FERC: Demand response fell 10% in power markets in 2016 RSS Feed

FERC: Demand response fell 10% in power markets in 2016

Utilities are increasingly turning to demand response as a tool to balance the grid, but the resource played less of a role in wholesale markets in 2016. While much of that has to do with PJM’s new capacity performance rules, there were declines in other markets as well, according to FERC’s annual assessment.

Since 2009, demand resource participation in wholesale markets has increased by about 6%, but it has also been outpaced by an approximately 16% increase in peak demand.

“This decrease in demand resource participation across the RTO/ISO regions was primarily due to an approximately 24% (3,030 MW) drop in demand resource enrollment in PJM Interconnection,” FERC’s report found.

The changes were somewhat offset by approximately 600 MW of demand response in PJM’s capacity performance product.

The Polar Vortex winter of 2014 caused widespread generator outages, leading PJM to develop new requirements in its capacity market. The changes were meant to ensure generators would be online in extreme weather, and among the changes was a requirement that resources be available year-round.

In the PJM market, demand response tends to be a summer resource, particularly on the residential side. The more stringent requirements were introduced in a new product called “Capacity Performance,” and phased in through a pair of transitional auctions. The transition ended last year and capacity in the latest auction had to be available year-round.

About 9,850 MW of demand response was offered in the 2020/2021 Base Residual Auction, declining nearly 17% from last year. Out of that, 7,820 MW of resources cleared the auction — about a 25% drop compared with 10,348 MW last year.

But FERC’s report identified declines in other markets as well.

Demand resource participation also fell in the California ISO by 8% (about 163 MW) due to decreased enrollment in price-responsive demand programs.

“Participation in utility-sponsored programs has been gradually declining over the last several years, while participation in CAISO’s wholesale demand response products has been growing,” FERC’s report said. “In 2016, demand resource enrollment in CAISO’s two wholesale products totaled 1,480 MW.”

Deployment of advanced metering infrastructure is a major factor underpinning the role of demand response. The report notes there were almost 65 million smart meters installed in 2015 out of a total of 151 million meters. Penetration rates, now about 43.9%, have been rising steadily for years.

Demand resource the in ISO New England and New York ISO markets also decreased by approximately 4%. However, net demand response participation rose in the Midcontinent ISO due to an increase in demand resource capacity registered as emergency demand response.

Read full article at Utility Dive