Enron Mail

From:miyung.buster@enron.com
To:joseph.alamo@enron.com, bhansen@lhom.com, rob.bradley@enron.com,tom.briggs@enron.com, michael.brown@enron.com, janet.butler@enron.com, stella.chan@enron.com, alan.comnes@enron.com, shelley.corman@enron.com, jeff.dasovich@enron.com, larry.decker@enro
Subject:Energy Issues
Cc:angela.wilson@enron.com
Bcc:angela.wilson@enron.com
Date:Wed, 18 Jul 2001 03:13:00 -0700 (PDT)

Please see the following articles:

Sac Bee, Wed, 7/18: Lawmakers debate efforts to save Edison:=20
Competing bills range from a straight bailout to purchase of transmission=
=20
lines
Sac Bee, Wed, 7/18: PG&E sues state over seizure of long-term power contrac=
ts=20
Sac Bee, Wed, 7/18: Energy Digest: Advocate attacks utility rescue plan
Sac Bee, Wed, 7/18: Hour of decision: Who will pay for costly power of past=
,=20
future? (Editorial)
SD Union, Tues, 7/17: Utility sues state seeking millions in seized power=
=20
contracts=20
LA Times, Wed, 7/18: PG&E Sues State Over Contracts
SF Chron, Wed, 7/18: Consumer prices up as energy costs moderate=20
SF Chron, Wed, 7/18: Contra Costa may upgrade 9 buildings=20
$1.7 million earmarked for conservation=20
SF Chron, Wed, 7/18: Lawmakers devise rival bailout plans for Edison=20
Push to come up with alternative to bankruptcy before recess=20
SF Chron, Wed, 7/18: News briefs on the California power crisis=20
SF Chron, Wed, 7/18: State's largest utility sues state seeking millions in=
=20
power contracts seized by governor=20
Mercury News, Wed, 7/18: Surplus state power sold at loss=20
Mercury News, Wed, 7/18: Light bulb moment (Commentary)
LA Times, Wed, 7/18: California Trading, Wholesale Power Boost Duke's=20
Earnings 27%
---------------------------------------------------------------------------=
---
----------------------------------------------------
Lawmakers debate efforts to save Edison: Competing bills range from a=20
straight bailout to purchase of transmission lines.=20
By Jim Sanders
Bee Capitol Bureau
(Published July 18, 2001)=20
Divided legislators began wrestling Tuesday with competing proposals to kee=
p=20
one of California's largest private utilities, Southern California Edison,=
=20
from going bankrupt.=20
Pressure is rising as Edison continues to struggle with more than $3.5=20
billion in debt and a tentative plan by Gov. Gray Davis to buy the utility'=
s=20
transmission lines for $2.76 billion has attracted little support.=20
The question now is whether legislators will accept a modified version of t=
he=20
governor's deal, will approve an entirely different rescue plan, or will=20
simply let Edison join Pacific Gas and Electric Co. in bankruptcy court.=20
"We're encouraged that at least there's activity and people are grappling=
=20
with the issues," said John Fielder, an Edison senior vice president.=20
The Assembly's energy committee heard testimony on two of the competing=20
proposals Tuesday. The Senate's energy committee will take up the third pla=
n=20
today.=20
The issue conceivably could be decided this week, since legislators are=20
scheduled to begin their summer recess Friday.=20
Of the three proposals under consideration, one would authorize state=20
purchase of Edison's transmission lines, one would provide an option to buy=
,=20
and one would simply tally Edison's debts and charge ratepayers to pay them=
=20
off.=20
Some legislators favor doing nothing at all and letting a bankruptcy judge=
=20
decide Edison's fate.=20
Steve Maviglio, a spokesman for Davis, said the Democratic governor support=
s=20
anything that "comes close" to the tentative deal, hammered out in April, t=
o=20
buy Edison's transmission lines.=20
Assemblyman Fred Keeley, D-Boulder Creek, and Assembly Speaker Robert=20
Hertzberg, D-Sherman Oaks, have proposed a rescue plan that would buy the=
=20
lines at a lower price -- $2.4 billion -- and would modify the governor's=
=20
plan substantially.=20
Key elements of the bill would allow the state to buy Edison's hydroelectri=
c=20
assets if the transmission-line sale falls through, allow businesses to=20
contract with private suppliers for electricity in 2003, and commit the sta=
te=20
to paying only 70 cents of every dollar owed by Edison to power generators.=
=20
The deal also would provide California with ownership or conservation=20
easements to more than 20,000 acres of land, and would require Edison to=20
increase its supply of alternative energy -- such as wind or solar. The=20
proposal is not expected to spark new rate hikes, Keeley said.=20
The Senate plan, like the Keeley-Hertzberg proposal, would require large an=
d=20
medium businesses to pay down much of Edison's debts.=20
The Senate plan dedicates up to $2.5 billion in large-user rates for debts=
=20
involving banks and renewable energy sources known as "qualifying=20
facilities."=20
The plan, written by Sen. Byron Sher, D-Palo Alto, seeks to leave Edison wi=
th=20
$1 billion in debt from generators and marketers for the utility to work ou=
t=20
on its own.=20
The Senate plan would give the state a five-year option to buy Edison=20
transmission lines for book value -- about $1.2 billion.=20
Rather than provide conservation easements, the plan calls for Edison's=20
environmentally sensitive acreage to be acquired by the state or a trust.=
=20
Remaining parts of the proposal are similar to the governor's deal.=20
A third proposal, pushed by several lawmakers, seeks to eliminate debt for=
=20
Edison and PG&E. It would not involve transmission lines, conservation=20
easements or other such elements.=20
Advocates say Edison's debt stemmed largely from failed state regulatory=20
policies, so the state should simply charge consumers a monthly fee to pay =
it=20
off.=20
"This is a straight bailout -- no hidden balls, no extras," said Assemblyma=
n=20
Rod Wright, D-Los Angeles.=20
It is not yet known whether that monthly fee could fit within the existing=
=20
rate structure. For home=0F'owners, the amount is estimated at $4 in the PG=
&E=20
service area and $2 within Edison's boundaries.=20
Consumer groups are wary of the Edison rescue proposals, fearing the state=
=20
will ultimately promise too much and get too little.=20
"When a supermarket and dairy farmer both are forced to pay a 10-year bailo=
ut=20
tax, the consumer pays more for milk," said Doug Heller of the Foundation f=
or=20
Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.=20


