3 minute read | July.12.2024
The California Public Utilities Commission has reformed its Resource Adequacy program in an effort to ensure a reliable power supply statewide.
The Commission recognized significant delays development projects face due to supply chain delays, labor shortages, interconnection queue limitations and rising costs. It adopted an approach that could help developers mitigate risk in contracts with load serving entities by allowing new resources to be shown for compliance earlier. During the summer months of peak electricity demand, the Commission will allow resources under development to help load serving entities meet their compliance obligations and contribute to reliability earlier.
Effective immediately, for June through September month-ahead filings, new resources that are not online in time to meet the deadline for a given Resource Adequacy compliance month will be considered to have met the compliance deadline if the resource achieves commercial operation and is online and deliverable at any time prior to the start of that compliance month. The compliance deadline for all other resources continues to be 45 days before the beginning of the compliance month.
The California Independent System Operator – CAISO – locks supply plan submittals 30 days prior to the compliance month, so the CPUC’s new extended cure period will not be included in CAISO’s current monthly Capacity Procurement Mechanism (CPM) process. The decision encourages coordination between the CAISO and the Commission’s Energy Division so that the newly online Resource Adequacy resources can appear in the CAISO markets and be accounted for in any CPM designations for the applicable compliance month.
The Commission’s decision also confirms that the “Slice of Day” (SOD) framework will go into effect for the 2025 compliance year.
In light of the near-term start date, the Commission modified and clarified important requirements of the SOD framework. For example:
The Commission’s decision acknowledges various outstanding questions regarding details of a future Unforced Capacity (UCAP) mechanism that would evaluate thermal power plants and storage resources.
For example, there is not yet consensus on whether the mechanism should be applied on a resource-specific basis or as a class average. Even so, the Commission reinforced its support for developing a UCAP mechanism that could be implemented as soon as 2026.