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<title>March 2004: Grid Poker</title>
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    <p align="left"><font face="Arial"><strong><small>About The Author:<br>
	<br>
	</small></strong><span lang="X-NONE" style="color: black"><font size="2">
	ROGER FELDMAN, Co-Chair of Andrews Kurth LLP Climate Change and Carbon 
	Markets Group has practiced law related to the finance of environmental and 
	energy projects and companies for 40 years.&nbsp; In particular, he has analyzed 
	and executed a wide variety and substantial value of project financings.&nbsp; He 
	chairs the American Bar Association&#8217;s Committee on Carbon Trading and 
	Finance, serves on the Board of the American Council for Renewable Energy, 
	and has been a senior official in the Federal Energy Administration.&nbsp; He is 
	a graduate of Brown University, Yale Law School and Harvard Business School.</font></span></font></p>
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    <img src="../images/feldman.gif" alt="Washington Viewpoint by Roger Feldman" border="0" width="375" height="75"><p><b><u><br>
      </u></b><u><b>March 2004</b></u></p>
    <p align="center"><font size="6"><b>Grid Poker</b></font></p>
    <p><strong>by Roger Feldman&nbsp; -- &nbsp; Bingham, Dana L.L.P.<br>
    </strong><font face="Arial" size="2">(<em>originally published by PMA OnLine 
    Magazine: 2</em>004/04/24)<br>
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    &nbsp;</span></p>
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    <p>We must look beyond the poker games being played now to where the great 
    pots will be in the future. Grid poker is the future.<br>
    <br>
    It has become clear that the continued momentum of restructuring and the 
    competitive model has stalled. The commonly accepted wisdom is that we are 
    re-entering the era of re-regulation of vertically integrated utilities, 
    overseen by regulators re-focused on integrated resource planning. In 
    effect, the commonly accepted wisdom is that we are entering the age of the 
    policy rollback. It is a very Newtonian notion: for every revolution there 
    is a counter-revolution. The New Order giveth way the Old. <br>
    <br>
    But this overlooks two realities, one political and one corporate. For 
    consumers and voters &#8211; and therefore ultimately regulators and legislators &#8211; 
    what the power business is &#8220;really&#8221; about are blackouts, national security 
    concerns and support for domestic economic competitiveness. As a 
    technological matter, what that common sense perception translates into is 
    the need for a &#8220;smarter&#8221; electrical system that is interactive, secure and 
    self healing in emergencies.<br>
    <br>
    The Newest Order not only needs to be, but possibly will be, a pragmatic 
    focus on &#8220;distributed energy&#8221;: operating the grid better and smarter in the 
    future to alleviate the shortcomings which deregulation revealed in the 
    system infrastructure (notably T&amp;D), and to control future generation needs 
    and costs through measures as diverse as demand response, load management 
    and technologies meant to operate the grid better and smarter in the future. 
    This is not just a shift in attention from one end of the integrated system, 
    generation, to the other transportation. Nor is it an effort to reign in 
    &#8220;Big Power&#8221; by focusing on conservation not production. It is a measured 
    embrace for basic scientific reasons of a new approach toward keeping our 
    power system up with our computerized society.<br>
    <br>
    Right now the high rollers are in the private room buying and selling 
    existing generation assets. Buying and selling wires is a secondary game. Of 
    course it is recognized that what assets will be worth will be a function of 
    the grid to which they are interconnected. Regulatory attention therefore 
    already is on rationalizing grid system regulation.<br>
    <br>
    But the future is not simply about congestion pricing and the allocation of 
    embedded transmission costs. Grid poker is increasingly about finer grain 
    T&amp;D issues: (1)&nbsp;interconnection of large and small generators; (2) 
    distribution generation applications; and (3) renewable energy delivery on 
    wires and through trading mechanisms. It is about system reconfiguration and 
    improvement through distributed energy initiatives.<br>
    <br>
    FERC has promulgated a rule for large generators (over 20 MW) and proposed a 
    separate rule for small generators. The thrust of the large generator rule 
    was to alleviate an important practical obstacles to hook-ups by new 
    facilities seeking to compete with local utilities in a reliable manner. It 
    was part of deregulation through standardization: notable provisions are: 
    (1)&nbsp;one set of standardized interconnection procedures and a standard 
    interconnection agreement throughout the nation, designed to reduce the time 
    and cost burden of case by case negotiation; and (2) delineation of 
    responsibility for interconnection costs: upgrades to new generation 
    initially to be &#8220;participant&#8221; funded by generators, subject to full refunds 
    to ISO/RTOs&#8217;; distribution system upgrades paid entirely by the generator. 