The Bee's Jim Sanders can be reached at (916) 326-5538 or jsanders@sacbee.c=
om=20
<mailto:jsanders@sacbee.com<.=20
Kevin Yamamura of The Bee Capitol Bureau contributed to this report.




PG&E sues state over seizure of long-term power contracts=20
By Dale Kasler
Bee Staff Writer
(Published July 18, 2001)=20
Reopening an old wound in California's energy crisis, Pacific Gas and=20
Electric Co. has sued the state over a group of low-cost energy contracts=
=20
seized almost six months ago by Gov. Gray Davis.=20
The lawsuit, filed Monday in San Francisco Superior Court, stems from the=
=20
collapse of the California Power Exchange and the state's entry into the=20
power-buying business in January.=20
PG&E and Southern California Edison had entered into a series of long-term=
=20
purchase contracts through the exchange, a now-defunct market for buying an=
d=20
selling electricity. But as both utilities collapsed financially and the=20
Power Exchange was clinging to life, the exchange seized the contracts and=
=20
was about to auction them off for nonpayment of bills.=20
That's when Davis stepped in. Using his emergency powers, the governor=20
grabbed control of the contracts, saying he didn't want them resold at=20
inflated prices.=20
At the time, the exchange said the contracts were worth about $1 billion,=
=20
with PG&E's share set at $348 million.=20
But it's likely their value has fallen along with the spot market price of=
=20
electricity. Back when the governor seized them, PG&E's contracts were for=
=20
$60 to $130 a megawatt-hour. That was a bargain at the time, and made the=
=20
contracts very valuable. Now that spot prices have plunged, those contracts=
=20
are no longer such a great deal.=20
PG&E's lawsuit didn't put a value on the contracts. Nevertheless, "the stat=
e=20
has benefited from the contracts," said PG&E spokesman Ron Low. "We should =
be=20
compensated."=20
The state had planned to pay for the contracts, at a price to be determined=
=20
by a state government claims board, said Davis' spokesman Steve Maviglio. B=
ut=20
he said the state also expected to be taken to court over the issue.=20
"We always thought we'd be fighting it out in a neutral forum," Maviglio=20
said. "This comes as no surprise."=20


The Bee's Dale Kasler can be reached at (916) 321-1066 or dkasler@sacbee.co=
m=20
<mailto:dkasler@sacbee.com<.






Energy Digest: Advocate attacks utility rescue plan


(Published July 18, 2001)=20
The state's consumer advocate criticized Gov. Gray Davis' proposed rescue=
=20
plan for San Diego Gas & Electric on Tuesday, calling it too generous to th=
e=20
utility's shareholders.=20
The Public Utilities Commission's Office of Ratepayer Advocates called the=
=20
proposed deal with SDG&E and its parent company, Sempra Energy, "clearly=20
excessive."=20
The advocate said the state goes too far in the core element of the rescue=
=20
plan -- the $1 billion state purchase of SDG&E's transmission lines. The=20
advocate said the money would be better spent building or buying new=20
generating plants.=20
The plan must be approved by the Legislature and PUC. A similar plan, to bu=
y=20
Southern California Edison's transmission lines, has run into numerous=20
roadblocks in the Legislature.=20
--Dale Kasler








Hour of decision: Who will pay for costly power of past, future?


