compliance
filings to this final determination.\418\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\418\ See PJM Initial Comments at 6-7; infra III.B.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
144. The NHA asserts that capacity markets are unequipped to
situate reactive power where it is most needed because capacity markets
do not allow for granular clearing prices based on specific geographic
locations. In turn, the NHA argues that RTOs/ISOs should instead
develop reactive power compensation rules to reflect locational
requirements.\419\ However, we find that generating facilities are
required to provide reactive power within the standard power factor
range as a matter of good utility practice and to meet the obligations
under their interconnection agreements under Order No. 2003,
[[Page 93441]]
regardless of location.\420\ For that reason, Order No. 2003 does not
contain a location-specific component for the provisions of reactive
power within the standard power factor range. Any additional reactive
power capability required to satisfy specific local reliability needs,
as well as the compensation for costs incurred to provide that
capability (e.g., capacitors, synchronous condensers), are for the
transmission provider to determine and are beyond the scope of this
final determination.\421\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\419\ NHA Initial Comments at 5-7.
\420\ See supra II.A.2; MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments
at 12-13 (``That series of orders required, among other things, that
interconnecting generators be able to provide reactive power within
the deadband without compensation.'').
\421\ See MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 15
(``Moreover, transmission providers have mechanisms for maintaining
system reliability in the face of premature retirements. When
generators advise MISO of a planned retirement via Attachment Y of
the MISO Tariff, MISO completes a review to determine whether any
Transmission System reliability concerns are caused by the
retirement. If voltage concerns arise in the Attachment Y study,
options to address the voltage concerns are reviewed and ultimately
a permanent solution is identified. If the permanent solution cannot
be implemented before the planned retirement date, then the MISO
Tariff has a designation for `system support resources,' under which
generators are eligible to receive cost-based compensation to
support their continued operation until an alternative solution to
the reliability problem posed by the resources' retirement is
developed.'' (citations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
145. In response to commenters \422\ who argue that generating
facilities will be unable to recover through their existing PPAs costs
that are currently recovered through separate reactive power payments,
the record lacks any concrete evidence showing whether, and to what
extent, generating facilities factored reactive power revenues into
their PPAs. Even if a generator were able to demonstrate that
eliminating compensation under our rule might impact some generating
facility's profitability, we do not believe that potential disrupted
expectations weigh in favor of a different outcome in this situation.
As a general matter, the risk of regulatory change is inherent in any
long-term PPA.\423\ Moreover, as explained above, because no generating
facility could have reasonably relied on an inherent right to separate
compensation for reactive power capability within the standard power
factor range since Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A (i.e., because such
compensation is required only to ensure ``comparability''), there has
always been some risk in relying on compensation, because market rules
can change.\424\ Indeed, developers and generating facilities have been
on notice since at least 2003 that the Commission regards reactive
power compensation within the standard power factor range as non-
compensable (other than where the comparability standard applies) --a
conclusion that was patent in those orders, and reinforced repeatedly
in subsequent Commission orders accepting transmission owner filings
under section 205 that eliminated reactive power compensation within
the standard power factor range.\425\ Additionally, the Commission
rejected reliance arguments in the MISO Rehearing Order \426\ and
PNM.\427\ We similarly find unsupported Generation Developers'\428\
concerns about energy markets being insufficient to recover fixed costs
and Indicated Trade Associations' \429\ concerns about not clearing the
energy market when including reactive power costs in energy market
bids. The record demonstrates that, in regions such as MISO, where
separate compensation for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range has been eliminated, generating facilities
continue to be developed, indicating that such developers believe there
to be sufficient opportunity to recover their costs, including any
costs associated with the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range.\430\ In light of this evidence, Indicated
Trade Associations' and Generation Developers' arguments that organized
markets do not provide sufficient opportunities for generating
facilities to recover their costs fall flat.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\422\ EDPR Initial Comments at 4-5; Generation Developers
Initial Comments at 19; Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 18; Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 59-
62.
\423\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5 (``When buyers and
sellers enter into power purchase agreements, the contracting
parties define and assign regulatory risk. Customers are not
responsible to manage or pay for suppliers' risks.'').
\424\ See MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 33
(``Sophisticated parties, like independent power producers, have the
ability to manage risks of this sort in entering long-term
arrangements rather than assuming that this compensation will be
available in perpetuity.'').
\425\ See, e.g., Nev Power Co., 179 FERC ] 61,103; PNM, 178 FERC
] 61,088 at PP 26-36; SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at PP 20, 30-33.
\426\ See MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 33
(``[W]e find that generators' assumption that such compensation will
continue to be available does not give rise to reliance interests
that justify requiring that such compensation continue to be
provided.'').
\427\ PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088 at P 33 (``[B]y designing its
generating facility to have the capability to provide reactive
support, Aragonne Wind is only meeting the conditions of
interconnection required of all generators and is not entitled to
compensation unless the transmission provider pays its own or
affiliated generators for reactive power within the established
range.'').
\428\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 18.
\429\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 14.
\430\ See MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 14
(``Moreover, all charges under Schedule 2 of the MISO Tariff for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
were eliminated in the MISO region effective December 1, 2022. MISO
has since experienced no reliability issues as a result and
generator interconnection applications, the first step of a process
that ends with execution of an interconnection agreement that
obligates the generator to provide reactive power within the
deadband, remain high.'' (citations omitted)).
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146. We agree with Generation Developers that ``[t]he Commission
has a statutory obligation to ensure that [Commission]-jurisdictional
rates are just, reasonable, and not unduly discriminatory or
preferential.'' \431\ Indeed, our actions here do nothing to deny
generating facilities their ``opportunity to recover their costs, plus
a reasonable rate of return.'' \432\ As noted above, generating
facilities have an opportunity to recover appropriately recoverable
fixed and variable costs through other markets, including the
opportunity to potentially make up for lost revenue from the cessation
of reactive power compensation within the standard power factor
range.\433\ And if market rules in RTOs/ISOs currently inhibit such
recovery, as discussed herein, we are permitting the RTOs/ISOs to
request additional time to update those market rules, as may be
appropriate and consistent with this final determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\431\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 6.
\432\ Id.
\433\ See, e.g., N. Am. Elec. Reliability Corp., 183 FERC ]
61,222 (2023) (explaining that the FPA requires only that
Commission-jurisdictional rates provide an opportunity for the
recovery of prudently incurred costs necessary to comply with
reliability standards--not that all entities have identical
outcomes) (citing ISO New England Inc., 132 FERC ] 61,044, at P 28
(2010) (``[R]esources are provided only an opportunity to recover
their costs, not a guarantee that they will recover those costs.'');
Bridgeport Energy, LLC, 113 FERC ] 61,311, at P 29 (2005) (``[T]he
Commission has no obligation in a competitive marketplace to
guarantee Bridgeport its full traditional cost-of-service. Rather,
in a competitive market, the Commission is responsible only for
assuring that Bridgeport is provided the opportunity to recover its
costs.'') (emphasis in original).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
147. Regarding ISO-NE's \434\ reliance on the Commission's denial
of the Maine Public Utilities Commission's complaint to support its
assertion that ISO-NE's reactive power scheme was, and continues to be,
just and reasonable, we acknowledge that our findings in this final
determination represent a change in policy from prior Commission
findings on compensation for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range. However, as discussed above, we find that
the record in this proceeding demonstrates that such a change is
appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\434\ ISO-NE Initial Comments at 10.
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[[Page 93442]]
148. We disagree with commenters' \435\ contention that eliminating
compensation for reactive power within the standard power factor range
would violate the cost causation principle. As discussed above, real
and reactive power are provided as joint products, with joint costs,
and are produced using the same equipment; therefore, a separate cost
compensation mechanism for the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range is not necessary.\436\ We are not persuaded
that eliminating compensation for reactive power within the standard
power factor range violates cost causation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\435\ ACORE Initial Comments at 3; Generation Developers Initial
Comments at 4, 9-12; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments
at 27; NEI Initial Comments at 2, 16; PSEG Initial Comments at 1-3,
17; Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 62-64; Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 9.
\436\ See II.B.2.
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149. Additionally, we disagree with claims that transmission
customers are the sole beneficiaries and cost-causers, as well as
assertions \437\ that eliminating compensation for reactive power
within the standard power factor range would insulate transmission
providers and customers from paying for any costs associated with the
services they are receiving--essentially requiring generating
facilities to recover the costs of reactive power from energy and
capacity market customers, rather than the transmission customers that
benefit from the reactive power service. These arguments fail because
they are inconsistent with Commission precedent that explains that
providing reactive power within the standard power factor range enables
generating facilities to reliably deliver real power to the
transmission system (i.e., make real power sales).\438\ In effect,
these costs are ``caused'' by the operating requirements of the
generating facilities to deliver real power, not by the separate needs
of the transmission customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\437\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 24-26;
Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 16; NEI Initial
Comments at 17.
\438\ See SPP Rehearing Order, 121 FERC ] 61,196 at P 15 (``As
we have previously explained, reactive power is required for an
interconnecting generator to deliver its power and reactive power
produced within the [standard power factor range] and is, therefore,
generally not compensable.'' (emphasis added)); BPA Rehearing Order,
120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21 (``The purpose for which generation assets
are built (including reactive power capability to maintain voltage
levels for generation entering the grid) is to make sales of real
power.''); see supra II.A.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
150. We similarly disagree with commenters'\439\ assertions that
eliminating compensation for reactive power within the standard power
factor range would result in undue discrimination between generating
facilities and transmission assets, where owners of the latter would
still have guaranteed recovery of their costs of reactive power assets
through transmission rates. The Commission has long held that reactive
power supply from transmission facilities is distinct from reactive
power supply from generating facilities, with the former constituting a
basic part of transmission service.\440\ This is because generating
facilities must produce reactive power within the standard power factor
range to allow the generating facilities' real power to reliably flow
onto the transmission system, while transmission provider investment in
capacitor banks is to control transmission system voltage levels to
provide reliable transmission service.\441\ These findings also address
similar arguments raised by NEI and PSEG.\442\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\439\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 24-27;
Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 64; PSEG Initial
Comments at 17; ACORE Initial Comments at 3; NEI Initial Comments at
2, 16.
\440\ Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,706
(``We accept NERC's identification of two ways of supplying reactive
power and controlling voltage. One is to install facilities, usually
capacitors, as part of the transmission system. We will consider the
cost of these facilities as part of the cost of basic transmission
service. Providing reactive power and voltage control in this way is
not a separate ancillary service. The second is to use generating
facilities to supply reactive power and voltage control. This use is
the service named here, which must be unbundled from basic
transmission service.'').
\441\ Id. (``NERC further distinguishes reactive supply services
based on the source of the need for the service: (1) reactive supply
needed to support the voltage of the transmission system; and (2)
reactive supply needed to correct for the reactive portion of the
customer's load at the delivery point.''); see also supra n.439.
\442\ NEI Initial Comments at 16 (citing 2005 Staff Report at
4); PSEG Initial Comments at 17 (citing same).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
151. Similarly, we find without merit Reactive Service Providers'
and Indicated Trade Associations' argument that transmission owners
that own generation will have a competitive advantage over IPPs by
virtue of their ability to recover their costs through retail rates.
Putting aside that commenters provide no support for their contention
that transmission owners that own generation will be able to recover
their reactive power costs through retail rates,\443\ the Commission
has rejected similar arguments on multiple occasions. In SPP and BPA,
the Commission explained ``that merchant generators are free to
negotiate rates that they charge their customers for real power that
are sufficient to compensate them for any costs that they may incur in
producing reactive power within their deadbands, just as affiliated
generators may seek to negotiate rates that they charge their customers
that are sufficient to compensate them for the costs of any reactive
power that they provide within their deadbands.'' \444\ The Commission
also observed that ``[i]n this regard, all that the protestors have
done is to note that an incumbent utility's generators may be able to
make up the revenue that they previously might have earned through a
separate charge for reactive power within the deadband in other ways--
such as through higher power sales rates. But merchant generators are
no differently situated and their ability to recover such costs has not
been compromised. They, equally, may be able to recover the costs for
reactive power within the deadband in other ways--such as through
higher power sales rates of their own.'' \445\ As in those other cases,
we believe that our action here ``maintains a level playing field for
all generators subject to Commission jurisdiction, such that
compensation for reactive power support is separately paid when
reactive power outside the deadband is dispatched to the point on the
transmission system where it is needed, and in the magnitude required
to ensure a stable grid.'' \446\
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\443\ SPP Order on Rehearing, 121 FERC ] 61,196 at P18
(``[T]ransmission owners' generators are not entitled to charge
retail customers retail rates that guarantee full recovery of their
costs; rather, they must first justify their rates to state
authorities'').
