Written By: "JM"
When the Muskrat Falls story is fully written, the date July 22, 2013 may be given prominence as one of those pivotal moments when Nalcor management ought to have counselled the political leadership to change course on its strategy for Muskrat Falls.
When the Muskrat Falls story is fully written, the date July 22, 2013 may be given prominence as one of those pivotal moments when Nalcor management ought to have counselled the political leadership to change course on its strategy for Muskrat Falls.
On
the morning of that day, the Utility and Rates Board of Nova Scotia (UARB)
rejected Emera’s application for approval of the Maritime Link (ML) stating the
deal had to be sweetened by $700 million to $1.4 billion (Net Present Value);
otherwise the construction of the Link would fail as the lowest cost option for
that Province.
That same afternoon, the Nalcor CEO was advised that Hydro Quebec (HQ) had filed a declaratory
judgment in the Quebec Superior Court requesting clarification on the
interpretation of the 1969 Power Contract. The contract clauses requiring
interpretation by the courts initially appeared routine, perhaps even innocuous
in nature. However, this challenge
threatens the very foundation of the Muskrat Falls business case.
Nalcor
later surrendered to the entirely predictable demands of the UARB in a revised
offer called the “Energy Access Agreement” (EAA) which committed virtually all
Newfoundland and Labrador’s surplus power to that Province at a price set by
auction in the New England States. This
capitulation by Nalcor secured one of the pre-requisites for the Federal Loan
Guarantee. However, in doing so, Nalcor
precluded the future allocation of firm power and energy from Muskrat Falls from
use for new industrial requirements in Labrador. It also undermined an early argument
used to justify the project.
It
bears stating that Nalcor did not even possess the wherewithal to negotiate a
basement selling price, matching the minimum value the UARB sought in its
analysis of Nova Scotia’s lowest cost option.
It is a critical error; one that will cost NL taxpayers dearly should
New England prices further deflate due to the continued expansion of the US
shale gas industry.
Is
it any wonder that Nova Scotia opposition to the project has been silenced?
Such
a convenient and expedient fix was not available to Nalcor to address Hydro
Quebec’s legal action. Instead there remains a legal uncertainty over
the project, as Nalcor continues to spend billions under the waning argument of
the ‘lowest cost alternative’.
Nalcor
has been coy about the impact of losing the judgment in the
Quebec Superior Court. The Corporation
has publicly argued that the Water Management Agreement is not in jeopardy; that whatever the outcome of the legal challenge , it will have no impact on the Muskrat Falls project.. However, Nalcor has
provided sparse detail to substantiate its claim, conveniently declining to
speak about the specifics of the case while it is before the courts.
The
public should not be naive enough to accept Nalcor’s claim. This court challenge of the 1969 Power
Contract is very relevant to the Muskrat Falls business case. The terse response from Premier Dunderdale on the day news of the court
challenge broke perhaps reflected the true uncensored opinion of Nalcor’s leadership
in response to Hydro Quebec’s initiative.
It was Dunderdale in full nationalist form, the magnitude of this threat
to the ‘plan’ was demonstrable by her frustration.
Make
no doubt this court case will have an impact on Nalcor’s overall business plan
and energy marketing strategy. It is a
big deal which was duly acknowledged within Nalcor's 2014 Strategy document:
Stripped
to its essence, the challenge is one in which Hydro Quebec seeks judicial
clarification that CFLCo cannot take more than 300 MW from the Upper Churchill
facility for sale to any third party, pursuant to the recapture provisions of
the 1969 Power Contract. If upheld, it will limit Nalcor’s current practice of
temporarily “storing” the remaining RECALL energy in the reservoir, producing
the energy when prices are highest in the US market.
More
importantly to the NL ratepayer, an unwelcome judicial outcome may also be
interpreted in a manner such that CFLCo cannot produce ‘stored energy’ for
Nalcor under the terms of the Water Management Agreement beyond the 300 MW
limit. The reader should note that CFLCo is owned by
both Nalcor and Hydro Quebec. In a legal
context, Nalcor and its other subsidiaries are defined as “third parties” under
the application of the 1969 Power Contract.
Stated
another way, any limit on ‘stored energy production’ would gut the
effectiveness of the Water Management Agreement. It would eliminate the very tool Nalcor must
have, in order to meet its firm capacity commitments to the Island, industrial
customers, and to Nova Scotia. It would potentially jeopardize the reliability
of the electrical system post-commissioning of the interconnection to Labrador.
Ultimately, it would result in higher costs to rate payers.
