Enron Mail

From:miyung.buster@enron.com
To:ann.schmidt@enron.com, bryan.seyfried@enron.com, elizabeth.linnell@enron.com,filuntz@aol.com, james.steffes@enron.com, janet.butler@enron.com, jeannie.mandelker@enron.com, jeff.dasovich@enron.com, joe.hartsoe@enron.com, john.neslage@enron.com, john.
Subject:Energy Issues
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Thu, 10 May 2001 04:01:00 -0700 (PDT)

Please see the following articles:

Sac Bee, Thurs, 5/10: "PUC sweats $4.8 billion rate raise"

Sac Bee, Thurs, 5/10: "PG&E wants panel to get boot"

Sac Bee, Thurs, 5/10: "Major job losses predicted; governor presses=20
generators"

Sac Bee, Thurs, 5/10: "Bond-sale bill goes to Davis "

Sac Bee, Thurs, 5/10: "State revenue outlook shrinks "

SD Union, Thurs, 5/10: "No blackouts despite dip in supplies"

SD Union (AP), Wed, 5/9: "Biggest users face huge rate hikes under PUC pla=
n"

LA Times, Thurs, 5/10: "Rate Hikes Up to 60" Proposed by PUC Chief"

LA Times, Thurs, 5/10: "Bush Energy Stance Begins to Worry Some in GOP"

LA Times, Thurs, 5/10: "In Office Buildings, the Lights Are On, But Nobody=
's=20
Home"

LA Times, Thurs, 5/10: "Power Shifts to Congress" (Commentary)

SF Chron, Thurs, 5/10: "Proud state forced to knees in power hunt"=20

SF Chron, Thurs, 5/10: "Power bills set to skyrocket for heavy users=20
Graduated rate increase would take effect in June "

SF Chron (AP), Thurs, 5/10: "Developments in California's energy crisis "

SF Chron (AP), Thurs, 5/10: "PG&E says fewer small power plants offline "

SF Chron (AP), Thurs, 5/10: "A look at two rate designs before power=20
regulators"

SF Chron, Thurs, 5/10: "Lights stay on despite failure of big plant"=20

SF Chron, Thurs, 5/10: "PG&E fights consumer committee=20
Obstruction feared in bankruptcy case "

SF Chron, Thurs, 5/10: "Generators silent on Davis plan=20
He offers lower compensation to stave off Edison bankruptcy "

Mercury News, Thurs, 5/10: "Rate plans shield most households"

Mercury News, Thurs, 5/10: "Energy bond plan gets final legislative OK,=20
faces delay"

Mercury News, Thurs, 5/10: "Fusion research gets a boost"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Power is Money
PUC details plan to raise Edison rates up to 34%. Half of users to see no=
=20
hike"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Economic crisis in forecast"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "GOP stalls sale of bonds with vote"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Electricity notebook
Davis asks power suppliers to accept 30% less than owed"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Regulators says more electricity rate hikes are=
=20
likely"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Starting all over again
The Legislature's special session on the power crisis ends today -- with mo=
re
work to do at an added cost"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Davis is set to sign a $13.4 billion bond-issue=
=20
measure
today to cover electricity costs"

OC Register, Thurs, 5/10: "Papering over state electricity problems"


Individual.com (AP), Thurs, 5/10: "Task Force To Propose Legislation"

Individual.com (AP), Thurs, 5/10: "Stage 2 Electrical Emergency Declaratio=
n;
SCE to Curtail 'Load' for Some Customers"

Individual.com (Bridgenews), Thurs, 5/10: "[B] FULL/ Pacific Gas & Electri=
c=20
restores all Qualifying=20
Facilities --Pacific Gas & Electric says 8 of 300 QFs still shut down"=20

---------------------------------------------------------------------------=
---
-------------------------------------

PUC sweats $4.8 billion rate raise
By Carrie Peyton
Bee Staff Writer
(Published May 10, 2001)=20
Big industries' electric bills would leap 50 percent or more and household=
=20
bills would rise an average of 11 percent to 17 percent under two proposals=
=20
outlined by state regulators Wednesday for revamping electric rates.=20
The twin proposals are efforts by Loretta Lynch, president of the state=20
Public Utilities Commission, and Christine Walwyn, a PUC administrative=20
judge, to decide how to divide the burden of a $4.8 billion rate hike.=20
"Both of them are just going to be very, very hard on business," said Bill=
=20
Booth, an attorney for the California Large Energy Consumers Association. H=
e=20
said it appeared that some cement and steel makers could face 90 percent ra=
te=20
hikes.=20
But small consumers were equally dismayed.=20
"This never should have happened in the first place," said Bob Finkelstein,=
=20
an attorney with The Utility Reform Network, placing the blame for soaring=
=20
rates on electric deregulation.=20
"In terms of allocating the fallout from the failed experiment, they seemed=
=20
to do a reasonable job. But it assumes that the fallout should be allocated=
=20
in the first place, and that just sticks in our craw," he said.=20
Several PUC commissioners have said they want to select a new rate design a=
t=20
a special meeting Monday, so the higher electric bills can begin going out=
=20
June 1 to customers of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern California=
=20
Edison.=20
One version before the PUC would include Lynch's call to begin looking for=
=20
ways to charge federal installations power rates that are tied to wildly=20
gyrating wholesale costs.=20
Reportedly first floated as a joke, the idea quickly took hold within the=
=20
PUC. Lynch said she wants to set it up as "pilot program," perhaps beginnin=
g=20
in mid-summer, so the federal government can test its own theories about=20
unfettered market prices being good for consumers.=20
"I don't believe it's a dig at the FERC (Federal Energy Regulatory=20
Commission)," she said during a news conference.=20
But she repeated her attack on federal regulators, saying electric rates ar=
e=20
rising in California only because the FERC has refused to cap runaway=20
wholesale electric prices.=20
Commissioner Richard Bilas later called a special federal rate "silly" and=
=20
"kindergartenish," and said the proposal was clearly intended "just to get=
=20
back at the federal government."=20
Any of the five appointed commissioners can offer an alternate version of t=
he=20
rate design, as Lynch did. The alternates will be considered alongside the=
=20
proposal by Walwyn, the judge who presided over lengthy hearings on how the=
=20
new rates should be crafted.=20
She recommended increases that would fall slightly more softly on residenti=
al=20
customers -- averaging 11 percent for Edison and 15 percent for PG&E -- and=
=20
more heavily on large industrial users, averaging 52 percent for Edison and=
=20
55 percent for PG&E.=20
But within those averages could be much higher individual increases, and=20
advocates for everyone from farmers to manufacturers waited anxiously=20
throughout the day for detailed tables that would list rates for dozens of=
=20
customer categories.=20
"I have got my expert economist standing by to look at the numbers when the=
y=20
come out," said Ron Liebert, associate counsel for the California Farm Bure=
au=20
Federation.=20
The release of the rate proposal has been delayed repeatedly as the PUC tri=
ed=20
to cram work that usually takes months into just a few weeks, and many of i=
ts=20
details remained obscure late Wednesday, dismaying those who are still=20
arguing for changes.=20
"We have to file comments on this by Friday. What they're doing is, they're=
=20
shutting down the comment period," said Jack Stewart, president of the=20
California Manufacturers & Technology Association.=20
He said it appears that some rates could nearly double, and "that's just a=
=20
death knell for many California manufacturers."=20
Lynch provided only sketchy summaries of her ideas, saying she wanted to=20
raise residential rates 16 percent for Edison and 17 percent for PG&E on=20
average, raise industrial rates 50 percent to 52 percent and cap agricultur=
al=20
rate increases on a sliding scale from 23 percent to 30 percent, partly at=
=20
Gov. Gray Davis' urging.=20
She said that about half of households statewide would see no increase unde=
r=20
a state law that protects those who use less than 130 percent of a "baselin=
e"=20
amount. However, PG&E has calculated that far more households -- 69 percent=
=20
-- use more than the baseline at some point during the year.=20
PG&E's baseline varies by region and season but generally runs between 300=
=20
and 400 kilowatt-hours, or about 50 percent to 60 percent of average=20
electricity use per household. It was created to give people access to a=20
minimal amount of power at a lower rate.=20
The heaviest household users still would see no increase on their first few=
=20
hundred kilowatt-hours, but after that prices would rise sharply, in tiers,=
=20
so that some households could see their overall bills rise 34 percent or=20
more.=20
Lynch and Walwyn also have proposed "bill limiters" so that businesses with=
=20
unusual usage patterns won't get hammered by unintended rate spikes.=20
The increases will not affect customers of the Sacramento Municipal Utility=
=20
District, which recently approved its own hikes, averaging 22 percent, and=
=20
other ratepayer-owned utilities.=20

