Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 25-22.082 - Selection of Generating Capacity
(1) Scope
and Intent. The intent of this rule is to provide the Commission information to
evaluate a public utility's decision regarding the addition of generating
capacity pursuant to Section
403.519, F.S. The use of a
Request for Proposals (RFP) process is an appropriate means to ensure that a
public utility's selection of a proposed generation addition is the most
cost-effective alternative available.
(2) Definitions. For the purpose of this
rule, the following terms shall have the following meaning:
(a) Public Utility: all electric utilities
subject to the Florida Public Service Commission's ratemaking authority, as
defined in Section 366.02(1),
F.S.
(b) Next Planned Generating
Unit: the next generating unit addition planned for construction by a public
utility that will require certification pursuant to Section
403.519, F.S.
(c) Request for Proposals (RFP): a document
in which a public utility publishes the price and non-price attributes of its
next planned generating unit in order to solicit and screen, for potential
subsequent contract negotiations, competitive proposals for supply-side
alternatives to the public utility's next planned generating unit.
(d) Participant: a potential generation
supplier who submits a proposal in compliance with both the schedule and
informational requirements of a public utility's RFP. A participant may
include, but is not limited to, utility and non-utility generators, Exempt
Wholesale Generators (EWGs), Qualifying Facilities (QFs), marketers, and
affiliates of public utilities, as well as providers of turnkey offerings,
distributed generation, and other utility supply side alternatives.
(e) Finalist: one or more participants
selected by the public utility with whom to conduct subsequent contract
negotiations.
(3) Prior
to filing a petition for determination of need for an electrical power plant
pursuant to Section 403.519, F.S., each public
utility shall evaluate supply-side alternatives to its next planned generating
unit by issuing a Request for Proposals (RFP).
(4) Each public utility shall provide timely
notification of its issuance of an RFP by publishing public notices in major
newspapers, periodicals and trade publications to ensure statewide and national
circulation. The public notice given shall include, at a minimum:
(a) The name and address of the contact
person from whom an RFP package may be requested;
(b) A general description of the public
utility's next planned generating unit, including its planned in-service date,
MW size, location, fuel type and technology; and
(c) A schedule of critical dates for the
solicitation, evaluation, screening of proposals and subsequent contract
negotiations.
(5) No term
of the RFP shall be unfair, unduly discriminatory, onerous, or commercially
infeasible. Each public utility's RFP shall include, at a minimum:
(a) A detailed technical description of the
public utility's next planned generating unit or units on which the RFP is
based, as well as the financial assumptions and parameters associated with it,
including, at a minimum, the following information:
1. A description of the public utility's next
planned generating unit(s) and its proposed location(s);
2. The MW size;
3. The estimated in-service date;
4. The primary and secondary fuel
type;
5. An estimate of the total
direct cost;
6. An estimate of the
annual revenue requirements;
7. An
estimate of the annual economic value of deferring construction;
8. An estimate of the fixed and variable
operation and maintenance expense;
9. An estimate of the fuel cost;
10. An estimate of the planned and forced
outage rates, heat rate, minimum load and ramp rates, and other technical
details;
11. A description and
estimate of the costs required for associated facilities such as gas laterals
and transmission interconnection;
12. A discussion of the actions necessary to
comply with environmental requirements; and
13. A summary of all major assumptions used
in developing the above estimates;
(b) A copy of the public utility's most
recent Ten-Year Site Plan;
(c) A
schedule of critical dates for solicitation, evaluation, screening of
proposals, selection of finalists, and subsequent contract
negotiations;
(d) A description of
the price and non-price attributes to be addressed by each alternative
generating proposal including, but not limited to:
1. Technical and financial
viability;
2.
Dispatchability;
3. Deliverability
(interconnection and transmission);
4. Fuel supply;
5. Water supply;
6. Environmental compliance;
7. Performance criteria;
8. Pricing structure; and
(e) A detailed description of the criteria
and the methodology, including any weighting and ranking factors, to be used to
evaluate alternative generating proposals on the basis of price and non-price
attributes.