\444\ BPA, 120 FERC ] 61,211 at P 21 (citing SPP, 119 FERC ]
61,199 at P 39).
\445\ Id.
\446\ SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at P 38. See N. Am. Elec.
Reliability Corp., 183 FERC ] 61,222 (rejecting claims that
reliability standard gives vertically integrated utilities a
competitive advantage; explaining that, while the approval of the
new standard may have different implications for different entities
depending on their existing compensation mechanisms, the FPA
requires only that Commission-jurisdictional rates provide an
opportunity for the recovery of prudently incurred costs necessary
to comply with reliability standards--not that all entities have
identical outcomes).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
152. Regarding Elevate's assertion that Commission precedent,
including Order No. 841, requires compensation for any service that a
generating facility is technically capable of providing, we note that
many regions do not provide separate compensation for each obligation
of interconnection. For example, as the PJM IMM notes, generating
facilities in PJM are required to provide primary frequency response
and other essential transmission system services as a condition of
interconnection without a separate, dedicated revenue stream.\447\
Furthermore, as explained above,
[[Page 93443]]
generating facilities have an opportunity to recover their appropriate
fixed and variable costs through other markets, including the
opportunity to make up for lost revenue from the cessation of reactive
power compensation within the standard power factor range.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\447\ Supra n.415.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
153. Although ISO-NE and NYISO argue to maintain their existing
reactive power compensation schemes, as discussed above, these
arguments ignore the findings in this final determination, which apply
equally to flat-rate compensation regimes like ISO-NE's and NYISO's, as
to the compensation regimes of PJM and certain non-RTO regions. That
is, generating facilities incur no incremental fixed costs and at most
de minimis variable costs incremental to the cost of providing real
power, because no additional equipment is required to provide reactive
power and variable costs are limited to the fuel costs (in synchronous
facilities) or foregone direct current power (in non-synchronous
facilities) necessary to provide the reactive power required to safely
inject real power into the transmission system and comply with
reliability requirements.\448\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\448\ See, II.B.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
154. These commenters argue that transparency, administrative
burden, and preventing double recovery problems are reduced or
eliminated in either ISO-NE, NYISO, or both. However, all those
arguments suppose that compensation is due, and thus that a
compensation method is needed. But, if no separate compensation is due,
all compensation methodologies will necessarily result in unjust and
unreasonable rates.\449\ Furthermore, we agree with New England
Consumer Advocates,\450\ who argue that any payment for reactive power
capability within the standard power factor range must yield some
roughly commensurate incremental benefit above and beyond that which
would accrue absent payment.\451\ Given those arguments, transmission
customers in ISO-NE and NYISO, just like transmission customers in PJM
and non-RTO regions, do not receive benefits that are commensurate with
the costs of reactive power charges, even if the compensation methods
used in these regions are less administratively burdensome than the
methods used in other regions.\452\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\449\ See, II.A.2.
\450\ New England Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 5 (``To
the extent . . . benefits are achieved by compliance with a
generating facility's interconnection agreement and/or as `good
utility practice,' [New England Consumer Advocates] agree[] with the
Commission that ratepayers should not be paying separately for the
costs to produce a joint reactive power product.'').
\451\ See, e.g., supra n.140.
\452\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 5-6 (``The
Commission's policy of looking strictly to capability for
determining cost recovery for Reactive Service incentivized
overbuilding of capability beyond what was required based on
interconnection requirements. This policy of not considering need or
requiring a demonstration of need by the transmission owner has
resulted in compensation for reactive capability without an actual
demonstrated benefit to transmission system customers. This
disconnect between capability and any actual demonstrated benefit
highlights serious concerns that charges to customers are not
related to any benefits received.'' (citations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Reliability
155. The NOPR preliminarily found that ``compensation for providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range is unnecessary to
maintain reliability'' and that ``requiring transmission providers to
continue paying for reactive power already required by a generating
facility's interconnection agreement is not necessary to ensure that
generating facilities provide reactive power when required.'' \453\ In
addition to noting that multiple RTOs, ISOs, and non-RTO/ISO
transmission providers have elected not to compensate generating
facilities for the provision of reactive power within the standard
power factor range under Schedule 2 of the OATT,\454\ the NOPR observed
that CAISO has not seen major issues of concern with the level of
reactive power in its region despite not providing separate
compensation for reactive power within the standard power factor range.
The Commission also preliminarily found in the NOPR that requiring
transmission providers to continue paying for reactive power already
required by a generating facility's interconnection agreement is not
necessary to ensure that generating facilities provide reactive power
within the standard power factor range.\455\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\453\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 43 (citing Essential
Reliability Servs. & the Evolving Bulk-Power Sys. Frequency
Response, Order No. 842, 83 FR 9639 (Mar. 6, 2018), 162 FERC ]
61,128, at P 121, order on reh'g and clarification, 164 FERC ]
61,135 (2018) (``While the Commission has approved specific
compensation for discrete services that require substantial
identifiable costs, such as for frequency regulation and operating
reserves, the Commission has not required specific compensation for
all reliability-related costs. We agree with those commenters who
observe that minimal reliability-related costs such as those
incurred to provide primary frequency response, are reasonably
considered to be part of the general cost of doing business, and are
not specifically compensated.'')).
\454\ Id. P 15 (citing MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at PP 52-53; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 26; PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088,
at PP 29-31; Nev. Power Co., 179 FERC ] 61,103 at PP 20-21; BPA, 120
FERC ] 61,211 at P 20; E.ON U.S. LLC, 119 FERC ] 61,340 at P 15;
Entergy Servs., Inc., 113 FERC ] 61,040 at P 38); see also id. P 18
(noting that CAISO, SPP, and MISO do not pay separately for reactive
power within the standard power factor range).
\455\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
156. The NOPR sought comment on the reliability impact of
prohibiting transmission providers from including in their transmission
rates any charges associated with the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range from a generating facility in
regions where generating facilities currently receive such
compensation.\456\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\456\ Id. P 44.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Comments
157. Many commenters do not expect to see an impact on reliability
under the NOPR proposal.\457\ For example, ``MISO has not experienced
reliability concerns since December 1, 2022 due to the elimination of
compensation for reactive power within the standard power factor
range.'' \458\ Furthermore, several commenters observe that regions
like MISO, which implemented similar reforms, and CAISO, which does not
compensate for reactive power service, have not experienced related
reliability concerns.\459\ The PJM IMM argues that ``there is no
evidence that expanding the just and reasonable approach to
compensation already in place in CAISO, SPP, and MISO to PJM will have
any adverse impact on reliability in PJM'' and that ``[t]he salient
difference between PJM and CAISO, SPP, and MISO is that PJM customers
paid $388,044,837.00 in out of market payments for reactive capability
in 2023, and customers in CAISO, SPP and MISO, paid $0.00'' \460\ for
the same service. Joint Customers agree with the NOPR that the
Commission's ``precedent is crystal clear that compensation is not
required'' \461\ for
[[Page 93444]]
generators meeting interconnection requirements of providing reactive
service within the standard power factor range. In addition, MISO
Transmission Owners assert that eliminating reactive power compensation
will not adversely affect reliability because generators are required
to provide reactive power pursuant to their interconnection
agreements,\462\ NERC requirements,\463\ and Order No. 2003.\464\ Joint
Customers argue that there is a ``lack of concrete evidence of adverse
reliability impacts (including in regions where this exact change has
been implemented)'' in the record and the commenters' concern that ``if
there is not an unjustifiable free revenue stream ostensibly related to
reactive service and capability, there will not be sufficient
generation for real power and capacity at some unspecified point in the
future'' is ``speculative to the point of incoherence.'' \465\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\457\ See, e.g., Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6-
8; Joint Customers Reply Comments at 1-2; MISO Initial Comments at
2; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 12-16; New England
Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 4-5; Ohio FEA Initial
Comments at 4; PGE Initial Comments at 2-3; PJM IMM Initial Comments
at 11-12.
\458\ MISO Initial Comments at 2.
\459\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 2-6; MISO Initial
Comments at 2; MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 14-15;
TAPS Initial Comments at 5.
\460\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11-12.
\461\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 2; see also id. at 3
(``The Commission is, in fact, in an enviable position where the pro
forma revisions contemplated in the NOPR have recently been
implemented on a large regional scale. For the purposes of
establishing record support for the NOPR and addressing transition,
discussed below, the MISO proceeding essentially point by point
addresses the arguments recycled to oppose the NOPR. The same is
true with respect to the arguments concerning reliability, which
were extensively addressed in the MISO order and order on rehearing.
But with respect to reliability, MISO is dispositive not only for
its precedential value, but also in setting up a real-world test of
the countervailing predictions regarding the impact of eliminating
compensation for reactive service within the standard power factor
range.'' (citations omitted)); id. at 4 (``MISO's experience
validates the Commission's conclusions in approving the MISO
Transmission Owners' proposed tariff revisions, as well as the
Commission's skepticism regarding speculative warnings of
reliability impacts. It similarly validates PJM's support for the
NOPR and the conclusions of the PJM Independent Market Monitor that
amending Schedule 2 of the PJM Tariff will not lead to reliability
concerns.'' (internal citations omitted)).
\462\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 4-6; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 12-16; MISO Transmission Owners Reply
Comments at 3-4; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 4; PGE Initial
Comments at 2-4.
\463\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 12.
\464\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 6 (citing Order
No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at P 546; Order No. 2003-A, 106 FERC ]
61,220 at PP 410, 416).
\465\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 4-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
158. MISO Transmission Owners refute the claim that the
transmission system will face increased retirements due to the loss of
reactive power revenue by arguing that transmission providers have
mechanisms for maintaining system reliability in the face of premature
retirements.\466\ Relatedly, Joint Consumer Advocates, MISO
Transmission Owners, and TAPS each point to ample backlogs in generator
interconnection queues nationwide as protection against any threat to
reliability from eliminating reactive power compensation.\467\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\466\ Supra n.448.
\467\ Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 7-8; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 12-16; TAPS Initial Comments
at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
159. MISO Transmission Owners also counter fears \468\ of
inadequate incentives to make the necessary capital investments to
provide reactive power by explaining that generators are incented by
their own operating and reliability requirements to install the
equipment that is most likely to keep their projects online and
delivering real power.\469\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\468\ See, e.g., Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments
at 21.
\469\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 11 (citing
MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 35 n.116
(``[G]enerators have incentives to install equipment to ensure that
their generation remains online and delivering real power.'')).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
160. Other commenters express general reliability concerns under
the NOPR proposal.\470\ Commenters also argue that specific types of
resources especially benefit from reactive power revenue, including
energy storage,\471\ hydro,\472\ and nuclear.\473\ Elevate explains
that ``[b]ecause energy storage resources `have the capability to
operate at any power factor, they are exceptionally valuable as
reactive power resources.''' \474\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\470\ See, e.g., Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at
5; Elevate Initial Comments at 4-9; Elevate Reply Comments at 4-6;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 2-6; Indicated Trade
Associations Initial Comments at 18-19; NAGF Initial Comments at 2;
NEI Initial Comments at 2; NEPGA Reply Comments at 2-3 (citing ISO-
NE Initial Comments at 6-7); NESCOE Reply Comments at 2-3 (citing
ISO-NE Initial Comments at 5-8); NHA Initial Comments at 1-2, 4;
NYISO Initial Comments at 8-11; PSEG Initial Comments at 4-5, 8, 16-
20, 22-24; Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 22.
\471\ Elevate Initial Comments at 4-9; Elevate Reply Comments at
4-6.
\472\ NHA Initial Comments at 2.
\473\ Id. at 6.
\474\ Elevate Initial Comments at 5 (citing Meyersdale Storage,
LLC Proposed Revenue Requirement under PJM Interconnection, L.L.C.
Open Access Transmission Tariff, Schedule 2, Reactive Supply and
Voltage Control From Generation Sources Service, Docket No. ER21-
864-000, Exh. No. MEY-0001 at 11:19-22 (filed Jan. 11, 2021)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
161. Generation Developers argue that, without the reactive power
capability of generating facilities, transmission providers will need
to further invest in transmission equipment capable of providing
reactive support.\475\ Indicated Trade Associations assert that
eliminating a source of stable, expected reactive power compensation
could lead to more retirements.\476\ Relatedly, Indicated Trade
Associations also state that, while CAISO does not currently compensate
reactive power service, it has had to rely on reliability must-run
(RMR) agreements to maintain the needed reactive power.\477\ NEI
emphasizes the importance of reactive power, noting Chairman Wood's
statement that proper reactive power management would have ``delayed''
or possibly prevented the 2003 August blackout,\478\ and NERC's finding
that ``reactive power is critical to the reliable and efficient
operation of the power system.'' \479\ NEPOOL argues that payment for
reactive power broadens the base of resources willing to seek to become
Qualified Reactive Resources and support reliability in ISO-NE.\480\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\475\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 2-3.