(Published July 18, 2001)=20

In the next few days, state lawmakers and regulators must make some=20
unsettling choices about how to share the financial burdens of California's=
=20
electricity debacle.=20
Looking backward, they will decide how -- or whether -- to erase $3.5 billi=
on=20
in debts run up last year by Southern California Edison, when it bought=20
pricey power but couldn't pass the costs on to consumers. Looking ahead, th=
ey=20
will choose who, if anybody, will get out of paying for expensive power=20
purchased by the state since the utilities ran out of cash last January.=20
In both cases, the principle guiding the decision ought to be the same: No=
=20
one is blameless in getting California into this mess, and no group can=20
escape the pain of getting out of it.=20
Democratic lawmakers in the Assembly are searching in vain for ways to hide=
=20
the real costs from voters. Their idea is to have the large users of power=
=20
(mostly big businesses) pay off Edison's past debts. In return, businesses=
=20
would get some freedom to shop for cheaper power deals in the future.=20
The problem is that there won't be much opportunity to shop in the coming=
=20
years. That's because Gov. Gray Davis went out at the very peak of the mark=
et=20
and bought up most of the state's future electricity supply before it went =
on=20
sale. The strategy of locking most of California's power demand into=20
long-term contracts seemed ill-advised at the time, even more so now.=20
Now that the governor has done all this shopping, the Public Utilities=20
Commission must assure that electric customers will pay for all that=20
electricity -- $43 billion worth of power over the next decade or so. In=20
addition, the PUC must commit customers to repaying the state for the power=
=20
it has already purchased this year -- many billions on top of that. The sta=
te=20
borrowed from itself to buy all this power, and is banking on a bond sale t=
o=20
pay off this debt. Unless a portion of the rate customers pay is dedicated =
to=20
repaying those bonds, they can't be sold.=20
This web of regulation, contracts and finance is so complex, so huge, it's=
=20
hard to see how the energy leaders in a few days will find a graceful, fair=
=20
solution. But for a political compromise to work, all the interests involve=
d=20
must take some pain.=20
Southern California Edison must swallow some of its debt. Power generators=
=20
and the state must renegotiate some of their long-term contracts so that th=
e=20
generators give back some of the bounty they reaped by market manipulation.=
=20
And no consumer, big or small, should be allowed to avoid paying the true=
=20
costs of the power they use. In this reckoning, there's no easy way out for=
=20
anyone -- and especially not for the elected officials who must deliver the=
=20
bad news.





Utility sues state seeking millions in seized power contracts =20


\
objattph=20
By David Kravets ASSOCIATED PRESS July 17, 2001 SAN FRANCISCO =01)=20
California's largest utility sued the state Tuesday seeking reimbursement o=
f=20
millions of dollars in energy contracts the governor seized Jan. 31. San=
=20
Francisco-based Pacific Gas & Electric Co. said it "has received no=20
compensation for the damage to its property," according to a suit filed in=
=20
San Francisco Superior Court. The suit came as PG&E, which filed for=20
bankruptcy protection in April, struggles to repay $14.4 billion in debt to=
=20
thousands of creditors. Invoking constitutionally vested powers, Gov. Gray=
=20
Davis seized the energy contracts to keep the California Power Exchange fro=
m=20
liquidating them. The now-defunct exchange, which was the state's middleman=
=20
for the buying and selling of power, wanted the contracts for itself to=20
recoup hundreds of millions in unpaid power buys that PG&E owed it. The=20
governor's office acknowledged that California owes PG&E for the contracts,=
=20
an amount that Davis wants a judge to determine. At the time they were=20
seized, the state estimated their value at $160 million, while the power=20
exchange priced them at $347 million. "We seized the contracts to have=20
reasonable priced power and expected that price to be set in a neutral=20
forum," said Steve Maviglio, the governor's spokesman. It's not easy to=20
determine their value. Using the contracts, the state buys electricity at a=
=20
set price, and can avoid the sky-high prices it has to pay for power bought=
=20
at the last minute. Therefore, the contracts' value changes with the volati=
le=20
price of electricity. "We believe the state has benefited from the value o=
f=20
our contracts, and as a result we should be compensated," PG&E spokesman Ro=
n=20
Low said. Low declined to place a value on the contracts. The contracts i=
n=20
question, which the state is now using to buy electricity because the=20
utility's bad credit rating restricts it from buying its own, promise power=
=20
at rates below those being charged today by power generating companies. =20
Because of the shaky financial pictures of PG&E, Southern California Edison=
=20
Co. and San Diego Gas & Electric Co., the state in January began buying muc=
h=20
of the electricity to supply the ratepayers of those utilities. The power =
is=20
sold to ratepayers through the utilities, which reimburse the state through=
=20
consumers' bills. But, because of energy pricing rules that prompted the=20
utilities' unstable financial footing, current rates are not enough to repa=
y=20
the state. To recoup its losses, the state is expected to sell $8 billion o=
r=20
more in bonds to be repaid through increased consumer power rates. Under=
=20
California's 1996 deregulation plan, the state's utilities sold many of the=
ir=20
power plants and were forced to buy electricity on the market through the=
=20
newly created power exchange. As demand mushroomed and supplies became=20
scarce, the utilities began paying substantially more for electricity than=
=20
deregulation rules allowed them to collect from consumers. The case is PG&=
E=20
v. California, 322921.=20






