The June 2013 decision by Southern California Edison (SCE) to permanently shut down its San Onofre Nuclear Generation Station (SONGS)—the largest power generator in the region—got the attention of the natural gas industry, and for good reason. Natural gas interests view gas-fired generation as the logical replacement for the now-gone 2,200 MW nuclear capacity, but many other forces are at work. In this two-part series we examine southern California’s electricity cunundrum, and how big a part natural gas is likely to play in keeping the lights and air conditioning on and the pool pumps pumping.
The two-unit, 2,200-MW SONGS facility for years was a linchpin in the region’s electric grid (see Play Me A Songs). A relatively low-cost, around-the-clock generator at a pivotal location, San Onofre provided critical voltage support—an electrical engineer’s way of saying it kept the grid on an even keel. Natural gas interests expect SONGS capacity to be replaced by gas fired generation. And gas will surely have a significant role in the electricity future of the Los Angeles Basin, San Diego, and California as a whole. But because of state policies and Federal rules, among other things, utilities and merchant power companies may well end up consuming less gas than they do now, and commercial and industrial firms may use more.
One big factor is California’s push for renewable energy and energy efficiency - including combined heat and power (CHP) plants that squeeze as much energy as possible out of each btu. Another is federal rules that will require about 3,800 MW of older gas-fired plants in southern California that use “once-through cooling” to be retired by 2020 (see Figure 1; note SONGS is just north of San Diego). Once-through cooling - like it sounds - releases cooling water after its been used only once, instead of recycling it—the preferred method now.
Figure 1
Source: California Energy Commission (Click to Enlarge)
Another 1,200 MW of gas-fired capacity in southern California is aging, inefficient and also likely to be taken offline within a few years. Regulators, gas-plant owners and others also need to wonder, how might the gas-delivery needs of power generators be affected by plans to export LNG from the region’s ports, or plans to pipe more U.S. gas south to Mexico?
In the first half of this two-part series we consider the closure of SONGS and how state policy and federal regulations are shaping natural gas’s future role in the southernmost third of the Golden State. In the second half, we will examine in more detail where gas demand is headed in California—and why—and what that means for gas producers with access to that market.
SCE decided in June it no longer made economic sense to hold out hope that SONGS units 2 and 3 could be restarted any time soon. Both units--which are co-owned by SCE (78.2%), San Diego Gas & Electric (20%) and the city of Riverside (1.8%)--had been taken offline in January 2012, Unit 2 for a planned routine outage and Unit 3 when operators detected a small leak in a steam generator tube. (Unit 1 was retired in 1992.) Subsequent testing found premature wear in tubes throughout both units’ steam generators, which had been replaced in 2009-10. It looked as if it might take years for federal nuclear regulators to approve fixing and restarting the units, so SCE and the other co-owners of SONGS decided it was better to pull the plug on them and work with state regulators to plan for replacing their output and reworking parts of southern California’s transmission system to keep the grid on an even keel without the nuclear capacity. As a result the power-supply situation in the LA Basin and San Diego this past summer was dicey, with utilities worried that the loss of a key transmission line or big gas-fired unit during a heat wave could cut off power to hundreds of thousands or even millions of customers.
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