The Bee's Carrie Peyton can be reached at (916) 321-1086 or=20
cpeyton@sacbee.com.=20



PG&E wants panel to get boot
By Claire Cooper
Bee Legal Affairs Writer
(Published May 10, 2001)=20
SAN FRANCISCO -- Pacific Gas and Electric Co. on Wednesday asked a judge to=
=20
disband an unprecedented committee of ratepayers appointed last week to=20
represent consumers in the utility's bankruptcy case, saying that some in t=
he=20
group were politically biased.=20
The utility filed a motion arguing that U.S. Bankruptcy trustee Linda Ekstr=
om=20
Stanley exceeded her legal authority by designating a consumers committee=
=20
armed with broad powers to investigate and negotiate alongside the utility=
=20
and its creditors.=20
The utility denounced the committee as a collection of "special interest"=
=20
groups with "well-known political and policy agendas" and a "history of=20
aggressive lobbying and litigation."=20
The PG&E motion, which was set for a hearing May 18 before Bankruptcy Judge=
=20
Dennis Montali, warned that turning the consumer committee loose could=20
"substantially retard the progress of this case and seriously prejudice its=
=20
outcome."=20
On Friday, PG&E singled out Consumers Union and The Utility Reform Network =
as=20
"well-organized lobbyists and political operatives."=20
Consumers Union regional chief Harry Snyder, a committee member, said he=20
would have no comment. TURN's representative to the committee, Nettie Hoge,=
=20
did not respond to a request for comment.=20
In appointing the ratepayers committee last week, Stanley, who is=20
administering the bankruptcy proceedings, said she was bringing it into the=
=20
case because the state, which ordinarily would represent the public, has=20
chosen to stay out.=20
Stanley chose the nine committee members to represent a mix of energy=20
consumers -- households, businesses, farms and government. In addition to=
=20
Consumers Union and TURN, the groups include the California Farm Bureau, th=
e=20
California School Boards Association and the California Manufacturers &=20
Technology Association.=20
If Montali upholds Stanley's action, PG&E must pay for the committee's=20
lawyers, accountants and other consultants to analyze data and present=20
arguments in the bankruptcy proceedings from the consumer's perspective.=20
"They (will) have all of the information that's going on," said Judy Beckne=
r=20
Sloan, a bankruptcy expert at Southwestern Law School, who speculated that=
=20
PG&E was balking at the committee's potential power and its costs to the=20
bankruptcy estate.=20
"The creditors and PG&E are opposed to their presence because to the extent=
=20
the judge heeds the consumers' concerns, he's going to be less aggressive=
=20
about raising rates," said Jesse Fried, a law professor at the University o=
f=20
California, Berkeley.=20
While Fried said Stanley's decision was defensible because the judge "is=20
supposed to take into account the wider interests of society," Los Angeles=
=20
bankruptcy lawyer Richard Levin sided with PG&E. Only the state should have=
=20
been allowed to represent consumers, Levin said, and its decision not to do=
=20
so should be final.=20

The Bee's Claire Cooper can be reached at (415) 551-7701 or=20
ccooper@sacbee.com.=20