In
the absence of any substantive analysis by Nalcor, the remainder of this post
will attempt to explain the risk of an unfavourable ruling from the Quebec
Superior Court:
1. Muskrat Falls is what is commonly
described a “Run of the River” hydroelectric facility. The Muskrat Falls reservoir has a live
storage capacity of 50 million cubic meters; the figure represents 0.2% the
size of the Upper Churchill reservoir. The
limited ability to store water means Muskrat must produce energy when the water
runs. When flows are less than optimal, production
is dependent upon the water flows released from the facility upstream.
2. In 2009, Nalcor submitted a Water Management
Agreement (WMA) to the Public Utilities Board (PUB) for approval. The WMA is intended to optimize production
from both Upper Churchill and Muskrat facilities on a year round basis. Both plants need to be used in combination in
order that the Labrador Island Link can provide 900 MW on an “as required”
basis for extended periods of time.
In simplest terms: when
the water flows at Muskrat Falls are high, and the Nalcor demand for energy is
low, the surplus generation is used to meet CFLCo’s obligations to Hydro
Quebec. The water flow at the Upper
Churchill is reduced accordingly. Any
energy produced by Muskrat Falls to meet the CFLCo delivery is “banked” as
water stored within the Upper Churchill reservoir.
Alternatively, when the flow at the
Muskrat Falls plant is insufficient to meet Nalcor’s demand, the Upper
Churchill plant production is increased.
The production will draw down the “banked” energy.
Assuming that the extra production
from the Upper Churchill is assured under the mechanism of the WMA, Nalcor can
guarantee that 824 MW will be produced to meet the rated nameplate capacity of
the Muskrat Falls plant. In combination
with the remaining 80 MW of RECALL power in winter 900 MW is available for
transmission over the Labrador Island Link.
It is fairly simple to manage the water flows in this fashion and
although it is integral to Nalcor’s planning, following the commissioning of
Muskrat Falls, CFLco’s ability to implement the plan is being legally
challenged. The Quebec Superior Court
may declare it contrary to the intent of the 1969 Power Contract.
3. Without the Water
Management Agreement there may be times when production from the Muskrat Falls
plant is minimal. If output from the Upper
Churchill plant is at the lowest contractual limit of 1200 MW, the resulting
production from Muskrat Falls from the water flow would be less than 200MW[i].
4. Based upon the example in
part 3, above, over 700 MW of additional power may be needed from the Upper
Churchill facility under the WMA to provide an equivalent production of 900 MW
to be delivered to the Labrador Island Link.
5. The WMA respects the terms
of previous power contracts. Previous
contracts such as the 1969 Power Contract, and the GWAC take precedence.
6. The 1969 Power Contract
between CFLCo and Hydro Quebec has language limiting the maximum amount of
Power which can be recalled by CFLCo to sell to third parties. This quantity is withheld from “the power and
energy agreed to be sold”.
7. Of the 300 MW of recall
power there is approximately 80 MW of remaining capacity in winter when all
domestic requirements are met in Labrador.
8. Under the Administration
of Premier Frank Moores, an attempt was made to increase the recall provision from
300 MW to 800 MW under the terms of the 1961 lease agreement. The attempt failed in both the Newfoundland
and Quebec Courts. A subsequent Appeal
to the Supreme Court of Canada (SCOC), upheld those decisions; maximum recall
from the Upper Churchill Facility remained at 300MW.
Given the Court Decision described in
Part 8, it may be apparent why the SCOC Decision on the interpretation of the
1969 Power Contract is so important. If
CFLCo cannot sell more than 300 MW to a third party, it means in periods of low
water flow at Muskrat Falls, only 80 MW of available RECALL power is available
to be added to meet Island demand.
If the Quebec Courts uphold this
extreme interpretation of the 1969 contract there could be extended periods
where the power available over the Labrador Island Link is ~280 MW, and not the
900 MW which has been assumed by Nalcor. Although it would not materially impact the
total amount of energy produced each year by Muskrat Falls, the energy may not
be available when we need it!
What are the impacts of such an
outcome? They are considerable:
1. Nalcor must still meet the
contractual requirement of 167 MW to Emera as part of the Nova Scotia Block.
2. The Muskrat Falls Power Purchase
Agreement (PPA) stipulates that the available capacity (in MW) is limited, firstly, by
the contractual obligation to Nova Scotia and, secondly, by the terms of the Water
Management Agreement. Put succinctly, if
the Courts uphold Quebec’s legal challenge, the Muskrat Falls PPA guarantees only 110 MW of firm dispatchable power out of the
nameplate capacity of 824 MW. This
excerpt from the Muskrat Falls PPA applies:
3. 110 MW is clearly far less
than the 675 MW, recently quoted by Nalcor, as reliable firm capacity from the
Labrador Island Link at Soldiers Pond. In
the context of issues raised in Part I of this Series, that amount of power is less
than 15% of the firm capacity, assumed by Nalcor, in the lowest cost analysis
used at DG2/DG3 decision gates.
