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Planning for Arizona’s Energy Future Brad Albert, General Manager of Renewable Resources Arizona Public Service Co. National Conference of State Legislators (NCSL), Energy Task Force December 8, 2010

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Page 1: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Planning for Arizona’s Energy Future

Brad Albert, General Manager of Renewable ResourcesArizona Public Service Co.

National Conference of State Legislators (NCSL), Energy Task ForceDecember 8, 2010

Page 2: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Regulatory Drivers in Arizona• Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy

Requirement

• 3% of retail sales in 2011

• Increasing to 5% of retail sales by 2015

• Incrementally increasing to 15% by 2025

• RES Distributed Energy Requirement

• Minimum 20% of the RES total energy requirement in 2010 increasing to 30% in 2012

• ½ from residential customers, ½ from non-residential customers

• APS commitment to exceed RES requirements

• 3.4 Million MWHs by 2015 (about 11% of retail sales)

Page 3: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Existing Conventional Generation

3

Page 4: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Renewable Energy Resources

Page 5: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

APS Resource Portfolio

Renewable Energy Type

MW

Wind 289

Solar 385

Biogas/Biomass 24

Geothermal 10

Total 708

Conventional Owned Fuel Type

MW

Nuclear 1,146

Coal 1,753

Gas – Combined Cycle 1,871

Gas – Simple Cycle 1,022

Gas – Steam 430

Oil – Simple Cycle 66

Total-Owned 6,288

Purchases/Exchanges 2,300

Page 6: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Nuclear28%

Coal39%

Natural Gas26%

Renewables3%

Energy Efficiency

4%

2011

Nuclear19%

Coal27%

Natural Gas21%

Renewable17%

EnergyEfficiency*

16%

2025

Energy Sources 2011 vs. 2025

Page 7: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Renewable Energy Options• Wind

• Very strong resource in neighboring states (NM, CA)

• Limited access to transmission

• Some commercially viable areas in Arizona

• Solar

• Some of the best solar conditions in the world

• Ability to implement projects relatively close to load center

• Geothermal

• Strong potential in neighboring states (CA, NV, NM)

• Limited potential in Arizona

• Biomass

• Arid conditions in Arizona provides limited potential for in-state development

Page 8: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

APS’s Utility-Scale Solar Initiatives• Concentrated Solar Power (Thermal)

• Power generation using conventional steam generation technology

• Solar energy provides the heat source• Greatest efficiency created when using water for cooling

• Thermal energy storage can be incorporated

• Generally 100MW or greater

• Most common type is parabolic trough technology

• Sunlight is focused on long, rectangular, highly reflective U-shaped mirrors arranged in parallel rows

• Single-axis tracking system that focuses solar energy onto a central receiver tube located along the focal line of the mirrors heating fluid

• Solar Photovoltaic (PV)

• Direct conversion of sunlight to electricity

• Modular components, easy to scale size to meet resource need

• Average residential roof-top system approximately 7kw• Utility scale systems are from 5MW to 250MW in size

• Fixed, single or dual axis tracking

Page 9: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Solar Thermal-Solana • 280 MW Concentrated Solar Plant with 6 hours of thermal

energy storage

• Awarded Conditional commitment for DOE loan guarantee in July 2010

• Location: 10 miles west of Gila Bend, AZ

• Total Generation: 280 MW

~about 900,000 MWHs energy

production per year

• Size: 3 square miles

• Jobs: Creates 80 permanent jobs

• Commercial operation

expected in 2013

Page 10: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

~44MW

Difference

APS Load: PV vs. CSP with Storage

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000

8,000

9,000

10,000

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Lo

ad

MW

(7/6

/20

15

)

Pro

du

cti

on

MW

(10

0M

W C

ap

ac

ity)

PV CSP w/6 Hr Storage Load Profile

Hours

PV

CSP

Load

Page 11: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Utility Scale Solar PV

• Seven (7) Projects currently under development 105 MW

• Third Party Owned with Power Purchase Agreements (PPA)

• Prescott, 10 MW

• Ajo, 4.5 MW

• Bagdad, 15 MW

• Buckeye, 6 MW

• Utility Owned – AZ Sun Initiative

• Luke Air Force Base, 15 MW

• Gila Bend, 18 MW

• Hyder, 17 MW

• Chino Valley, 20 MW

Page 12: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Luke Air Force Base

• 15 MW Solar Photovoltaic Power Plant

• Equal to 3,750 Arizona homes or 50% of Luke AFB’s energy needs

• Construction scheduled to start January 2011, Commercial Operation date Summer 2011

• Will be the largest solar installation on U.S. Government property

• Located on 100 acres of underutilized land on the base

• Single-axis tracking system of 52,000 SunPower solar panels

Page 13: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Utility Scale Solar Plants: PV vs. CSP• Solar Photovoltaic (PV)

• Minimal water usage

• Developable at smaller scale or larger scale

• Smaller required land area to be economical, allows for more siting options

• Susceptible to significant and rapid fluctuations in power output with onset of clouds

• Less than full output at time of peak load

• Can be interconnected at many different levels of the transmission/distributionsystem

• Concentrated Solar Power (Thermal)

• Must be developed at large scale to be economical

• Greater land area, increased complexities in land acquisition, permitting, and ability to interconnect into existing transmission affordably

• Relatively large “step” additions to the renewable portfolio

• Transmission interconnection can be more complex

• Thermal technology reduces power output fluctuations due to cloud coverage

• Easier to incorporate thermal energy storage directly into design

• Two Options: Wet-cooled or Dry-cooled

• Significant reduction in efficiency and cost increase for dry cooling

Page 14: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Critical Role of Legislature

• Stability of State and Federal Policy

• Long term predictability

• Present landscape of utility industry

• Stable Environment that is supportive of these types of Long Term infrastructure investments

• Supportive Cost Recovery from regulatory body

• State and Local Support

• State RPS (Renewable Portfolio Standard)

• Tax Policies

• Permitting Process

Page 15: Planning for Arizona’s Energy FutureRegulatory Drivers in Arizona • Renewable Energy Standard (“RES”) Total Energy Requirement • 3% of retail sales in 2011 • Increasing

Thank You.hank You

Brad Albert, General Manager of Renewable Resources