Major job losses predicted; governor presses generators
By Dale Kasler, Ed Fletcher and Emily Bazar
By Dale Kasler, Ed Fletcher and Emily Bazar
(Published May 10, 2001)=20
As a private consultant predicted the state will lose 135,000 jobs from a=
=20
summer of blackouts, Gov. Gray Davis on Wednesday pressed power generators =
to=20
forgo 30 percent of their California earnings to help pull the state out of=
=20
the energy crisis.=20
Summoning executives of the companies he has repeatedly accused of price=20
gouging, Davis said the generators probably would have to forgive a portion=
=20
of the debt they're owed by California's two destitute utilities to win the=
=20
Legislature's approval for his controversial plan to repay the debts and=20
rescue the utilities.=20
"I suggest that they should look to (accept) 70 percent of what they claim=
=20
they were owed," Davis said after a four-hour meeting in the Capitol. "I fe=
lt=20
the Legislature will insist on a reduction."=20
Although Davis said, "I believe they are willing to take some reduction," a=
t=20
least one generator, Reliant Energy Inc., immediately dismissed the=20
governor's proposal.=20
The meeting capped a roller-coaster day in which anti-generator protesters=
=20
brought a pig to the Capitol and the state narrowly averted a third straigh=
t=20
day of rolling blackouts. But while enough megawatts were found to scrape b=
y=20
for a day, the state is surely facing a summer of severe shortages.=20
A study, commissioned by some of the state's most influential business=20
lobbyists and partly funded by Intel Corp., predicted chronic blackouts wil=
l=20
mean significant economic harm to California.=20
The study by John Urbanchuck of New Jersey-based AUS Consultants said the=
=20
blackouts would erase 135,000 jobs and cause $26 billion in economic=20
devastation.=20
Several California economists said the prediction was overblown, but none=
=20
doubted the electricity crisis could significantly harm the state's busines=
s=20
climate.=20
"It really depends on how severe the blackouts are," said UCLA economist=20
Chris Thornberg. "If we have 30 straight days of blackouts in June ... you'=
re=20
going to end up with a mess."=20
Everything else being equal, the loss of 135,000 jobs would raise=20
California's unemployment rate by 0.7 percent, to 5.4 percent, based on the=
=20
latest numbers from the Employment Development Department.=20
Ted Gibson, chief economist with the state Department of Finance, said AUS'=
=20
estimates seem high.=20
"It'd be hard for me to think those relatively limited, one-hour-at-a-time=
=20
(blackouts) would have such an impact," Gibson said.=20
As it is, the blackouts have struck some of California's most important=20
employers, such as Sun Microsystems Inc. and Advanced Micro Devices.=20
Tuesday's blackout hit Apple Computer Inc.'s lone U.S. factory, in Elk Grov=
e.=20
Economic development agencies from other states have stepped up recruiting=
=20
efforts in California, hoping to capitalize on the state's misfortunes. A f=
ew=20
glass manufacturers have moved production, said Jack Stewart, president of=
=20
the California Manufacturers & Technology Association.=20
It could get worse. For example, a leading Silicon Valley electronics=20
manufacturer, Solectron Corp. of Milpitas, said it is seriously considering=
=20
pulling some of its operations out of California.=20
"The blackouts and the lack of reliable power are our biggest concerns," sa=
id=20
Solectron spokesman Bob Kula. "We have the ability to move (production)=20
quickly."=20
Solectron, whose factories were hit with blackouts in January and March,=20
employs 4,000 workers in Northern California.=20
A top state official said business leaders around the country look at the=
=20
electricity crisis as emblematic of a state that's becoming iffy as a place=
=20
to do business.=20
"The whole question of how did the state allow it to get this far -- I keep=
=20
hearing that from Wall Street, I keep hearing that from the business=20
community," said the official, who asked to remain anonymous. "The last yea=
r=20
has demonstrated that the risks of doing business in California are much=20
higher than anywhere else in the United States."=20
The state was spared a third day of blackouts Wednesday when cooler, windie=
r=20
weather in the late afternoon produced a spurt of wind-generated electricit=
y=20
and a much-needed drop in demand. Throw in an unexpected power purchase fro=
m=20
the Pacific Northwest, and the state's fragile power grid suddenly had 1,40=
0=20
megawatts it wasn't expecting, more than enough to compensate for a breakdo=
wn=20
of a major Bay Area power plant in early afternoon.=20
Another boost: Pacific Gas and Electric Co. said all but a handful of its=
=20
alternative-energy suppliers have resumed production. These suppliers,=20
responsible for a fourth of the state's energy supply, have been closed for=
=20
weeks because of nonpayment by PG&E and Southern California Edison. The two=
=20
stricken utilities are paying them again.=20
But while blackouts were unlikely today, there were no guarantees.=20
"We're not swimming in megawatts," said spokeswoman Stephanie McCorkle of t=
he=20
Independent System Operator, which runs the state's power grid.=20
Representatives from a dozen wholesale power generators -- 10 in person and=
=20
two by phone -- attended the Capitol summit.=20
Despite months of verbal potshots between Davis and the generators, the=20
meeting was described as cordial by John Stout, senior vice president of=20
Houston-based Reliant.=20
But Davis also said he told the executives that unless they accept a=20
reduction in payment for back debts, the Legislature is likely to reject hi=
s=20
plan to buy the utilities' transmission lines -- a key element of his plan =
to=20
pay back billions the utilities owe them.=20
If the plan goes through, the generators can get paid this year, Davis said=
.=20
If it's killed, they'll probably have to wait three or four years to get=20
their money in Bankruptcy Court.=20
So far only Edison has agreed to sell its lines to the state. Senate=20
President Pro Tem John Burton, D-San Francisco, said Wednesday that the=20
Edison deal will be rejected unless the generators forgive some debts.=20
"I'm going to insist that they take at least a 30 percent haircut on the=20
monies that they're owed," Burton said earlier.=20

The Bee's Dale Kasler can be reached at (916) 321-1066 or dkasler@sacbee.co=
m.=20
Bee Staff Writer Kevin Yamamura contributed to this report.=20


Bond-sale bill goes to Davis=20


(Published May 10, 2001)=20
The state Senate sent legislation to Gov. Gray Davis on Wednesday authorizi=
ng=20
the largest revenue bond sale in U.S. history over continued Republican=20
opposition.=20
The bill, SB 31x, would allow California to sell $13.4 billion in bonds,=20
starting in August, to repay the state for past and future power purchases.=
=20
Davis is expected to sign the bill today.=20
Because the bill failed to receive the two-thirds majority needed for an=20
urgency measure, however, the bonds can't be sold until 90 days after the e=
nd=20
of the Legislature's special session.=20
Lawmakers are expected to end the session Monday, and most of the 200 pendi=
ng=20
energy bills already introduced will be reborn in a second energy session,=
=20
said Senate President Pro Tem John Burton, D-San Francisco.=20
SB 31x passed on a 23-12 vote, with most Democrats supporting the measure a=
nd=20
all Republicans opposing it. Sen. Joe Dunn, D-Garden Grove, was the only=20
Democrat to vote against it.=20
Republicans proposed that the state use the surplus to write off $6 billion=
=20
that California has spent on electricity since mid-January. But Democrats=
=20
said the state needs to replenish those funds to support other state progra=
ms=20
in education, transportation and health care.=20
Treasurer Phil Angelides had pursued a bridge loan of $4.13 billion to=20
bolster the state's budget and ensure that non-energy programs remain funde=
d.=20
But when Assembly Republicans assailed the immediate bond sale, the=20
short-term loan was lost.=20
Zane Mann, editor of the California Municipal Bond Advisor, said the delay =
in=20
the bond sale "casts a cloud" over the project but won't kill it. It will=
=20
probably lead to a higher interest rate, which will add to the ratepayers'=
=20
costs, he said.=20
-- Kevin Yamamura and Dale Kasler=20