\476\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 18-19;
Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 12.
\477\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 19-20.
\478\ NEI Initial Comments at 3 (citing Letter from FERC
Chairman Pat Wood, III, 1 (Feb. 4, 2005), https://www.ferc.gov/sites/default/files/2020-05/20050310144430-02-04-05-rp-letter-wood.pdf; 2005 Staff Report at 3 (``Inadequate reactive power has
led to voltage collapses and has been a major cause of several
recent major power outages worldwide.'')).
\479\ NEI Initial Comments at 3-4 citing NERC, Essential
Reliability Services Task Force Measures Framework Report 16 (Nov.
2015), https://www.nerc.com/comm/Other/essntlrlbltysrvcstskfrcDL/ERSTF%20Framework%20Report%20-%20Final.pdf.
\480\ NEPOOL Reply Comments at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
162. Indicated Trade Associations also argue that eliminating
compensation for reactive power service within the standard power
factor range will hamper generators' ability to provide reactive power
service outside the standard power factor range because such events do
not happen with enough regularity to warrant the capital costs
associated with such capability.\481\ Similarly, Indicated Trade
Associations argue that the increasing reliance on non-synchronous
resources makes it even more important to ensure that generators have
incentives to go beyond the bare minimum requirements outlined in their
interconnection agreements.\482\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\481\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 21.
\482\ Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
163. NYISO and IPPNY warn that transitioning away from NYISO's
current reactive power compensation structure could introduce
reliability risks and operational complexities.\483\ NYISO asserts that
its reactive power compensation supports electric system reliability
because it requires resources to undergo annual capability tests and
maintain automatic voltage control equipment to ensure consistent
reactive power support.\484\ NYISO explains that these resources
dynamically produce or absorb reactive power, supporting the electric
system within and beyond standard power factor ranges without operator
intervention. NYISO emphasizes that this automatic and
[[Page 93445]]
dynamic support is essential for maintaining system reliability.\485\
Reactive Service Providers explains that inverter-based generation can
and does provide VAR support even when no MW are sold.\486\ Generation
Developers and Reactive Service Providers highlight the pivotal role in
maintaining reliability that transmission providers with a dynamic
source of reactive power supply provide.\487\ NYISO is concerned that
eliminating compensation for reactive power within the standard power
factor range will introduce confusion among existing generators and new
generators, and, in the longer term, introduce reliability issues onto
the electric system.\488\ NYISO also believes that the final
determination will result in eliminating the price signals and
incentives for the reactive power necessary to maintain system
reliability, instead blending those costs and payments into payments
made to all capacity suppliers without a direct link to provision of
the reactive power necessary to support a reliable electric
system.\489\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\483\ NYISO Initial Comments at 8-11; IPPNY Reply Comments at 1-
2.
\484\ NYISO Initial Comments at 5-7.
\485\ Id.
\486\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 21-23.
\487\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 25; Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 21-23.
\488\ NYISO Initial Comments at 7.
\489\ Id. at 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
164. Elevate adds that international electric markets recognize the
importance of energy storage resources to maintaining long-term
transmission system reliability.\490\ For example, Elevate states that
in the United Kingdom, the National Grid Electricity System Operator
(ESO) has entered into a contract with the largest transmission system
connected battery project in Europe to provide reactive power support
services to maintain system voltages in the face of growing system
variability and the retirement of thermal generation resources. Elevate
states that the ESO entered this contract despite already providing
compensation to resources for providing or absorbing reactive power as
a condition of interconnecting and through regular solicitations to
secure resources to provide more reactive power than what is required
to interconnect to the transmission system.\491\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\490\ Elevate Reply Comments at 6-7 (citing Energy Storage News,
Europe's largest transmission-connected BESS begins `world first'
reactive power services contract, (Feb. 13, 2023), https://www.energy-storage.news/europes-largest-transmission-connected-bess-begins-world-first-reactive-power-services-contract/).
\491\ Id. at 7 (citing ESO, Obligatory Reactive Power Service,
https://www.nationalgrideso.com/industry-information/balancing-services/reactive-power-services/obligatory-reactive-power-service#Document-Library (last visited June 26, 2024); ESO, Enhanced
Reactive Power Service, https://www.nationalgrideso.com/industry-information/balancing-services/reactive-power-services/enhanced-reactive-power-service-erps#Document-library (last visited June 26,
2024)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Commission Determination
165. Based on our review of the record, and consistent with the
preliminary finding in the NOPR,\492\ we conclude that prohibiting
transmission providers from including in their transmission rates any
charges associated with the provision of reactive power from a
generating facility within the standard power factor range and thereby
eliminating compensation to generating facilities for reactive power
within the standard power factor range, would not negatively impact
reliability. The record in this proceeding affirms our preliminary
finding in the NOPR that requiring transmission customers to continue
paying for reactive power already required by a generating facility's
interconnection agreement is not necessary to ensure that generating
facilities provide reactive power when required, as new and existing
generating facilities are, and will continue to be, required to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range as a condition of
obtaining and maintaining interconnection.\493\ As commenters note,
these findings are supported by the fact that generating facilities in
CAISO, SPP, MISO, and certain non-RTO regions (e.g., BPA, Arizona
Public Service Company, Southern Companies) do not receive compensation
for reactive power capability within the standard power factor
range,\494\ and there is no evidence in the record that the lack of
reactive power compensation anywhere has led to an insufficient supply
of reactive power in those regions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\492\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 43.
\493\ Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6-8; Joint
Customers Reply Comments at 1-2; MISO Initial Comments at 2; MISO
Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 12-16; New England Consumer
Advocates Initial Comments at 4-5; Ohio FEA Initial Comments at 4;
PGE Initial Comments at 2-3; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 11-12. See
also Order No. 842, 162 FERC ] 61,128 (``[T]here are interconnection
requirements for generating facilities in which the recovery of
capital costs and operating expenses are not necessarily
ensured.'').
\494\ See, e.g, MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 (accepting MISO
transmission owners' proposal to eliminate compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range);
Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator Corp., 160 FERC ] 61,035 at P 19 (``[A]
separate payment for the provision of reactive power capability
inside the standard power factor range is not required, and we see
no reason to require a separate cost recovery mechanism for reactive
power capability based on the record here.''); PNM, 178 FERC ]
61,088 at P 29 (``Consistent with Commission precedent, a
transmission provider may decide to eliminate compensation for
having the capability of providing reactive service within the
standard power factor range.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
166. For these same reasons, we also find speculative and without
merit claims that elimination of compensation for reactive power within
the standard power factor range will mute investment in real and
reactive power capability, hasten generating facility retirements and/
or RMR agreements and as a result, negatively impact reliability and
require increased transmission provider investment in transmission
equipment capable of providing reactive support.\495\ We see no record
evidence supporting these concerns, and substantial record evidence to
the contrary. For example, CAISO stated that its current approach to
not compensate for reactive power provided within the standard power
factor range has not resulted in major issues of concern with respect
to the level of reactive power,\496\ and TAPS points out that
reliability has not suffered in regions in which reactive power in the
standard power factor range is not compensated, as confirmed by years
of experience in regions in which the absence of such compensation is a
long-standing practice.\497\ Reliability has not been weakened in those
regions because the Commission's 20 year old requirement that
interconnection customers have equipment to provide such reactive power
ensures that generating facilities can interconnect reliably.\498\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\495\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 5; Indicated
Trade Associations Initial Comments at 18-19; Indicated Trade
Associations Reply Comments at 12; NEPOOL Reply Comments at 12;
Elevate Initial Comments at 4-9; Elevate Reply Comments at 4-6; NEI
Initial Comments at 6, 15; NHA Initial Comments at 2, 4.
\496\ CAISO Initial Comments to the NOI at 5-6 (explaining that
despite the fact that it does not compensate for reactive power
within the standard power factor range, CAISO ``has seen no evidence
to this point that resources cannot comply with reactive power
dispatch instructions because they have insufficient funds for the
equipment to meet the reactive power dispatch''); MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 15 (``The claim that generators may have
to retire units in the absence of compensation for reactive power
service within the deadband is pure speculation. Prior to the
elimination of compensation for reactive power within the deadband
in MISO, a number of generators in MISO operated without
compensation for reactive power within the deadband as they did not
file their revenue requirements for reactive power when their
projects came on-line.'').
\497\ TAPS Initial Comments at 5.
\498\ See, e.g., Joint Customers Reply Comments at 6 (arguing
that there is a ``lack of concrete evidence of adverse reliability
impacts (including in regions where this exact change has been
implemented)'' in the record and that commenters' concern that ``if
there is not an unjustifiable free revenue stream ostensibly related
to reactive service and capability, there will not be sufficient
generation for real power and capacity at some unspecified point in
the future'' is ``speculative to the point of incoherence''); TAPS
Initial Comments at 5; MISO Initial Comments at 2 (explaining that
it would not expect to see any effect on reliability through
eliminating compensation for reactive power within the standard
power factor range and in fact, MISO has not experienced reliability
concerns since December 1, 2022 due to the elimination of
compensation for reactive power within the standard power factor
range). See also Order No. 842, 162 FERC ] 61,128 at P 121 (``While
the Commission has approved specific compensation for discrete
services that require substantial identifiable costs, such as for
frequency regulation and operating reserves, the Commission has not
required specific compensation for all reliability-related costs. We
agree with those commenters who observe that minimal reliability-
related costs such as those incurred to provide primary frequency
response, are reasonably considered to be part of the general cost
of doing business, and are not specifically compensated.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 93446]]
167. In response to the reliability concerns raised by ISO-NE and
NYISO, we find that their stated concerns are not specific to the
proposal being adopted in this final determination--that is, their
arguments are not limited to the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range--and as a result, we find their concerns
unpersuasive. ISO-NE and NYISO allude generally to reliability benefits
from reactive power compensation over the full range of a generating
facility's capability to provide reactive power. As such, ISO-NE's and
NYISO's comments appear to address the reliability implications of
eliminating reactive power compensation entirely--that is, eliminating
compensation both within and outside of the standard power factor
range--rather than the narrower focus of this final determination,
which addresses only the provision of reactive power within the
standard power factor range. However, as explained herein, the long-
existing obligation of generating facilities to provide reactive power
within the standard power range in order to reliably interconnect to
the transmission system remains unchanged, as do the rules regarding
the provision of reactive power outside the standard power factor
range, which is considered a compensable ancillary service for
transmitting power across the transmission system to serve load.\499\
We also reject arguments about the provision of reactive power service
beyond the requirements of generating facilities' interconnection
agreements,\500\ outside of the standard power factor range,\501\ and
Elevate's claims about the ESO's decision to double-compensate reactive
power service in the United Kingdom for similar reasons.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\499\ See, e.g., MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at P 23
(citing METC Rehearing Order, 97 FERC at 61,852-53).
\500\ Indicated Trade Associations Reply Comments at 12.
\501\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
168. We agree with NYISO's \502\ and others' \503\ statements about
the importance of reactive power to reliability, including statements
of dynamic reactive power sources,\504\ but we note that such
statements are equally true with or without reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor range. Once again, requiring
transmission customers to continue paying for reactive power within the
standard power factor range already required by a generating facility's
interconnection agreement is not necessary to ensure that generating
facilities provide reactive power when required, as new and existing
generating facilities are, and will continue to be, required to provide
reactive power within the standard power factor range as a condition of
obtaining and maintaining interconnection.\505\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\502\ NYISO Initial Comments at 5-7.
\503\ See, e.g., Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 6-
8; Joint Customers Reply Comments at 1-2; MISO Transmission Owners
Initial Comments at 12-16.
\504\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 25; Reactive
Service Providers Initial Comments at 21-23.
\505\ See supra II.B.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
169. In response to NEI's statements about the importance of
reactive power in the 2005 Staff Report,\506\ and NERC's Essential
Reliability Services Task Force Measures Framework report,\507\ we note
that the 2005 Staff Report also explains that ``[i]nvestment that
results in reactive power capability by generation facilities is driven
by interconnection requirements, historical inertia and potential cost
recovery for capacity. There is little interaction between the actual
system need or value of reactive power capability and its supply by
independent generation resources.'' \508\ Additionally, to support our
finding here, we are relying on more recent evidence, which indicates
that RTOs/ISOs and non-RTO regions that have eliminated compensation
for reactive power capability within the standard power factor range
are not experiencing any adverse reliability impacts due to absence of
reactive power compensation within the standard power factor
range.\509\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\506\ Supra n.508.
