Invenergy Hits Another Roadblock

GoLocalProv News Team

Invenergy Hits Another Roadblock

Invenergy Power Plant
The Rhode Island Energy Siting Board (EFSB) voted to reject the two-year-old Public Utilities Commission advisory opinion that said there was a need for the proposed Invenergy power plant.

“We are pleased with the Board’s common sense decision. The Town is painstakingly making the case that building a new power plant in Rhode Island is not justified,”  said Burrillville Town Manager Michael Wood.

The EFSB will no longer take into consideration the earlier PUC opinion on this issue. Instead, the EFSB will decide the issue of need based on all the evidence presented, included updated testimony that will be filed by the parties.

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Rejection

According to the press release, board members said the information in the advisory opinion is “stale” and much has happened since it was first issued in September of 2016. 

In that motion, the Town argued that the findings of the Advisory Opinion are outdated and the Advisory Opinion is therefore no longer relevant to current circumstances. Among the events cited:

  • CREC’s Unit One's Capacity Supply Obligation ("CSO") has been recommended for termination. On September 20, 2018, ISO-NE took the unprecedented action of filing a request with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission ("FERC") seeking to terminate Clear River Energy Center's Unit One CSO.
  • Unit Two Has Failed to Obtain a CSO for Three Successive Auctions: Unit Two did not obtain a CSO in FCAs 10, 11, or 12. In fact, Unit Two was disqualified from last year's FCA 12, and because of significant delays in the project, it has also been recently disqualified from FCA 13.
  • Reduced Need for power in the region, as shown by ISO-NE’s declining net peak load forecasts.
  • Increased Solar, Increased Baseload Renewables, and Increased Offshore Wind.

Second Set Back in Two Months

In September, the ISO — the regional transmission organization for New England — issued a damaging letter the adversely impacts Invenergy's fate.

The letter from ISO was to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and unceremoniously requested the New England grid be released from their obligation to buy Invenergy’s power.

Proponents and opponents disagree if the ISO development cripples the Invenergy effort or just adds another obstacle, but one thing is for sure -- the ISO decision is a major blow to the project.

ISO wrote in their letter to FERC, “Invenergy has not made sufficient progress to achieve Clear River Unit 1’s critical path schedule milestones, and the commercial operation date for Clear River Unit 1 is more than two years beyond June 1, 2019…”

Some environmental leaders believe the ISO letter is a critical nail to project, which has strong support from organized labor.

Burrillville Town Manager Michael Wood said about the ISO, “Most notably there is no need for Invenergy’s new gas-fired power plant. Renewables are coming online faster than expected- and in fact, a surplus in capacity is expected.”

“[The ISO] filing is proof positive of what CLF has argued from day one: Invenergy's plant is simply not needed," Jerry Elmer, senior attorney at CLF, said in a statement. "It's time for Invenergy to admit defeat and withdraw its permit application."


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