Developing a Risk Management/Plant Optimization Strategy to
Transcription
Developing a Risk Management/Plant Optimization Strategy to
Developing a Risk Management/Plant Optimization Strategy to Support Cornell University’s Conversion to Natural Gas Cogeneration Presented by: Jim Adams, Director of Utilities Energy and Sustainability Cornell University Rick Sievertsen, Vice President Fellon-McCord June 28, 2011 BACKGROUND June 28, 2011 2 Why Change? • Was operating a 90% coalfired power plant • Local utility offered low, fixed-price electricity – 1997: rate structure no longer available • Had been studying feasibility of building cogeneration – Natural gas plant more efficient June 28, 2011 3 Why Change? • Cogeneration = higher fuel demands • Annual fuel consumption would increase almost 70%, 15 x more gas – From 1.6 mill Dth (coal + gas) to 2.7 mill Dth • Needed strategic approach to energy procurement June 28, 2011 4 DEVELOPING AN ENERGY PROCUREMENT POLICY June 28, 2011 5 Guidelines Defined • Initial business rules for procurement – Purchases of $2+ million need Board of Trustees approval • Lengthy approval process • Would limit effectiveness of program • Volatility of natural gas markets require quick decision June 28, 2011 6 Internal Team Created • Partnered with senior administration – CFO, treasurer, vice president of budget and planning, vice president of facilities and purchasing, representative from investment office • Energy purchasing policy established – – – – – – – June 28, 2011 Portfolio could extend 5 years and have $180 million value Transaction caps, resulting in layered coverage 80% cap on hedged volume Derivatives and weather-related hedges permitted Physical and financial hedges permitted Energy Risk Oversight Committee (EROC) Minimum credit rating requirements 7 FINDING A PARTNER AND DEVELOPING A PLAN June 28, 2011 8 EROC Directive: Third-Party Consultant • Initially researched large financial counterparties • Determined needs were best served by a firm focused only on energy management • Partnership established between Cornell University and Fellon-McCord June 28, 2011 9 Develop Purchasing Strategy • Together developed a plan – Identified level of risk tolerance – Developed risk charter – Recommended natural gas purchasing program Quantify Risk Evaluate & Adjust June 28, 2011 Determine Tolerance Document Procedures Choose Instruments 10 Purchasing Program Recommendation • Three-year program 100 Incremental Purchases Hedged % of Physical Supply – First year: base hedge 40% of expected consumption – Subsequent years: 30% and 20% based on forward price curve 75 50 Month 13 Month 25 25 Month 37 0 12 24 36 Hedge/Fixed Price Term (months) • Program approved in 2009 June 28, 2011 11 Time to Execute Hedging Strategy • Fellon-McCord – Identified qualified suppliers • Had to meet natural gas requirements, be able to facilitate Cornell’s forward purchases, appropriate credit rating – Worked with Cornell and potential vendors to identify best options – Walked Cornell decision-makers through every step of the process • University made final decisions June 28, 2011 12 Continuous Review • Original Risk Charter still in-place • Continuous communication is key – Immediate communication if markets change – Weekly calls to discuss changes in market conditions, price activity, underlying market trends – Quarterly reviews between EROC and FellonMcCord ensure budget targets are met June 28, 2011 13 BENEFITS OF AN OUTSOURCED ENERGY PARTNER June 28, 2011 14 Benefits • Cornell has access to all of Fellon-McCord’s resources – Expertise across the energy supply chain – Difficult for Cornell to replicate with internal staff • Market / industry happenings • Contract knowledge • Day-to-day mechanics June 28, 2011 15 Energy Resources • Market Committee – Committee of energy professionals with diverse backgrounds and extensive industry experience – Daily review of all market factors – Recommendations – based on Cornell’s risk tolerance – published in Fellon-McCord Market Update© and discussed in person June 28, 2011 16 Energy Resources • Regularly issued publications June 28, 2011 17 Energy Resources • Fellon-McCord helped Cornell maneuver through entire process – Developed purchasing strategy from initial discussion through execution – Acts as liaison with natural gas suppliers – Works with local utility to export Cornell’s excess electricity to grid – Advises on all aspects of energy market June 28, 2011 18 Cornell University + Fellon-McCord = Strong Strategic Partnership June 28, 2011 19 QUESTIONS June 28, 2011 20