\507\ Supra n.509.
\508\ See 2005 Staff Report at 69; see also APS, 94 FERC at
61,080 (``We note that operating a generating unit within the
proposed [standard power factor range] does not affect the
generation output of a unit.'').
\509\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 13-14 (``When
the MISO Transmission Owners proposed to eliminate compensation for
producing reactive power within the deadband, the most common
protest from generators was that it would impact the reliability of
the grid. However, such claims are not supported by evidence and
distract from the underlying fact that generators are obligated to
provide reactive power within the deadband whether or not they are
compensated for it . . . MISO has since experienced no reliability
issues as a result and generator interconnection applications, the
first step of a process that ends with execution of an
interconnection agreement that obligates the generator to provide
reactive power within the deadband, remain high.'' (citations
omitted)); PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5 (``There is no evidence from
any of the markets where this policy already exists that it has
created a reliability issue.'').
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E. Investment
170. The NOPR sought comment on whether, and if so how, eliminating
separate reactive power compensation within the standard power factor
range may affect investment decisions to build, or finish building,
generating facilities, and whether, and if so, how the elimination
could otherwise affect generating facilities' business decisions in
those markets.\510\ The NOPR also noted that in MISO, the Commission
rejected any reliance arguments, reasoning in part that the provision
of reactive power within the standard power factor range required
little or no incremental investment.\511\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\510\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 49.
\511\ Id. P 16 (citing MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022
at P 29); MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 29-31
(finding that providing reactive service requires ``little or no
incremental investment'' by both synchronous and non-synchronous
resources); PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 151 FERC ] 61,097 at PP 7,
28 (finding that non-synchronous generating facilities are
comparable to traditional synchronous generating facilities, in that
there are for both types of generating facilities very little if any
incremental costs incurred to provide reactive power).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Comments
171. PGE argues that the NOPR proposal would not have a measurable
impact on investment decisions.\512\ MISO Transmission Owners also
reject the claim that the proposed rule will disincentivize investment
in new generating and storage resources.\513\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\512\ PGE Initial Comments at 5.
\513\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 3-7.
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172. However, several commenters claim that ending compensation for
reactive power service in the standard power factor range would have a
negative impact on investment. Many commenters claim that such an
action would be disruptive to generators and/or their investors, who
include forecasts of such compensation as the basis for financing
arrangements.\514\
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\514\ ACORE Initial Comments at 3-4; Calpine Initial Comments at
2; Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 4-5; Generation
Developers Initial Comments at 33; EDPR Initial Comments at 1, 3-4;
Elevate Initial Comments at 6; Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
Initial Comments at 13-14; Indicated Trade Associations Initial
Comments at 16; Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6; NEI
Initial Comments at 2, 5-6, 8; NHA Initial Comments at 4-5.
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[[Page 93447]]
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173. The PJM IMM maintains that:
There is no evidence that units are built as a result of
reactive [power] revenue. There is no evidence that sources of
revenue are not fungible and that a decrease in reactive [power]
revenues could be not replaced with other sources of revenue. There
is no basis for adding new resources to the already very crowded
interconnection queue solely based on out of market subsidies from
reactive revenues.\515\
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\515\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12-13.
174. Similarly, PGE notes that transmission providers that have
eliminated reactive power compensation have not observed a decrease in
proposed investment.\516\ MISO Transmission Owners assert that
Indicated Trade Associations' claim that reactive power revenue streams
can make the difference in overall profitability is unsupported by
evidence.\517\ Moreover, MISO Transmission Owners argue that investors
could not reasonably have relied on reactive power compensation within
the standard power factor range in perpetuity and should have
considered the risk of its elimination when making investment
decisions.\518\ Similarly, Joint Customers explain that to the extent
that generators voluntarily and unilaterally installed greater reactive
capability than that required by their respective interconnection
agreements, they did so at their own risk and for their own strategies,
none of which mean that they should continue to be compensated for
costs that they did not have to incur and which do not benefit
transmission customers.\519\
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\516\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 4-6.
\517\ Id. at 3.
\518\ Id. at 7.
\519\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 20.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
175. NEI, Calpine, Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers, and
Generation Developers argue that they relied on the Commission's
longstanding precedent and policy of allowing compensation for reactive
power within the standard power factor range in making their investment
decisions and suggest that the final determination would be highly
disruptive to market participants.\520\ PSEG asserts that the final
determination represents a significant departure from existing
Commission policy without an adequate explanation.\521\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\520\ NEI Initial Comments at 8; Calpine Initial Comments at 2;
Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 13;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 33-34.
\521\ PSEG Initial Comments at 4, 20-22 (citing PJM Providers
Grp. v. FERC, 88 F.4th at 271-72 (quoting FCC v. Fox Television
Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. at 515); Ass'n of Oil Pipe Lines v. FERC,
876 F.3d 336, 342 (D.C. Cir. 2017)).
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176. ACORE and Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers highlight the
costs and potential challenges of generators with PPAs who may be
unable to renegotiate those agreements to include costs related to
reactive power service.\522\ ACORE and Calpine argue that the NOPR
proposal would impede project development during a period of greater
need for generation resources.\523\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
states that the loss of reactive power compensation could lead to
generators not developing other projects because the revenue loss
impacts these projects' ability to leverage finite capital based on
this cash flow reduction.\524\ Middle River Power also claims that the
NOPR proposal may prompt investors to question the reliability and
stability of other Commission-approved rates and markets.\525\
Indicated Trade Associations argue that, given the narrow margins for
competitive generators, small reactive power revenue streams can make
the difference between whether a generator will be profitable over its
life or not.\526\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\522\ ACORE Initial Comments at 3-4; Indicated Reactive Power
Suppliers Initial Comments at 14.
\523\ ACORE Initial Comments at 3-4; Calpine Initial Comments at
2.
\524\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 13-
14.
\525\ Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6.
\526\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
177. Clean Energy Associations argue that the proposal is also
disruptive to a host of interconnection customers with operating or
near-completed projects and extant PPAs.\527\ Clean Energy Associations
also argues that the NOPR fails to consider IPP projects located in PJM
with reactive power rates that are the result of Commission-approved
settlements. Clean Energy Associations also argues that the Commission
has not adequately considered the fundamental differences between IPP
projects and projects that are utility-owned.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\527\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 4-5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Commission Determination
178. Based on the record, we find that there is substantial
evidence to support the conclusion that prohibiting the inclusion in
transmission rates of reactive power rates within the standard power
factor range will not have a significant impact on investment in new
generating facilities.\528\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\528\ See, e.g., MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 3-4,
5-7; PGE Initial Comments at 5; PJM IMM Initial Comments at 12-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
179. First, as stated above, generating facilities in CAISO, SPP,
MISO, and certain non-RTO regions do not receive compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor
range,\529\ and, as MISO Transmission Owners explain,\530\ there is no
evidence in the record that: (1) these policies have led to an
insufficient supply of reactive power in those regions, or (2)
generating facilities in these regions have been unable to recover any
costs associated with the provision of such reactive power. Because new
and existing generating facilities are required to provide reactive
service within the standard power factor range as a condition of
interconnection, eliminating compensation for providing that service
would not negatively impact investment.\531\
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\529\ See Cal. Indep. Sys. Operator Corp., 160 FERC ] 61,035 at
P 19 (``[A] separate payment for the provision of reactive power
capability inside the standard power factor range is not required,
and we see no reason to require a separate cost recovery mechanism
for reactive power capability based on the record here.''). See also
PNM, 178 FERC ] 61,088 at P 29 (``Consistent with Commission
precedent, a transmission provider may decide to eliminate
compensation for having the capability of providing reactive service
within the standard power factor range.''); Order No. 842, 162 FERC
] 61,128 (``[T]here are interconnection requirements for generating
facilities in which the recovery of capital costs and operating
expenses are not necessarily ensured.'').
\530\ MISO Transmission Owners Reply Comments at 3-4.
\531\ See, e.g., MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 55; MISO Rehearing
Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 35-36; see also MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 9-10 (``At the same time MISO was
experiencing a dramatic increase in the amounts transmission
customers paid for reactive power service prior to its elimination
of compensation for reactive power service within the deadband, SEIA
highlighted that MISO was one of the two `most lucrative' regions
for reactive power compensation, where generators received millions
of dollars in compensation for having the capability to produce
reactive power within the deadband, a capability that was already a
condition of obtaining interconnection.'' (citations omitted)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
180. Second, we also agree with the MISO Transmission Owners, who
note that because compensation for the provision of reactive power
within the standard power factor range has always been based on
comparability rather than compensability, ``[r]eactive power
compensation is not a given'' and that ``[t]he Commission has
consistently followed these principles, allowing transmission providers
across the nation to eliminate compensation for reactive power service
within the deadband.'' \532\
[[Page 93448]]
As previously noted, developers have been on notice since at least
Order No. 2003 and Order No. 2003-A that reactive power is not
compensable within the standard power factor range (other than for
comparability reasons), and so could not have relied, reasonably or
otherwise, on the permanence of such compensation for investment
purposes.\533\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\532\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 19. See also
Joint Customers Reply Comments at 6-7 (``Additionally, claims that
investors made decisions relying on the revenue stream associated
with the capability to provide reactive power within the deadband
fail to contend with the many instances in which the Commission
accepted transmission providers' elimination of compensation for
reactive power within the deadband. Sophisticated investors could
not reasonably have relied on compensation for providing reactive
power within the deadband in perpetuity, but rather should have
considered the risk of elimination of this revenue stream when
making investment decisions.'' (citations omitted)).
\533\ See BPA Rehearing Order, 125 FERC ] 61,273, at P 15 & n.24
(``[N]either affiliated nor non-affiliated generators have an
inherent right to any compensation for reactive power inside the
deadband.'').
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181. Third, to the extent that generating facilities may have
incurred costs by increasing their generating facilities' reactive
power capabilities beyond the requirements of their interconnection
agreements, we find that it is unreasonable to charge transmission
customers for these costs as they were not required for interconnection
and do not fit within the least justifiable cost to customers.\534\
Further, as noted herein, this final determination does not address
compensation for reactive power provided outside of the standard power
factor range, which will continue to be compensable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\534\ See Joint Customers Initial Comments at 20 (``To the
extent that generators voluntarily and unilaterally installed
greater reactive capability than that required by their respective
interconnection agreements, they did so at their own risk and for
their own strategies, none of which mean that they should continue
to be compensated for costs that they did not have to incur and
which do not benefit transmission customers.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
182. Fourth and finally, as discussed herein and further below,
generating facilities have other opportunities to recover any de
minimis variable costs of providing reactive power within the standard
power factor range, and this final determination establishes a
transition mechanism to give RTOs/ISOs time to adjust their market
rules to ensure that generating facilities continue to have such other
opportunities after this final determination.
183. Some commenters expressed general concerns about generating
facilities and investors relying on reactive power revenues for
planning purposes,\535\ including concerns of interconnection customers
with near-completed or operating projects, and extant PPAs,\536\ as
well as with IPP projects located in PJM with reactive power rates that
are the result of Commission-approved settlements.\537\ However, we
reiterate that in this final determination \538\ we have rejected any
reliance arguments, reasoning in part that the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range requires no incremental
investment or fixed costs and at most de minimis incremental variable
costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\535\ See, e.g., ACORE Initial Comments at 3-4; Calpine Initial
Comments at 2; Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 4-5;
EDPR Initial Comments at 1, 3-4; Elevate Initial Comments at 6;
Generation Developers Initial Comments at 33; Indicated Reactive
Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 14; Indicated Trade Associations
Initial Comments at 16; Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6;
NHA Initial Comments at 4-5.
\536\ See Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 5.
\537\ Id.
\538\ See supra II.C.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
184. Relatedly, Indicated Trade Associations \539\ argue that
narrow profit margins mean that the loss of reactive power revenues
could tip generating facilities out of profitability. We reiterate our
finding above that the variable and incremental costs of providing
reactive power within the standard power factor range requires no or at
most a de minimis increase in variable costs beyond the cost of
providing real power \540\ and that generating facilities can recover
any de minimis variable costs through other means. Additionally, no
commenter provided any evidence that the loss of reactive power
compensation would make a project that was otherwise profitable,
unprofitable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\539\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 16.
\540\ See supra II.B.2.