(f) Any application
fees that will be required of a participant. Any such fees or deposits shall be
cost-based;
(g) Best available
information regarding system-specific conditions which may include, but not be
limited to, preferred locations proximate to load centers, transmission
constraints, the need for voltage support in particular areas, and/or the
public utility's need or desire for greater diversity of fuel
sources.
(6) No
attribute, criterion, or methodology shall be employed that is not identified
in the RFP absent a showing that such attribute, criterion, or methodology is
necessary for and consistent with the purpose of the rule.
(7) As part of its RFP, the public utility
shall require each participant to publish a notice in a newspaper of general
circulation in each county in which the participant proposes to build an
electrical power plant. The notice shall be at least one-quarter of a page and
shall be published no later than 10 days after the date that proposals are due.
The notice shall state that the participant has submitted a proposal to build
an electrical power plant, and shall include the name and address of the
participant submitting the proposal, the name and address of the public utility
that solicited proposals, and a general description of the proposed power plant
and its location.
(8) Within 30
days after the public utility has selected finalists, if any, from the
participants who responded to the RFP, the public utility shall publish notice
in a newspaper of general circulation in each county in which a finalist
proposes to build an electrical power plant. The notice shall include the name
and address of each finalist, the name and address of the public utility, and a
general description of each proposed electrical power plant, including its
location, size, fuel type, and associated facilities.
(9) Each public utility shall file a copy of
its RFP with the Commission.
(10)
The public utility shall allow participants to formulate creative responses to
the RFP, such as responses which employ innovative or inventive technologies or
processes. The public utility shall evaluate all proposals.
(11) The public utility shall conduct a
meeting prior to the release of the RFP with potential participants to discuss
the requirements of the RFP. The public utility shall also conduct a meeting
within two weeks after the issuance of the RFP and prior to the submission of
any proposals. The Office of Public Counsel and the Commission staff shall be
notified in a timely manner of the date, time, and location of such
meetings.
(12) A potential
participant may file with the Commission objections to the RFP limited to
specific allegations of violations of this rule within 10 days of the issuance
of the RFP. The public utility may file a written response within 5 days.
Within 30 days from the date of the objection, the Commission panel assigned
shall determine whether the objection as stated would demonstrate that a rule
violation has occurred, based on the written submission and oral argument by
the objector and the public utility, without discovery or an evidentiary
hearing. The RFP process will not be abated pending the resolution of such
objections.
(13) A minimum of 60
days shall be provided between the issuance of the RFP, and the due date for
proposals in response to the RFP.
(14) The public utility shall evaluate the
proposals received in response to the RFP in a fair comparison with the public
utility's next planned generating unit identified in the RFP. The public
utility may modify the construction costs and/or performance parameters
affecting revenue requirements in its next planned generating unit that it
included in the RFP. However, if it chooses to do so, it must inform
participants of its intent, and provide the participants (limited to the
remaining finalists) a corresponding opportunity to revise their
bids.
(15) If the Commission
approves a purchase power agreement as a result of the RFP, the public utility
shall be authorized to recover the prudently incurred costs of the agreement
through the public utility's capacity, and fuel and purchased power cost
recovery clauses absent evidence of fraud, mistake, or similar grounds
sufficient to disturb the finality of the approval under governing law. If the
public utility selects a self-build option, costs in addition to those
identified in the need determination proceeding shall not be recoverable unless
the utility can demonstrate that such costs were prudently incurred and due to
extraordinary circumstance.
(16)
The Commission shall not allow potential suppliers of capacity who were not
participants to contest the outcome of the selection process in a power plant
need determination proceeding.
(17)
In implementing an RFP under this rule, the public utility may use or
incorporate an auction process.
(18) Upon a showing by a public utility and a
finding by the Commission that a proposal not in compliance with this rule's
provisions will likely result in a lower cost supply of electricity to the
utility's general body of ratepayers, increase the reliable supply of
electricity to the utility's general body of ratepayers, or otherwise will
serve the public welfare, the Commission shall exempt the utility from
compliance with the rule or any part of it for which such justification is
found.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 350.127(2), 366.01, 366.05(1), (7), 366.051, 366.06(2), 366.07 FS. Law Implemented 366.04(1), (2), (5), 366.041, 366.051, 366.06(1), (2), 366.07, 403.519 FS.
New 1-10-94, Amended 6-17-03.
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