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2022 ozone season NOx prices rise with natural gas prices
14 July 2022IHS Markit Energy Expert
Cross-state Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) Group 3 seasonal nitrogen
oxide (NOx) allowance prices have increased over tenfold
in 2022 (see Figure below). The rapid increase in natural gas
prices over the last six months have made coal plants more
economically competitive, driving this recent spike in
NOz prices as coal plants demand more allowances.
Moreover, regulatory uncertainty from a proposed update to the
CSAPR program, known as the Good Neighbor Rule update, has made
allowance holders wary of trading away credits that could be banked
for use next summer when fewer allowances are granted.
As high wholesale power prices have made coal plants more
economical and high gas prices have eroded gas plant margins, fleet
operators have greater incentive to dispatch coal plants in the
current market. However, they face constraints from NOx
emissions limits. Emissions credits represent an opportunity to
generate more revenue by being able to dispatch coal plants longer.
At fuel prices around $8.71/mmbtu for natural gas and $3.00/mmbtu
for coal (based on EIA data from early June 2022), a typical coal
plant could pay up to $32,000 per allowance and still be
economically dispatched.
Regulatory uncertainty may also have a role in current market
behavior. In February, the EPA proposed the Good Neighbor Rule
update to CSAPR which would add an additional 13 states to Group 3
and lower the allowance budgets for these states. This proposal may
lead to less liquidity as operators hold on to allowances to build
a bank for the 2023 ozone season. This reaction contributes to
rising prices due to a smaller supply of allowances being traded.
However, this impact will likely be temporary as 2024 will see new
limitations on the use of banked allowances.
The current sky-high NOx prices are unlikely to last
beyond this summer, as natural gas prices are expected to fall
under $6/mmbtu by next ozone season. Coal prices are also likely to
continue rising, eroding the cost benefits of coal plants.
Nonetheless, S&P Global expects NOx allowance prices
beyond this ozone season to be higher than previously seen under
the CSAPR program if the Good Neighbor Rule proposal takes
effect.
For the remainder of this summer, allowance prices will likely
fall if gas prices stay below $8/mmbtu as a result of the Freeport
LNG facility fire that is limiting US exports. NOx
prices may fall as much as 50% if market participants adopt a
similar view of gas prices for their planning purposes. Short-term
fluctuations in gas prices are unlikely to impact NOx
prices as operators focus on the five-month ozone season as a whole
(May through September). Nonetheless, the allowance market will
continue to react to external events that typically impact prices
such as hot weather and increased power demand. With high gas
prices, regulatory uncertainty, and an above-average summer
forecast, this year's NOx prices are unlikely to cool to
anywhere near last summer's values.