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185. Further, we disagree with PSEG's assertions that the NOPR
represents a significant departure from existing Commission policy
without an adequate explanation and refer PSEG to the evidence and
reasoning presented herein that we are relying upon in this final
determination.\541\ Consequently, we are revising the pro forma
Schedule 2, pro forma LGIA, and pro forma SGIA to prohibit the
inclusion in transmission rates of unjust and unreasonable charges
related to the provision of reactive power within the standard power
factor range by generating facilities. As courts of appeals have
articulated on several occasions, ``[t]he APA does not require
`regulatory agencies [to] establish rules of conduct to last forever,'
'' but rather, ``agencies may `adapt their rules and policies to the
demands of changing circumstances.' '' \542\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\541\ See supra II.A.2, II.B.2, II.C.2.
\542\ Solar Energy Indus. Ass'n v. FERC, 80 F.4th 956, 979 (9th
Cir. 2023) (citing Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of U.S., Inc. v. State
Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. at 43).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
186. Similarly, in response to Middle River Power's \543\ claims
about the reliability and stability of other Commission-approved rates
and markets, we note when the Commission finds that a rate is unjust
and unreasonable, as we do here, the Commission has not only the right
but the obligation under section 206 of the FPA to modify that rate in
order to ensure it is just and reasonable.\544\ As the PJM IMM,\545\
Joint Consumer Advocates,\546\ and Dr. Bremser,\547\ note the
Commission has previously changed compensation policies when it has
determined that existing practices were resulting in unjust and
unreasonable rates.\548\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\543\ Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6.
\544\ 16 U.S.C. 824e(a) (``Whenever the Commission, after a
hearing held upon its own motion or upon complaint, shall find that
any rate, charge, or classification, demanded, observed, charged, or
collected by any public utility for any transmission or sale subject
to the jurisdiction of the Commission, or that any rule, regulation,
practice, or contract affecting such rate, charge, or classification
is unjust, unreasonable, unduly discriminatory or preferential, the
Commission shall determine the just and reasonable rate, charge,
classification, rule, regulation, practice, or contract to be
thereafter observed and in force, and shall fix the same by
order.'').
\545\ PJM IMM Reply Comments at 6 (``Such attacks on the rules
and standards can be disregarded because they are collateral attacks
on final rules and standards that are not within the scope of this
proceeding. Reactive Service Providers arguments challenging
longstanding Commission policy and multiple Commission orders are
also beside the point.'').
\546\ Joint Consumer Advocates Initial Comments at 8
(``[S]ection 206 of the FPA requires that the Commission act to
eliminate unjust and unreasonable rates where and when it finds
them. There is no statutory authorization to allow an unjust and
unreasonable rate to continue.'')
\547\ Joint Customers Reply Comments, Reply Affidavit of Dr.
Albert W. Bremser at 4:1-3 (``My second conclusion is that permanent
reliance on [Commission]-jurisdictional practices as never changing
is not consistent with the typical experience of [Commission]-
jurisdictional entities and ratepayers.''; id. at 10:2-6 (``In terms
of reliance on Commission past practices or what the Commission has
allowed, it is my experience that the Commission can and does change
its practices and what it allows. This can impact the rates charged
to ratepayers and the rates collected by companies.'').
\548\ See, e.g., Indep. Mkt. Monitor for PJM v. PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C., 176 FERC ] 61,137 (2021); order on reh'g,
178 FERC ] 61,121 (2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Additional Comments
1. Comments
187. Ameren asserts that it was the right decision to eliminate
compensation for reactive power
[[Page 93449]]
capability in MISO, as evident by the numerous reactive power cases in
which Ameren intervened from 2018-2022 that were set for hearing and
settlement judge procedures, with resulting revenue requirements
reduced substantially from what the filing generator proposed, and in
some cases by over 50%.\549\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\549\ Ameren Initial Comments at 5 (citing Docket Nos. ER21-
1046, ER21-2329, ER21-2695, ER21-2892, ER22-526, ER22-616, ER22-615,
ER22-1554, ER22-1610, ER22-1815).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
188. The NHA asserts that individual RTOs/ISOs should develop and/
or improve upon reactive power capability compensation market rules to
reflect locational requirements.\550\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\550\ NHA Initial Comments at 6-7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
189. Indicated Trade Associations request that the Commission
clarify that the NOPR will not be applied in determining refunds in
cases where the Commission has established settlement and hearing judge
proceedings for reactive rates.\551\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\551\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 32.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
190. Indicated Trade Associations argue that the Commission should
not implement the NOPR proposal.\552\ Indicated Trade Associations
assert that the NOPR is not supported by the NOI record, which they
argue was focused on changes and improvements to the methodology used
to determine appropriate reactive power compensation, rather than the
NOPR's proposal to eliminate reactive power compensation within the
standard power factor range altogether.\553\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\552\ Id. at 1, 7.
\553\ Id. at 5-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
191. Glenvale avows that some generators provide reactive power
within the power factor range but outside of the requirements of their
interconnection agreements, such as solar generators that are not
synchronized to the transmission system but still provide reactive
power service.\554\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\554\ Glenvale Initial Comments at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
192. Clean Energy Associations also proposes their own reactive
power compensation format in which the Commission would develop a new,
objective, cost-based, technology-neutral rate for reactive power to
encourage the proliferation of reactive power resources in a non-
discriminatory way.\555\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\555\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 9-10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
193. Reactive Service Providers also argue that a 0.95
standard power factor range is arbitrary. As support, they claim that
it is not NERC-mandated, that many generating facilities are not
actually satisfying it, and that ``it is in essence a mandate to create
headroom if and when it is needed by the Transmission Provider.'' \556\
Reactive Service Providers argue that there is no difference
operationally between operating within and outside the standard power
factor range because that distinction does not reflect the operational
realities of an integrated transmission system, where the transmission
provider is ``balancing all resources instantaneously such that all
load everywhere benefits.'' \557\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\556\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 24-29.
\557\ Id. at 35-36.
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194. Clean Energy Associations asks that, should the Commission
proceed with its proposal, that the Commission should clarify that
interconnection agreements cannot adopt a standard power factor range
other than 0.95 leading and lagging and specify that compensation must
be provided for reactive power provided outside of the range.\558\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\558\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 2-3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
195. ACORE recommends that instead of removing all compensation
within the standard power factor range, a cost-based, technology-
neutral rate be established for reactive power, with a focus on
reducing the administrative burdens of the AEP Methodology.\559\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\559\ ACORE Initial Comments at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
196. Joint Customers highlight the burdens associated with the
individualized review of reactive rate filings arguing that it leads to
higher costs for customers without corresponding benefits and that the
case-by-case approach using the AEP Methodology is resource-intensive
and results in inconsistent outcomes.\560\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\560\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 7-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
197. Liberty states that it believes the current methodology has
resulted in ambiguity on cost formation and could lead to unjust rates
for customers.\561\ Liberty explains that it would generally support a
cost recovery methodology change that results in reasonable rates for
customers that are not duplicative in nature, in line with industry
standards, and sufficiently compensates reactive power capability
services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\561\ Liberty Initial Comments at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
198. Middle River Power argues that the AEP Methodology has
consistently produced just and reasonable rates for Middle River Power-
affiliated generation and others and that if administrative burden were
a problem that must be remedied, the solution would be to reform the
administrative process by which just and reasonable rates are
determined.\562\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\562\ Middle River Power Initial Comments at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
199. NEI suggests that the Commission should continue to support
the AEP Methodology.\563\ NEI notes that while there are implementation
challenges to the AEP Methodology, as highlighted by NEI previously,
such process-related concerns do not render it unjust and
unreasonable.\564\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\563\ NEI Initial Comments at 5.
\564\ Id. at 11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
200. TAPS argues that the AEP Methodology that many generators use
in their reactive power compensation filings, and which was derived
many years ago for synchronous generators, is not well-suited for non-
synchronous generators to which the methodology is now being
applied.\565\ For example, TAPS explains that TAPS members have found
it very difficult to verify the inputs to the AEP Methodology for a
specific generator based on publicly available data, because many
generators seeking compensation do not submit a FERC Form No. 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\565\ TAPS Initial Comments at 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Commission Determination
201. We appreciate the concerns raised by numerous commenters
requesting that we undertake various initiatives, as set forth above.
However, we find that the requested initiatives go beyond the scope of
this rulemaking, which addresses only compensation for reactive power
service within the standard power factor range. Accordingly, we will
not address those concerns here.
III. Compliance Procedures
A. Revisions To Eliminate Compensation for Reactive Power Supply Within
the Standard Power Factor Range
202. To effectuate the changes discussed herein, we are taking the
following four actions.
1. Revise Schedule 2 of the Commission's Pro Forma OATT
203. We revise Schedule 2 of the Commission's pro forma OATT to
include the following sentence at the end of Schedule 2: ``However,
such rates shall not include any charges associated with the
compensation to a generating facility for the supply of reactive power
within the power factor range specified in its interconnection
agreement.'' This revision prohibits separate compensation for the
provision of reactive power within the standard power factor range
specified in an interconnection agreement.
[[Page 93450]]
2. Revise Section 9.6.3 of the Pro Forma Large Generator
Interconnection Agreement
204. We revise section 9.6.3 of the pro forma LGIA to remove the
proviso: ``provided that if Transmission Provider pays its own or
affiliated generators for reactive power service within the specified
range, it must also pay Interconnection Customer.'' Accordingly, under
our proposal here, section 9.6.3 of the pro forma LGIA would read as
follows: ``Payment for Reactive Power. Transmission Provider is
required to pay Interconnection Customer for reactive power that
Interconnection Customer provides or absorbs from the Large Generating
Facility when Transmission Provider requests Interconnection Customer
to operate its Large Generating Facility outside the range specified in
Article 9.6.1. Payments shall be pursuant to Article 11.6 or such other
agreement to which the Parties have otherwise agreed.'' Along with the
other proposed revisions, this proposed revision prohibits a
transmission provider from including in its transmission rates any
charges associated with the supply of reactive power within the
specified power factor range from a generating facility. Accordingly,
transmission providers would be required to pay an interconnection
customer for reactive power only when the transmission provider
requests the interconnection customer to operate its facility outside
the power factor range set forth in its interconnection agreement.
3. Revise Section 1.8.2 of the Pro Forma Small Generator
Interconnection Agreement
205. We similarly are revising section 1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA
to remove the following sentence: ``In addition, if the Transmission
Provider pays its own or affiliated generators for reactive power
service within the specified range, it must also pay the
Interconnection Customer.'' Accordingly, under our proposal here,
section 1.8.2 of the pro forma SGIA would read as follows: ``The
Transmission Provider is required to pay the Interconnection Customer
for reactive power that the Interconnection Customer provides or
absorbs from the Small Generating Facility when the Transmission
Provider requests the Interconnection Customer to operate its Small
Generating Facility outside the range specified in article 1.8.1.''
4. Compliance Procedures
206. To effectuate these changes, we require each transmission
provider to submit a compliance filing as discussed below to make
changes to their Schedule 2s or other OATT provisions relating to
charges and payments for reactive power, as well as to their pro forma
LGIAs and pro forma SGIAs in their OATTs. To the extent that any
transmission provider believes that it already complies with the
reforms adopted in this final determination, the transmission provider
is required to demonstrate how it complies in the compliance filing
required 60 days after the effective date of the final determination.
In reviewing compliance filings proposed by non-RTO/ISO transmission
providers, the Commission will apply the ``consistent with or superior
to'' standard to deviations from the adopted pro forma Schedule 2 \566\
and to deviations from the pro forma LGIA and pro forma SGIA.\567\ In
evaluating compliance filings made by RTOs/ISOs, the Commission will
apply the ``consistent with or superior to'' standard to deviations
from the adopted pro forma Schedule 2 and the ``independent entity
variation standard'' to deviations from the pro forma LGIA and pro
forma SGIA.\568\
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\566\ See Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,760-
63.
\567\ See Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at PP 822-27; Order
No. 2006, 111 FERC ] 61,220 at PP 546-50).
\568\ See Order No. 888, FERC Stats. & Regs. ] 31,036 at 31,760-
63; Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103 at PP 822-27; Order No. 2006,
111 FERC ] 61,220 at PP 546-50).
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B. Transition Period
207. In the NOPR, the Commission proposed to require each
transmission provider to submit a compliance filing within 60 days of
the effective date of the final determination. The Commission further
proposed to allow 90 days from the date of the compliance filing for
implementation of the proposed reforms to become effective.\569\ The
NOPR sought comment on whether a transition period beyond the 90-day
implementation period proposed was necessary and for what duration any
transition period should last.\570\ Specifically, the NOPR asked if any
factors, such as potential business or investment impacts, should be
considered in determining whether any transition period is appropriate
and what transition mechanisms other than delaying the implementation
date of the final determination would minimize such disruptions.
