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:Wed, 6 Jun 2001 06:13:00 -0700 (PDT)

Please see the following articles:

Sac Bee, Wed, 6/6: Businesses vie for blackout exemptions:=20
The PUC must decide who should be spared, and the applicant list is very lo=
ng

Sac Bee, Wed, 6/6: PG&E, ISO agree to court order on power bills

Sac Bee, Wed, 6/6: Peter Schrag: Turning up the heat in Houston and=20
Washington (Editorial)

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Is trading an insider's game?

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Daily energy costs for state fall in past weeks=20

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Five tiers sought in proposed rate boost

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Port budget large, but power bills loom

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Continuous use urged for planned power plant=20

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Rising energy prices threaten Poway troupe=20

SD Union, Wed, 6/6: Fair to use generators for midway attractions

LA Times, Wed, 6/6: 'Hi, My Name Isn't Justice, Honey,' and Shame on Lockye=
r =20
(Editorial)

LA Times, Wed, 6/6: U.S. Probes Alleged Pact Not to Build New Plants Power:=
=20
Justice officials focus on Southland operations of two firms, which deny=20
wrongdoing

LA Times, Wed, 6/6: Natural Gas, Power Prices Drop Sharply Energy:=20
More conservation, mild weather are among factors keeping costs down, exper=
ts=20
say

LA Times, Wed, 6/6: The State Utility Averts $1 Billion in Costs Courts:=20
PG&E and Cal-ISO agree to recognize Department of Water Resources as=20
purchaser of the power

SF Chron, Wed, 6/6: Dramatic drop in cost of electricity=20
LOWER BILLS: Cheaper fuel, milder weather credited

SF Chron, Wed, 6/6: San Jose council gives green light to generating plant=
=20
VOTE REVERSAL: Officials pressured to OK project

SF Chron, Wed, 6/6: Developments in California's energy crisis

SF Chron, Wed, 6/6: California conserves

SF Chron, Wed, 6/6: L.A. power customers awash in cheap energy

SF Chron, Wed, 6/6: PG&E doesn't want to pay for energy to avert blackouts

Mercury News, Wed, 6/6: Metcalf plant gets preliminary approval=20

OC Register, Wed, 6/6: Feds probe AES, Williams

Individual.com (PRnewswire), Wed, 6/6: Calpine Begins Construction of=20
Peaking Energy Center in Gilroy, Calif.=20

Individual.com (PRnewsire), Wed, 6/6: Reliant Urges FERC to Drop or Amend=
=20
California Price
Caps to Avoid Additional Shortages and More Blackouts

Energy Insight, Wed, 6/6: Farm-fresh biopower
---------------------------------------------------------------------------=
---
---------------------------------------

Businesses vie for blackout exemptions: The PUC must decide who should be=
=20
spared, and the applicant list is very long.
By Carrie Peyton and Dale Kasler
Bee Staff Writers
(Published June 6, 2001)=20
Mixes for milkshakes and frozen coffees could spoil at ice cream parlors,=
=20
sickening customers.=20
Seniors getting their hair done would have to leave their dryers and go hom=
e=20
with wet heads, risking a chill.=20
Mall escalators could come to a sudden halt, endangering shoppers who lose=
=20
their footing.=20
Those are among the health and safety risks cited by more than 10,000=20
businesses and government bodies asking state regulators to exempt them fro=
m=20
rolling blackouts.=20
It is a list that mixes nursing homes and grocery stores, outpatient surgic=
al=20
clinics and beauty salons, dialysis centers and country clubs.=20
"A lot of people are treating this like a lottery," said Subodh Medhekar of=
=20
Exponent Inc., the consulting firm sorting through exemption requests for t=
he=20
state Public Utilities Commission.=20
For many, Medhekar said, the rationale seems to be " 'I'm pretty sure I won=
't=20
get exempted, but what's the down side? Let's put in an application.' "=20
Amid predictions that Californians could face dozens of rolling blackouts=
=20
this summer, state regulators are trying to update a decades-old list of wh=
o=20
should be spared if the lights go out.=20
The Alta Sierra County Club in Grass Valley should be among those whose pow=
er=20
stays on, Sean O'Brien, the club's golf course superintendent, told=20
regulators in a nine-page application.=20
The country club telephones could go out, making it harder to phone for hel=
p=20
if someone has a medical problem while golfing, he said in an interview.=20
And if the golf course's irrigation pumps shut down, it would lose the=20
ability to quell small blazes -- leaving it to rely on a fire station O'Bri=
en=20
said is about one-quarter mile away.=20
Placerville Dialysis wants an exemption, too. As many as a dozen people the=
re=20
can be having their blood pumped through an artificial kidney that cleans i=
t=20
when their own kidneys no longer function properly.=20
"When the power goes out, everything just stops," said manager Shirley=20
Carpenter. "There is a way to manually return the blood by hand before it=
=20
clots in the line. ... It would just be hectic."=20
It takes about five minutes of manual pumping to fully disconnect someone=
=20
from a dialysis machine, Carpenter said. And some patients can help by=20
operating their own pumps.=20
But, she said, "I'm sure it would be kind of frightening to have your blood=
=20
out in the line and the power off, and they're pretty much tied to the=20
machine."=20
Pam Chin, a hairdresser at the Loomis Beauty Salon, said the owner sought a=
n=20
exemption because people could get overheated if the air conditioning went=
=20
out, and older customers getting their hair set could be chilled if the=20
dryers shut off.=20
With about half the state already exempt from rolling blackouts, the questi=
on=20
of who else should stay connected has become a delicate one for utilities,=
=20
regulators and legislators.=20
Carl Wood, the PUC commissioner who has taken the lead on blackout issues,=
=20
estimates that fewer than 1,000 more utility customers can be exempted befo=
re=20
they overload the rolling outage system designed to take stress off the=20
electric grid.=20
While about 6,000 customers are classified as "essential" by the state's tw=
o=20
largest utilities, keeping them out of the blackout rotation also spares=20
about 5 million other customers who are served by the same circuits.=20
That multiplier effect will have to be weighed by the consulting firm, by=
=20
utilities and eventually by PUC commissioners, who are scheduled to vote in=
=20
early August on who should be added to existing standards.=20
The rules will apply to the state's investor-owned utilities, Pacific Gas a=
nd=20
Electric Co., Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric Co.,=
=20
but not to municipal utilities.=20
The Sacramento Municipal Utility District already rejected pleas for specia=
l=20
exemptions from a medical lab, a veterinary hospital, nursing homes, medica=
l=20
facilities, businesses and residents. SMUD believes they can weather=20
blackouts because they are not critical to public safety.=20
People have counted on having dependable electricity for so long that some=
=20
have widely varying ideas of who can do without it safely, Medhekar said.=
=20
Of the more than 500 Baskin Robbins ice cream parlors that dot California,=
=20
only five are listed on the PUC Web site as applicants for exemptions.=20
The site cautions that its list of 9,239 electronic applicants hasn't been=
=20
checked for duplicates -- or fiction. It includes hundreds of outlets of th=
e=20
same drug store and supermarket chains, dozens of related nursing homes and=
=20
more than 400 dentists. Another 1,200 commercial power users have applied b=
y=20
fax.=20
Among those who have confirmed they want out of outages are the grocery=20
chains operated by West Sacramento-based Raley's, which said it took the=20
action as part of united effort with all California grocers, who are worrie=
d=20
about food spoilage.=20
Others in the mix are Fairfield's Westfield Shoppingtown Solano, formerly t=
he=20
Solano Mall, where officials sought the exemptions out of fear that shopper=
s=20
would get injured if escalators came to a sudden halt.=20
The Yolo County Housing Authority asked for an exemption on behalf of its 7=
00=20
dwellings in the belief that the utilities offer exemptions for low-income=
=20
Californians, Executive Director David Serena said.=20
Serena added that many of the authority's occupants are older or disabled a=
nd=20
could be endangered by a blackout.=20
Chevron Corp. acknowledged it couldn't show that a blackout at its refineri=
es=20
would present "imminent danger to public health or safety," but it asked Go=
v.=20
Gray Davis to support legislation exempting makers and transporters for=20
"critical fuels," saying a refinery shutdown would cut into the state's=20
gasoline supply.=20
Some businesses acknowledged that their applications are a long shot.=20
"It's probably a stretch," said Amanda Leveroni, who owns Bacio Catering Co=
.=20
of Chico, about her request to the PUC. "The public wouldn't be in danger.=
=20
"But we're a catering company -- somebody has planned for a year-plus for a=
=20
wedding or some big event," she added. "I would be in such a huge situation=
.=20
I'd have to send out for pizza."=20

