Trade Resources Industry Views Transmission Project No Factor in Idling Houston-Area Plant: Calpine

Transmission Project No Factor in Idling Houston-Area Plant: Calpine

Calpine plans to suspend operations on February 22, 2016 at its 91-MW cogeneration facility near Houston, but a major transmission project on which state regulators are to decide Thursday was not a factor, a spokesman said.

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas on November 24 issued a notice to stakeholders about Calpine's plan to mothball the natural gas-fired plant in the Houston suburb of Clear Lake. Comments on the proposal are due on December 8. ERCOT has 90 days to decide whether to engage the plant for ancillary services on a reliability-must-run basis.

"There were costly repairs needed for the turbine, and current market conditions do not warrant a return to service," Calpine spokesman Brett Kerr said in a Thanksgiving Day email.

The Houston Import Project, which has support from ERCOT and the staff of the Public Utility Commission of Texas, did not affect Calpine's decision to suspend operations at the plant, which started operating in January 1985, Kerr said.

The Houston Import Project is a 345-kV line that would connect a substation in the southeastern part of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas' North Hub to a substation in northwest Harris County in ERCOT's Houston Hub.

On April 24, Cross Texas Transmission and CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric applied for certificates of convenience and necessity to build the project, which links the eastern corner of Limestone County near Jewett, Texas, through Singleton, Texas, to a substation west of Tomball, Texas. CenterPoint is the electricity transmission and distribution service provider for most of the Houston area.

On July 22, Calpine and NRG Energy filed testimony challenging the applications, arguing that ERCOT's recommendation in favor of the Houston Import Project was outweighed by defects in the ERCOT analysis and an inappropriate exercise of its discretion in the matter.

On October 29, the PUC staff submitted a proposal for decision approving a certificate of convenience and necessity for the project, and the PUC is slated to decide the matter at its public meeting this Thursday.

Source: http://www.platts.com/latest-news/electric-power/houston/transmission-project-no-factor-in-idling-houston-21540402
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