State revenue outlook shrinks=20
By John Hill
Bee Capitol Bureau
(Published May 10, 2001)=20
Legislative Analyst Elizabeth Hill dropped a budget bombshell Wednesday,=20
reporting to legislators that state revenues will be $3.4 billion lower tha=
n=20
Gov. Gray Davis predicted in his January budget proposal.=20
Instead of enjoying a $1.9 billion reserve, the Davis budget plan for the=
=20
fiscal year beginning July 1 would now leave the state $1.5 billion in the=
=20
hole, Hill wrote in a letter to legislators overseeing the budget.=20
Dwindling revenue from a faltering economy leaves Davis' plan in need of=20
major revisions. The new revenue estimates would require cuts in one-time=
=20
expenditures that Davis proposed for programs such as clean beaches and=20
fiscal relief for local governments. Cuts also may have to be made in new=
=20
spending contemplated for education, which got most of the new money in the=
=20
$104.7 billion January budget proposal.=20
"The number is so deep that it's going to be hard for us not to contemplate=
=20
cuts or make cuts," said Assemblyman Tony C?rdenas, D-Sylmar, vice chairman=
=20
of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee. "We don't know where those cuts=
=20
are going to come from."=20
Little will be immune, said Dan Howle, chief of staff for Sen. Steve Peace,=
=20
D-El Cajon, chairman of the Joint Legislative Budget Committee.=20
"It's going to include programs the governor is very supportive of and woul=
d=20
like to get done, but we're in a little bit of a cash crunch here, and you'=
ve=20
got to do what you've got to do," he said.=20
"If anything's got a protective fence around it, it's education. But I stil=
l=20
think it'll have to take a share of the cuts."=20
These grim budget figures don't take into account possible hits on the budg=
et=20
caused by the state's breathtaking expenditures on electricity.=20
Those effects could be negligible if the state is able to sell bonds to pay=
=20
for power and replenish the treasury. But considering recent events in the=
=20
volatile energy crisis, no assumption is safe.=20
The budget crunch will likely highlight conflicting spending priorities and=
=20
could lead to more polarization between Democrats and Republicans who have=
=20
been squabbling over the energy crisis.=20
"A third of the Assembly has never done a budget," Howle said. "Another thi=
rd=20
has never dealt with anything other than huge surpluses. Now you're saying=
=20
we've got to go in and cut. This could be a long, hot summer."=20
The new revenue projections are a dramatic illustration of the state's=20
faltering economy. Revenues for the fiscal year that starts July 1 are now=
=20
expected to be $4.8 billion less than anticipated in January, Hill wrote.=
=20
That includes a decrease of $3.9 billion in income tax, $500 million in sal=
es=20
tax and $600 million in bank and corporation taxes, offset by some moderate=
=20
increases in insurance and estate taxes, said Brad Williams, chief economis=
t=20
in the non-partisan Legislative Analyst's Office.=20
"It's deterioration in the stock market and implications for capital gains=
=20
and stock options," Williams said, "and also the weakening outlook for the=
=20
economy as a whole."=20
The $4.8 billion blow is softened somewhat by unexpectedly strong revenues=
=20
from last year's tax returns, which helped boost revenues $1.4 billion high=
er=20
than had been anticipated.=20
The net effect is $3.4 billion less for the fiscal year that begins July 1.=
=20
If the Democratic governor's budget were approved as is, the deficit would=
=20
reach almost $6 billion in the fiscal year that begins July 1, 2002, Hill=
=20
wrote.=20
The governor is expected to release his revised budget Monday. The state=20
Department of Finance said Wednesday that it wouldn't comment on the new=20
revenue estimates until then.=20
One obvious target for budget cutters is one-time expenditures in the Janua=
ry=20
proposal. This includes money for local governments, state building project=
s,=20
housing initiatives, replacing diesel engines that contribute to air=20
pollution, cleaning up beaches, law enforcement technology grants, flood=20
control, parks along rivers and more.=20
Even if the state axed $2.5 billion for one-time expenditures that Davis=20
proposed, it would still have to cut an additional $1.7 billion proposed fo=
r=20
ongoing programs.=20
Davis' budget -- which projected an $8 billion surplus -- includes at least=
=20
$1.9 billion more for education than required under formulas approved by=20
voters in Proposition 98. But considering Davis' commitment to education,=
=20
most believe it's unlikely the governor would balance the budget by=20
throttling back to the minimum funding level, which would require cuts to=
=20
existing education programs.=20
C?rdenas said education, health care and transportation should be protected=
=20
from cuts.=20
Assembly Republicans agree about education, but have different ideas about=
=20
the rest.=20
On Wednesday, the Republicans released their plan for the revised budget. I=
t=20
includes protecting schools and law enforcement, creating a $4 billion=20
reserve for future electricity purchases, and striking a proposed 1/4-cent=
=20
sales tax increase.=20
The sales tax, which went into effect in the early 1990s, was removed this=
=20
year, but Davis has proposed restoring it in 2002.=20
"All this does is put a new burden on the backs of Californians" already=20
coping with higher energy costs, said Assemblyman George Runner, R-Lancaste=
r,=20
a member of the Assembly Budget Committee.=20
Republicans say an electricity reserve could avoid the need to do another=
=20
bond sale for power purchases next year.=20
"This is the time to make sure we are putting money aside and that we're no=
t=20
going to have to turn back to taxpayers or ratepayers and put an additional=
=20
burden on them," Runner said.=20

The Bee's John Hill can be reached at (916) 326-5543 or jhill@sacbee.com.=
=20



No blackouts despite dip in supplies=20



Stage 2 alert, power plant breakdown add to concerns
By Jeff McDonald=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
May 10, 2001=20
In the nip-and-tuck world of meeting California's energy needs, a small=20
victory was notched yesterday in Folsom, where managers of the state power=
=20
grid avoided blackout orders for the first time since the weekend.=20
But tensions nonetheless ran high among power industry officials, and=20
business leaders in San Diego County are growing increasingly alarmed at th=
e=20
nagging energy crisis.=20
The number of available megawatts fluctuated throughout the day yesterday a=
nd=20
a major power plant broke down, but engineers at the Independent System=20
Operator maintained service across the state.=20
Persistent shortages combined with unusually high temperatures prompted pow=
er=20
alerts as early as 10:15 a.m., when grid officials warned that supplies had=
=20
dipped within 7 percent of reserves.=20
With more than 12,000 megawatts of power unavailable from idled plants,=20
system operators issued a Stage 2 warning about 11:45 a.m. and asked large=
=20
users to cut back consumption through the afternoon.=20
Two hours later, a boiler tube leak knocked out a 750-megawatt power plant =
in=20
the Bay Area. Repairs will probably take several days.=20
"It wrecked my day," said Jim McIntosh, the Independent System Operator=20
director of grid operations. "It just changed the whole perspective of what=
=20
was going on."=20
The loss of the 750 megawatts deepened concerns in Folsom, where ISO=20
engineers measured a peak afternoon demand that barely trailed supplies of=
=20
almost 34,000 megawatts.=20
As late as 3 p.m., grid officials expected to be forced into cutting servic=
e=20
to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses. Cooling temperatures and=
=20
conservation efforts helped kill the last threat, McIntosh said.=20
More blackouts could be ordered today, however, and tomorrow may be just as=
=20
problematic.=20
"The next couple of days will certainly be impacted by the loss of that=20
unit," McIntosh said.=20
The latest breakdown added to some already high drama at utility companies,=
=20
where officials braced through the day for orders to cut power to hundreds =
of=20
thousands of customers.=20
Blackout orders never came. But executives at San Diego Gas and Electric Co=
.=20
spent the day on heightened alert, calling critical-need residents and=20
businesses and informing them of potential service interruptions.=20
"This has become relatively commonplace," SDG&E spokesman Douglas Kline sai=
d.=20
"We handle it as a matter in the course of business now, unfortunately. We'=
ve=20
been on high alert all day."=20
Service was cut to more than 23,000 customers in several San Diego-area=20
neighborhoods Monday and Tuesday afternoons. More than 500,000 homes and=20
businesses across the state also lost power.=20
In a power interruption unrelated to the power problems across the state, a=
=20
number of major businesses in downtown San Diego were cut off unexpectedly =
in=20
midafternoon.=20
Customers between F Street and Harbor Drive lost power about 3:15 p.m. when=
=20
something went wrong with an underground cable that serves, among others, t=
he=20
Marriott Marina hotel, SDG&E said.=20
Service was restored within two hours, but not before convention meeting=20
rooms went dark and hotel restaurants closed.=20
The heat wave that has hung across California the past three days is expect=
ed=20
to begin cooling today and tomorrow, the National Weather Service said. Tha=
t=20
should reduce demand for air conditioning, one of the biggest power draws i=
n=20
the state.=20
However, the constant uncertainty in the electricity industry is taking its=
=20
toll on local businesses, which not only are seeing huge run-ups in utility=
=20
costs but are girding for potential losses that even a few minutes of=20
interruptions can cause.=20
"From a business standpoint, it's not 15 minutes of downtime for many of ou=
r=20
companies," said Julie Meier Wright, president of the San Diego Regional=20
Economic Development Corp. "For many of them, it means the loss of hours,=
=20
days, weeks and even longer of work."=20







