My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Browse
Search
(13)AR 050608 Power Sales Agreement
Colton
>
CITY CLERK
>
City Council Agendas
>
Agenda Packets
>
2000 - 2009
>
2008
>
05/06/2008 6:00 pm
>
CONSENT CALENDAR:
>
Purchase Power Agreement
>
(13)AR 050608 Power Sales Agreement
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
2/23/2014 5:57:27 AM
Creation date
2/19/2014 11:35:03 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Agenda Item
Item Number
13
Subject (2)
- Approve the Power Sales Agreement between the Southern California Public Power Authority and the City subject to Preparation of the Final Execution Copy for Renewable Energy to Comply with Senate Bill 1078.
Submitted On
5/1/2008
Submitted By
Sabdi Espinoza
Item Title
AR 050608 Power Sales Agreement
ATRequest
2180
Status (2)
2
Department
City Clerk
Meeting Date
5/6/2008
Meeting Time
6:00:00 PM
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
92
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
ITEM #13 <br />CITY OF COLTON <br />AGENDA REPORT <br />FOR CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 06, 2008 <br />TO: HONORABLE MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL <br />FROM: Jeannette Olko, Electric Utility General Manager <br />SUBJECT: Request to Approve Power Sales Agreement with the Southern <br />California Public Power Authority <br />DATE: April 29, 2008 <br />BACKGROUND: <br />On October 7, 2003, the City of Colton adopted Resolution No. R-102-03, thus establishing a <br />Renewables Portfolio Standard ("RPS") Policy to comply with Senate Bill 1078. SB 1078 <br />provided specific guidelines to Investor Owned Utilities ("IOU") in developing and implementing <br />a RPS, and ordered municipal electric utilities to devise local standards in light of the <br />legislation's public policy goals while taking into consideration the effect of the standard on <br />rates, reliability, financial resources, and the goal of environmental improvement. In addition, <br />each publicly owned electric utility must report its progress toward attaining the RPS not only to <br />its customers, but also to the California Energy Commission. On March 6, 2007, the city council <br />approved an amendment to Resolution No. R-102-03 to reflect a target portfolio level of 20 <br />percent by December 31, 2010. <br />DISCUSSION/ ANALYSIS: <br />Currently, the energy the City receives from renewable resources equals approximately four <br />percent (4%) of the total electricity sold to our customers. Existing renewable resources include <br />landfill gas, wind, and solar. Through SCPPA, the Electric Utility is in the midst of a due <br />diligence process on a number of renewable projects, including resources from geothermal, <br />small hydroelectric generation (less than 30 MW in size), solar thermal, and green waste. The <br />Biosoils project will also provide renewable energy for the Electric Utility. All together, these <br />projects will allow the City to meet and most likely exceed the legislative goal of 20 percent by <br />December 31, 2010. <br />This power sales agreement is the culmination of an extended negotiation between the <br />members of SCPPA and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California to receive power <br />generated by small hydroelectric facilities located in Southern California. The agreement is in <br />substantially final form, subject to minor modifications as each participant obtains approval from <br />their respective city councils. The City of Azusa approved the power sales agreement on April <br />28, 2008, subject to preparation of the final execution copy. Anaheim Public Utilities will be <br />seeking approval on May 13, 2008. <br />Under terms of the agreement, each participant in the project — the Cities of Anaheim, Azusa, <br />and Colton, will receive the renewable energy, including the associated capacity rights and <br />environmental attributes from four hydroelectric plants with a total nameplate capacity of 17.04 <br />MW over a term of fifteen years and two months. These four plants have historically produced <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.