PG&E Sues State Over Contracts
From Bloomberg News

July 18 2001

SAN FRANCISCO -- PG&E Corp.'s Pacific Gas & Electric Co. utility sued=20
California on Tuesday, saying it wants to be paid for the wholesale=20
electricity contracts the state seized in January.

Gov. Gray Davis took away Pacific Gas' 12-month forward contracts to ensure=
a=20
sufficient and continuous supply of electricity for the state. At the time,=
=20
California estimated the contracts were worth $150 million.

Pacific Gas claims the contracts had "significant value" because they allow=
ed=20
the utility to receive power for less than current market rates. "Although=
=20
PG&E has demanded just compensation from the [state], PG&E has received no=
=20
compensation for the damage to its property," the utility said in court=20
papers filed Monday in San Francisco Superior Court.

The company, which filed for Chapter 11 protection in April, is seeking=20
damages and attorney fees. The state claimed in January that the contracts=
=20
would have delivered enough electricity to power 100,000 to 500,000 homes f=
or=20
6 cents to 13 cents per kilowatt-hour.

Officials in the governor's office did not immediately return calls seeking=
=20
comment.=20
Copyright 2001, Los Angeles Times <http://www.latimes.com<;=20




Consumer prices up as energy costs moderate=20
LEIGH STROPE, Associated Press Writer
Wednesday, July 18, 2001=20
,2001 Associated Press=20
URL:=20
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/news/archive/2001/07/18/=
finan
cial0837EDT0023.DTL<
(07-18) 05:37 PDT WASHINGTON (AP) --=20
Consumer inflation edged up last month as electricity prices continued to=
=20
surge, while the cost of gasoline and other energy products retreated.=20
The Labor Department reported Wednesday that the Consumer Price Index, the=
=20
government's most closely watched inflation measure, climbed by a seasonall=
y=20
adjusted 0.2 percent in June. The index was up 3.8 percent for the year.=20
The new reading on consumer prices matched analysts' expectations.=20
The "core" rate of inflation, which excludes volatile energy and food price=
s,=20
rose 0.3 percent in June compared with just 0.1 percent in May.=20
,2001 Associated Press=20






Contra Costa may upgrade 9 buildings=20
$1.7 million earmarked for conservation=20
Jason B. Johnson, Chronicle Staff Writer <mailto:jbjohnson@sfchronicle.com<
Wednesday, July 18, 2001=20
,2001 San Francisco Chronicle </chronicle/info/copyright<=20
URL:=20
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/chronicle/archive/2001/0=
7/18/
MNC199898.DTL<
Contra Costa will spend as much as $1.7 million to conserve energy at the=
=20
county's nine worst "energy hog" buildings under a proposal approved=20
yesterday by the Board of Supervisors.=20
The measure is part of a larger effort the board in March agreed to underta=
ke=20
to reduce the county's energy use by up to 10 percent.=20
A private company will install upgraded heating, ventilation and air=20
conditioning control systems at the nine buildings, resulting in savings of=
=20
just under $200,000 a year.=20
"What we've done is pick our energy hogs," said Bart Gilbert, the county's=
=20
general services director. "To start the process of making our buildings mo=
re=20
energy efficient."=20
County officials had no difficulty in identifying the hogs, which tended to=
=20
be large buildings that serve a variety of uses and are open as much as 24-=
=20
hours a day, seven days a week, said Gilbert.=20
Eight of the buildings are in Martinez, the county seat, and one is in=20
Antioch. They include the Bray Courts building in downtown Martinez,=20
sheriff's offices and morgue, and the Employment and Human Services buildin=
g=20
in Antioch.=20
One energy waster is the 120,000-square-foot Summit Center, an office=20
building on Arnold Drive in Martinez that the county acquired last year.=20
The building's cooling system activates at a particular setting -- 76=20
degrees. So it shuts down completely when the temperature reaches below tha=
t=20
setting and won't turn on until it reaches about 79 degrees.=20
But new digital technology controls allow the system to gradually reduce or=
=20
increase power without having to shut down, which saves energy.=20
"When you turn the system on everything doesn't kick in, everything doesn't=
=20
come on full speed," said Gilbert. "That's a tremendous savings."=20
The county will contract with Syserco Inc. of Fremont to install the new=20
control systems from July through June 30, 2002.=20
County officials believe that the plan will reduce demand by 700,000 kilowa=
tt=20
hours and pay for itself in about five years by reducing energy costs.=20
The county has applied for a low-interest loan from the state's Energy=20
Department that would cover about half the plan's costs. It is one of sever=
al=20
Bay Area communities seeking such loans during the energy crisis.=20
In the past two months, state officials have received $50 million worth of=
=20
new loan applications from city and county governments.=20
Before the energy crisis, the department would average between $5 and 10=20
million in loan applications, said Virginia Lew, project manager for the=20
department's Energy Partnership Program.=20
San Francisco is set to receive $5 million in loans for replacing inefficie=
nt=20
lighting at San Francisco General Hospital and city traffic signals.=20
Solano County will receive $1.1 million for lighting and efficiency project=
s=20
similar to those in Contra Costa, while Santa Rosa was given $1.5 million f=
or=20
water and wastewater treatment facility upgrades.=20
Oakland officials are awaiting approval of the city's application for about=
=20
$400,000 for a combination of lighting and ventilation efficiency projects.=
=20
e-mail Jason B. Johnson at jbjohnson@sfchronicle.com=20
<mailto:jbjohnson@sfchronicle.com<.=20
,2001 San Francisco Chronicle </chronicle/info/copyright< Page A - 17=20








