Or. Admin. Code § 860-082-0063 - Supplemental Review
(1) To accept the
offer of a supplemental review, the applicant must submit a signed copy of the
Supplemental Review Agreement and pay a supplemental review fee of $1,000, both
within 10 business days of the offer. If the written agreement and fee have not
been received within that timeframe, the Application will be deemed withdrawn
unless the applicant has notified the public utility that they wish to continue
being evaluated under the Tier 4 review procedures.
(2) Within 20 business days of an applicant's
election to undergo supplemental review, the public utility must perform
supplemental review using the screens set forth below, notify the applicant of
the results, and include with the notification a written report of the analysis
and data underlying the public utility's determinations under the screens.
(a) Supplemental Review Penetration Screen:
Where 12 months of line section minimum load data (including onsite load, but
not station service load served by the proposed small generator facility) are
available, can be calculated, can be estimated from existing data, or can be
determined from a power flow model, the aggregate export capacity on the feeder
or line section is less than 100 percent of the relevant minimum load on the
feeder. If minimum load data are not available, or cannot be calculated,
estimated, or determined, the aggregated export capacity on the line section is
less than 30 percent of the peak load for all line Sections bounded by
automatic sectionalizing devices upstream of the proposed project.
(A) Load that is co-located with
load-following, non-exporting, or export-limited projects should be
appropriately accounted for. The public utility may take the impacts of
non-export or export limited generation on the calculation of daytime minimum
load when evaluating potential system impacts.
(B) The interconnecting public utility will
not consider as part of the aggregate export capacity for purposes of this
screen the export capacity of generators known to be already reflected in the
minimum load data, including combined heat and power (CHP) facility
capacity.
(b) Voltage
and Power Quality Screen. In aggregate with existing generation on the line
section:
(A) The voltage regulation on the
line section can be maintained in compliance with relevant requirements under
all system conditions;
(B) The
voltage fluctuation is within acceptable limits as defined by IEEE Std
1547TM;
(C) The harmonic levels meet IEEE 1547 limits
at the Point of Interconnection; and
(D) Substation transformer backfeed screen.
Where existing protective devices and equipment cannot adequately support
backfeed, the aggregated export capacity on the substation transformer must be
less than 80 percent of the relevant minimum load for the substation
transformer.
(E) Supplemental
Grounding Screen: If the project failed the Line Configuration Screen, apply
the Supplemental Grounding Screen in paragraphs (F)-(H). If the project limits
export pursuant to OAR
860-082-0033, the export
capacity must be included in any analysis including power flow
simulations.
(F) For projects with
a rotating machine, if effective grounding is maintained, the project passes
the screen.
(G) For projects with a
three-phase inverter, apply one of the following screens:
(i) If the line-to-neutral connected load on
the feeder or line section is greater than 33 percent of peak load on the
feeder or line-section, the project passes the screen.
(ii) If using a supplemental grounding
software tool:
(I) If the tool determines that
supplemental grounding is not required to maintain effective grounding, the
project passes this screen.
(II) If
the tool determines that supplemental grounding is required, the applicant must
agree to modify the project to include supplemental grounding. If the applicant
does not agree to modify the project, the project fails this screen.
(H) If using detailed
hosting capacity analysis that incorporates evaluation of temporary overvoltage
risk for inverters, the project passes the screen if the nameplate rating of
the project is below the available hosting capacity at the Point of
Interconnection.
(c)
Safety and Reliability Screen. The location of the proposed small generator
facility and the aggregate export capacity on the line section do not create
impacts to safety or reliability that cannot be adequately addressed without
application of the study process. If the project limits export pursuant to OAR
860-082-0033, the export
capacity must be included in any analysis, including power flow simulations,
except when assessing fault current contribution. To assess fault current
contribution, the analysis must use the rated fault current; for example, the
applicant may provide manufacturer test data (pursuant to the fault current
test described in IEEE 1547.1-2020 clause 5.18) showing that the fault current
is independent of the nameplate rating. The interconnecting public utility may
consider the following factors and others in determining potential impacts to
safety and reliability in applying this screen:
(A) Whether the line section has significant
minimum loading levels dominated by a small number of customers (i.e., several
large commercial customers).
(B)
Whether the loading along the line section is uniform or even.
(C) Whether the project is located in close
proximity to the substation (i.e., less than 2.5 electrical circuit miles), and
whether the line section from the substation to the Point of Interconnection is
a Mainline rated for normal and emergency ampacity.
(D) Whether the project incorporates an
adjustable time delay function to prevent reconnection of the generator to the
system until system voltage and frequency are within normal limits for a
prescribed time.
(E) Whether
operational flexibility is reduced by the project, such that transfer of the
line section(s) of the Project to a neighboring distribution circuit/substation
may trigger overloads or voltage issues.
(F) Whether the project employs equipment or
systems certified by a recognized standards organization to address technical
issues such as, but not limited to, islanding, reverse power flow, or voltage
quality.
(3)
If the proposed interconnection passes the supplemental screens, the
Application must be approved, and the public utility will provide the applicant
an executed Interconnection Agreement pursuant to the procedure set forth in
OAR 860-082-0025(7)(e).
(4) After receiving an Interconnection
Agreement executed by the public utility, the applicant must proceed under the
terms of the applicable level of review under which the Application was
initially studied.
(5) Applicants
undergoing Supplemental Review will be able to access, review, and verify
minimum load calculations except in cases where the minimum load data contain
identifiable individual customer data.
Notes
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 183, ORS 756 & ORS 757
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 756.040 & ORS 756.060
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.