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


PG&E, ISO agree to court order on power bills
By Claire Cooper
Bee Staff Writers
(Published June 6, 2001)=20
SAN FRANCISCO -- Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and the operator of=20
California's power grid agreed Tuesday to a preliminary court order providi=
ng=20
that the utility will continue to receive -- but not pay -- generators' bil=
ls=20
for the state's purchases of the most expensive wholesale electricity.=20
The tab has been running at about $300 million a month.=20
The order, which U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Dennis Montali said he'll sign, will=
=20
specify that the Independent System Operator will not procure power except=
=20
for a "creditworthy buyer who has agreed to pay the generator."=20
In California, the only such potential buyer is the state Department of Wat=
er=20
Resources. However, the department, which has avoided PG&E Co.'s bankruptcy=
=20
proceedings by claiming sovereign immunity, will not be controlled by the=
=20
agreement. Montali pointed out that the department still could demand=20
reimbursement from PG&E.=20
Under the agreement, the ISO will not press any claims against PG&E on beha=
lf=20
of generators if they are not paid.=20
The proposed preliminary injunction was based on an April order by the=20
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which forbade the ISO from purchasing=
=20
power on behalf of any non-creditworthy buyer, such as PG&E.=20
The ISO is appealing the FERC order. If the appeal succeeds, the injunction=
=20
will end.=20



Peter Schrag: Turning up the heat in Houston and Washington


(Published June 6, 2001)=20

Behind all the palaver about the predictable standoff at last week's energy=
=20
"summit" between President Bush and Gov. Gray Davis, one major political=20
development was missed.=20
Put simply, in the past month the focus of the California energy crisis, an=
d=20
maybe the onus as well, has moved east: from the state's (and Davis')=20
handling of the mess to the generating companies, energy marketers and gas=
=20
pipeline companies that have richly profited from it, and thus to FERC, the=
=20
do-next-to-nothing Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and the Bush=20
administration.=20
That wasn't all Davis' doing -- far from it -- though it's been at the hear=
t=20
of his message about energy industry "pirates" and "profiteers." Bush's=20
misbegotten energy plan and the administration's political clumsiness also=
=20
contributed mightily, not least by inadvertently giving Davis the chance to=
=20
get media exposure he could only have dreamed about.=20
More important, there's the defection of Sen. James Jeffords from the=20
Republican Party and the resulting shift of control in the U.S. Senate, whe=
re=20
the next chair of the Energy Committee will be Sen. Jeff Bingaman of New=20
Mexico, a co-sponsor of Sen. Dianne Feinstein's bill capping wholesale=20
electric rates for the next two years. And chairing the Committee on=20
Governmental Affairs will be Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut, who's=20
already asked for an audit of energy prices.=20
Those changes will draw a lot more attention to recent studies showing that=
a=20
handful of big generators -- Duke Power, Reliant, Mirant, Dynegy and the hu=
ge=20
energy-marketing firm Enron -- have gamed the market to drive wholesale=20
prices to levels that, in the year 2000, sometimes reached 40 times the=20
prices of the year before.=20
The findings come not merely from economists at the California Independent=
=20
System Operator, the agency that manages the state's grid, who estimate=20
overcharges resulting from market power at $6.2 billion for last year alone=
.=20
They come also from Severin Borenstein and his colleagues at the University=
=20
of California Energy Institute, who "conservatively" calculate the=20
overcharges at $4.5 billion; from Paul Joskow, a widely respected energy=20
economist at MIT; and from Edward Kahn, an economic analyst in San Francisc=
o.=20
In a recent paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research,=20
Joskow and Kahn conclude that there's "considerable evidence that the high=
=20
prices experienced in the summer of 2000 reflect the withholding of supplie=
s=20
from the market by suppliers [generators or marketers] exercising market=20
power." That those high prices occurred not merely during peak usage but al=
so=20
at off-hours, when no one had ever seen a price spike before, makes those=
=20
spikes even more curious.=20
There is, in addition, the powerful suspicion that the huge increase in=20
natural gas prices that a subsidiary of El Paso Energy Co., now the largest=
=20
gas company on Earth, was charging on the California side of the=20
California-Arizona border wasn't merely the result of an innocent imbalance=
=20
between supply and demand.=20
None of that may be illegal. If there's no collusion, there are no violatio=
ns=20
of antitrust laws. But it adds plenty of steam to the political argument. I=
n=20
the 2000 election cycle alone, energy companies kicked in some $64 million =
in=20
political contributions, 75 percent of it to Republicans. At a time when=20
those companies, many of them located in the same Houston neighborhood, are=
=20
racking up astronomical profits and when their collective coziness with Bus=
h=20
and the Republican Party is a lot more than rhetoric, their vulnerability t=
o=20
a vigorous Senate investigation ought to be obvious.=20
The clincher is "Blackout," a "Frontline" program that both symbolizes the=
=20
shifting emphasis and reinforces it. (The program is scheduled to be aired =
at=20
8 p.m. Friday on Sacramento cable Channel 7.) It isn't another recital of=
=20
Californians worrying about their electric bills, or about the stupidity of=
=20
the state's deregulation scheme or how Davis dithered in addressing the=20
crisis. It is about those generators and marketers in Houston and North=20
Carolina, men (and a few women) who regard themselves as the heroes of the=
=20
new energy markets.=20
The piece is reported by Lowell Bergman, who in working for both "Frontline=
"=20
and the New York Times has already broken major print stories about Duke=20
Power's secret approach to Davis offering unspecified energy refunds in=20
return for an end to state investigations and lawsuits. Bergman also report=
ed=20
private conversations between Enron chairman Kenneth Lay, a major Bush=20
supporter, and FERC chairman Curt Hebert regarding the influence that Lay=
=20
could exercise with Bush to allow Hebert to keep his chairmanship if Hebert=
's=20
supported certain decisions Enron badly wants.=20
None of these recent events is likely to end Davis' political woes, and the=
y=20
may not produce the wholesale rate caps Feinstein wants and that most=20
economists think necessary -- or maybe any significant reduction in the=20
industry's predatory pricing. But they will surely help turn up the heat,=
=20
both in Houston and Washington. Six months ago FERC found wholesale prices=
=20
were not "fair and reasonable" as federal law requires, but did little abou=
t=20
them. It will now have a lot more questions to answer.=20

Peter Schrag can be reached at Box 15779, Sacramento, CA 95852-0779, or at=
=20
pschrag@sacbee.com.