Biggest users face huge rate hikes under PUC plan=20



By Karen Gaudette
ASSOCIATED PRESS=20
May 9, 2001=20
SAN FRANCISCO =01) Customers of California's two largest utilities who use =
the=20
most electricity would pay much more to run canneries, tumble laundry and=
=20
conduct other tasks under a tiered rate plan implementing record hikes=20
approved in March.=20
The rate plan proposed Wednesday by Loretta Lynch, president of the state=
=20
Public Utilities Commission, suggests how the rate hikes should be allocate=
d=20
among residential, industrial, commercial and agricultural customers.=20
Residential customers of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern Californ=
ia=20
Edison Co. who use the most electricity would face average rate hikes of 35=
=20
percent to 40 percent.=20
And industrial users, such as factories and food processors, could face hik=
es=20
of 50 percent or more as the state desperately tries to start recouping the=
=20
$5.2 billion it already has paid to buy power for customers of those=20
financially ailing utilities.=20
Still, under Lynch's plan, as many as half of the 9 million customers of PG=
&E=20
and SoCal Edison would not see their bills rise at all.=20
Lynch's plan is the culmination of weeks of discussion among customers, sta=
te=20
officials, consumer activists and the utilities about how best to allocate=
=20
the record rate hikes approved in late March by the PUC.=20
Those rate hikes will affect all classes of customers, from small families =
to=20
the huge Silicon Valley facilities powering the Internet, but not all will=
=20
face the same magnitude of rate increases.=20
And, even within those classes, customers will pay more depending on when=
=20
they use the electricity. Those who use power during times of highest deman=
d=20
=01) generally, during daylight hours =01) will pay the most.=20
Lynch said her plan "recognizes that energy is expensive at every hour of=
=20
every day by every customer," but penalizes those who do not cut back on=20
energy use or try to shift to different times of the day.=20
Under Lynch's proposal, agricultural customers could face rate hikes rangin=
g=20
from 23-30 percent, with increases capped at 30 percent. Industrial users=
=20
face average increases of 50 percent or more, and commercial users average =
34=20
percent to 45 percent hikes.=20
Her proposal, Lynch said, designs rates to encourage conservation and=20
provides $5 billion over the next year to help pay the state Department of=
=20
Water Resources for the billions it has spent providing electricity for=20
customers of PG&E and Edison.=20
Lynch left the door open for future rate hikes, noting that the state=20
provides its electricity-buying expenses to the commission only on a monthl=
y=20
basis, while wholesale electricity prices continue to soar.=20
Lynch's proposal, and a largely similar proposal from PUC administrative la=
w=20
judge Christine Walwyn, will be reviewed in public hearings throughout the=
=20
state the rest of this week.=20





Rate Hikes Up to 60% Proposed by PUC Chief=20
Power: Lynch says about half the residential customers of Edison, PG&E woul=
d=20
escape increases. Her plan draws fire from all sides.=20

By TIM REITERMAN and NANCY RIVERA BROOKS, Times Staff Writers=20

?????SAN FRANCISCO--About 4 million California residential electricity=20
customers will face increases in their monthly bills of up to about 60% und=
er=20
a proposal unveiled Wednesday by the state's chief utility regulator.=20
Interest groups on all sides promptly condemned the plan as too hard on=20
either consumers or businesses.
?????The proposal by California Public Utilities Commission President Loret=
ta=20
Lynch would increase the bills of roughly half of Southern California=20
Edison's residential customers, who consume medium to heavy amounts, by $8 =
to=20
$93 a month. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. customers would be hit with hikes o=
f=20
$6 to $87 a month.




Elisabeth Charion is among about 70 people testifying at a PUC hearing=20
Wednesday in Fullerton, most venting their anger at elected officials and=
=20
utility companies, whom they blame for the crisis.
IRFAN KHAN / Los Angeles Times

