RIO GRANDE ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, Inc. Eagle Ford Consortium Conference April 22, 2014.
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Transcript of RIO GRANDE ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, Inc. Eagle Ford Consortium Conference April 22, 2014.
RIO GRANDE ELECTRIC RIO GRANDE ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE, Inc.COOPERATIVE, Inc.
Eagle Ford Eagle Ford
Consortium ConferenceConsortium Conference
April 22, 2014April 22, 2014
TopicsTopics
1. About Rio Grande Electric Cooperative
2. Service territory as related to Eagle Ford region
3. Local area offices and contact information
4. General electrical services offered
5. Typical electrical services for oil & gas industry
6. Business information and process
7. Challenges faced serving the Eagle Ford Shale
Rio Grande Electric CooperativeRio Grande Electric Cooperative
• “Owned by Those We Serve”
• Organized: 1945
• Headquarters: Brackettville, Texas - Kinney County
• Service Territory: 35,000 sq. miles along Rio Grande River
• Memberships: 6,222 members with 12,950 meters
• Meter Density: 1.34 average meters per mile of line
Rio Grande Electric CooperativeRio Grande Electric Cooperative
• RGEC provides electric service to:
– 18 counties in Texas
– 2 counties in New Mexico
– 3 delivery points to Mexico along Rio Grande River
Rio Grande Electric CooperativeRio Grande Electric CooperativeTexas Service TerritoryTexas Service Territory
Rio Grande Electric CooperativeRio Grande Electric Cooperative• Major Facilities:
– 143 miles of self serving transmission line– 9,775 miles of overhead distribution line– 155 miles of underground distribution line– 18 substations– 4 substations located in Eagle Ford Shale region:
• Eagle Pass (Rosita Creek)• Carrizo Springs• Crystal City• Brundage
• RGEC also owns and operates 2 privatized military electrical distribution systems:– Ft. Bliss (El Paso)– Laughlin AFB (Del Rio)
Rio Grande Electric CooperativeRio Grande Electric Cooperative
• Eagle Ford Shale counties served:
– Edwards– Maverick– Zavala– Dimmit– Webb
Rio Grande Electric CooperativeRio Grande Electric Cooperative• Area offices are located in:
– Alpine
– Brackettville (HQ & office for Edwards county)
– Carrizo Springs (main office for Eagle Ford Shale region)
– Dell City
– El Paso
– Ft. Stockton
Carrizo Springs Area Office 3204 Valley StreetP.O. Box 125Carrizo Springs, Texas 78834
Telephone: (830) 876-2513 Toll Free: 1-(800) 460-0674 Fax: (830) 876-2087
RGEC Area OfficeRGEC Area Officeforfor
Main Eagle Ford Shale Region Main Eagle Ford Shale Region
Ken BuscherArea Operations Manager
RGEC Electrical ServicesRGEC Electrical Services
• General Single & Three Phase Service
• Residential
• Seasonal / Recreational
• Water Wells / Irrigation
• Temporary & Stand-By Power
• Area Lighting
• RioNet Satellite Internet Service
RGEC Electrical ServicesRGEC Electrical ServicesTypical for OIL and GAS INDUSTRYTypical for OIL and GAS INDUSTRY
• Temporary Construction Power• RV Parks & “Man Camps”• Oil Pipeline Valves• Pipeline Cathodic Protection• Large Power (loads > 50 KW)
– Oil Well Pumping– Oil Pipeline Booster Pump Station– Gas Compressor Station
RGEC Electrical ServicesRGEC Electrical ServicesFor OIL and GAS INDUSTRY
Major Large Power Requirements
•Primary Metering Stations– Typically 14.4/24.9 KV Three-Phase– Some of EFS area may be 7.2/12.47 KV 3Ø
•Substation– Express Distribution Feeder to Major Load– Step-Down Substation to Desired Voltage
•Wholesale Transmission Service
RGEC Business InformationRGEC Business Information
• Website: www.rgec.coop
– Bylaws– Tariff– Rate Schedule– Service Area Maps– Area Office Locations– Distributed Generation Manual
RGEC Service Request ProcessRGEC Service Request Process
• Become member of the Cooperative– File Membership Application– $5 Membership Fee– Establish Credit
• New Service Request– $250 Application Fee– Certificate of Tax Exemption (if applicable)– Certificate of Compliance (from local county)– Designate Account Representative (DR)– Provide copy of property deed(s) involved– Grant or obtain easements for power line ROW
Challenges RGEC faces serving large Challenges RGEC faces serving large Eagle Ford Shale loadsEagle Ford Shale loads
• Existing capacity limited: power lines/capacity is sparse some areas
• Piecemeal load service requests – understanding the “big picture” (ie, longer term load requirements) will facilitate better analysis and planning
• ROW confusion: Actual property owner has to grant easement for RGEC power lines – NOT the entity with surface agreement
• DIG-TESS response: need prompt and accurate pipeline locating
• Security concerns: for personnel working in remote areas near border
• “Hunting season”: can limit field engineering activities and impact power line construction schedules – causing delays for service
• “Last minute service requests”: make contact with utility early for ROM assessment of service requirements, service territory verification, etc.