Monday, June 21, 2010

New Report: Deregulated Generation Companies Profit During Recession

Electric deregulation was supposed to benefit consumers — that was the promise during the 1990s when several states adopted the market system. But according to a new report, some of the biggest winners last year were the major generation companies.

Released by the American Public Power Association, the May 2010 study finds that generation companies operating under deregulation in the Northeast earned healthy profits in 2009 — despite facing the nation’s worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

The APPA report also concluded that generation companies under deregulation made much more money than generation companies still subject to regulation. Given the relatively high earnings, it's not surprising that deregulated generation companies oppose any return to regulation. One company warned that if “market deregulation is reversed or discontinued, our business prospects and financial condition could be materially adversely affected.”

Texas implemented electric retail competition in 2002 after authorizing electric deregulation in 1999. Since 2002, rates have remained consistently above the national average Prior to adoption of the deregulation law, rates in Texas were consistently below the national average. Rates in Texas also have increased by a far greater extent than they have in neighboring regulated states such as Louisiana and Oklahoma.

The APPA is a trade group associated with public electric companies such as municipally owned utilities. You can read the organization’s full report here.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

CREZ Update: Lines could impact 12 counties


A transmission line project proposed just this week for the Amarillo area is already stirring controversy, according to a news story in the Amarillo Globe-News. Writer Kevin Welch  reports in the newspaper's June 17th edition on the application by Sharyland Utilities to build lines from southern Carson County to southeast Deaf Smith County.  The utility has proposed the route shown above, although that route could change as more landowners express their views at the Texas Public Utility Commission.

"In all the cases we've been involved in, in none of them have the commissioners chosen the preferred route," Lloyd Gosselink attorney Georgia Crump told the newspaper. "They're trying to weigh all the criteria. It's not a science, it's an art." Among Crump's clients is a property owner with lines passing north of Palo Duro Canyon State Park.

Sharyland's application was among three filed by utilities this week for major transmission projects. The lines included in the applications will transmit power from wind generators in West Texas and the Panhandle, and are associated with the state's Competitive Renewable Energy Zone program, or  "CREZ" for short.

The transmission lines proposed by Sharyland could impact property owners in Armstrong, Carson, Deaf Smith, Oldham, Potter and Randall counties. Separately, Oncor filed an application for lines that could impact landowners in Tarrant, Wise and Parker Counties. A third company filed an application for a transmission project near Abilene, with lines that could impact Kent, Dickens and Scurry counties.

With the filings this week, a procedural clock begins at the PUC under which the agency has 180 days to conduct hearings, consider testimony and render decisions.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Power Line Dispute in the Hill Country



A massive transmission line proposed for Central Texas is causing big headaches for the mayor of Kerrville, who fears it could harm his community's economic development.

Speaking to KENS Channel 5 in San Antonio, Mayor David Wampler said his community could lose a half billion dollars because of the line.

“The City of Kerrville has spent about $14 million in infrastructure improvements to bring utilities and roads to areas that would be affected by this line,” he said.

State Rep. Harvey Hilderbran also expressed concern. In letters written to the Public Utility Commission and the Lower Colorado River Authority, Hilderbran called for a change in the proposed route. “We want that line to move away from the Kerrville corridor,” he said.

The PUC already has given the green-light to several transmission projects associated with so-called "Competitive Renewable Energy Zones." The CREZ lines will criss-cross West Texas, the Panhandle and Central Texas -- and potentially harm scenic views and lower property values along the way.

It's possible for affected landowners to block individual routes, but only if they intervene in a complicated legal process at the Public Utility Commission. More information about CREZ and the proposed transmission lines can be found at the PUC website.