?????About half of the residential customers of the state's two biggest=20
public utilities would see no increase under the proposal if they continued=
=20
to consume energy at their current pace.
?????Lynch said she could not guarantee that more rate increases would not =
be=20
necessary. "Even these astronomical average rates may prove inadequate," sh=
e=20
said, noting that wholesale electricity prices are still high and=20
unpredictable.
?????The rate hike, Lynch said at a news conference, is necessary because=
=20
"federal regulators have failed to follow federal laws to ensure just and=
=20
reasonable prices."
?????The deepening energy crisis compelled Lynch to release her proposal=20
after public hearings on the rate increase already had begun. Lynch said th=
at=20
she wished her proposal had been ready sooner, but that at least some of th=
e=20
remaining public hearings will have the benefit of reviewing it.
?????PUC passage of the essential elements of Lynch's plan seems likely.
?????Along with two of her colleagues on the five-member commission, Lynch=
=20
was appointed by Gov. Gray Davis, and they often vote as a bloc. Lynch said=
,=20
however, that testimony later this week from utilities, the public and othe=
r=20
interested parties could prompt modifications.
?????Structuring the $5-billion rate increase is an important but political=
ly=20
sensitive step in California's attempt to restore stability to the delivery=
=20
of power to 9 million customers of two financially troubled utilities while=
=20
protecting the state budget.
?????The PUC has tried to design rates that would encourage conservation=20
without damaging business. Competing interest groups, ranging from consumer=
=20
advocates to large manufacturers, have been jockeying for advantage for wee=
ks.
?????The PUC approved a rate increase of 3 cents per kilowatt-hour March 27=
=20
to help pay the state's mounting power tab, which now exceeds $5 billion.=
=20
This week, the commission is conducting statewide hearings on how the pain=
=20
should be shared among millions of residents and businesses. On Monday the=
=20
panel is set to vote on Lynch's plan and a similar one by a PUC=20
administrative law judge.
?????Neither proposal appeared to please anyone.
?????"The PUC says everyone should share the pain, but we think the fair=20
share of the pain for residential consumers should be zero," said Mindy=20
Spatt, spokeswoman for the Utility Reform Network, a San Francisco consumer=
=20
group. "It should be paid by commercial and industrial customers who wanted=
=20
and still want deregulation."
?????Consumer activist Harvey Rosenfield said regulators should go after=20
power generators and their hefty profits rather than ratepayers.
?????"Rate increases are not the answer, and this is not going to be the en=
d=20
of them," said Rosenfield, president of the Foundation for Taxpayer and=20
Consumer Rights in Santa Monica. "This is like organized crime: The more yo=
u=20
give them, the more they want."
?????Commercial and industrial customers would see increases of up to 50%,=
=20
and agricultural interests would face increases of 23% to 30% under Lynch's=
=20
proposal.
?????Business interests contend that the rate hikes hit them much harder th=
an=20
residential users.
?????Calling the proposal "a death knell for the California economy," Jack =
M.=20
Stewart of the California Manufacturers and Technology Assn. estimated that=
=20
industrial customers would see their power rates increase an average of 53%=
.=20
And the pain of the rate hikes will be compounded by blackouts this summer,=
=20
which the group contends will cost California businesses $21.8 billion in=
=20
lost productivity.
?????"For most large manufacturers, energy is a large piece of their=20
operating costs," Stewart said. "If you add 53% to that, it's going to=20
severely hamper their ability to do business."
?????Unlike residential customers, the business customers are not grouped=
=20
into tiers based on their amount of usage. Lynch said there was insufficien=
t=20
time to establish a tiering system for nonresidential customers by June 1,=
=20
when the rate hikes will start showing up on bills.
?????An earlier proposal by Lynch had attempted to narrow the gap between=
=20
residential rates and the lower rates paid by nonresidential customers. But=
=20
the commission president said that goal could not be immediately achieved=
=20
without seriously damaging the state's economy.
?????To protect the largest users from gigantic rate increases, Lynch's=20
proposal caps the maximum bill increase at 300% for most customers and 250%=
=20
for agricultural customers.
?????"While we understand bill limiters may have some troubling conservatio=
n=20
impacts, at some point, price signals are unbearable for customers. Bill=20
limiters will protect customers from unanticipated extraordinary bill=20
impacts," Lynch wrote.
?????In recent weeks, the commission has received about 20 plans for=20
structuring the rate increase, including one from Davis, who had proposed a=
=20
slightly smaller overall rate increase. Lynch said her plan incorporates a=
=20
number of features of the governor's plan, including a tiered structure tha=
t=20
would punish heavy users and reward those who conserve.
?????Under state legislation, there is no rate increase for consumption up =
to=20
130% of baseline, the amount deemed the minimum needed by a customer in a=
=20
given area and noted on ratepayer bills. Also exempted are low-income=20
customers who already receive discounted electricity rates.
?????Edison and PG&E said they could not assess how the PUC proposals would=
=20
affect their customers because the commission had not provided details to t=
he=20
utilities as of late Wednesday.
?????But PG&E has disputed the commission's claim that half of customers=20
would not be affected by the increase, noting that only 32% of PG&E custome=
rs=20
never exceeded 130% of baseline usage in the last year.
?????Industrial and commercial customers complained that the plan should no=
t=20
exempt such a large group of residential customers, in any event. A rate=20
increase for these users--based on the PUC's estimate that the group will=
=20
constitute about half of residential customers--could generate an extra $1=
=20
billion.
?????If the PUC insists on exempting so many, the $1-billion shortfall shou=
ld=20
be covered solely by other residential users, businesses say.
?????Under Lynch's plan the burden of paying that amount would be split=20
equally among commercial, industrial and nonexempt residential customers.
?????If covering the shortfall were not shared by the three groups, Lynch=
=20
said, some residential customers would suffer a 100% increase in their bill=
s.
?????The proposal calls for a pilot program, including one that would let=
=20
federal agencies based in California "experiment with their own market rate=
=20
policies."
?????Lynch challenged federal agencies to try to live with "real time," or=
=20
hourly, prices in the volatile wholesale marketplace--a slap at officials o=
f=20
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission who favor a free wholesale market=
=20
over price caps. Use of real-time pricing requires installing a special met=
er.
?????"'It would be great if the federal users respond to price signals enou=
gh=20
that prices come down," Lynch said, adding that she was skeptical that woul=
d=20
happen in today's dysfunctional market.
?????A FERC spokeswoman declined to comment on Lynch's proposal.
?????During the third day of PUC hearings, about 200 people gathered at=20
Fullerton College. Seventy people testified, most venting their anger at=20
elected officials and utility companies, whom they blame for the state's=20
flawed deregulation plan.
?????"I am opposed to any rate increase for residences and small business,"=
=20
testified Ruth Shapin, a Santa Ana attorney. "This crisis was created by=20
politicians. PG&E and SCE have transferred billions of dollars to their=20
parent companies. Let them bail themselves out, not the ratepayers."
?????Others said the baselines might be unfair because the commission had n=
ot=20
taken into consideration home size, the number of occupants and the locatio=
n.
?????"It's going to be hard for many people to stay below the 130% baseline=
,"=20
said Sylvia Hartman of Lakewood. "Some customers could easily go 400% over=
=20
the baseline."
---=20
?????Reiterman reported from San Francisco, Rivera Brooks from Los Angeles.=
=20
Times staff writer Dan Weikel in Fullerton contributed to this story.

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times=20






Bush Energy Stance Begins to Worry Some in GOP=20


By GREG MILLER and RICHARD SIMON, Times Staff Writers=20

?????WASHINGTON--As power shortages and price spikes spread beyond=20
California, congressional Republicans are beginning to worry that the Bush=
=20
administration's reluctance to offer much immediate relief could hurt the=
=20
party in the 2002 elections.
?????A national energy plan to be unveiled by the White House next week wil=
l=20
focus on long-term strategies. But with California and other states bracing=
=20
for a summer of electricity turmoil and gasoline prices surging across the=
=20
country, some GOP lawmakers are pressing for short-term solutions.




U.S. Rep. Mary Bono, left, and Gov. Gray Davis discuss meeting with=20
executives of power-generating companies. Bono plans to seek $100 million t=
o=20
help poor people pay energy bills.
AP

?????"The White House has been taking a look at the big picture," said a GO=
P=20
leadership aide in the House. "But they're going to be around in four years=
.=20
We might not have members around in two years if we don't show we care."
?????That sentiment is being voiced by a rising number of GOP lawmakers.=20
"We're in a crisis situation, which is only going to get worse if we don't=
=20
act very aggressively," Rep. Elton Gallegly (R-Simi Valley) said Wednesday.=
=20
Gallegly is one of four congressional Republicans from California to break=
=20
with the administration by supporting temporary price controls on wholesale=
=20
electricity.
?????The rising anxiety, which has begun spreading beyond the California=20
delegation, underscores how much has changed since the state declared its=
=20
first Stage 3 power emergency in December. At that time, Congress' response=
=20
was largely: That's Gov. Gray Davis' problem.
?????Not anymore.
?????Thirty-nine Stage 3 alerts later, a House committee today will take up=
a=20
GOP-drafted emergency bill that would, among other things, allow Davis to=
=20
temporarily waive certain emission standards for power plants during an=20
emergency and provide federal aid to relieve a notorious bottleneck in the=
=20
California power grid.
?????But some GOP lawmakers say the legislation doesn't go far enough, and=
=20
plan to offer amendments containing their own ideas. Rep. Mary Bono (R-Palm=
=20
Springs) plans to push for $100 million in energy assistance to low-income=
=20
households and for a directive to federal facilities in the West to cut=20
energy use by 20%.
?????"House leaders recognize that they could lose the House in California =
if=20
there's not an action plan that members can campaign on," said Scott Reed, =
a=20
GOP strategist.
?????As lawmakers search for ways to provide immediate relief, the White=20
House continues to cite California's troubles as evidence of the need to=20
upgrade an aging, overburdened electricity transmission system.
?????Responding to reports that the administration would propose legislatio=
n=20
to give the federal government eminent domain authority in siting power=20
lines, White House press secretary Ari Fleischer said Bush wants to ensure=
=20
that the distribution infrastructure can move electricity from regions with=
=20
surpluses to regions that need more power.
?????"That's one of the reasons that California is going through the=20
difficulties it's going through," Fleischer said. "There is energy availabl=
e=20
in other parts of the country, but it can't be shipped to California as=20
easily as you would hope, because of infrastructure problems."
?????Fleischer took exception to a front-page story in The Times reporting=
=20
that Bush, in a speech delivered Tuesday, "offered no hint of what his=20
administration might do" to help California avert a possible economic=20
downturn caused by power blackouts.
?????Though the president did not specifically mention possible actions in=
=20
the speech, Fleischer said Bush last week "announced a series of steps,=20
including conservation," to help California get through an energy crisis th=
is=20
summer.
?????He said that the Pentagon is reducing its energy needs within Californ=
ia=20
by 10% and that all other federal agencies, at Bush's direction, are=20
reviewing their energy consumption patterns.
?????Environmentalists already have begun blasting the administration's=20
energy plan--even before its details are made public--for what they=20
characterize as a failure to emphasize energy efficiency and investments in=
=20
renewable fuels.