    But while this Order struck a blow for open access, observers of the 
    prospects for a vital responsive grid remained skeptical. They perceived 
    lack of sustained momentum for the traditional grid regulation/business 
    model, including lack of continued impetus for major existing transmission 
    system improvement &#8211;in the absence of an intense focus on whether the 
    existing network with strategic DG add-ons, demand side management and 
    demand response initiatives, could run more efficiently.<br>
    <br>
    FERC has not been oblivious to the potential of enhancing the transmission 
    system by adding distributed energy resources at key points on the system. 
    What better response to the blackout threat than to minimize reliance on 
    widely diffused power-grid than to promote the deployment of DG closer to 
    load on a &#8220;plug-and-play&#8221; basis. But in its small generator interconnection 
    rules, FERC became embroiled in old style controversy, notably over 
    Federal-State jurisdictional issues with respect to the regulation of 
    interconnection of DG on local distribution systems and FERC&#8217;s alleged 
    premature presumption of Standard Market Design, even though it did not 
    prevailed nationally.<br>
    <br>
    Gridlock over transmission reform and SMD has already left the public 
    wondering how the clear near-term need for transmission and distribution 
    (T&amp;D) system upgrades (with an estimated $30-100 billion cost over the next 
    decade) will be met. How will congested load centers be served? How will 
    interregional seams be traversed? <br>
    <br>
    Increasingly, it is recognized that the issue is one of mobilizing 
    &#8220;distributed energy&#8221; techniques without penalizing existing utilities&#8217; 
    distribution systems in the process. Even-handed regulatory approaches, new 
    technology applications and &#8220;smart&#8221; distribution systems, including layered 
    control systems; protection systems for two-way power flows; improved 
    communications and rapid ability to realign configuration and operations, 
    are all receiving greater attention.<br>
    <br>
    Renewable resources that produce electricity intermittently, especially wind 
    and solar, will be used more extensively if customers can rely on the 
    traditional utility system to eliminate deficits and to absorb excesses from 
    on site generation. Protections against discrimination for long-distance 
    transmission from remote sites to load centers will help them further. <br>
    <br>
    To deal with situations where wires do not facilitate sales, state 
    initiatives have focused on &#8220;constructive&#8221; movement of energy are coming 
    into focus. Renewable Portfolio Standards, (mandatory green-sourced power 
    purchase requirements for distribution companies); the creation of &#8220;green 
    tags&#8221; (or &#8220;credits&#8221;) associated with but separable from green power, which 
    may be sold by its generators to distribution companies and used by them to 
    meet these purchase requirements; the facilitation of the trading of these 
    green tag rights among parties, and experimentation with government 
    sponsored markets for certain derivative products-based upon the trading of 
    these &#8220;greenstream products&#8221; are all state initiatives. So too are &#8220;cap and 
    trade&#8221; programs for &#8220;emission reduction credits,&#8221; which are earned by 
    reducing carbon emissions through substitution of non-carbon generating 
    technologies for carbon polluting generation sources (an approach being 
    pioneered in EU countries under Kyoto) may a similar &#8220;constructive&#8221; power 
    movement effect.<br>
    <br>
    Revision of grid poker&#8217;s rules will mesh with several primary interests of 
    the capital markets. They are an integral piece of the fabric of free trade 
    in electric power. They promote a healthy grid system, which provides 
    technological innovation with respect to the wires system which, in turn, 
    benefits national security, consumers, and fundamental regulatory stability. 
    They also add a wild card to the deck: of monetizable &#8220;legal assets&#8221; which 
    can be factored into the complex financing equation of certain assets. A 
    chance, perhaps to be &#8220;future studs&#8221;. The best players of grid poker will be 
    future studs.</p>
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text-align:left"><font face="Arial" size="2">
	<span lang="X-NONE" style="color: black">ROGER FELDMAN, Co-Chair of Andrews 
	Kurth LLP Climate Change and Carbon Markets Group has practiced law related 
	to the finance of environmental and energy projects and companies for 40 
	years.&nbsp; In particular, he has analyzed and executed a wide variety and 
	substantial value of project financings.&nbsp; He chairs the American Bar 
	Association&#8217;s Committee on Carbon Trading and Finance, serves on the Board 
	of the American Council for Renewable Energy, and has been a senior official 
	in the Federal Energy Administration.&nbsp; He is a graduate of Brown University, 
	Yale Law School and Harvard Business School.</span></font></p>

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