A proposal designed not to limit the price of electricity – but to actually increase it during certain periods — could face Public Utility Commission scrutiny in 2010, according to some market watchers.
Extremely costly to consumers, the proposal would create a process whereby generators would receive payments for their wholesale power that would be substantially higher than prices dictated by the market. The process would kick in during periods when wholesale power on the ERCOT grid is running in relatively short supply.
Cities and other consumer representatives have argued against the policy, and it was rejected during proceedings earlier this year at ERCOT. But it retains support both from electric generators and by the Independent Market Monitor of the ERCOT market, leading many to believe that the PUC will take up the issue again this year.
The IMM and industry groups say the price supports are needed to encourage the further development of generation in Texas. Cities and consumer groups have noted the fundamental inconsistency of price supports within the context of the state’s deregulated market, a market supposedly based upon the premise that competitive forces should dictate prices.
Cities also note the extreme cost of the proposal — up to approximately $750 million per year, by some estimates. The expense would obliterate any supposed savings industry advocates have claimed will come from the nodal market redesign, or from improved ERCOT operations. The proposal also would put further upward pressure on retail prices — that is, the electricity prices customers actually pay — which have remained consistently above the national average ever since the state’s transition to deregulation.
-- R.A. Dyer
OPINE is a blog by the Utility Practice Group of the Lloyd Gosselink law firm. The focus of news and debate in this blog is on energy, utility and environmental law and policy in the State of Texas. Constructive comments are welcome.
Showing posts with label PUC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PUC. Show all posts
Monday, January 11, 2010
Friday, August 7, 2009
Chicken Problems for the Texas Wind Industry?

The result? According to Heather Whitlaw, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department biologist: “Anybody who puts anything on our landscape would be evaluated in one form or another.”
The AP reports that federal recommendations from 2004 discouraging the construction of turbines within five miles of prairie chicken breeding grounds have gone largely unheeded by the industry. Instead a wind energy trade group has asked for the scientific basis of the five-mile limit, according to the AP.
The Texas Public Utility Commission last year authorized the construction of billions of dollars of new transmission lines to serve wind generators throughout Texas. Some of these lines will connect to the Panhandle, which the AP identifies as lesser prairie chicken territory. No word on how a federal designation for the tiny bird will impact the state’s expensive transmission line initiative.
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