Time To Repeal New England’s Anti-Consumer Dirty Energy Rule
By Bruce Ho
Originally published on
the NRDC Expert Blog.
Within the arcane rules that govern New England’s regional power grid, there’s a ticking time bomb that threatens to frustrate the region’s efforts to tackle the climate crisis while raising electricity bills by $3 billion over 10 years.
Known as the Minimum
Offer Price Rule or MOPR (pronounced “mo-per”), this provision has already
locked in hundreds of millions of dollars in excess charges to households and
businesses from Nashua, New Hampshire, to New Haven, Connecticut, by preventing
inefficient, polluting power plants from being replaced by cleaner ones.
Unless changed, this
rule will force the region to pay even more for dirty power it neither wants
nor needs. Repealing or significantly reforming the
costly, outdated Minimum Offer Price Rule is in the best interests of New
England’s consumers, their health, and our climate.
For years, the
organization that operates New England’s grid — ISO New England — has resisted
meaningful MOPR reforms. In 2018, the ISO proposed an updated rule that
reinforced the existing MOPR, prioritizing fossil fuel generators’ profits over consumers.
But there’s hope for
change. The new chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, or FERC,
which oversees ISO New England, has made MOPR repeal or reform a top priority. In
response, ISO New England has publicly committed to reform the rule, though
what the grid operator has in mind — and whether this aligns with consumer and
clean energy interests — remains to be seen.
New England states also
are pushing ISO New England and FERC to act. As several groups (Acadia Center,
Conservation Law Foundation, NRDC, and Sierra Club) that are members of
the Sustainable
FERC Project coalition recently commented to state
leaders, continued pressure from the states will be critical to address the
MOPR and build a reliable, clean, and consumer-centric grid.
How We Got Here: The MOPR’s Origin and Evolution
The MOPR, which was
first developed in the PJM grid region and only later exported to ISO New
England, wasn’t always an anti-consumer, pro-dirty-energy rule. Originally, the
rule sensibly was intended to prevent a form of market manipulation known as
“buyer-side market power,” where a utility or other entity would create new
supply and bid it in the electricity market at an artificially low price for
the purpose of lowering the price for the remainder of the power it purchases.
In theory, the exercise
of buyer-side market power could force competitors out of business. The
original MOPR, by being designed only for this rare occasion, was actually never
used.
Yet over time, the MOPR
lost its way. As a result of pressure from owners of older fossil-fuel
generators, ISO New England and FERC undertook an ill-conceived expansion of
the rule.
The MOPR was redefined
as a tool to prop up prices for existing generation by preventing small
utilities from saving money by building their own power plants and impeding
state implementation of public policies, such as clean air and climate laws.
Because those state
policies would result in an expansion of the supply of clean energy, market
prices would drop, potentially spurring the retirement of older, polluting
power plants. But the owners of such power plants advocated for significant
revisions to the MOPR to restrict clean energy’s access to the market, artificially
inflate prices, and protect the conventional generators’ profits.
Federal law reserves to
states the ability to make decisions on power generation. But rather than
seeing state laws for their public benefits and respecting these laws as an
exercise of protected state authority, FERC and ISO New England saw them as a
threat to the status quo and the ability of conventional fossil fuel power
plants to “compete” to produce power.
So FERC and the grid
operator decided to counteract state laws by expanding the MOPR to erect
barriers to clean energy’s participation in New England’s electricity market.
By making clean energy appear artificially expensive in the market, the
expanded MOPR has helped protect the market share and profits of polluting
sources of power.
Harms
to All Consumers
The MOPR results in
higher bills for consumers. A 2019 analysis conducted for the Sustainable FERC
Project by Grid Strategies concluded the MOPR could raise New England
consumers’ electricity bills by $3 billion over the next decade.
These higher costs are
already materializing. For example, by protecting conventional power plant owners
from having to compete with the 800-megawatt Vineyard Wind project off the
coast of Massachusetts, the MOPR locked in an estimated $270 million in higher bills for consumers.
The MOPR’s higher costs
are not only borne by consumers in Massachusetts and other states that are
incentivizing the build out of clean energy; the cost of the rule is paid by
consumers across the region. By reducing competition in New England’s regional
electricity market, the MOPR creates higher prices everywhere.
Take, for example, New
Hampshire, which does not currently have clean energy policies as ambitious as
those of its neighbors. Because New Hampshire participates in a regional
electricity market, without the MOPR, when a neighboring state like
Massachusetts invests in clean energy, those investments would increase the
overall supply of power in the region and lower prices in New Hampshire and
other states. Such investments would also reduce the need for consumers in New
Hampshire to pay for new power plants and encourage the retirement of surplus,
less efficient generation.
Because clean energy,
including resources like energy efficiency, already is or is increasingly
becoming the cheapest source of power; creates local jobs; results in local air
quality improvements that improve residents’ health; and is needed to mitigate
the climate crisis, a state like New Hampshire would see greater economic and
environmental benefits by adopting its own policies to grow this sector.
But even in the absence
of adopting such policies, New Hampshire stands to benefit from the clean
energy policies of its neighbors — or at least it would if it weren’t for the
MOPR.
Getting
Back on Track to Protect Consumers and Clean Energy
There are two ways to
fix this problem for New England’s consumers: eliminate the MOPR or
significantly reform it.
Eliminating the MOPR
would remove the rule’s existing barrier to clean energy and enable projects
like Vineyard Wind — and the thousands of megawatts of other clean energy
projects that are proposed, being built, and coming online in the region — to
participate in New England’s electricity market fairly. Consumers from Nashua
to New Haven would benefit from lower bills driven by increased competition
from investments in clean energy.
Alternatively, ISO New
England and FERC could reform the MOPR. For example, ISO New England could
allow the state-driven clean energy investments to opt out of participation in
the centrally operated New England market, and therefore avoid the MOPR.
But, unlike today, ISO
New England would still account for the full contributions of these clean
energy resources to grid reliability regardless of their participation in these
markets. This path, known as a “residual market,” would recognize that as clean
energy resources are built, the need for conventional power resources to meet
consumers’ needs decreases.
An ISO New England-run
residual market would shrink in size over time, resulting in fewer market procurements
and lower costs for consumers.
As Sustainable FERC
Project groups discussed in our recent comments to the New England
states, either of these pathways — MOPR reform or MOPR elimination — would
help get the region back on track to protecting consumers and
help get ISO New England out of the way of the clean energy transition that’s
both needed and underway.
Addressing the MOPR
isn’t the only reform New England needs to protect consumers and build a better
environment. Leadership and action from states, ISO New England, and FERC is
also needed in a variety of areas, including transmission planning, better governance and standards for public participation in
decision-making, and environmental justice, to ensure the grid is reliable,
clean, affordable, and fair.
But defusing the MOPR
bomb is and must be a top priority. It is inexcusable to force New England
consumers to pay billions for a misguided rule that serves the interests of the
fossil fuel industry rather than those of the public.