?????Activists Say Crisis Isn't Real
?????At a Wednesday news briefing, a coalition of environmental advocates=
=20
disagreed with the administration's assertion that the country is=20
experiencing an energy "crisis," and accused it of crafting a plan designed=
=20
to boost the profits of key campaign contributors.
?????"We cannot drill our way out of this situation," said Dan Becker of th=
e=20
Sierra Club. He and others argued that conserving fuel--with cars that use=
=20
less gasoline and appliances that use less electricity, for example--is the=
=20
best way to avoid energy shortages in the short term.
?????So far, it is not clear whether the energy crisis will work to either=
=20
party's advantage. Many on Capitol Hill are bracing for an election year th=
at=20
could be brutal for incumbents of both parties if voters who endure high=20
energy bills this summer vent their frustration in the voting booth next ye=
ar.
?????Some House Republicans acknowledged that they have been pushing the=20
White House to appear more engaged in finding near-term solutions.
?????When House Republicans met with Cheney last week, "they urged him and=
=20
all the administration to at least make it clear that a lot of effort is=20
going into finding a way to solve the problem," said Jim Specht, a spokesma=
n=20
for Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Redlands), leader of the California GOP delegation.
?????Though some Republicans have offered ideas to address the immediate=20
problem, it is not clear whether any will receive congressional approval.
?????Indeed, the emergency assistance bill being taken up today by the Hous=
e=20
energy subcommittee faces trouble, although it was drafted by the panel's=
=20
chairman, Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas).
?????Barton stripped out a number of provisions opposed by environmentalist=
s.=20
But Democrats plan to seek a vote on capping wholesale electricity prices, =
a=20
proposal most Republicans oppose. Democrats also plan to introduce an=20
amendment to target natural gas prices.
?????House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt (D-Mo.) said the bill "fails=20
miserably" to address California's problems. "During the campaign, Presiden=
t=20
Bush promised a sensible energy policy," Gephardt said. "In recent weeks,=
=20
however, the president has responded to the gathering crisis by throwing up=
=20
his hands and saying there's nothing we can do, there's no way to give peop=
le=20
immediate relief from blackouts and sky-high increases of price of gasoline=
=20
at the pump."
?????Lawmakers of both parties acknowledge that they are hearing a rising=
=20
chorus of constituent complaints about the energy price spikes and supply=
=20
shortages.
?????Rep. Chris Cox (R-Newport Beach) was caught in a blackout during a tou=
r=20
of a computer chip factory in his district. "They said it cost them $1=20
million if the power goes off even for five minutes," said Cox, who=20
nonetheless opposes price controls.
?????Cox said he is worried about how the California electricity crisis mig=
ht=20
affect the national economy. He said that when he asks business owners abou=
t=20
expanding in California, "they just look at you like you're nuts. They don'=
t=20
consider California an option because of this uncertainty."
?????"People come up to you and want you to help solve the problem," said=
=20
Rep. George Radanovich (R-Mariposa).
?????He has explained that there is little the federal government can do in=
=20
the short term.
?????"Californians want somebody to do something," said John J. Pitney Jr.,=
=20
associate professor of government at Claremont McKenna College. "When peopl=
e=20
are in a mood like that, politicians get nervous thinking that they're the=
=20
ones who might get blamed."
?????Said Reed, the GOP strategist: "Every incumbent in California is=20
vulnerable in the next election, in both parties. This is an issue that is=
=20
not ideological. It's about action and solving a short-term problem.=20
"Politics have taken over this issue, like it or not," he said. "They may=
=20
have been raging in California for the last three or four months. It's now =
a=20
national political issue."=20
---=20
?????Times staff writers James Gerstenzang, Edwin Chen, Elizabeth Shogren a=
nd=20
Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed to this story.

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times





In Office Buildings, the Lights Are On, But Nobody's Home=20
Energy: Analysts say metering individual tenants could encourage=20
conservation.=20