Lawmakers devise rival bailout plans for Edison=20
Push to come up with alternative to bankruptcy before recess=20
Lynda Gledhill, Chronicle Sacramento Bureau <mailto:lgledhill@sfchronicle.c=
om<
Wednesday, July 18, 2001=20
,2001 San Francisco Chronicle </chronicle/info/copyright<=20
URL:=20
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/chronicle/archive/2001/0=
7/18/
MN76320.DTL<
Sacramento -- Lawmakers are struggling this week to agree on a plan to keep=
=20
Southern California Edison from declaring bankruptcy as they rush to comple=
te=20
business before Friday's scheduled summer recess.=20
After months of talking about a solution and dismissing one agreed to by=20
Edison and Gov. Gray Davis, lawmakers now have several competing proposals =
to=20
consider.=20
A plan introduced last week by Assembly Speaker Robert Hertzberg, D-Sherman=
=20
Oaks (Los Angeles County), was debated for several hours yesterday, along=
=20
with a GOP-backed alternative by Assemblyman Roderick Wright, D-Los Angeles=
.=20
The two plans, which are scheduled for votes today in the Assembly Energy=
=20
Costs and Availability Committee, take sharply different approaches:=20
-- Hertzberg's plan would pay $2.4 billion for Edison's transmission lines =
to=20
help cover the utility's estimated $3.5 billion debt. The utility would be=
=20
allowed to pay off its remaining debt by issuing bonds.=20
The utility would repay the bonds using ratepayer money. For the first two=
=20
years, all customers would pay for the debt, but after that the largest use=
rs=20
would pay off the rest.=20
-- Wright calls his plan a "straight bailout." It would allow the utility t=
o=20
issue bonds to cover all of its debt and impose a $2 a month rate increase=
=20
for all users until the debt is paid.=20
The Senate also introduced its own plan. A bill by Sen. Byron Sher, D-Palo=
=20
Alto, would give the state a five-year option to buy the transmission lines=
=20
and would have the state back only $2.5 billion of the utility's debt.=20
Since Davis announced a deal with Edison earlier this year, lawmakers,=20
business groups and consumer advocates have all expressed reservations with=
=20
one aspect or another of it. Opposition has usually focused on the state=20
purchase of Edison's transmission lines.=20
The flurry of activity this week is an effort by lawmakers to take some kin=
d=20
of vote before they adjourn. The Edison agreement has an Aug. 15 deadline f=
or=20
approval by the Legislature.=20
Brian Bennett, a spokesman for Edison, said creditors view that date as=20
extremely important.=20
"We're as close to bankruptcy as our creditors want us to be," he said. "Is=
=20
it a drop dead date? I don't know, but it is clearly an important date."=20
Consumer groups have denounced Wright's plan, and at least one calls=20
Hertzberg's proposal just another bailout and said it would cost California=
ns=20
$6.7 billion over the next 10 years.=20
"We cannot be seduced by big businesses paying a bailout tax," said Doug=20
Heller, a consumer advocate with the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer=
=20
Rights. "At the end of the day, we know businesses will pass these costs on=
=20
to the consumer."=20
Included in the 76-page Hertzberg bill are provisions that would allow larg=
e=20
companies to buy their power directly from a provider instead of going=20
through the utility after 2003.=20
But a coalition of large business groups also said they are strongly oppose=
d=20
to the plan because it does not allow for immediate direct access.=20
"Ultimately, we think our companies buying power for themselves is the best=
=20
solution," said Jack Stewart, president of the California Manufacturers and=
=20
Technology Association. "If businesses think there's a light at the end of=
=20
the tunnel where they see lower rates coming, they might tough it out and=
=20
stay."=20
Wright argues that the beauty of his proposal is that it could easily apply=
=20
to the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. service area if the company wanted to u=
se=20
it as a way out of bankruptcy court. He estimates that PG&E customers would=
=20
pay about $4 a month to help the company pay off its debt.=20
"This is a straight bailout," Wright said. "This is not a hidden bill. Ther=
e=20
are extras."=20
Wright said he believes his constituents would rather pay an extra $2 than =
be=20
unemployed because their business left the state due to high energy costs.=
=20
Business groups said the idea makes sense.=20
"What good would it do to have your electricity bill reduced by $10 or $15=
=20
but not have a job?" said Bill Hauck, president of the California Business=
=20
Roundtable.=20
Whatever plan is eventually authorized would be used to convince the PG&E=
=20
bankruptcy judge to follow a similar model for that company, giving the sta=
te=20
those transmission lines as well.=20
The purchase of the transmission lines has been at the center of Davis' pla=
n.=20
He argues that the purchase will give the state the ability to upgrade the=
=20
system, allowing a better flow of power between Northern and Southern=20
California and a decreased chance of blackouts.=20
But opponents argue that the state is getting one-third of a complicated=20
system that will cost billions to upgrade and operate.=20
"It's like buying a car with three wheels -- it is not going to get out of=
=20
the lot," consumer advocate Heller said.=20
E-mail Lynda Gledhill at lgledhill@sfchronicle.com=20
<mailto:lgledhill@sfchronicle.com<.=20
,2001 San Francisco Chronicle </chronicle/info/copyright< Page A - 14=20




