'Ghost projects' haunt power grid planners and taxpayers

‘Ghost projects’ haunt power grid planners and taxpayers

Spread the love

(The Center Square) – As the country braces for a surge in electricity demand driven by large energy users like data centers, two questions lie at the center of the debate over the grid’s future: can it remain reliable and who will pay for it?

Utility experts warn that rising load forecasts are colliding with projected supply shortfalls. And, while PJM works to finalize new rules for connecting large load customers to the grid, some state officials, consumer advocates, and industry groups are zeroing in on the affordability piece of the puzzle.

Accurate load forecasting is essential in meeting rising demand without wasting capital on infrastructure that may never be used, and it affects everything – from keeping the lights on to the prices customers pay each month.

“Ghost projects” are a big part of the issues that are creating uncertainty, Todd Snitchler, president and CEO of the Electric Power Supply Association, or EPSA, told The Center Square.

A ghost project is a generation or transmission project that is announced or funded but never gets built.

Snitchler said gigawatts of new demand are being reported to the system, but there are duplications. Data center developers and hyperscalers routinely scout multiple locations at once, so the same potential project gets counted several times, artificially inflating the load forecast – leading to the risk of overbuilding, stranded costs, or unnecessary spending.

According to Snitchler, there are utilities pointing to these numbers to justify getting back into the business of rate-based generation, claiming they can deliver new plants faster and more cheaply, and with no impact on customers.

None of this can be true, he added, “because they’re subject to the same pressures we are as independent power producers.” And under their business model, they recover their costs plus a reasonable rate of return through a non-bypassable charge paid by customers.

Some states, he said, are tightening their tariffs to include only credible, large-load projects in forecasts. When AEP Ohio applied its new tariff, its projected growth over five years dropped from 30 GW to 13 GW – a 60% reduction. The former is equivalent to powering 26 million homes, while the latter is enough for 1.1 million.

“That suggests to me,” he said, “they can’t be alone in experiencing that.”

He noted that the load forecast for most Pennsylvania utilities was surprisingly flat, with others having only 1-1.5% annual growth, while PPL’s amounted to a 200% increase over 10 years. Something he says is wildly out of step with their peer utilities and raises questions about how thoroughly they are vetting projects, and how many are real.

He argued that overstated demand forecasts suggest developers need to build like crazy, justifying the utilities’ preference to get back into the rate-based generation business – and forcing customers to pay for new power plants instead of relying on the competitive market.

In these cases, Snitchler questions whether the projects are real, or simply advocacy tools designed to help publicly traded utilities grow their rate base and boost shareholder returns, as opposed to competitive developers who invest their own capital and bear the risk themselves.

His concern is that in addition to not having the best answer, there’s an incentive to have the wrong answer, because that helps advance policy objectives that may be better for some organizations, but are intentionally harmful to others.

The bottom line, EPSA says, is that realistic, data-driven planning ensures reliability for the 67 million customers in the PJM region. The solution to meeting demand is continued investment through competitive electricity markets in new and existing power generation, guided by disciplined, transparent forecasting that reflects the projects most likely to materialize.

“There is no silver bullet for this – and I’m not even convinced there’s silver buckshot. Because there’s so much happening that needs coordination for us to deliver and do our best, to ensure a reliable, affordable, and growing system,” Snitchler said. “I think everyone is aiming in the right direction, and we’d do a little better if we bickered less and cooperated more. But it doesn’t feel like where we are at the moment.”

“PJM is doing everything within our authority to reform our processes so they reflect load growth that is likely to occur, not just speculative activity,” Jeffrey Shields, PJM spokesperson, told The Center Square via email.

He said the potential for duplicative requests is one issue they are addressing with their stakeholders in the Critical Information Fast Path process for Large Load Additions, which will conclude on Nov. 19 with a recommendation to the PJM Board of Managers. The CIFP process was initiated by the Board in August to explore ways to continue to connect large loads to the system quickly and reliably without risking electricity shortages.

As part of the CIFP discussions, they are recommending several improvements to the load forecasting process, building on existing enhancements that incorporate large load adjustments into the long-term forecast. They have also standardized the system that load-serving entities use to request large load additions, to include evidence of binding commitments that facilities will be built.