Is trading an insider's game?=20



Buying, selling of electricity is a growth business, but some say deck is=
=20
stacked against consumers
By Craig D. Rose=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
While Californians decry deregulation's failure to deliver a competitive=20
market, electricity wholesalers have quietly developed a vast and rapidly=
=20
growing business of buying and selling power among themselves.=20
The deals take place on high-tech trading floors in Houston and elsewhere=
=20
around the country, as well as on Internet-based trading systems.=20
Some experts say this electricity trading is a key mechanism for raising=20
consumer power prices, yet it's largely unregulated.=20

"Electricity trading is like buying stock -- when you have ability to chang=
e=20
the stock price," said Frank Wolak, a Stanford University economics profess=
or=20
and member of the state grid operator's market surveillance group.=20
Energy companies say the buying and selling of contracts to deliver power=
=20
provides risk management, allowing plant owners to presell their electricit=
y,=20
lock in prices and avoid fluctuations. The rough and tumble of the free=20
market, they add, is the most efficient means of allocating a resource like=
=20
electricity.=20
But industry critics say trading is far from a competitive market paradigm.=
=20
In their view, it's a means of communication -- a way for energy insiders t=
o=20
collude and raise prices under the guise of competition.=20
To be sure, the trading arms of major energy companies have emerged as star=
s=20
in an industry where profit surges of 300 percent or 400 percent are not=20
uncommon.=20
The transactions, shrouded in secrecy, can leave ownership of a critical=20
commodity in unknown hands. Consider the case of power generated by AES=20
Corp.'s California plants.=20
In 1998, AES made a bold move. Immediately after purchasing power plants th=
at=20
gave it control of 10 percent of the state's electric generating capacity,=
=20
the company sold the output from its plants for the next 20 years to Willia=
ms=20
Cos.=20
Williams did not sit on this treasure trove of electrons. The Tulsa, Okla.,=
=20
company soon sold 80 percent of what it bought.=20
It is difficult to say who owns that power now. Some might be owned by Semp=
ra=20
Trading, a sister company of SDG&E. Or some could be owned by Enron Corp.,=
=20
the nation's biggest electricity trader.=20
A spokeswoman for Williams conceded that Williams itself may have repurchas=
ed=20
some of the electricity it sold earlier. But trading companies closely guar=
d=20
their positions.=20
This much can be said with certainty: Electricity that AES sold for less th=
an=20
5 cents per kilowatt-hour to Williams changed hands perhaps 10 times in the=
=20
wholesale market and emerged at times in recent months with a price tag for=
=20
consumers that was 300 percent higher.=20
Williams' trading profits increased by 523 percent in the first quarter thi=
s=20
year.
Advance sales
All this buying and selling creates curious confluences.=20
In their attempt to deflect criticism over high prices, generating companie=
s=20
such as Duke Energy -- operator of the South Bay Power Plant in Chula and=
=20
others in the state -- frequently note that they sell most of their=20
electricity far in advance. But they acknowledge less often that their=20
trading units may also be buying power, which could boost the company's=20
electricity inventory.=20
Duke was the fourth biggest electricity trader last year and cited its=20
trading activity as a prime contributor to its wholesale business profits,=
=20
which soared 324 percent in the first quarter to $348 million.=20
It is a company's power traders who frequently direct plant operators to=20
increase or decrease the generation of power in response to market=20
conditions.=20
Energy companies have little option but to turn to trading for profits. One=
=20
of the better kept secrets of electrical deregulation and its promise of=20
competition is that there is remarkably little competition in the productio=
n=20
side of the business.=20
For one thing, electricity is a commodity; power from one company is=20
indistinguishable from that generated by others.=20
More important, nearly all modern plants generate power from turbines built=
=20
by a handful of manufacturers. The result? Modern plants owned by different=
=20
companies produce power at nearly identical cost.=20
"The cost of power produced by modern plants is all within a mil=20
(one-thousandth of a dollar)," said Michael Peevey, an adviser to Gov. Gray=
=20
Davis and former president of Southern California Edison.=20
So the extraction of profit in the electricity business relies much more on=
=20
trading. Traders' profits rise when prices are volatile -- plunging, or eve=
n=20
better, rising sharply.
Little regulation
But despite the obvious temptation to manipulate the market, the burgeoning=
=20
electricity trading business has remained largely unregulated.=20
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission does require quarterly filings fro=
m=20
energy traders, but these often provide incomplete information, or at least=
=20
little that has been of concern to FERC.=20
In fact, although the trading of electricity grew more than a hundredfold=
=20
from 1996 to 2000, FERC has taken no major enforcement action against a=20
trader. After the onset of the California crisis last year, FERC has acted=
=20
once. That was against Williams, which agreed to pay $8 million without=20
admitting guilt to resolve an allegation that it withheld supply to pump up=
=20
prices.=20
FERC's record of enforcement in the area of power trading stands in contras=
t=20
to a long list of enforcement actions within other markets taken by the=20
Securities Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission=
.=20
FERC has recently added staff to its market oversight operations. But Willi=
am=20
Massey, a FERC commissioner, says the agency's effort is still inadequate.=
=20
"Electricity can be flipped, stripped and chopped up," Massey said. "It's a=
n=20
extraordinarily complicated market.=20
"The sophisticated marketers and traders have simply moved past us. We're=
=20
kind of horse and buggy in our approach and they're out there in rocket shi=
ps=20
flying around ... The problem is that sophisticated traders don't necessari=
ly=20
produce reasonable prices. They produce profits."=20
Before deregulation, electricity trading was a low-key affair. Regulated=20
utilities dealt power back and forth on a reciprocal basis to fill=20
electricity shortfalls in their control areas. There was little trading for=
=20
profit until the mid-1990s, after federal legislation and FERC rulings open=
ed=20
the market.=20
Major traders include large energy companies, sister companies of=20
California's major utilities and Wall Street firms.
Market volatility
In many ways, the trading of power is similar to that of other commodities.=
=20
But there are important differences. Because it cannot be stored and its us=
e=20
is so fundamental, the price of electricity is the most volatile of all.=20
When supplies are tight, a single supplier can rapidly raise prices to=20
budget-busting levels, as evidenced by Duke Energy's recent admission that =
it=20
charged California nearly $4,000 for a megawatt-hour of power, a quantity=
=20
that probably sold hours earlier for one-tenth of that sum or less.=20
Wolak, the Stanford economist, and state Sen. Joseph Dunn, D-Garden Grove,=
=20
who is investigating the state power market, say trading allows companies t=
o=20
collude under the guise of competition. Instead of wringing out lowest cost=
s,=20
the wholesale trading market serves to raise prices, they say.=20
"As I trade to you and you trade to me, we communicate to each other what=
=20
price we would like to get," said Wolak. "It's not collusive. It's just=20
communicating price."=20
Mark Palmer, a spokesman for Enron, the nation's biggest power trader, said=
=20
California's problem is not the result of trading.=20
"It's a result of shortages," Palmer said.=20
Underscoring its emphasis on trading, Enron's new headquarters tower in=20
downtown Houston rises from a six-story block of new trading floors,=20
including expanded space for electricity trading.=20
Enron also pioneered trading in cyberspace and its Enron Online site claims=
=20
to be the most active computer-based trading market.=20
The Houston company argues that consumers won't fully benefit from power=20
trading and deregulation until they have greater choice in choosing their=
=20
power supplier. And the company says FERC has not done enough to open acces=
s=20
to transmission lines, which would allow traders to move power around the=
=20
country. To that end, Enron has lobbied hard for President Bush's plan for =
a=20
national electricity grid.=20
Palmer says the notion that the price of electricity rises each time it is=
=20
traded is mistaken.=20
"The market is always looking for the real price of a commodity," Palmer=20
said.=20
Dunn, the California state senator, says his investigation found a differen=
t=20
function for trading. At a time when supply barely meets or falls short of=
=20
demand, he noted, companies with electricity to sell have to worry only abo=
ut=20
how high to set their price.=20
"The trader is a pawn in the generator's game to drive up prices," said Dun=
n.=20
"Trading develops a level of trust. You, my alleged competitor, will bid in=
=20
the same patterns and I will respond not in a competitive pattern but in a=
=20
complimentary pattern."=20
The state senator said his investigation found evidence that on several day=
s,=20
energy companies appeared to test their ability to drive prices up, without=
=20
being undercut by competitors.=20
This ability to drive up prices without competitive consequence is a key te=
st=20
of market power, the technical term for manipulation or price fixing.=20
But Dunn also conceded that antitrust violations can be hard to prove in=20
court. He suggested that even if the trading behavior falls short of=20
antitrust violations, it remains anti-competitive and devastating for the=
=20
California economy.=20
To Harry Trebing, a utility industry expert and professor emeritus at=20
Michigan State University, wholesale electricity trading is reminiscent of=
=20
what took place in the 1920s and early '30s. Back then, utility companies=
=20
created complex networks of holding companies that traded stock among=20
themselves, driving up prices in the process.=20
Undoing that scheme was a focus of President Franklin Roosevelt's=20
administration. Congress ended up barring national power companies and=20
tightening regulation of utilities, in an effort to counteract their tenden=
cy=20
to create markets that work only for insiders.=20
"The broad goals of trading are the same," Trebing said.=20
"The goal is to maximize profits through raising prices."=20