News briefs on the California power crisis=20

Wednesday, July 18, 2001=20
,2001 Associated Press=20
URL:=20
<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/news/archive/2001/07/18/=
state
0913EDT0146.DTL<
(07-18) 06:13 PDT (AP) -- diuriegr1 ?By The Associated Press?SAN DIEGO (AP)=
-- County supervisors want to eliminate a $100 fee for ?installing solar p=
ower systems to spur interest in the alternative energy ?source. ?Superviso=
r Ron Roberts proposed waiving the fee at the board's Tuesday ?meeting. A n=
ew ordinance may be ready for the supervisors' approval in two ?months. ?Th=
e fee is charged to homeowners who live in the unincorporated areas of the =
?county. Solar power systems for hot water heaters can cost about $4,000 an=
d ?home units can cost about $26,000. ?The county has been issuing more per=
mits for solar units this year and ?expects to issue 250 permits by Decembe=
r. Two years ago, the county issued ?only 12. ?TEMECULA, Calif. (AP) -- An =
Indian burial ground sits in the way of a ?proposed power-line route and tr=
ibal members have asked U.S. Sen. Barbara ?Boxer to help preserve the site.=
?Boxer, D-Calif., last week introduced an amendment to the Interior ?Appro=
priations bill that would place more than 700 acres of land owned by the ?P=
echanga tribe in a federal trust. If approved, the legislation would allow =
?the tribe to bypass the procedure review by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. =
?San Diego Gas & Electric wants to run a 500,000-volt power line through th=
e ?area. The $271 million route would run through southwestern Riverside Co=
unty ?and link the utility's grid with one operated by Southern California =
Edison. ?SDG&E officials said the proposed federal legislation wouldn't der=
ail the ?company's project. ?"I don't think it jeopardizes the project," sa=
id SDG&E spokeswoman Jacqueline ?Howells. "There are variations of our line=
that don't require that land, and ?there are alternatives further west." ?=
The state's Public Utilities Commission must still approve the project. ?Th=
e tribe recently purchased the site, which has one of the state's oldest ?o=
ak trees. It is also home to several village sites and areas used for ?crem=
ation. Tribal chairman Mark Macarro said the amendment wasn't ?specifically=
meant to block the power line project but rather to preserve the ?land fro=
m development. ?,2001 Associated Press ???????State's largest utility sues =
state seeking millions in power contracts seized ?by governor ?DAVID KRAVET=
S, Associated Press Writer?Wednesday, July 18, 2001 ?,2001 Associated Press=
?URL: ?<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/news/archive/200=
1/07/18/natio?nal0848EDT0542.DTL<?(07-18) 05:48 PDT SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- ?=
California's largest utility has sued the state seeking reimbursement of ?m=
illions of dollars in energy contracts seized by the governor. ?San Francis=
co-based Pacific Gas & Electric Co. "has received no compensation ?for the =
damage to its property," the company said in a lawsuit filed Tuesday ?in Sa=
n Francisco Superior Court. ?PG&E filed for bankruptcy protection in April =
and is struggling to repay ?$14.4 billion to thousands of creditors. ?Gov. =
Gray Davis seized the energy contracts on Jan. 31 to keep the California ?P=
ower Exchange from liquidating them. The now-defunct exchange, which had ?b=
een the state's middleman for buying and selling power, wanted the contract=
s ?to recoup hundreds of millions of dollars that PG&E owed it. ?The govern=
or's office acknowledged that California owes PG&E for the ?contracts, an a=
mount that Davis wants a judge to determine. At the time they ?were seized,=
the state estimated their value at $160 million, while the power ?exchange=
priced them at $347 million. ?"We seized the contracts to have reasonable =
priced power and expected that ?price to be set in a neutral forum," said S=
teve Maviglio, the governor's ?spokesman. ?Under the contracts, the state b=
uys electricity at a set price rather than ?paying higher prices for power =
bought at the last minute. Therefore, the ?contracts' value changes with th=
e volatile price of electricity. ?"We believe the state has benefited from =
