It’s telling that, for years, “utility
services” were referred to as “off-premises services” in
commercial property forms.
That’s because water, electricity, and
communications services were almost universally provided by
specialized utility companies to households and businesses. Except
for some farms and large manufacturers, almost no one had the
capability to provide these services for themselves.
That’s changing, however, when it comes to
electrical power, and it will change a lot faster if the federal
government has its way.
The U.S. Dept. of Energy (DOE) is leading a
nationwide effort to decentralize how electrical power is generated
and distributed in the United States.
“Distributed energy,” or “distributed
generation,” are terms used to describe the growing trend to place
power generating facilities on commercial or even residential
properties to ease demands on overstrained power grids and contain
the effects of local blackouts.
“Combined heat and power” (CHP, see below)
is just one form of distributed energy, but the DOE says that more
than 500 CHP sites were installed between 2000 and 2005. Their
combined generating capacity amounts to 20.6 gigawatts (GWs),
according to the DOE’s Energy Information Administration, a figure
roughly equivalent to the capacity of two major metropolitan
electrical utility companies.
As part of President George W. Bush’s energy
program, DOE has set a goal of having 92 GWs of CHP generating
capacity in place by 2010, an amount equivalent to more than 10% of
total U.S. generating capacity in 2004.
Public sector interest in distributed energy was
aroused by Hurricane Andrew in 1992, when thousands of Florida
residents suffered without power, even if their homes were otherwise
habitable and their businesses relatively undamaged.
Following the series of hurricanes that have
struck Gulf states over the past two years, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush
this year came out in support of legislative proposals to require
all gasoline facilities in the state to have emergency power
generators on site to ensure that residents and emergency crews can
have fuel following hurricanes.
Some argue that the proposals should go even
further and mandate that all food stores and ATMs have emergency
power sources.
Distributed energy entails much more than
emergency power, however, according to Ritchie Priddy, senior
associate with the North Star Energy Group, Des Plaines, Ill.
The California electricity crisis of 2001 and
the Northeastern blackout of 2003 dramatized the exposure of
households and businesses to power interruptions even under normal
conditions, Priddy says, and inspired many organizations to explore
the benefits of distributed energy.
“There’s a whole new cottage industry
springing up with this,” he says. “Many users are using
distributed energy for regular operating power, and we think that’s
the trend.”
As an example of the growing use of distributed
energy, the DOE reports that a supermarket in Mt. Kisco, N.Y.
recently installed four 60-kilowatt turbines to generate electricity
to provide air conditioning and cool display cases. The warm air
created is used to regenerate a desiccant wheel for reducing
unwanted moisture in the store.
Priddy adds that “commercial firms can now
practically and cost-effectively produce power to sell to regional
power grids” through energy “aggregator” firms.
In addition to offering financial incentives for
firms to reduce their demand for electricity, the New York
Independent System Operator contracts to purchase power at peak
times from non-utility companies that have their own generating
facilities.
Technological advances in developing
smaller-scale power generating equipment are allowing public
officials to promote what is, in essence, a re-engineering of the
nation’s power grid.
According to a report from the Northeast
Sustainable Energy Association (NSEA), energy equipment
manufacturers have developed “a whole new generation of modular
gas turbine and fuel cell power plants small enough to power retail
stores, restaurants, apartment houses, and even individual homes.”
Gas-fired turbines need natural gas to operate,
but research is underway to enable them to be powered by methane or
bio-gases that are generated by industrial operations. “Even
relatively small units can match the efficiency of the largest
coal-fired steam plant,” reads the report.
Fuel cells actually require no conventional fuel
at all, just an external supply of hydrogen that they convert into
electricity. As long as they have that, fuel cells operate like
batteries that never run down or need recharging.
Researchers are exploring economically viable
ways to extract pure hydrogen from water, which would boost the
value of fuel cells.
Photovoltaic cells convert sunlight into
electricity, and are called “the most modular of all the renewable
energy distributed resources” by the NSEA. Photovoltaic cells are
still hampered by the intermittent availability of sunlight, but
they provide vital relief on hot, sunny days when demand for
air-conditioning is greatest.
Wind energy conversion systems--windmills--are
being erected in areas open enough to accommodate them, although
they encounter significant resistance on aesthetic grounds.
Meanwhile, the principal focus of the federal
DOE’s distributed energy campaign is “combined heat and power”
(CHP). Also known as “co-generation,” CHP is the process of
capturing heat generated by industrial operations to drive steam
turbines and generate electricity.
“Smaller sized equipment dramatically expand[s]
the number of sites where CHP can be installed,” writes Neal
Elliot, an analyst with the American Council for an Energy Efficient
Economy. “These technologies are poised to satisfy a significant
portion of the U.S.’s growing electricity needs,” he writes.
The growing use of distributed energy means that
property insurers will be confronted with an exposure for onsite
power generation--and “utility” interruption--that was rare or
incidental in the past.
“These exposures are here to stay and
increasing every day,” says Samuel Broomer, a vice president with
Mutual Boiler Re, an equipment breakdown insurer based in Malvern,
Pa. “The need is driven by the increased reliability afforded in
an emergency or from cost savings developed through co-generation.”
“For the most part, the concentration of these
exposures varies with geography,” Broomer adds. Distributed energy
is found “where the frequency of electrical outages is more
common, or where an outage can have severe consequences, such as in
northern latitudes.”
“While still not a common exposure,
[distributed energy]
In addition, the presence of power generating
equipment at locations that typically did not have them in the past
introduces an exposure for fuel that many risks did not have in the
past, says Robert Guevara, AAIS vice president for inland marine.
Still, Guevara and Dina Widlacki, AAIS senior
product development specialist for commercial property, agree that a
risk that utilizes distributed energy is viewed as a better risk
from an underwriting standpoint.
“A firm that has its own power generating
capacity is generally considered to be a better risk,” says
Widlacki. “When you have your own power, even for emergency
purposes, it demonstrates that you have taken precautions to
maintain operations and limit losses.
“It also reassures an underwriter that an
insured location is likely to remain lighted and occupied in the
aftermath of a storm, and thus less likely to be vandalized or
suffer other types of slow degradation.”
However, equipment breakdown reinsurers caution
that the addition of power generation to a commercial risk calls for
a special degree of care and expertise.
“The risks are complicated by the fact that
the companies installing the electrical generating capacity may not
have the personnel that understand the equipment design,
installation, operation or maintenance requirements,” says
Milewski at HSB.
“Non-revenue generating departments, such as
maintenance and training, are often targets for staff and expense
reductions,” he adds. “As a result, the quality of the
maintenance may be reduced, impacting the reliability of the
equipment and the potential for failure.”
“These [energy] technologies have resulted in
increasingly high-performance machines which, for the most part,
have proven to be exceptionally reliable,” says Broomer at Mutual
Boiler Re. “Naturally, as the size and importance of these
capabilities within a facility increase, so do the inherent property
damage and time element exposures.”