Daily energy costs for state fall in past weeks=20



By Ed Mendel=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
SACRAMENTO -- In some of the first good news of the electricity crisis, the=
=20
Davis administration said yesterday that the daily cost of power purchased =
by=20
the state for utility customers has dropped in recent weeks.=20
The price-drop news comes after an announcement that Californians conserved=
=20
more energy than expected last month, 11 percent, and amid Davis=20
administration optimism that the Legislature may finally begin to move on a=
=20
plan to keep Southern California Edison out of bankruptcy.=20
The developments, if they turn out to be a trend and not temporary, could b=
e=20
among the first signs that Gov. Gray Davis' plan to end the electricity=20
crisis is beginning to work. But the administration isn't saying that.=20
"We have had a few good days here lately," said S. David Freeman, a Davis=
=20
power adviser. "I don't think that I want to project."=20
Some power-market watchers began to speculate last month that prices may ha=
ve=20
peaked earlier this year. Platts, an energy information service, said=20
yesterday that spot prices for the natural gas used by power plants are=20
falling this month.=20
The governor's press secretary, Steve Maviglio, told reporters yesterday th=
at=20
the daily amount spent on power is now "well below" $50 million, which was=
=20
the average cost earlier this year.=20
A 12-day gap in the most recent notice to the Legislature that another $500=
=20
million increment will be spent on power suggests that the daily average=20
during the last two weeks may have dropped down around $42 million.=20
Oscar Hidalgo, a spokesman for the state power purchasing agency, said that=
=20
the average cost of power was under $40 million during the first four days =
of=20
this month.=20
Maviglio attributed the lower cost to conservation, the phasing in of cheap=
er=20
long-term power contracts, fewer power plants off-line for maintenance, and=
=20
cooler weather.=20
However, he said, "The average cost is still way over what we paid last=20
year."=20
There was widespread skepticism in late April when the governor's consultan=
ts=20
predicted that the $346 per megawatt-hour average paid by the state for=20
non-contracted power from April through June would drop to an average of $1=
95=20
from July through September.=20
"We are still very comfortable with the projection that Mr. Fichera and=20
company estimated," Maviglio said, referring to Joseph Fichera of Saber=20
Partners in New York.=20
During a briefing on May 21, Fichera told reporters that the amount of powe=
r=20
that the state would obtain under long-term contracts for May was expected =
to=20
be about 43 percent of the total required, the so-called net short.=20
Fichera said contracts already signed were expected to cover 66 percent of=
=20
the net short in June, 48 percent in July, and 42 percent in August. He sai=
d=20
contracts that had been agreed on in principle could increase those amounts=
=20
to 73 percent in June, 67 percent in July, and 60 percent in August.=20
"We are still on target. There are risks," Fichera said yesterday, among th=
em=20
extended hot weather and power plant outages. "No one is popping the=20
champagne corks until Sept. 30."=20
The governor's consultants based their forecast of power demand this summer=
=20
on an estimate that Californians will reduce their electricity use by 7=20
percent.=20
The 11 percent reduction last month, as compared to May of last year, came=
=20
before the sticker shock of rate hikes that begin this month for customers =
of=20
Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric. And a $35 million ad campaign urging=
=20
conservation has not hit full stride.=20
Maviglio said the administration plans to release some detailed information=
=20
on Monday about the roughly $8 billion the state has spent buying power. Th=
e=20
general fund will be repaid by a bond of up to $13.4 billion that ratepayer=
s=20
will pay off over 15 years.=20
Legislative leaders have demanded detailed information about power purchase=
s=20
before proceeding with the Edison plan. Assembly Democrats are working on a=
=20
plan that de-emphasizes state purchase of the Edison transmission system an=
d=20
would put most of the burden for paying off Edison's debt on businesses and=
=20
large users, not residences.