PJM has also recommended a specific review process involving the states and utilities that operate within their borders; those states and their utilities also have authority to set rates and require commitments from data centers and other “large load” customers.

A summary of their proposal to deal with the issue will be considered along with 11 others.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

House Dems pass redistricting amendment GOP says will lead to more gerrymandering

House Dems pass redistricting amendment GOP says will lead to more gerrymandering

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Democrat state legislators say they are one step closer to standing against attacks on voting rights after...
TCS exclusive leads to revised legal arguments in income tax referendum lawsuit

TCS exclusive leads to revised legal arguments in income tax referendum lawsuit

By TJ MartinellThe Center Square Let's Go Washington filed a supplemental brief to the state Supreme Court for its lawsuit to force a referendum on the millionaire's tax that cited...
Republican lawmakers press Trump trade rep on tariff relief

Republican lawmakers press Trump trade rep on tariff relief

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Republican lawmakers pushed back Wednesday against the Trump administration's tariff policies during a House Ways and Means Committee hearing. They raised concerns about the impact...

WATCH: WA GOP leader calls AG’s income tax emails ‘certainly improper’

By Carleen JohnsonThe Center Square Washington Senate Minority Leader John Braun says documents obtained by The Center Square that reveal months of communication between the office of Attorney General Nick...
WAGOP calls on justice to recuse herself in income tax ruling over alleged conflict

WAGOP calls on justice to recuse herself in income tax ruling over alleged conflict

By Tim ClouserThe Center Square The Washington State Republican Party wants a state Supreme Court justice to recuse herself from ruling in a legal challenge to a millionaire's tax, citing...
Georgia candidates mourn Scott, celebrate accomplishments

Georgia candidates mourn Scott, celebrate accomplishments

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Candidates in Georgia’s 13th congressional district and other state leaders mourned the death of Rep. David Scott, D-Ga. Scott was first elected to Congress in...
Congress considers national citizen-only voting amendment

Congress considers national citizen-only voting amendment

By Chris Dickerson | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A Florida Congresswoman has introduced a constitutional amendment that would establish a clear requirement that only United States citizens can vote in...
Fragile ceasefire with Iran being tested

Fragile ceasefire with Iran being tested

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square After extending the ceasefire with Iran, President Donald Trump is reportedly giving the Islamic Republic a shorter deadline to present a unified proposal for a...
Faith leaders urge SEC to expand retirement options for nonprofit workers

Faith leaders urge SEC to expand retirement options for nonprofit workers

By Tom JoyceThe Center Square Faith leaders and conservative groups want the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to change retirement rules they say hurt nonprofit and church workers. In a...
Trump attacks Supreme Court over tariffs, frets about birthright case

Trump attacks Supreme Court over tariffs, frets about birthright case

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump lashed out at U.S. Supreme Court justices Wednesday, calling some Republican-appointed members "weak, stupid, and bad" over a February ruling that struck...
Senate Democrats vow to make budget resolution vote painful for Republicans

Senate Democrats vow to make budget resolution vote painful for Republicans

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Senate Republicans will kick off a vote-a-rama as soon as Wednesday evening on a budget resolution, unlocking a filibuster-proof way to fund ICE and Border...
Lawmakers question Omar’s role in fraud scandal as she skips hearing

Lawmakers question Omar’s role in fraud scandal as she skips hearing

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota lawmakers are questioning U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar’s role in the Feeding Our Future fraud scheme as investigations and prosecutions continue. On Tuesday, the state...
Illinois Quick Hits: Governor announces green tax credits for film and TV

Illinois Quick Hits: Governor announces green tax credits for film and TV

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker has announced a new 5% tax credit to incentivize green film and television production....
‘Plaintiffs’ lawyer paradise:’ IL lawsuit-friendly courts jack up costs, report says

‘Plaintiffs’ lawyer paradise:’ IL lawsuit-friendly courts jack up costs, report says

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineThe Center Square Illinois is falling behind the rest of the country at reforming its court system, and in some ways is headed in the...
Scott, congressman from Georgia, dies

Scott, congressman from Georgia, dies

By Kim JarrettThe Center Square U.S. Rep. David Scott, a Democrat from Georgia's 13th Congressional District, has died. He was 80. Scott, fifth member of Congress to die in office...