the value of our contracts, and as a ?result we should be compensated," PG&=
E spokesman Ron Low said. ?Low declined to place a value on the contracts. =
?,2001 Associated Press ?????Surplus state power sold at loss ?Posted at 11=
:50 p.m. PDT Tuesday, July 17, 2001 ?BY JOHN WOOLFOLK ??Mercury News ???Sta=
te officials who bought power contracts averaging $138 per megawatt-hour ?f=
or this month are selling some of the power back for as little as $1 per ?m=
egawatt-hour, traders say. ?After scrambling this spring for every megawatt=
it could buy to stave off ?summer blackouts, cool weather and decreased de=
mand have left the state ?holding more power than it needs and selling the =
surplus for whatever it can ?get. ?State officials won't say how much they =
are selling the power for, but ?acknowledged unloading surplus electricity.=
?``We're seeing certain times of the day where we may not need power that =
we ?previously thought we needed, and we're selling it on the open market,'=
' said ?Oscar Hidalgo, spokesman for the state Department of Water Resource=
s. ``We're ?probably moving a little more power than we anticipated, but I =
don't think ?anybody anticipated a July like we're experiencing.'' ?Utiliti=
es routinely sell surplus contract power when demand is lower than ?expecte=
d. But the state's recent sell-off could fuel criticism that ?California bo=
ught too much power at too high a price, fearing rolling ?blackouts and soa=
ring prices this summer. ?``There's a painful lesson to be learned when you=
overbuy when supplies are ?tight,'' said Gary Ackerman, executive director=
of the Western Power Trading ?Forum. ``Anybody can lose money in this busi=
ness, and the state of California ?is getting a taste of that.'' ?The state=
in the past week has sold anywhere from 10 to 20 percent of its ?available=
power, Hidalgo said. On Tuesday, the state had up to 40,000 ?megawatts ava=
ilable, while demand hovered around 32,000 megawatts, according ?to the pow=
er grid operator. ?Must be sold ?Because electricity cannot be stored, powe=
r purchased in contracts for a ?later date would be wasted if not used or s=
old. ?``It's better than losing it altogether,'' Hidalgo said. ``The way th=
e ?electricity business is set up, you either use it or move it. You can't =
put ?it in a bottle and put it on a shelf.'' ?State officials would not say=
how much they've made in sales to offset ?purchase costs, citing concerns =
about jeopardizing their bargaining position. ?According to California Ener=
gy Markets, a trade weekly, the state was ?unloading power last Thursday at=
$25 per megawatt-hour. Ackerman said the ?state has been selling power for=
as little as $1 to $5 per megawatt-hour. ?Power was selling on the spot ma=
rket for $20 to $40 per megawatt-hour ?Tuesday. ?The state, which assumed t=
he role of power buyer for California's biggest ?utilities in January, expe=
cted to sell surplus power from time to time, ?although not quite this much=
, Hidalgo said. Even with demand down, the state ?still is buying more powe=
r than it sells, he said. ?With temperatures throughout the West unseasonab=
ly low in recent weeks, other ?utilities also are selling their surplus pow=
er at a loss. ?``That's an accepted operating risk we always assume,'' said=
Scott Simms, ?spokesman for Portland General Electric, adding that recent =
federal price ?caps are lower than what the Oregon utility paid. ``Sometime=
s you gain, ?sometimes you lose. Hopefully, if you planned well, you end up=
winning.'' ?Whether the state planned well or overbought is hard to say. T=
he contracts ?could prove invaluable if another heat wave threatens blackou=
ts. Ackerman ?likened power contracts to insurance -- a prudent move to gua=
rd against ?shortages and price spikes, even if it turns out you don't need=
it. ?At the very least, the current situation underscores the importance o=
f ?weather in the volatile electricity market. Traders pore over forecasts =
and ?even buy weather insurance, Ackerman said. ?Demand and prices have bee=
n so low that some energy companies are shutting ?down the small power plan=
ts called ``peakers.'' ?Hidalgo said the state has no regrets. ?``What we w=
ere doing was making sure we had an available supply with these ?contracts,=
'' Hidalgo said. ``We were facing scarcity in the market early on. ?There w=