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\569\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 54.
\570\ Id. P 56.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
208. The NOPR also sought comment on whether existing generating
facilities that have previously received compensation for reactive
power capability should be allowed to continue to receive compensation
for a limited period, as an interim rate during a transition period,
while prohibiting new generating facilities from receiving reactive
power capability compensation.\571\ The NOPR asks how it should
determine eligibility for continued compensation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\571\ Id.
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209. In addition, for regions that have an established capacity
market, the NOPR sought comment on whether transmission providers
should be allowed to make the implementation of their compliance filing
align with the region's capacity market timelines to allow costs
associated with reactive power production, if any, to be incorporated
into capacity market bids.\572\ For regions without a capacity market,
the NOPR sought comment on whether a different transition mechanism, if
any, would be necessary and whether it would be unduly discriminatory
or preferential to set different implementation dates for the final
determination in different markets and regions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\572\ Id.
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1. Comments
210. Several commenters who support the NOPR assert that no
transition beyond the 90-day transition period in the NOPR is
necessary.\573\ MISO Transmission Owners urge the Commission to neither
provide a transition period nor compensate generators that previously
received reactive power compensation for a limited period.\574\ MISO
Transmission Owners urge the Commission to adopt the NOPR's proposed
rule to be effective immediately.\575\ While Joint Customers oppose a
transition period, citing Commission policy and precedent,\576\ they
state that only a brief transition period, if any, is necessary for the
implementation of the NOPR reforms.\577\
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\573\ See PGE Initial Comments at 5; TAPS Initial Comments at 8;
PGE Initial Comments at 5.
\574\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 17-19.
\575\ Id. at 2.
\576\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 7-8 (citing PNM, 178
FERC ] 61,088 at P 32; MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 67; MISO
Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ] 61,022 at PP 32-33.)
\577\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 18-21.
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211. PGE states that it does not believe the decision to implement
these provisions in the 90-day implementation period will have a
measurable impact on business or investment decisions.\578\
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\578\ PGE Initial Comments at 5.
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212. Joint Customers and MISO Transmission Owners suggest that
[[Page 93451]]
generators should have made business or investment decisions in
anticipation of the potential elimination of reactive power within the
standard power factor range.\579\ Joint Customers explain that the move
towards these reforms has been ongoing for years, providing ample time
for market participants to adjust their investment strategies.\580\
Similarly, MISO Transmission Owners assert that generators have been on
notice of the prospect of the elimination of reactive power since Order
No. 2003 and reminded of it routinely since then.\581\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\579\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 9-10; MISO Transmission
Owners Initial Comments at 18-19 (noting that generating facilities
have been on notice of the prospect of the elimination of reactive
power compensation since Order No. 2003 and reminded of it routinely
since then).
\580\ Joint Customers Initial Comments at 21.
\581\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 18-19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
213. MISO Transmission Owners and TAPS both oppose a transition
period so that reduced rate relief can be provided to customers.\582\
MISO Transmission Owners emphasize that the Commission found that by
eliminating compensation for reactive power within the standard power
factor range MISO would ``reduce charges to MISO's transmission
customers.'' \583\ MISO Transmission Owners further state that the
Commission should not compensate generators that previously received
reactive power compensation for a limited period for such reasons.\584\
MISO Transmission Owners add that, under the current compensation
scheme, generating facilities are able to ``gold-plate their reactive
capabilities to the detriment of ratepayers,'' so the Commission
``should refrain from imposing any transition period or vintaging
carve-outs that allow capability-based compensation to continue.''
\585\ TAPS claims that customers, including TAPS members, have been
harmed by excessive reactive power compensation thus far and
accompanying inefficient, administratively burdensome, case-by-case
determinations.\586\ Therefore, TAPS argues against a transition period
because generators should no longer benefit from currently unjust and
unreasonable rates.\587\ Likewise, Joint Customers noted the Commission
has previously rejected the continuation of compensation beyond the
tariff effective date.\588\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\582\ Id.; TAPS Initial Comments at 8.
\583\ MISO Transmission Owners Initial Comments at 18 (citing
MISO, 182 FERC ] 61,033 at P 67; MISO Rehearing Order, 184 FERC ]
61,022 at P 55 n.186 (rejecting an argument that the Commission
should have declined to waive the 60-day notice requirement)).
\584\ Id.at 17-18.
\585\ Id. at 19.
\586\ TAPS Initial Comments at 8.
\587\ Id.
\588\ Joint Customers Reply Comments at 8.
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214. Calpine and Indicated Trade Associations oppose the NOPR
proposal and request that if the Commission were to move forward, the
Commission exempt existing resources, applying the proposed reforms
only to new resources. Calpine reasons that the Commission exempted
existing resources from new requirements in Order Nos. 827 and 842 and
that exemptions would support market stability and investments needed
for reliability.\589\ Indicated Trade Associations further assert that
in addition to existing resources, the exemption should also be allowed
for resources in advanced stages of development.\590\ Indicated
Reactive Power Suppliers state that Commission-approved cost-based
tariffs should last the remaining life, transfer of ownership, or
expiration of PPAs for existing resources.\591\ Middle River Power
requests that the Commission consider implementing a legacy rate
provision for generators that have existing reactive rate tariffs to
mitigate adverse impacts on its current investments and contends that
the Commission has a history of adopting similar measures under similar
circumstances.\592\ Reactive Service Providers state that the
Commission should consider grandfathering the agreements of existing or
near-completion generating facilities.\593\ Generation Developers argue
that the Commission should not eliminate reactive power compensation
for resources receiving compensation pursuant to a rate schedule or
tariff in effect prior to the effective date of any final determination
in this proceeding.\594\ EDPR also proposes that facilities which have
already concluded long-term PPAs but do not yet have an established
rate be allowed to prove that the long-term PPA for a facility seeking
reactive power compensation was executed prior to the issuance of the
NOPR.\595\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\589\ Calpine Initial Comments at 2-3.
\590\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 29-30.
\591\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 2;
Glenvale Initial Comments at 6-7.
\592\ Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6-7 (citing
Indicated Energy Trade Associations Initial Comments at 24; PJM
Interconnection, L.L.C., 110 FERC ] 61,053, at P 61, order on reh'g,
112 FERC ] 61,031 (2005) (finding it appropriate to grandfather
units for which construction commenced in reliance on a prior rule),
order on reh'g, 114 FERC ] 61,302 (2006); Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co., 62
FERC ] 61,062 (1993) (explaining that, the Commission had decided to
``grandfather'' prior storage arrangements ``in light of the fact
that . . . historical customers have already made their conversion
elections in reliance on access to this storage'')).
\593\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 67-76.
\594\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 33-34.
\595\ EDPR Initial Comments at 5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
215. In absence of an exemption for existing resources, or
grandfathering of existing rates and generator agreements, commenters
who oppose the proposal advocate for a transition period to comply with
the final determination. Eagle Creek \596\ recommends a transition
period of at least three to five years, Reactive Service Providers
\597\ a period of five years, and Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers
\598\ a period of seven to ten years respectively. Other commenters who
ask for a transition period include AEP, requesting at least 120
days,\599\ and ACORE, requesting a five to ten-year transition
period.\600\ Calpine \601\ and AEP \602\ both expressed concerns of
affected generators' ability to recover their costs as justification
for a transition period and cite times that the Commission has approved
of a transition period in the past.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\596\ Eagle Creek Initial Comments at 5.
\597\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 75-76.
\598\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 2-
3.
\599\ AEP Initial Comments at 7-8.
\600\ ACORE Initial Comments at 4.
\601\ Calpine Initial Comments at 4.
\602\ AEP Initial Comments at 7-8 (citing PJM Interconnection,
L.L.C., 117 FERC ] 61,331, at P 73 (2006) (``The adoption of a
transition period must strike a reasonable balance between the need
to implement RPM to generate relevant prices, and the provision of
some period to enable parties to understand and make adjustments to
the new market.''), order on reh'g, 119 FERC ] 61,318 (2007);
Midcontinent Independent System Operator, 180 FERC ] 61,141, at PP
248-249 (2022) (``The transition period appropriately balances the
need to implement the SAC methodology with the recognition that
resource owners and LSEs may need to adjust their operations--
including outage timing--and their contractual arrangements to
maximize their potential SAC values.''); PJM Interconnection,
L.L.C., 155 FERC ] 61,157, at PP 150-151 (2016) (accepting a phase-
in of PJM's capacity performance requirements as just and reasonable
because the benefits of providing relevant entities adequate time to
adjust Fixed Resource Requirement plans based on the new rules were
weighed in conjunction with the interest in applying the
requirements in an even-handed manner)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
216. EDPR proposes a 10-year transition period for existing rates
and PPAs. EDPR explains that it will under collect its revenues under
PPAs that include an offset for reactive power compensation.\603\
Therefore, EDPR proposes that facilities with an established reactive
rate schedule should be allowed to keep that established rate on file
during a 10-year transition period. Similarly, Reactive Service
Providers argue that the
[[Page 93452]]
Commission should allow PPAs to be reevaluated.\604\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\603\ EDPR Initial Comments at 3-4.
\604\ Indicated Reactive Power Suppliers Initial Comments at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
217. Glenvale requests that if cost recovery is not possible for
certain projects, the run-off for legacy projects be extended to 10
years. Glenvale explains that eligible projects would be those which
are unable to access revenue in the substitute market designated by the
Commission, and reasonably rely on the current tariff.\605\ Glenvale
claims that an extension would motivate these generators to build
technologies that both support the transmission system and are a low
cost to consumers.\606\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\605\ Glenvale Initial Comments at 5.
\606\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
218. Several commenters argue that a transition period is necessary
for RTOs/ISOs to implement the NOPR. The NHA explains that a transition
period would allow RTOs/ISOs to adjust their tariffs and market designs
accordingly.\607\ Generation Developers assert that the Commission
should direct RTOs/ISOs to propose a transition period that accounts
for discrepancies between implementation of any market rule changes and
when resources will be able to benefit from these changes.\608\
Similarly, NAGF states that a transition period specific to each market
based on their design and rules allows generators to evaluate lost
revenue, cost recovery options, and the possibility of retiring, all
while also providing time for planners to contemplate other generation
options.\609\ Clean Energy Associations ask that the Commission, should
it proceed with its proposal, implement a transition period that takes
into consideration regional and market differences.\610\ Additionally,
Indicated Trade Associations state that PJM, ISO-NE, and NYISO each
currently subtract expected energy and ancillary services revenues,
including reactive power revenues, from the Net CONE value used to
develop demand curves for capacity market auctions.\611\ Relatedly,
Reactive Service Providers explain that PJM, ISO-NE, and NYISO have
completed capacity auctions and assigned capacity obligations for years
from now and that the Commission cannot reopen those auctions to make
up for lost revenue.\612\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\607\ NHA Initial Comments at 9-10.
\608\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 35.
\609\ NAGF Initial Comments at 2.
\610\ Clean Energy Associations Initial Comments at 2-3, 9-10.
\611\ Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 14-15.
\612\ Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at 57.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
219. NYISO notes that shifting to event-specific reactive power
compensation only when a resource is instructed to operate outside its
standard power factor range would require complex market design rules--
including developing market rules, incorporating reactive power into
the NYISO's co-optimization of real power (i.e., energy to meet load),
operating reserves, and regulation service which would require
extensive software changes that would take years to develop and
implement based on current obligations and initiatives.\613\ PJM
requests that as part of their compliance filings implementing the new
rate paradigm, RTOs/ISOs be permitted to propose rules around testing,
monitoring, and penalties. PJM argues that this is to ensure that
generators provide the reactive power capability that they are required
to provide under their Commission-jurisdictional interconnection
agreements when called upon, as correctly identified in the NOPR.\614\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\613\ NYISO Initial Comments at 9-10.
\614\ PJM Initial Comments at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
220. NAGF \615\ and PJM \616\ both propose allowing transmission
providers the flexibility to propose effective dates on compliance that
will align with regional capacity market timelines. PJM further notes
that compliance dates should align with billing and settlements
timelines as well.\617\ In a similar manner, Calpine suggests that in
PJM, any new reactive service compensation policy should take effect no
sooner than the first delivery year of the first PJM capacity auction
administered under comprehensively updated new rules.\618\ NAGF
explains that alignment with capacity market timelines would allow
costs associated with reactive power production to be incorporated into
capacity market bids if the capacity market reforms permit recovery and
to allow generators to better evaluate their cost recovery process and
probability.\619\ Likewise, PJM argues that such timeline alignments
will permit generators currently receiving reactive power revenues to
continue to do so until the related offsets are removed from the
capacity market auction parameters.\620\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\615\ NAGF Initial Comments at 3.