By JERRY HIRSCH, Times Staff Writer=20

?????Despite power outages and soaring energy prices, workers stream out of=
=20
California's downtown and suburban offices each evening leaving lights=20
blazing and computers humming. And there has been scant incentive to=20
conserve, since commercial building leases typically include the cost of=20
energy.
?????Energy experts and other analysts say metering of individual office=20
tenants would encourage conservation by pushing companies to shut off light=
s,=20
computer monitors, desk fans and other electrical devices at night, but sta=
te=20
regulations and utility policies are in the way.
?????That conflict between policy and conservation efforts has drawn the=20
attention of state Sen. Debra Bowen (D-Marina del Rey), who chairs the Sena=
te=20
Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee. On Tuesday, Bowen asked=20
California Public Utilities Chairwoman Loretta Lynch to review what Bowen=
=20
called "archaic" regulations governing how electricity meters are used in=
=20
office buildings. Bowen said she also plans to take up the issue in her=20
committee.
?????At issue is Rule 18, a regulation established by the commission two=20
decades ago that prohibits landlords from using submeters to assess energy=
=20
charges to tenants.
?????"It is quite old and dates back to a different era of electricity=20
distribution in California," said Bowen, who was urged to take action by th=
e=20
Building Owners and Managers Assn. "I asked Loretta Lynch to open a=20
proceeding to revise or eliminate that ban."
?????Lynch did not return calls for comment on the state's metering policie=
s,=20
but PUC regulatory analyst William Gaffney said more metering "would be a=
=20
boon to energy conservation" because "you could see what you are using."
?????"Direct metering would ultimately foster greater energy savings . . .=
=20
more permanent savings, because it would encourage capital investments in=
=20
more efficient equipment, windows, etc., etc.," said Evan Mills, a scientis=
t=20
in the energy analysis department of the Lawrence Berkeley National=20
Laboratory in Berkeley.
?????Usually, the only tenants in office buildings with utility meters are=
=20
retail and restaurant businesses, according to commercial real estate=20
experts. Most tenants in California office towers sign what are called "gro=
ss=20
leases" that include power. When electricity usage or rates go up=20
unexpectedly, landlords can charge monthly or annual "escalation fees" to=
=20
cover the extra cost. The fees typically are apportioned by the percentage =
of=20
the building a tenant occupies.
?????This method of billing is counterproductive to energy savings, said=20
Willet Kempton, senior policy scientist at the University of Delaware's=20
Center for Energy and Environmental Policy. Energy hogs are subsidized by=
=20
other tenants. Conversely, savings through conservation are only fractional=
ly=20
shared.
?????Two key obstacles block metering of individual tenants in a building.
?????One is economics--high-rise buildings get a far better rate with one=
=20
utility meter than if each floor is metered.
?????"We can sell a lot of energy on just one bill," said Randy Howard,=20
manager of commercial services at the Los Angeles Department of Water and=
=20
Power. "If we had 200 meters there and had to do the billing and meter=20
reading for each of them, each tenant would pay a higher rate."
?????Moreover, utilities aren't anxious to send meter readers to every floo=
r=20
of a building, going through private offices to find the meters. One=20
alternative--locating all the meters in a central area where the main=20
electrical line enters the building--would require massive rewiring of=20
existing office towers that could cost several hundred thousand dollars or=
=20
more, depending on the size of the building, said Ali Sherafat, senior vice=
=20
president of the Los Angeles office of Syska & Hennessy, a consulting=20
engineering firm.
?????A 1995 ruling by the PUC required that individual tenants in office=20
buildings be placed on meters operated by a public utility (as opposed to=
=20
landlord-managed submeters), but relatively few have been installed because=
=20
of exemptions.
?????For example, Southern California Edison Co. officials typically meet=
=20
with developers at the start of a building project to determine how many=20
meters it might require, said Matt Deatherage, a planning support manager f=
or=20
the utility. But because developers build office space so that its=20
configuration can change easily as tenants shift, the estimate is often=20
wrong. A building designed with three meters for three tenants might find=
=20
itself with six tenants or more by the time it opens.
?????"We don't require them to go back and rewire the building if it turns=
=20
out to be wrong, that would be too expensive," Deatherage said.
?????The second obstacle is Rule 18, the 1981 ban on submetering originally=
=20
intended to protect utility monopolies and to prevent landlords from gettin=
g=20
electricity at a discount price and selling it at a markup to tenants.
?????"When you resell electricity like that, you function as a utility and=
=20
that's not allowed," said Deatherage.
?????Nonetheless, Bowen believes that deregulation may have superseded thos=
e=20
issues and that current policy should emphasize conservation.
?????Although the leasing model used in California is common, it's not=20
universal, said Peter L. DiCapua, energy chairman of the Building Owners an=
d=20
Managers Assn. International.
?????Many New York tenants have individual meters. Others are on landlord=
=20
submeters, a system that allows them to tap into the lower, high-volume rat=
es=20
paid by the building's operator but still pay for actual, rather than=20
estimated, energy use.=20
?????Landlords would welcome a changed regulation to allow submetering for=
=20
several reasons. There are the conservation benefits, said Dan Emmett, chie=
f=20
executive of Douglas Emmett & Co., one of the largest building owners and=
=20
managers in Los Angeles County. It also would reduce some of the inevitable=
=20
arguments with tenants who claim they pay more than their fair share for=20
services at a building.
?????"I think submetering could be practical," Emmett said. "It is not that=
=20
complicated and is fairly inexpensive."
?????Sherafat said it would cost about $2,000 per tenant for the submeter a=
nd=20
the necessary software. Submeters could be installed at the electrical pane=
l=20
level without expensive rewiring for utility meters, he said. Better yet, t=
he=20
software allows data to be collected at a central point, eliminating the ne=
ed=20
for meter readers. Such a system also could allow big buildings to use one=
=20
master meter to get the best rate .
?????Though submetering would foster conservation, it still is not a panace=
a,=20
said Kempton of the University of Delaware. When it comes to energy=20
conservation, changing the behavior of businesses and workers is notoriousl=
y=20
tricky.
?????"Attorneys literally can't be bothered with the nuances of energy," sa=
id=20
DiCapua, an executive at Atco Properties & Management in New York. "They ar=
e=20
focused on things other than if the air conditioning was left on all night.
?????That is typical of professional services firms, because energy is just=
a=20
small fraction of their expenses, Kempton said.
?????And individual metering sounds great in theory, Kempton added, but it =
is=20
useless if the bill goes to a home office elsewhere or if the on-site manag=
er=20
of the firm never sees it.
?????In any push to change the rules, however, people should remember that=
=20
the current system was developed for sound reasons, often based on reducing=
=20
the expense of constructing buildings and finding tenants the lowest prices=
=20
for energy, Howard said.=20
?????"Right now we are in a conservation mode, so everybody is talking abou=
t=20
this," he said. "But that hasn't always been the case, so a single meter fo=
r=20
a big building made sense."

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times=20






Thursday, May 10, 2001=20
Power Shifts to Congress=20

?????Wholesale electricity prices soared with the temperature this week,=20
jumping to eight times the peak of only three weeks ago. No one knows how=
=20
high the price may go when high summer hits. Which makes it all the more=20
intriguing that one of the big power-generating companies is now calling fo=
r=20
temporary price caps, which the Bush administration stubbornly opposes.=20
?????Authority over wholesale power prices rests with the Federal Energy=20
Regulatory Commission, which is charged by Congress with maintaining "just=
=20
and reasonable" rates. But FERC refuses to impose what California desperate=
ly=20
needs, a broad temporary price cap that allows companies to recover their=
=20
costs plus a reasonable profit. The state's last hope for rate caps now res=
ts=20
with Congress.=20
?????Sens. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Gordon Smith (R-Ore.) are=20
sponsoring legislation that would require FERC to establish temporary maxim=
um=20
rates. Rep. Henry Waxman (D-L.A.) is scheduled to propose amendments to a=
=20
House bill today to do the same. The support of three Republican House=20
members from California, who are on the energy and air quality subcommittee=
,=20
is crucial. They are Christopher Cox of Newport Beach, Mary Bono of Palm=20
Springs and George Radanovich of Mariposa. The Waxman measure serves the be=
st=20
interests of California. Concern about losing seats in Congress may also he=
lp=20
the GOP members make the right choice.=20
?????It was Feinstein who got a letter from Keith E. Bailey, chairman of=20
Williams Cos., an energy producer, in support of temporary price controls.=
=20
Perhaps some generators are tired of being labeled gougers, pirates and=20
bloodsuckers, and they will settle for a reasonable profit through the rest=
=20
of this crisis. But price caps would have to apply to all the producers.=20
Congress must act, starting today with the subcommittee vote on the Waxman=
=20
measure. Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times=20






Proud state forced to knees in power hunt=20
Robert Salladay, Chronicle Sacramento Bureau
Thursday, May 10, 2001=20
,2001 San Francisco Chronicle=20
URL: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=3D/c/a/2001/05/10/MN40227.=
DTL=20
California has turned into the trailer park next door, the cash-only,=20
deadbeat neighbor forced to beg for enough power to keep the swamp cooler=
=20
running.=20
Yesterday in Folsom, home of the state's energy managers, was another study=
=20
in high-tech, air-conditioned humiliation -- punctuated by a frantic scrapi=
ng=20
and bowing for energy across the West.=20
Poor people with "secured" credit cards can relate to the scene at the=20
California Independent System Operator. This week began with Canada's BC=20
Hydro threatening to shut off power again until the state actually wired ca=
sh=20
to its bank account.=20
"We got the money," an ISO engineer stood up and told another employee at t=
he=20
agency's semi-secret Folsom headquarters yesterday. "Yeah, we're good for=
=20
another $14 million. Burn it up, huh, Lloyd?"=20
Lloyd started burning it up, thanks to an OK from the Department of Water=
=20
Resources and to several million California taxpayers' footing the bill.=20
California narrowly missed a third day in a row of blackout