Five tiers sought in proposed rate boost=20



Conservation would be promoted, SDG&E says
By Karen Kucher=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
A proposed rate increase for SDG&E customers to cover the high cost of=20
electricity should be imposed in five tiers to encourage conservation, the=
=20
company is advising state utility regulators.=20
The more electricity a customer uses, the higher the rate would be.=20
SDG&E needs to raise its rates to bring in an additional $502 million=20
annually to pay the state for power purchases.=20
The state Public Utilities Commission is expected to rule on San Diego Gas =
&=20
Electric's rate-increase proposal June 28.=20
The rate changes would remove a cap that has shielded most SDG&E customers=
=20
from rising electricity prices for a year. The cap, enacted by state=20
lawmakers in September 2000 and retroactive to June 2000, set rates at 6.5=
=20
cents per kilowatt-hour.=20
Higher rates would mean the average SDG&E residential and small-business=20
customer's electricity bills would go up by 18 percent. Large commercial=20
users' bills would average 29 percent more.=20
Public hearings on the issue will be held next Monday and Tuesday in San=20
Diego, El Cajon, Escondido and San Clemente. These sessions will focus on=
=20
small-business and residential consumers. Hearings on large commercial user=
s=20
were held last month.=20
Earlier this year, the PUC decided to allow the state's two largest=20
utilities, Pacific Gas and Electric and Southern California Edison, to char=
ge=20
customers an extra $5.7 billion annually for electricity.=20
The state Department of Water Resources, which has been buying power for=20
SDG&E customers since February, asked SDG&E to generate a total of $915=20
million annually to cover the cost of electricity purchases.=20
With the proposed rate increases, SDG&E could do that.=20
Large commercial customers would pay about 30 percent of the overall increa=
se=20
and residential and small-business customers would pay about 70 percent, sa=
id=20
Ed Van Herik, a spokesman for the utility company.=20
If the increase can be tiered, as many as 60 percent of residential custome=
rs=20
will see no rate increase if their electricity usage remains the same, Van=
=20
Herik said.=20
But customers who use more than 130 percent of their baseline -- considered=
=20
the minimum amount of electricity needed by a household -- will be billed a=
t=20
increasingly higher rates.=20
Residential and small-business customers who use a lot of electricity could=
=20
pay as much as 17.89 cents per kilowatt hour for some power they consume.=
=20
Consumer advocate Michael Shames said he is concerned the utility's proposa=
l=20
does not spread the increases evenly among different types of users. He als=
o=20
called for more scrutiny of the state's request.=20
People should tell PUC officials "that this increase should not be a carte=
=20
blanche or blank check approval," said Shames, the head of Utility Consumer=
s'=20
Action Network. "The PUC needs to ensure that the rate increase requested b=
y=20
the (state) is reasonable."=20
The public hearings are scheduled for:=20
?Monday, 1 p.m., San Diego Concourse, Copper Room, 200 C St., San Diego.=20
?Monday, 7 p.m., El Cajon Community Center, 195 E. Douglas Ave., El Cajon.=
=20
?Tuesday, 1 p.m., Country Inn Hotel, 35 Via Pico Plaza, San Clemente.=20
?Tuesday, 7 p.m., Center for the Arts, 340 N. Escondido Blvd., Escondido.=
=20







Port budget large, but power bills loom=20



Slowing economy also cause for worry
By Ronald W. Powell=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
The "rock" is rolling financially, but there are indications that the blues=
=20
lurk on the horizon.=20
Officials of the San Diego Unified Port District -- headquartered in a=20
block-shaped building some employees call the rock -- are happy with a=20
projected 2001-2002 budget that is 5.1 percent larger than the current one.=
=20
Total revenue is expected to reach $208.7 million, $10.2 million above what=
=20
is expected in the fiscal year that ends June 30.=20
Port commissioners gave preliminary approval to the budget yesterday and ar=
e=20
scheduled to take a final vote July 10.=20
But a slowing economy and surging electric bills are causes for concern.=20
Electricity costs are expected to rise from $5 million to $8.2 million in t=
he=20
coming fiscal year.=20
"As far as trends, we see a continuation of the growth we've experienced ov=
er=20
the past five years," said Bruce Hollingsworth, the port's treasurer. "But=
=20
our percentage of growth will not rise as sharply."=20
Port revenues have grown steadily since the 1997-1998 fiscal year, when $16=
3=20
million was generated.=20
The proposed budget calls for adding 24 employees to the port's 730-member=
=20
work force. New hires will include three Harbor Police officers, 10 employe=
es=20
in the aviation division and four in maritime services.=20
The port operates Lindbergh Field and administers nonmilitary tidelands alo=
ng=20
San Diego Bay. It is landlord to more than 600 waterfront businesses and=20
operates two marine cargo terminals and one cruise ship terminal.=20
The budget calls for growth in each of the port's primary revenue centers:=
=20
aviation, real estate and maritime services.=20
Passenger and cargo activity at Lindbergh Field is expected to generate $90=
.7=20
million, or $5 million more than expected in the current year. Most of that=
=20
increase is expected to come from parking-rate increases at the airport and=
=20
at the port's long-term parking lot on Pacific Highway.=20
Rent from hotels and other businesses that are port tenants are expected to=
=20
total $63.1 million, up $1.8 million from the current budget.=20
Increases in cargo and cruise ship traffic are expected to boost maritime=
=20
income by $2.7 million, to a total of $18.4 million.=20
The port expects to spend $157 million on construction projects. They inclu=
de=20
$8.5 million to relocate the General Services Department from Eighth Avenue=
=20
and Harbor Drive in San Diego to National City and more than $5 million for=
=20
paving and improvements at the 10th Avenue Marine Terminal.=20
Rent revenue could grow substantially in future years. Four hotel projects =
on=20
port property have won approval or are seeking it.=20
Jim Bailey, president of Manchester Resorts, told commissioners yesterday=
=20
that he expects to break ground on a second Hyatt tower of 750 rooms by Jun=
e=20
26. Port officials said revenue from that hotel would bring in an additiona=
l=20
$3.7 million a year. It is scheduled to open in the summer of 2003.=20
Hollingsworth, the treasurer, said that if all four hotels are built the po=
rt=20
could receive as much as $15 million a year in new revenue.=20