\616\ PJM Initial Comments at 4-6.
\617\ Id. (requesting that ``transmission providers in regions
with centralized capacity markets such as PJM be permitted
flexibility to propose effective dates on compliance that will align
with applicable capacity market and billing and settlements
timelines'' to ``allow costs associated with reactive power
production to be incorporated into capacity market bids, and also
ensure alignment with applicable billing and settlements dates.'')
\618\ Calpine Initial Comments at 4 & n.7 (noting that the
Commission has recently approved a transition period associated with
PJM's implementation of generator interconnection reforms (citing
PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 181 FERC ] 61,162, at PP 8, 60
(2022))); PJM Initial Comments at 4-6 (explaining that a transition
period could be ``to permit generators who are currently receiving
reactive power revenues under Tariff, Schedule 2 to continue to do
so until the Delivery Year of the first Base Residual Auction
(``BRA'') where the removal of these reactive revenues from the
Energy and Ancillary Services (``E&AS'') offset can be reflected in
the auction parameters. This concept would be based on the idea that
these generators submitted their bids in prior auctions without the
knowledge that Tariff, Schedule 2 revenues would no longer exist,
which may have impacted the bids they ultimately submitted.'').
\619\ NAGF Initial Comments at 3.
\620\ PJM Initial Comments at 4-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
221. The PJM IMM recommends a transition period as short as
possible, emphasizing that a faster transition will speed up benefits
to customers and reduced revenues to generation owners.\621\ The PJM
IMM recommends reducing current approved rates under Schedule 2 that
exceed the E&AS Offset to the level of the E&AS Offset that was
applicable to the auctions for each RPM Delivery Year. The PJM IMM also
suggests that pending reactive filings submitted prior to the NOPR
proposal should not be approved exceeding the same aforementioned level
of the E&AS Offset. The PJM IMM proposes that the E&AS Offset be
reduced to zero dollars and removed from the rules immediately. As for
Schedule 2 to the PJM OATT, the PJM IMM believes it should be revised
to immediately remove the ability to file for new reactive capability
rates and then eliminated in its entirety effective at the start of the
first Delivery Year where the E&AS Offset included in the capacity
market base residual auctions for such Delivery Year is zero
dollars.\622\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\621\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 14.
\622\ PJM IMM Initial Comments at 15 (``Given the schedule for
upcoming capacity market auctions in PJM, the timing for the
transition will be a direct result of the effective date of a final
determination. Given this schedule, there will be a significant lag
before the Offset can be removed for an identified delivery year.
For example, if the effective date of the final determination were
March 1, 2025, the Offset could be eliminated and payments under
Schedule 2 eliminated effective June 1, 2027, the start of the
delivery year for the base residual auction scheduled to be run in
June 2025.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
222. The PJM IMM makes similar recommendations if PJM eliminates
the E&AS Offset as a component of the market seller offer caps in the
capacity market prior to the end of the proposed transition period: (1)
that the E&AS Offset be reduced to zero dollars and removed from the
rules immediately; (2) that Schedule 2 be eliminated from the
OATT.\623\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\623\ Id.
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[[Page 93453]]
223. PJM states that it would like flexibility to implement an
interim rate during the transition period.\624\ PJM notes that it
contemplates a number of different scenarios, including disallowing any
units without existing reactive power rate schedules to collect
reactive power revenue or an interim flat rate per MVAr of capability.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\624\ PJM Initial Comments at 4-6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Commission Determination
224. For all transmission providers in an RTO/ISO or non-RTO/ISO
region, we direct a compliance filing within 60 days of the effective
date of the final determination, including a proposed effective date
within 90 days from the date of the compliance filing, as proposed by
the NOPR.\625\ We find that the NOPR's proposal to only allow 90 days
from the date of the compliance filing for implementation of the
proposed reforms to become effective is appropriate. However, in
recognition of the concerns raised by commenters with respect to the
interplay between existing reactive power revenue compensation
mechanisms and energy and capacity market rules in ISO-NE, NYISO, and
PJM, we will permit those RTOs/ISOs to each request a later effective
date,\626\ for the Commission's consideration, in order to allow them
to develop and propose any changes to their market rules that may be
necessary in order to accommodate this final determination's
elimination of compensation for the provision of reactive power within
the standard power factor range. With any such request, the RTO/ISO
must affirmatively demonstrate why such a requested effective date is
necessary, given, for example, its existing market rules, and what
market rule changes the RTO/ISO believes may be needed to accommodate
this final determination. We find that this approach reasonably
balances concerns about expediently addressing unjust and unreasonable
transmission rates for reactive power with concerns raised by
commenters about existing cost recovery rules in the organized markets
and will ensure that the ability of generating facilities to seek any
appropriate cost recovery will not be impeded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\625\ NOPR, 186 FERC ] 61,203 at P 54.
\626\ Any RTO/ISO that proposes an effective date longer than 90
days from the date of the compliance filing must include an
indeterminate 12/31/9998 effective date in eTariff with their
compliance filing and must provide the Commission with an estimate
of when the changes will become effective and must make a filing
with the Commission if they are unable to meet their estimated
effective date. Further, the RTO/ISO must also notify the Commission
at least 7 days prior to the effective date of their proposed
changes so that Commission staff may make the required changes in
eTariff.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
225. This flexibility would accommodate the potential section 205
filings that some RTOs/ISOs mentioned may accompany any final
determination compliance filings, such as PJM's adjustments to market
rules to remove the offset in auction parameters as well as ``propose
rules around testing, monitoring, and penalties, to ensure that
generators actually provide the reactive power capability that they are
required to provide under their Commission-jurisdictional
interconnection agreements when called upon.'' \627\ The Commission
welcomes these and similar section 205 filings to adapt markets to
accommodate the final determination as well as to clarify each RTO's/
ISO's compensation scheme for reactive power service outside of the
standard power factor range, if necessary.\628\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\627\ PJM Initial Comments at 7.
\628\ Generation Developers Initial Comments at 34-35
(``Additionally, as part of any compliance filings submitted in
response to a final rule in this proceeding, the Commission should
require RTOs and [ISOs] to make revisions to their tariffs
eliminating existing barriers to the recovery of reactive power
costs through sales of other products. This would include, for
instance, requiring RTOs/ISOs with organized capacity markets to
revise their tariffs to permit resources to accurately reflect their
investment in reactive power in their capacity offers. The
Commission also should require RTOs/ISOs to revise their market
power mitigation frameworks to permit generation resources to
reflect reactive power costs in their cost-based energy curves.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
226. We decline to adopt a transition period in non-RTO/ISO regions
beyond the 90-day implementation period proposed in the NOPR. Some
generating facilities in non-RTO/ISO regions contend that the
compliance period should extend until the termination of existing PPAs
or request that we require all PPAs to be reevaluated to cover the
foregone revenue. As explained above, the record lacks any concrete
evidence showing whether, and to what extent, generating facilities
factored reactive power revenues into their PPAs. And even if a
generating facility were able to demonstrate that eliminating
compensation under our rule might impact some generating facility's
profitability, which they have not, we do not believe that potential
disrupted expectations weigh in favor of a different outcome in this
situation. As a general matter, the risk of regulatory change is
inherent in any long-term PPA.\629\ Moreover, as explained above, we
are skeptical of any purported reliance interests given that generating
facilities have not had an inherent right to separate compensation for
reactive power capability within the standard power factor range since
Order Nos. 2003 and 2003-A (i.e., because such compensation is required
only to ensure ``comparability''). Finally, developers and generating
facilities have been on notice since at least 2003 that the Commission
regards reactive power compensation within the standard power factor
range as non-compensable (other than where the comparability standard
applies)--a conclusion that was patent in those orders, and reinforced
repeatedly in subsequent Commission orders accepting transmission owner
filings under section 205 that eliminated reactive power compensation
within the standard power factor range.\630\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\629\ See, e.g., PJM IMM Reply Comments at 5 (``When buyers and
sellers enter into power purchase agreements, the contracting
parties define and assign regulatory risk. Customers are not
responsible to manage or pay for suppliers' risks.'').
\630\ See, e.g., Nev Power Co., 179 FERC ] 61,103; PNM, 178 FERC
] 61,088 at PP 26-36; SPP, 119 FERC ] 61,199 at PP 20, 30-33.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
227. We disagree with commenters who request that generating
facilities with reactive rates on file prior to the effective date of
the final determination be provided legacy treatment.\631\ Given that
the Commission finds above that allowing transmission providers to
compensate generating facilities, affiliated and unaffiliated, for
providing reactive power within the standard power factor range has
resulted in unjust and unreasonable transmission rates, it would raise
undue discrimination concerns to continue to provide payment through
Schedule 2 for reactive power supply within the standard power factor
range to generating facilities with rates already on file when those
rates have been found to be unjust and unreasonable.\632\ Although
commenters point to other situations where the Commission has provided
legacy treatment for existing rates, in those situations the existing
rate had not been found to be unjust and unreasonable.\633\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\631\ Calpine Initial Comments at 2-3; EDPR Initial Comments at
5; Generation Developers Initial Comments at 33-34; Glenvale Initial
Comments at 6-7; Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at
29-30; Middle River Power Initial Comments at 6-7; Reactive Service
Providers Initial Comments at 67-76.
\632\ See Dynegy Midwest Generation, Inc. v. FERC, 633 F.3d
1122.
\633\ See, e.g., Reactive Service Providers Initial Comments at
67-76 (citing Order No. 2003, 104 FERC ] 61,103; Order No. 661, 111
FERC ] 61,353; Order No. 827, 155 FERC ] 61,277; Order No. 2023, 184
FERC ] 61,054; Cal. Indep. Sys. Op., 124 FERC ] 61,031, at PP 12,
13, 20 (2008); Midcontinent Independent System Operator, Inc., 158
FERC ] 61,003, at PP 44, 45, 59 (2017); Sw. Power Pool, Inc., 167
FERC ] 61,275, at P 19 (2019)) (noting that ``[i]t is common for the
Commission to allow grandfathering of existing agreements and rate
schedules when making sweeping industry changes,'' that the
Commission ``has long implemented new Tariff rules in view of the
economic impact to late-stage projects,'' and ``woven throughout
each transition period ordered by the [Commission] is a need to
carefully balance interests and preserve the expectations of the
parties'')); Indicated Trade Associations Initial Comments at 29-30
(citing PJM Interconnection, L.L.C., 110 FERC ] 61,053 at P 61;
Tenn. Gas Pipeline Co., 62 FERC at 61,306) (noting that when the
Commission eliminated an exemption from market power mitigation, the
Commission provided legacy treatment for units that commenced
construction in reliance of the rule)).
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[[Page 93454]]
IV. Information Collection Statement
228. The Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) regulations
require approval of certain information collection requirements imposed
by agency rules. Upon approval of a collection(s) of information, OMB
will assign an OMB control number and an expiration date. Respondents
subject to the filing requirements of a rule will not be penalized for
failing to respond to these collections of information unless the
collections of information display a valid OMB control number.
229. This final determination will amend the Commission's
regulations pursuant to section 206 of the FPA, to eliminate
compensation to generating facilities for the provision of reactive
power within the standard power factor range set forth in each
generating facility's individual interconnection agreement. To
accomplish this, the Commission proposes to require each transmission
provider to amend the pro forma LGIA, the pro forma SGIA, and Schedule
2 in its OATT to implement the reforms proposed in this final
determination. Such filings should be made under Part 35 of the
Commission's regulations. Subsequently, the final determination would
revise the following currently approved information collections: FERC
516H (OMB control. No. 1902-0303): Pro Forma Open Access Transmission
Tariff, FERC 516 (OMB control No. 1902-0096): Electric Tariff Filings,
and FERC 516A (OMB control No. 1902-0203): Standardization of Small
Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures [SGIA and SGIP].
230. The Commission is submitting these reporting requirements to
OMB for its review and approval under section 3507(d) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act. Comments are accepted on whether the information will
have practical utility, the accuracy of provided burden estimates, ways
to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected, and any suggested methods for minimizing the respondent's
burden, including the use of automated information techniques.
231. Please send comments concerning the collection of information
and the associated burden estimates to: Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street
NW, Washington, DC 20503, Attention: Desk Officer for the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission. Due to security concerns, comments should
be sent electronically to the following email address:
[email protected]. Comments submitted to OMB should refer to
OMB Control No. 1902-0303, 1902-0096, or 1902-0203.
232. Please submit a copy of your comments on the information
collection to the Commission via the eFiling link on the Commission's
website at https://www.ferc.gov. If you are not able to file comments
electronically, please send a copy of your comments to: Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, Secretary of the Commission, 888 First Street
NE, Washington, DC 20426. Comments on the information collection that
are sent to FERC should refer to Docket No. RM22-2-000.
