Saturday, February 04, 2012Register
About   |  
Contact   |  
Search
You are here STATES Oklahoma
 Â
 

 

Oklahoma FlagOklahoma
 
The information provided below will help you understand and navigate through the regulatory environment in Oklahoma.

Number of CHP Sites: 18
Installed Megawatts: 1.3 GW

Sample Oklahoma Organizations Using CHP
Industrial
  • Firestone Tire & Rubber Company/Dayton Tire Plant
  • Citation Oil & Gas
  • Weyerhaeuser Company
  • Ponca City Refinery
Education
  • University of Oklahoma
  • Oklahoma State University

Electric Industry Restructuring Status

In June 2001, the Governor signed SB 440, which established a 9-member task force to further study the effects of deregulation. Retail competition will not be implemented until after the task force issues its final report at the end of 2002 and the legislature enacts enabling restructuring legislation. In February 2004, the U.S. DOE's Oak Ridge National Laboratory submitted a report showing that Oklahoma consumers could end up with electric rates up to 25% higher than existing rates if retail competition was implemented. The study was used by the Electric Restructuring Advisory Committee, established under SB 440, to complete their own report concerning transmission issues. No further deregulation action has occurred.


Interconnection Regulations

There are no regulations in place at this time.


Net-Metering Rules

Net metering has been available in Oklahoma since 1988 under Oklahoma Corporate Commission Order 326195. This ruling requires investor owned utilities and rural cooperatives under the Commission's jurisdiction to file net metering tariffs for customer-owned renewable energy and cogeneration facilities at 100 kW or less in capacity. The program is available to all customer classes and there is no statewide limit to the amount of net metering capacity.

Exit Fees/Stranded Costs

Each utility must propose a recovery plan for stranded costs under Senate Bill 500. Transition charges, which can be collected over at 3 - 7-year period, must not cause the total price for electric power to exceed the cost per kWh paid by consumers when the law was enacted during the transition period.


Siting Requirements

An electrical generation facility does not need the permission of the Oklahoma Corporation Commission. However, certain environmental and emissions permits must be obtained from the Oklahoma DEQ.


Air Emissions Regulations

There are no areas in non-attainment status.


Minor Source Permitting

Sources emitting more than 5 tons per year of a criteria pollutant must obtain a minor source permit.

Standards by Criteria Pollutant
Criteria Pollutant Emissions Standard
Nitrogen Oxides Any new gas-fired fuel-burning equipment with a rated heat input of 50 million BTUs per hour or more, in excess of 0.20 pound per million BTUs (0.36 gram per million gram-calorie) heat input, two-hour maximum
Sulfur Oxides 0.2 lb/MMBtu for gas
Limit applies to all minor sources

Units that cannot meet the above limits will be required to install controls. Sources that emit more than 100 tons per year of any criteria pollutant are required to complete a state-level Best Available Control Technology analysis. The cost threshold is $8,000 to $10,000 per ton for NOx.

There is a 30-day public comment period for sources with a potential to emit 100 tons per year or greater. The total permitting time is anywhere from 3 months to 1.5 years for a large project.

Major NSR/PSD Permitting

A potential to emit 250 tons or more of any criteria pollutant triggers a Prevention of Substantial Deterioration.

State Incentives & Grants

Gulf Coast CHP directory (last updated Jan. 2011)

 


Houston Advanced Research CenterU.S. Department of Energy Gulf Coast Clean Energy Application Center
4800 Research Forest Drive
The Woodlands, TX 77381

Privacy StatementTerms Of UseHouston Advanced Research Center

BorderBoxedBlueBoxedGrayBlueSmall width layoutMedium width layoutMaximum width layoutMaximum textMedium textSmall textBack Top!