IESO invites new ideas on how to provide regulation service

Toronto: As part of its ongoing efforts to broaden participation in Ontario’s energy markets, the Independent Electricity System Operator released a Request for Information (RFI) June 22, related to the provision of regulation, an essential service that helps maintain the balance between supply and demand. Regulation is a contracted service that acts to match total system generation to total system load (plus transmission losses) on a second-by-second basis and helps to correct variations in power system frequency.

          The IESO says it wants to expand the regulation market in Ontario and is opening the RFI to both incumbent providers and potential new entrants into the regulation service marketplace. The RFI will enable the IESO to assess respondents’ capabilities in the provision of regulation, including through the use of products and technologies not currently utilized in Ontario or specified in the IESO Market Rules.

          The IESO currently schedules up to 100 megawatts of regulation range on a day-to-day basis.

          Like many jurisdictions across North America, several factors are driving the need to expand the regulation market in Ontario, including:

• The nature of forecasting the output of variable generation such as solar and wind resources;

• The behaviour of distributed energy resources that are not subject to IESO dispatch instructions or fully integrated into the IESO’s operational tools and processes; and

• Changing patterns in consumer demand for electricity resulting from conservation and energy efficiency, embedded generation and other factors that impact the accuracy of demand forecasts and dispatch decisions.

          “This RFI marks the next stage in the evolution of Ontario’s ancillary services market, building on our Alternative Technologies for Regulation project in 2012,” said Kim Warren, the IESO’s Vice-President of Market and System Operations and Chief Operating Officer. “As Ontario’s supply mix continues to change, and as consumer behaviour becomes more difficult to predict, we need the right tools to maintain reliability. Through this RFI, we hope to determine how best to expand those sources of regulation that can meet our needs.”

          In advance of the RFI, the IESO posted on its website one full year of its regulation signal data, a step intended to help potential new entrants into the regulation market to assess, test and simulate various scenarios at their own facility using an actual sample of the IESO’s regulation signal data. The data sample can be found here.

          The RFI is a precursor to a potential Request for Proposals for regulation service. The form of any such RFP has not yet been determined but will be influenced by the aggregate responses to this RFI.

          The IESO will accept responses to the RFI until Friday, September 30, 2016 at 3 p.m. All related documents, including submission requirements, are available here.