4. If the firm generation is
not guaranteed from Labrador, additional generation capacity will be needed on
the island to meet the required reliability targets. The most obvious option would be the continued
and long term dependence upon the Holyrood thermal station. If Nalcor implements the upgrades which are
assumed a requirement for the isolated option case, $600 million of CAPEX is required
to maintain Holyrood as a long term source of capacity.
5. Pursuant to the 1969 Power
Contract, Hydro Quebec may elect to take all its allocated energy, per month,
in the first or last 20 days. This implies
there is a potential for minimal water flow for up to 10 days duration. Not only is there potential for Holyrood to be
needed as back up generation, it may be required for prolonged periods to meet
base deliveries. The resulting fuel
charges would be larger than those assumed by Nalcor, in its lowest cost
analysis, and completed as part of DG2 and DG3.
The incremental fuel costs would be much higher than any offsetting
energy exports, resulting in net negative impact to domestic rates.
These
questions are now being asked by Interveners within the ongoing PUB
investigation into the reliability of the Island’s electrical system. True to form, Nalcor has attempted to limit the PUB from examining these critical issues. It deems this legal risk outside
the scope of Phase II of the investigation dealing with issues relating to
security of supply after Muskrat is commissioned.
I am hopeful this Post will document
why Nalcor’s position is completely without merit.
Despite Nalcor’s attempt to thwart
review of the WMA, the PUB would be negligent to not include this legal risk as
part of its ongoing investigation. The
interpretation of the 1969 Power Contract is an essential element to
understanding the reliability of our generation system post-Muskrat Falls. These issues cannot be decoupled or examined
on a selective basis. Although the interpretation presented in this paper is
severe it is, in the opinion of the Author, one of the possible outcomes.
Nalcor must be challenged to explain to the PUB the implications of a Court Decision that
sides with
Hydro-Quebec. While one must respect
that the issue is currently before the
Quebec Superior Court, the PUB assessment
need not be public but it must be completed.
As stated by the Electrical Power Control Act this is clearly within the
responsibility of the
PUB to guarantee adequate planning of the
provinces electrical supply.
Failure of the PUB to permit the Grand
River Keepers and Danny Dumeresque to ask questions relating to the Water
Management Agreement would not only be a failure of public transparency. It would constitute a failure of the PUB, itself,
to fulfil its legislated responsibility.
Indeed, why have a regulatory body if issues of this public importance
and interest are not fully investigated?
Part I of this series describes the
false inputs which Nalcor used in its DG2 Reference to the PUB and third party
reviews by Navigant and MHI. The author
would describe it as strategic. My old
friend, Uncle Gnarley, would more likely describe it as deception.
When the risks associated with the
failure of the Water Management Agreement are considered, it is not difficult
to see the Nalcor decision to proceed without legal certainty was perhaps delusional.
“Deception and Delusion” is a concept
familiar to those who have read the the recent Oxford Paper by Ansar and Flyvbjerg, et al. The next and final part of this series will
draw a parallel between the conclusions in this research, and what has unfolded
on the Lower Churchill project. I would
encourage readers who are interested to spend the 10$ to download the
Oxford paper. It is well worth the
read.
[i] The reader can find further clarification on this from the 2009
application to the Public Utilities Board.
Section 3.1 of the prefilled evidence explains the various extreme
situations on how the Gull Island reservoir would respond depending upon the
delivery of water from the Upper Churchill.
Within this pre-filled evidence Nalcor concluded that without the WMA
there would only be 400 MW of firm output from the Gull Island facility from a
rated nameplate of 2250 MW. Using a
similar analogy the firm production from Muskrat Falls would be less than 200
MW in periods of low water flow.
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Editor's Note:
VISION BUILT ON DELUSION (Part II) was written by "JM". He is the
anonymous researcher and writer who presented a major Paper to the PUB Review
during the Muskrat Falls Review. JM has
written a number for Uncle Gnarley Blog, including, most recently, The Snow Job (Part I). Others include: Gnarley's Theory of Political Devolution and The Great Revolutionary From The Shore and The Right Side of History.
JM has also submitted to the
PUB a Paper entitled: Underestimating Peak Load and The Potential Impact On The Muskrat Falls Solution.
A full list of JM's Papers can be found on the The Sir Robert Bond Papers Blog by Ed Hollett
To readers who may
be unfamiliar with "JM", I would say that, while circumstances
require his anonymity, you will be impressed with the depth of his analysis on
many aspects of the Muskrat Falls Project.
- Des Sullivan