Black Mountain CCO talks storage in MISO and SPP ahead of looming IX studies deadline

Standalone storage developer Black Mountain Energy Storage has pivoted its development expertise to SPP and MISO as its home market of ERCOT has continued to get over-saturated.

BMES presently has over a 1 GW of storage projects collectively across both grid operators and both regions offer attractive attributes for the developer, said the company’s chief commercial officer Witt Duncan in an interview with NPM.

The route to commercialization, across both grid operators, includes a level of contractedness, either through a flat toll or through capacity contracts, said Duncan, adding that capacity contracts “provide load serving entities, who are beholden to resource adequacy measures, capacity attributes of the facility while project owners collect a flat capacity payment plus energy and ancillary services revenue-similar to the RA construct in CAISO."

Both grid operators also support four-hour batteries.

What will occupy BMES in the coming weeks is SPP as the grid operator has an October 31st deadline looming for projects to be submitted for interconnection studies. The SPP has elected to forego the 2025 cluster year, so developers either submit or have a two-year waiting period to get their respective projects in the queue.

Duncan said BMES has four projects which it intends to submit into queue studies ahead of the deadline, if the deadline isn’t pushed back.

SPP is facing “looming retirement of thermal capacity, load growth and offers ELCC rating of renewables,” said Duncan. The SPP had proposed ELCC a performance-based accreditation (PBA) earlier this year to FERC which would allow them to understand which resources will be available when needed based on their past performance.

Specific to MISO, Ducan said the grid operator has seen an introduction of data center load growth, which has changed the opportunity for contracting and offtake origination, and also looming retirement of older thermal resources. This includes Entergy Arkansas plans to retire 2.4 GW of coal capacity through the end of this decade, amongst other Integrated Resource Plans (IRP) filed across the region.

As with SPP, Duncan also sees the path to commercialization likely bilateral deals with load serving entities (LSE) and another opportunity, albeit smaller, through MISO’s centrally cleared capacity auction.

“It does give owners the ability to sell capacity through a cleared auction, but its s smaller percentage and it is kind of boom-and-bust cycle,” said Duncan, adding that it is not the best path towards the market.

“There is a more accretive path towards getting projects sold, either bilateral with member utilities, load serving entities and C&I customers,” added Duncan.

ERCOT

BMES built its reputation developing and flipping early-to-middle stage projects to the likes of UBS Asset Management, East Point Energy, Excelsior Energy Capital in previous years.

Overall, BMES sold roughly 3 GW of projects in ERCOT since the company was founded in 2021.

*This story was originally published exclusively for NPM subscribers last month.

NPM US (New Project Media) is a leading data, intelligence and events company dedicated to providing origination led coverage of the renewable energy market for the development, finance, advisory & corporate community.

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