233. Title: FERC 516H: Pro Forma Open Access Transmission Tariff,
FERC 516: Electric Tariff Filings, and FERC 516A: Standardization of
Small Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures [SGIA and
SGIP].
234. Action: Revision of the information collection in accordance
with Docket No. RM22-2-000.
235. OMB Control No.: 1902-0303, 1902-0096, 1902-0203
236. Respondents for this Rulemaking: Public utility transmission
providers, including RTOs/ISOs.
237. Frequency of Information Collection: One-time compliance
filing.
238. Necessity of Information: The final determination will require
that transmission providers submit to the Commission a one-time
compliance filing proposing tariff revisions.
239. Internal Review: The Commission has reviewed the changes and
has determined that such changes are necessary. These requirements
conform to the Commission's need for efficient information collection,
communication, and management within the energy industry in support of
the Commission's ensuring just and reasonable rates. The Commission has
specific, objective support for the burden estimates associated with
the information collection requirements.
240. Public Reporting Burden: The Commission's estimate consists of
our estimated effort related to updating the proposed revisions to the
pro forma OATT, and subsequent revisions to the pro forma LGIA and pro
forma SGIA, and the effort related to submitting a one-time compliance
filing.
241. The Commission estimates burden \634\ and cost \635\ as
follows:
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\634\ ``Burden'' is the total time, effort, or financial
resources expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, or
disclose or provide information to or for a Federal agency. For
further explanation of what is included in the estimated burden,
refer to 5 CFR 1320.3.
\635\ Commission staff estimates that the respondents' skill set
(and wages and benefits) for Docket No. RM22-2-000 are comparable to
those of Commission employees. Based on the Commission's Fiscal Year
2024 average cost of $207,786/year (for wages plus benefits, for one
full-time employee), $100/hour is used.
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C. Annual
B. Number of number of D. Total E. Average burden Hrs. & F. Total annual Hr. burdens G. Cost per
A. Collection respondents responses per number of cost per response & total annual cost respondent
respondent responses
(Column B x (Column D x Column E)........ (Column F /
Column C) Column B)
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FERC 516H: Pro Forma Open Access Transmission Tariff
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Transmission Providers (Schedule 2 40 1 40 4 hrs.; $400.............. 160 hrs.; $16,000............ $400
one-time compliance filing).
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FERC 516: Electric Tariff Filings
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Transmission Providers (pro forma 43 1 43 4 hrs.; $400.............. 172 hrs.; $17,200............ 400
LGIA one-time compliance filing).
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[[Page 93455]]
FERC 516A: Standardization of Small Generator Interconnection Agreements and Procedures
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Transmission Providers (pro forma 43 1 43 4 hrs.; $400.............. 172 hrs.; $17,200............ 400
SGIA one-time compliance filing).
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Totals........................ ............ ............... ............ .......................... 504 hrs.; $50,400............ ............
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V. Environmental Analysis
242. The Commission is required to prepare an Environmental
Assessment or an Environmental Impact Statement for any action that may
have a significant adverse effect on the human environment.\636\ We
conclude that neither an Environmental Assessment nor an Environmental
Impact Statement is required for this final determination under Sec.
380.4(a)(15) of the Commission's regulations, which provides a
categorical exemption for approval of actions under sections 205 and
206 of the FPA relating to the filing of schedules containing all rates
and charges for the transmission or sale of electric energy subject to
the Commission's jurisdiction, plus the classification, practices,
contracts, and regulations that affect rates, charges, classification,
and services.\637\
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\636\ Reguls. Implementing the Nat'l Env't Pol'y Act, Order No.
486, 52 FR 47897 (Dec. 17, 1987), FERC Stats. & Regs. Preambles
1986-1990 ] 30,783 (1987) (cross-referenced at 41 FERC ] 61,284).
\637\ 18 CFR 380.4(a)(15).
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VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
243. The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA) \638\ generally
requires a description and analysis of proposed rules that will have
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) sets the threshold for what
constitutes a small business. Under SBA's size standards,\639\
transmission providers under the category of Electric Bulk Power
Transmission and Control (NAICS code 221121), have a size threshold of
950 employees (including the entity and its associates).\640\
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\638\ 5 U.S.C. 601-612.
\639\ 13 CFR 121.201.
\640\ The RFA definition of ``small entity'' refers to the
definition provided in the Small Business Act, which defines a
``small business concern'' as a business that is independently owned
and operated and that is not dominant in its field of operation. The
Small Business Administrations' regulations at 13 CFR 121.201 define
the threshold for a small Electric Bulk Power Transmission and
Control entity (NAICS code 221121) to be 500 employees. See 5 U.S.C.
601(3) (citing to Section 3 of the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C.
632).
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244. We estimate that there are 43 transmission providers that are
affected by the reforms proposed in this final determination, based on
the NERC Active Compliance Registry Matrix as of January 11, 2024.\641\
The Commission used a combination of sources to determine the number of
employees within each entity using open-source data and information
provided by Dunn & Bradstreet. We estimate that 6 of the 43
transmission providers, approximately 14% (rounded), are small
entities.
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\641\ NERC, NCR Active Entities List, (Jan. 12, 2024),
NERC_Compliance_Registry_Matrix_Excel.xlsx.
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245. We estimate that one-time costs (in Year 1) associated with
the reforms proposed in this final determination for one transmission
provider (as shown in the table above) would be $1,200 to submit the
compliance filing. Following Year 1, the Commission estimates no
ongoing costs associated with this final determination.
246. According to SBA guidance, the determination of significance
of impact ``should be seen as relative to the size of the business, the
size of the competitor's business, and the impact the regulation has on
larger competitors.'' \642\ We do not consider the estimated cost of
$1,200 to be a significant economic impact for any of the entities that
would be impacted by this final determination. As a result, we certify
that the reforms proposed in this final determination would not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
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\642\ U.S. Small Business Administration, A Guide for Government
Agencies How to Comply with the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 18 (Aug.
2017), https://cdn.advocacy.sba.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/21110349/How-to-Comply-with-the-RFA.pdf.
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VII. Document Availability
247. In addition to publishing the full text of this document in
the Federal Register, the Commission provides all interested persons an
opportunity to view and/or print the contents of this document via the
internet through the Commission's Home Page (https://www.ferc.gov).
248. From the Commission's Home Page on the internet, this
information is available on eLibrary. The full text of this document is
available on eLibrary in PDF and Microsoft Word format for viewing,
printing, and/or downloading. To access this document in eLibrary, type
the docket number excluding the last three digits of this document in
the docket number field.
249. User assistance is available for eLibrary and the Commission's
website during normal business hours from FERC Online Support at 202-
502-6652 (toll free at 1-866-208-3676) or email at
[email protected], or the Public Reference Room at (202) 502-
8371, TTY (202)502-8659. Email the Public Reference Room at
[email protected].
VIII. Effective Date and Congressional Notification
250. These regulations are effective January 27, 2025. The
Commission has determined, with the concurrence of the Administrator of
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB, that this rule
is not a ``major rule'' as defined in section 351 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.
By the Commission. Commissioner Chang is not participating.
Issued: October 17, 2024
Debbie-Anne A. Reese,
Secretary.
Note: The following appendices will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Appendix A: Abbreviated Names of Commenters
[[Page 93456]]
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Abbreviation Commenter(s)
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ACORE........................ American Council on Renewable Energy.
AEP.......................... American Electric Power Service
Corporation.
Ameren....................... Ameren Service Company.
Calpine...................... Calpine Corporation.
Clean Energy Associations.... Solar Energy Industries Association
(SEIA) and American Clean Power
Association.
C T Gaunt.................... Dr. Charles Trevor Gaunt.
Eagle Creek.................. Eagle Creek Reactive Generators.
EDPR......................... EDP Renewables North America LLC.
Elevate...................... Elevate Renewables F7, LLC.
Generation Developers........ Vistra Corp. and Dynegy Marketing and
Trade, LLC.
Glenvale..................... Glenvale LLC.
IPPNY........................ Independent Power Producers of New York,
Inc.
Indicated Reactive Power KMC Thermo, LLC, Bitter Ridge Wind Farm,
Suppliers. LLC, Guernsey Power Station LLC, Moxie
Freedom LLC, Safe Harbor Water Power
Corporation, BIF III Holtwood LLC,
Brookfield Power Piney & Deep Creek LLC,
Erie Boulevard Hydropower, L.P., Carr
Street Generating Station, L.P., Bear
Swamp Power Company LLC, Brookfield
White Pine Hydro LLC, Brookfield
Renewable Trading and Marketing LP, and
Reworld Waste, LLC f/k/a Covanta.
Indicated Trade Associations. Electric Power Supply Association, The
PJM Power Providers Group the New
England Power Generators Association,
Inc., Independent Power Producers of New
York, Inc., the Coalition of Midwest
Power Producers.
ISO-NE....................... ISO New England Inc.
Joint Consumer Advocates..... Illinois Attorney General, Illinois
Citizens Utility Board, Maryland Office
of People's Counsel, the New Jersey
Division of Rate Counsel, the North
Carolina Utilities Commission Public
Staff, the Office of the People's
Counsel for the District of Columbia,
and the West Virginia Consumer Advocate
Division of the Public Service
Commission.
Joint Customers.............. Old Dominion Electric Cooperative,
Northern Virginia Electric Cooperative,
Inc., and Dominion Energy Services, Inc.
on behalf of Virginia Electric and Power
Company d/b/a Dominion Energy Virginia.
Liberty...................... Liberty Utilities.
Middle River Power........... Middle River Power LLC.
MISO......................... Midcontinent Independent System Operator,
Inc.
MISO Transmission Owners..... Ameren Services Company, as agent for
Union Electric Company d/b/a Ameren
Missouri, Ameren Illinois Company d/b/a
Ameren Illinois, and Ameren Transmission
Company of Illinois; Arkansas Electric
Cooperative Corporation; City Water,
Light & Power; Cooperative Energy;
Dairyland Power Cooperative; East Texas
Electric Cooperative; Entergy Arkansas,
LLC; Entergy Louisiana, LLC; Entergy
Mississippi, LLC; Entergy Texas, Inc.;
Great River Energy; Indianapolis Power &
Light Company; Lafayette Utilities
System; MidAmerican Energy Company;
Minnesota Power (and its subsidiary
Superior Water, L&P); Missouri River
Energy Services; Montana-Dakota
Utilities Co.; Northern States Power
Company, a Minnesota corporation, and
Northern States Power Company, a
Wisconsin corporation, subsidiaries of
Xcel Energy Inc.; Northwestern Wisconsin
Electric Company; Otter Tail Power
Company; Prairie Power, Inc.; Southern
Indiana Gas & Electric Company (d/b/a
CenterPoint Energy Indiana South); and
Southern Minnesota Municipal Power
Agency.
NAGF......................... North American Generator Forum.
NEPGA........................ New England Power Generators Association,
Inc.
NEPOOL....................... New England Power Pool.
NESCOE....................... New England States Committee on
Electricity.
New England Consumer Office of Massachusetts Attorney General
Advocates. Andrea Joy Campbell, the Connecticut
Office of Consumer Counsel, the Maine
Office of Public Advocate, the New
Hampshire Office of Consumer Advocate,
and the Rhode Island Division of Public
Utilities and Carriers
NEI.......................... Nuclear Energy Institute.
NYISO........................ New York Independent System Operator,
Inc.
NHA.......................... National Hydropower Association.
Ohio FEA..................... Ohio Office of the Federal Energy
Advocate of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
Onward Energy................ Onward Energy Holdings, LLC.
PGE.......................... Portland General Electric Company.
PJM.......................... PJM Interconnection, L.L.C.
PJM IMM...................... Monitoring Analytics, LLC, acting in its
capacity as the Independent Market
Monitor for PJM.
PSEG......................... Public Service Electric and Gas Company,
PSEG Power LLC, and PSEG Energy
Resources & Trade LLC, and each wholly-
owned, direct or indirect subsidiaries
of Public Service Enterprise Group
Incorporated.
Reactive Service Providers... CIP, D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments,
L.L.C., Invenergy Renewables LLC,
Leeward Renewable Energy, LLC,
Lightsource Renewable Energy Operations,
LLC, NextEra Energy Resources, LLC,1
[Oslash]rsted Wind Power North America,
LLC, and RWE Clean Energy, LLC.
TAPS......................... Transmission Access Policy Study Group.
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[FR Doc. 2024-24528 Filed 11-25-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717-01-P