Oregon Administrative Rules
Chapter 330 - DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Division 160 - ESTABLISH A RENEWABLE ENERGY CERTIFICATE SYSTEM FOR THE OREGON RENEWABLE PORTFOLIO STANDARD (RPS)
Section 330-160-0090 - Metering, Monitoring, and Reporting of Qualifying Thermal Energy
Universal Citation: OR Admin Rules 330-160-0090
Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 9, September 1, 2024
In order to be eligible to generate T-RECs, a facility must meet all the requirements of this Rule. Qualifying thermal energy must be measured, monitored, and reported using the following methods:
(1) Metering:
(a) Large facilities: For facilities with the
capacity to generate one or more T-RECs per hour of operation (3.412 million
Btu/hr), the generator representative must have installed a thermal energy
measurement system to continually measure qualifying thermal energy. The
thermal energy delivered to the secondary purpose must be metered. All
parameters needed to determine thermal energy to the secondary purpose must be
directly measured.
(b) Small
facilities: For facilities with the capacity to generate less than one T-REC
per hour of operation (3.412 million Btu/hr), the generator representative must
have installed a thermal energy measurement system to measure qualifying
thermal energy delivered to the secondary purpose. Calculation parameters, such
as heat capacity, and directly measured parameters, such as temperature and
pressure, that do not vary more than +/-2% for the full range of expected
operating conditions, may be evaluated on an annual basis and used in the
calculation methodology as a constant. These parameters may be based on such
sources as manufacturers' published ratings or one-time measurements, but must
be clearly defined and explained in the thermal energy measurement plan
required under Subsection(e). All other parameters used to determine the amount
of qualifying thermal energy must be continually measured. The generator
representative must assess the significance of the potential error that the
methodology parameters have on the total annual quantity of qualifying thermal
energy and include this analysis in the thermal energy measurement plan. The
generator representative must also submit to the Department for approval in the
thermal energy measurement plan an appropriate discount factor to be applied to
the qualifying thermal energy calculation methodology, and the Department may
revise this discount factor as it considers appropriate to account for variance
due to parameters that are not continually measured.
(c) The thermal energy measurement system
must capture sufficient data, and make necessary calculations or provide all
necessary data for calculations to be made using standard engineering
calculation procedures, to determine the net thermal energy used by the
secondary purpose over an interval specified in the thermal energy measurement
plan.
(d) Measurement system
components must be installed in accordance with the manufacturer's
specifications.
(e) The generator
representative must submit to the Department a thermal energy measurement plan
that describes the thermal energy generating equipment, secondary purposes,
data measurements to be collected, all associated measurement devices, data
formats and storage, data gathering techniques, measurement system calibration,
calculation methodology, discount factors, and other relevant equipment and
activities that will be used to determine the quantity of qualifying thermal
energy. The generator representative must also submit all necessary
documentation, including drawings, specifications, piping and instrumentation
diagrams, and other information as requested by the Department for system
review. The thermal energy measurement system must be reviewed and approved by
the Department as part of the certification of a facility as Oregon
RPS-eligible.
(f) The generator
representative must submit an updated measurement plan and documentation for
review and approval to the Department upon the following:
(A) Changes in the configuration of the
thermal energy measurement system;
(B) Installation or removal of thermal energy
measurement system components;
(C)
Installation of new thermal energy generation equipment or changes in thermal
energy generation capacity; or
(D)
Installation or removal of secondary purpose equipment, changes to secondary
purpose use, or changes the secondary purpose maximum thermal energy demand;
(E) Observations that indicate the
thermal energy measurement system is not performing in accordance with the
thermal energy measurement plan.
(2) Monitoring
(a) Where continual measurements are required
to determine the quantity of qualifying thermal energy, the generator
representative must take data readings at least once per hour or more
frequently as necessary to capture irregular or frequently varying parameters.
For all facilities, the qualifying thermal energy produced shall be totaled for
each 24 hour period, each month, and each quarter.
(b) The generator representative must retain
measured data and related thermal energy calculations on-site for 5 calendar
years and make records available for audit as required by the Department.
(c) Prior to measuring qualifying
thermal energy for the purpose of generating T-RECs, the generator
representative must perform, or have performed, an initial calibration of the
thermal energy measurement system and all associated measurement devices, or
demonstrate that a calibration has been performed as specified by system
component manufacturers or within the last 365 days of the application date for
certification as Oregon RPS-eligible. All measurement devices shall be
recalibrated annually or as specified by system component manufacturers to
maintain specified accuracy. Calibrations must be performed using the
calibration procedures specified by the meter manufacturer, calibration methods
published by a consensus-based standards organization, or other industry
accepted practice.
(d) Individuals
designing, installing, operating, and maintaining the thermal energy
measurement system must have appropriate training and certification. The
generator representative must maintain documentation of maintenance and
calibration activities.
(3) Reporting must be conducted in accordance with all WREGIS reporting requirements.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 469.040, 469A.130, OL 2016, Ch. 28
Stats. Implemented: ORS 469A.010 - 469A.025, 469A-130 - 469A.145, OL 2016, Ch. 28
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Oregon may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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