asn't enough supply to fulfill the need. What the contracts have done ?is o=
bligated the producers to give us power.'' ?Blackout threat fades ?The stat=
e's daily power costs have fallen from more than $100 million in May ?to le=
ss than $26 million in July, Hidalgo said, and there hasn't been a ?blackou=
t in two months. While some of the surplus power is sold on the ?market, it=
is also being traded to Northwestern hydropower utilities to cover ?past d=
ebts, he said. ?``This is not a bad position for us to be in,'' Hidalgo sai=
d, adding that the ?situation could always take a turn for the worse. ``We =
can't lose sight of ?the fact that we're still in an emergency situation. I=
f this was routine, ?this crisis would be over. We're not out of the woods.=
'' ???Contact John Woolfolk at jwoolfolk@sjmercury.com ?<mailto:jwoolfolk@s=
jmercury.com< or (408) 278-3410. ????????Light bulb moment ?Published Wedne=
sday, July 18, 2001, in the San Jose Mercury News ?NOW it all makes sense. =
Dick Cheney hasn't been pushing to drill for more oil ?and gas because of h=
is pals in the energy business. It's because of his ?electric bill. ?The ve=
ep mansion, it turns out, consumes electricity the way a 1965 ?Oldsmobile b=
urned gas. The bill for this year -- $186,000 -- shouldn't have ?to come ou=
t of Cheney's budget, the White House says. It should be paid by ?the Navy,=
which owns the property. ?No way, we say -- unless the house lights have s=
ome national defense value. ?Perhaps blinding the pilots of incoming fighte=
r jets? ?The Bush team says California should just face up to market prices=
. So why ?not Cheney? ?But there is an alternative, as we've discovered out=
here. Conservation. It ?works. Really. ?Cheney's got a 33-room house. Do t=
hey all have to be lit up all the time? ?????Business; Financial Desk ?Cali=
fornia Trading, Wholesale Power Boost Duke's Earnings 27%?THOMAS S. MULLIGA=
N??07/18/2001 ?Los Angeles Times ?Home Edition ?Page C-2 ?Copyright 2001 / =
The Times Mirror Company ?Pushed by the explosive growth of its trading and=
wholesale-power businesses, ?Duke Energy Corp. on Tuesday reported a 27% i=
ncrease in second-quarter ?profit, narrowly topping Wall Street estimates. =
?Duke's net income was $419 million, or 53 cents per share, in the quarter =
?ended June 30, up from $329 million, or 44 cents, in the year-ago quarter.=
?The consensus estimate of industry analysts was 52 cents per share. ?Reve=
nue for the quarter leaped 43% to $15.6 billion. ?Shares rose 38 cents to c=
lose at $42.03 on the New York Stock Exchange. ?Charlotte, N.C.-based Duke,=
like other out-of-state independent power ?producers, is under fire from G=
ov. Gray Davis for allegedly overcharging for ?electricity from its Califor=
nia generating plants. ?Duke does not break out its California results, but=
its profits from soaring ?spot-market prices in California during the quar=
ter probably amounted to no ?more than a penny or two per share, according =
to analyst Jeff Gildersleeves ?of Argus Research in New York. ?California a=
ccounts for about 10% of Duke's U.S. wholesale-power business, ?and about 9=
0% of its California power is sold through long-term contracts ?rather than=
on the spot market, the company has said. ?Those long-term contracts are a=
source of worry for investors, Gildersleeves ?said. Neither Duke nor the s=
tate has disclosed whether the contract prices ?can be adjusted downward if=
spot-market prices fall, he said. If the prices ?are not firm, it could re=
present a risk to future profits, he added, ?especially if spot prices cont=
inue to fall. ?Duke's North American Wholesale Energy business unit posted =
second-quarter ?operating earnings of $251 million, up 128% from $110 milli=
on a year earlier. ?Analyst Timothy M. Winter of A.G. Edwards in St. Louis =
said the overall ?quarter was "very good," considering that Duke's earnings=
from its ?regulated-utility business in North and South Carolina actually =
were flat ?because of mild weather, a slowing economy and increased costs a=
ssociated ?with some nuclear generating facilities being out of operation. =
???PHOTO: Duke, which owns a plant in Morro Bay, beat analyst estimates.; ;=
?PHOTOGRAPHER: CAROLYN COLE / Los Angeles Times ?