Continuous use urged for planned power plant=20



Escondido facility originally proposed for peak demand
By Jonathan Heller=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
ESCONDIDO -- A proposed power plant in southwest Escondido that initially w=
as=20
expected to run only during times of peak electricity demand probably will =
be=20
allowed to run full time.=20
A state energy official who recommended approval of the plant yesterday has=
=20
said the plant could operate as often as the state deems necessary.=20
The California Energy Commission was scheduled to vote on the project today=
.=20
CalPeak Power of San Diego has asked the commission to approve a 49-megawat=
t=20
plant on Enterprise Street near Vineyard Avenue. Referred to as a "peaker"=
=20
plant, such facilities typically are designed to supply energy only during=
=20
times of peak demand.=20
The state limits the number of hours some plants can operate to keep=20
pollution at a minimum. A 44-megawatt peaker plant being built on West=20
Mission Avenue in Escondido by Ramco Inc. will be allowed to operate no mor=
e=20
than 16 hours per day.=20
That plant is permitted to emit up to 5 parts per million of nitrogen oxide=
,=20
although its actual emissions are expected to be slightly lower, said Dale=
=20
Mesple, a Ramco consultant. Nitrogen oxide is a component of smog.=20
The CalPeak plant, if approved, would be restricted to 2 parts per million =
of=20
nitrogen oxide.=20
It was generally assumed that the CalPeak plant would operate under similar=
=20
time restrictions as the Ramco plant. The potential for air pollution was=
=20
among the chief concerns of residents who spoke at the City Council hearing=
s=20
on the Ramco project and at the energy commission hearings about the CalPea=
k=20
plant.=20
But under the terms of approval recommended by Energy Commission Chairman=
=20
William Keese, CalPeak's plant would be able to operate "up to 8,760 hours=
=20
per year, typically when the demand for electricity is high." That number=
=20
equals 24 hours a day.=20
The actual number of hours would depend on the requirements of the state's=
=20
Independent System Operator, which manages the energy grid.=20
"We certainly want to have the flexibility to run whenever we're needed,"=
=20
said Mark Lyons, CalPeak's development director. "Exactly how often we will=
=20
run is anybody's guess."=20
Escondido Councilwoman June Rady said she was frustrated by the possibility=
=20
of the plant running full time. In Ramco's case, the city and the county Ai=
r=20
Pollution Control District made it clear how often the plant could operate.=
=20
CalPeak chose to bypass the city's permitting process and went through the=
=20
state Energy Commission, which offers an expedited 21-day approval put in=
=20
place by Gov. Gray Davis as an emergency measure.=20
"I think Escondido has been absolutely ignored and there's a total lack of=
=20
due process," Rady said. "It boils down to an issue of local control."=20
Although city officials objected to the commission pre-empting the city's=
=20
land-use authority, the commission maintained that Davis' order gave it the=
=20
final say on this type of project.=20
If the commission gives final approval today, the only remedy available to=
=20
the city would be in court. At least three council members must vote to=20
initiate legal action.=20
Keese's recommended approval did take into account several city concerns=20
regarding landscaping. The CalPeak plant would be built near the entrance o=
f=20
a planned high-tech business park, and city officials were worried the=20
plant's appearance might hinder the ability to attract high-quality tenants=
=20
to the park.=20
Mayor Lori Holt Pfeiler said she was not surprised by the commission's=20
recommendation.=20
"I expected they would want to approve the project, and that's why it was=
=20
important for the city to weigh in with conditions we have in this=20
community," Pfeiler said.=20






Rising energy prices threaten Poway troupe=20



By Brian E. Clark=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
POWAY -- Rising electricity rates may extinguish the stage lights this summ=
er=20
for the Poway Performing Arts Company.=20
"I'm afraid that if SDG&E gets the price increase it's asking for -- from 6=
.5=20
cents per kilowatt-hour to 8.9 cents -- that we'll go under," said Kathy=20
McCafferty, spokeswoman for the nonprofit theater.=20
The volunteer organization produces its plays in a building at a Poway Road=
=20
shopping center. It held three fund-raising performances over the weekend,=
=20
but officials were uncertain yesterday how much money was raised.=20
The group is not affiliated with the Poway Performing Arts Center and has=
=20
been in business for 20 years.=20
McCafferty said the group built up a $2,000 surplus last summer before ener=
gy=20
prices began to surge.=20
"That $2,000 was a big reserve for us," she said. "It seemed like a ton of=
=20
money, but, boy, it went fast. And we're really energy-dependent. Our light=
s=20
use a lot of power. And we're in Poway on the second floor of our building.=
=20
It gets hot here, and we have to use air conditioning."=20
But McCafferty acknowledged that the cost of power isn't the group's only=
=20
problem.=20
In a recent letter to backers, President Nan Katona said the organization=
=20
also needs new blood to keep operating.=20
"The truth is that lack of funding is just a symptom of the deeper problem,=
=20
which is lack of community support," she wrote. "Ironically, audiences and=
=20
reviewers recognize the Poway Performing Arts Company as one of the premier=
=20
community arts theaters in San Diego."=20
Katona said some new volunteers had stepped forward to take leadership role=
s=20
in the theater company since she wrote her letter last month. But she said=
=20
rising electricity prices could still bring the group down.=20
"If our energy bills double or triple, we could be in dire straits," she=20
said. "It could push us over the edge financially."=20
McCafferty said it would be difficult for the theater to cut costs.=20
"We can't run a much leaner operation," she said. "If our power prices go u=
p=20
again, we may still be forced out of business."=20
The theater is at 13250 Poway Road, in the Lively Shopping Center. For more=
=20
information, call (858) 679-8085.=20







Fair to use generators for midway attractions=20



By Michael Burge=20
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER=20
June 6, 2001=20
DEL MAR -- The Del Mar Fair will generate its own electricity for thrill=20
rides on the midway this year instead of using energy from SDG&E.=20
"In case there are planned or unplanned outages, we still will be operating=
,"=20
fairgrounds General Manager Timothy J. Fennell said.=20
Fennell decided to put the midway on generators because he didn't want the=
=20
fairgrounds pulling power from the grid while county residents are coping=
=20
with rolling blackouts at home and at work, he said.=20
And the fair does not want to take a chance that a rolling blackout will=20
leave some people stranded in rides high above the grounds, forcing an=20
evacuation.=20
The fairgrounds has been told it is exempt from rolling blackouts, but rath=
er=20
than take such a risk it will rent 13 diesel-fuel generators and produce=20
electricity on the midway. The rest of the fairgrounds will use power from=
=20
San Diego Gas & Electric Co.=20
Fairgrounds operations manager Larry Baumann estimated it would cost the=20
fairgrounds $20,000 more to generate its own electricity than to buy it fro=
m=20
SDG&E.=20
Midway manager Donna Ruhm said it will be worth it.=20
"Rides that require evacuation have to have backup power and they do," Ruhm=
=20
said. "Now our service won't be interrupted."=20
It is not unusual for carnivals to generate their own power, and the=20
fairgrounds has done so in the past. Fair officials removed the generators =
10=20
to 15 years ago to reduce noise on the midway.=20
The fair opens June 15 and ends July 4.=20
While the rest of the fairgrounds is on the SDG&E grid, Baumann said backup=
=20
generators can kick in during a typical 60-or 90-minute blackout, allowing=
=20
the fair to operate without serious difficulty. Those generators are not=20
linked to the midway.=20
All the generators are licensed by the state and meet emission standards,=
=20
fair officials said, so they do not expect the noise and odor to be=20
excessive.=20
The fairgrounds is taking the precaution of providing its own power despite=
=20
the fact that it probably will not go dark during a rolling blackout.=20
"SDG&E has assured me that .?.?. the fairgrounds and the racetrack will not=
=20
be on the curtailment (blackout) list during the fair and the races," said=
=20
Del Mar Fire Chief Jack Gosney.=20
The Del Mar Thoroughbred racing season begins July 18 and ends Sept. 5.=20
Gosney said SDG&E told him earlier this year that the fairgrounds was not=
=20
subject to a forced outage because it shared a circuit with the Del Mar Fir=
e=20
Station, which is a 911 dispatch center and exempt from a blackout. But he=
=20
said recent research showed that the fairgrounds is on a separate circuit.=
=20
Nonetheless, Gosney said, SDG&E is exempting the fairgrounds and racetrack=
=20
during the busy summer season.=20
The fairgrounds paid $137,152.95 for its electricity usage from March 12 to=
=20
April 10. It paid $51,845.39 for electricity during the same period last ye=
ar.
?=20






Wednesday, June 6, 2001=20
'Hi, My Name Isn't Justice, Honey,' and Shame on Lockyer=20
By TOM G. PALMER


?????Here's what California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer said at a press=20
conference about Enron Corp. Chairman Kenneth Lay: "I would love to=20
personally escort Lay to an 8-by-10 cell that he could share with a tattooe=
d=20
dude who says, 'Hi, my name is Spike, honey."'=20
?????Here's why Lockyer should be removed from his office of public trust:=
=20
First, because as the chief law enforcement officer of the largest state in=
=20
the nation, he not only has admitted that rape is a regular feature of the=
=20
state's prison system, but also that he considers rape a part of the=20
punishment he can inflict on others.=20
?????Second, because he has publicly stated that he would like to personall=
y=20
arrange the rape of a Texas businessman who has not even been charged with=
=20
any illegal behavior.=20
?????Lockyer's remarks reveal him to be an authoritarian thug, someone whol=
ly=20
unsuited to holding an office of public trust.=20
?????But his remarks do have one positive merit: They tell us what criminal=
=20
penalties really entail.=20
?????Contrary to some depictions of prisons as country clubs, they are=20
violent and terrible places. More and more politicians propose criminal=20
sanctions for more and more alleged misdeeds, and as a result ever more kin=
ds=20
of behavior are sanctioned by criminal penalties, perhaps now even selling=
=20
electricity. Those found guilty of such crimes are put into cages, where th=
ey=20
are deprived of their liberty and dignity and, as Lockyer so clearly=20
acknowledged, raped and brutalized. What's worse, Lockyer has indicated tha=
t=20
he believes that rape is an appropriate part of the system of punishments h=
e=20
administers.=20
?????Should it matter that Lay is a businessman? Imagine the outcry if the=
=20
head of Enron were female. What would Lockyer's fellow Democrats have said =
to=20
that?=20
?????Should it matter that Lay is chairman of an electricity generator? Doe=
s=20
the nature of his business justify threats to escort him to his own rape?=
=20
Lockyer told the Los Angeles Times that he had singled out Enron's chairman=
=20
because the Houston-based company is the world's largest energy trader.=20
?????So apparently singling out a man for a heinous threat is OK because he=
's=20
the chairman of the world's largest energy trading company. That's accordin=
g=20
to the man who, as a state senator, sponsored California's 1984 hate-crimes=
=20
law. Evidently the crusader against intimidation on the basis of race,=20
religion and sexual orientation feels no hesitation at all about intimidati=
ng=20
someone and threatening him with the brutal use of physical force simply=20
because he heads the world's largest energy trading company.=20
?????Lockyer and Gov. Gray Davis seem to think that the best way to keep th=
e=20
lights on is to threaten electricity producers with brute force, rather tha=
n=20
to offer to pay competitive rates in competitive markets. Are energy=20
producers to blame for California's energy problems? No. Bad policies,=20
including rigid controls on retail prices of electricity, are the cause of=
=20
the problem, not the people who generate energy. Scapegoating producers and=
=20
threatening them with violence is an old ploy of authoritarians. California=
ns=20
should not stand for it.=20
?????An Enron spokesman said that Lockyer's chilling stated desire to arran=
ge=20
the rape of Lay does not merit a response. The spokesman is wrong. Lockyer'=
s=20
remarks merit public disgrace and removal from office. After all, rape is n=
ot=20
a form of legal justice in America--is it?=20
- - -

Tom G. Palmer Is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute in Washington. E-mai=
l:=20
Palmert@cato.org

Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times=20






California ; Metro Desk=20
U.S. Probes Alleged Pact Not to Build New Plants Power: Justice officials=
=20
focus on Southland operations of two firms, which deny wrongdoing.
MYRON LEVIN; NANCY RIVERA BROOKS
?=20
06/06/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page B-1=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
The U.S. Department of Justice has launched an investigation into whether t=
wo=20
companies that control a large swath of Southern California 's electricity=
=20
supply agreed to limit power plant construction, potentially hindering=20
crucial energy production, according to federal records and interviews.=20
The civil antitrust probe of Williams Energy Services and AES Southland=20
represents the Justice Department's first foray into the activities of ener=
gy=20
suppliers who have reaped huge profits in California 's price-shocked marke=
t.=20
AES disclosed the investigation, which began last month, in a filing with t=
he=20
Securities and Exchange Commission on Tuesday. In its papers, AES said the=
=20
Justice Department is focusing on whether its agreement with Williams could=
=20
constrain future power plant construction in Southern California .=20
The investigation comes at a time when the state is scrambling to get new=
=20
generators built and running to avoid blackouts and economic problems.=20
The government alleges that AES and Williams agreed to limit the expansion =
or=20
construction of new power plants near three facilities purchased by AES in=
=20
1998 from Southern California Edison under the state's new deregulation pla=
n.=20
The plants--in Long Beach, Huntington Beach and Redondo Beach--are owned by=
=20
AES, but the electricity is sold by Williams. Under a 3-year-old deal, know=
n=20
as a tolling agreement, Williams essentially rents out the capacity of the=
=20
plants for annual payments to AES. Williams supplies natural gas to fire th=
e=20
plants and sells the electricity under long-term contracts and in the costl=
y=20
spot market.=20
Williams and AES have similar tolling agreements at plants in Pennsylvania=
=20
and New Jersey. However, AES spokesman Aaron Thomas said the Justice=20
Department's investigative requests have focused only on agreements between=
=20
Williams and AES in Southern California .=20
Thomas would say only that the agreement at the center of the investigation=
=20
is simply a delineation of "how expansion or repowerings are done at the=20
facilities."=20
The three plants have a combined capacity of more than 3,900 megawatts,=20
enough to supply about 3 million homes. This summer, AES is bringing anothe=
r=20
450 megawatts on line by reactivating two mothballed generators in Huntingt=
on=20
Beach.=20
Paula Hall-Collins, a spokeswoman for Tulsa-based Williams Cos., said she=
=20
believes that the investigation is unrelated to a recent inquiry by the=20
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission into whether AES and Williams=20
unnecessarily shut down plants to jack up prices. A portion of that=20
investigation was settled in April, when Williams, without admitting any=20
wrongdoing, agreed to pay about $8 million.=20
"We've always maintained that we've operated within the law, and we're=20
certain the investigation by the DOJ will find we are operating legally,"=
=20
Hall-Collins said.=20
Williams and AES are among the power plant owners and marketers that have=
=20
been lambasted by Gov. Gray Davis because of gold-plated electricity prices=
=20
that have pushed the state's biggest utilities to the edge of ruin and are=
=20
steadily draining the state's budget surplus.=20
State officials are asking FERC to revoke the rights of AES and Williams to=
=20
sell electricity at whatever price the market will bear. That right was=20
granted for three years, beginning in 1998 by federal regulators when=20
California 's $28-billion electricity market was opened to competition.=20
Under that plan, the rights of AES and Williams to sell into the market are=
=20
the first to come up for renewal.=20
AES Southland and Williams Energy Services are both arms of large energy=20
companies--AES Corp. of Arlington, Va., and Williams Cos. of Tulsa, Okla.






California ; Metro Desk=20
Natural Gas, Power Prices Drop Sharply Energy: More conservation, mild=20
weather are among factors keeping costs down, experts say.
RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR; NANCY VOGEL
?=20
06/06/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page B-1=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
WASHINGTON -- The wholesale prices of electricity and natural gas in=20
California have fallen sharply in recent weeks, and experts said Tuesday th=
at=20
the relief could be the harbinger of an energy turnaround.=20
Or it may be just a blip.=20
In the last couple of weeks, California power prices have plunged to the=20
lowest levels since April 2000, traders say, with electricity selling on so=
me=20
days for less than $100 per megawatt-hour.=20
At night, when demand slackens, power sometimes sells for less than $20 per=
=20
megawatt-hour. That is reminiscent of the days before prices went haywire=
=20
last summer.=20
It is a drastically different scenario than the $500 to $800 the state paid=
=20
during a spate of hot weather last month.=20
Meanwhile, wholesale natural gas prices at a bellwether pipeline junction o=
n=20
the Southern California -Arizona border dipped last week to their lowest=20
levels since November, according to a publication that tracks the industry.=
=20
Separately, Southern California Gas Co. and Pacific Gas & Electric Co.=20
reported June rate cuts for their residential gas customers of 16% and 38%,=
=20
respectively.=20
Experts credited a combination of conservation, mild weather, a burst of=20
increased hydroelectric generation and lower natural gas prices for the dro=
p=20
in electricity costs.=20
"Conservation is starting to worry the generators, which is nice to see,"=
=20
said Severin Borenstein, director of the University of California Energy=20
Institute in Berkeley. Californians used 11% less energy last month than in=
=20
May 2000, according to the state Energy Commission.=20
"I'm worried that if we don't push harder on conservation, [prices] won't=
=20
stay down," Borenstein added.=20
On the natural gas side, experts said the price decline is due to replenish=
ed=20
storage within California , a nationwide drop in the cost of the fuel and=
=20
easing demand from power plants.=20
The number of shippers competing to get natural gas to the state has also=
=20
increased, with the expiration of a controversial contract on the El Paso=
=20
pipeline system last week.=20
But economists were reluctant to make sweeping predictions based on the=20
latest indicators.=20
"It's hard to draw specific conclusions," said Bruce Henning, who tracks th=
e=20
natural gas markets for Energy and Environmental Analysis Inc., an Arlingto=
n,=20
Va., consulting firm.=20
How the summer turns out depends on the weather in the state, Henning said,=
=20
adding, "The weather represents the balance in the Southern California=20
market."=20
Natural gas fuels most California power plants. With wholesale prices=20
recently averaging three to four times the rates charged elsewhere in the=
=20
country, state and federal officials have despaired of chances for=20
controlling electricity costs.=20
Last Friday, however, the daily price for immediate delivery of natural gas=
=20
in Topock, Ariz., a pipeline junction near the California border, dipped to=
=20
$7.85 per million British thermal units.=20
According to Natural Gas Week, it was the first time since mid-November tha=
t=20
the price at that location had fallen below $8 per million BTUs. One millio=
n=20
BTUs is what a typical Southern California home uses in five or six days.=
=20
Considered a bellwether for other pipeline systems serving California , the=
=20
Topock price reached a record $56.54 per million BTUs on Dec. 8. It stood a=
t=20
$9.36 per million BTUs at the close of business Tuesday, still below recent=
=20
weekly averages.=20
Other industry publications have also picked up signals of price declines.=
=20
Platts, the energy information division of McGraw-Hill Cos., reported Tuesd=
ay=20
that the price for monthly gas delivery contracts to California fell 22% in=
=20
June, following a nationwide trend.=20
But Henning said the drop in California prices is attributable to both lowe=
r=20
prices around the country and a decline in the high markups for shipping ga=
s=20
to California . Those markups, which far exceed the cost of transporting ga=
s,=20
have drawn the attention of state and federal investigators.=20
Henning said the markups are declining as depleted storage levels in=20
California are replenished. "Storage levels have been filling very rapidly,=
=20
and that fact is reflected in prices coming down," he said.=20
The link between natural gas and electricity prices is a hotly debated=20
subject. Some experts say high-priced natural gas is driving up the cost of=
=20
electricity . Others believe that record prices for power are raising the=
=20
prices that generators are willing to pay for their fuel.=20
Electricity prices that range from $20 to $200 per megawatt-hour--instead o=
f=20
the $150 to $500 per megawatt-hour paid in recent months--are great news fo=
r=20
Gov. Gray Davis.=20
Average daily power prices in California for transactions through the=20
Automated Power Exchange have dropped from $149 per megawatt-hour last Frid=
ay=20
to $110 per megawatt-hour Tuesday. The exchange is a private company that=
=20
brings together electricity buyers and sellers and accounts for less than 1=
0%=20
of the state's market.=20
Davis spokesman Steve Maviglio said Tuesday that average daily power=20
purchases by the state have recently dipped below $50 million.=20
The state has sometimes had to pay more than $100 million a day since it=20
started buying power in January through the Department of Water Resources.=
=20
The state stepped in because California 's two biggest utilities became too=
=20
financially crippled to withstand the prices being charged by generators.=
=20
Davis' plan to pay for past and future energy purchases with a $12.4-billio=
n=20
bond issue hinges on an assumption that power prices will be driven down th=
is=20
summer through long-term contracts, conservation and the construction of ne=
w=20
power plants.=20
UC Berkeley's Borenstein said conservation efforts have not gone far enough=
.=20
"You walk into most buildings and you still need a sweater," he said. "That=
=20
ain't the way to hit the target."=20
If Californians conserved an additional 10% off their peak usage on hot=20
afternoons, he said, "we could really break the backs of the generators, we=
=20
could really collapse the price."=20
Prices tend to skyrocket in California 's electricity market on hot=20
afternoons, when demand soars and grid operators must scramble to purchase=
=20
enough electricity . Cool weather, which reduces demand for air conditionin=
g,=20
and conservation help keep the state from reaching such crisis situations.=
=20
Borenstein said he believes generators are also asking less money for their=
=20
electricity in part because of a federal order that took effect last month.=
=20
The order limits the price power plant owners can charge when California 's=
=20
supplies are strained.=20
Power sellers say there are more fundamental forces at work.=20
"There's more supply relative to demand, which is softening prices," said=
=20
Gary Ackerman, executive director of the Western Power Trading Forum. "The=
=20
market is working, and it's providing cheaper wholesale power more quickly=
=20
than any regulatory scheme could ever do."=20
*=20
Times staff writer Dan Morain in Sacramento contributed to this story.=20
RELATED STORY=20
PG&E wins: The utility averted a $1-billion bill for power buys. B6=20
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)=20
A Blip or a Trend?=20
Daily natural gas prices at the California border with Arizona--considered =
a=