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:Fri, 8 Jun 2001 04:17:00 -0700 (PDT)

Please see the following articles:

Sac Bee, Fri, 6/8: As prices fall, state seeks better deals

Sac Bee, Fri, 6/8: Energy rebate may reward ex-gluttons

Sac Bee, Fri, 6/8: PG&E may pay small creditors first, execs say

Sac Bee, Fri, 6/8: Energy Digest: Low-income discounts grow

SD Union, Fri, 6/8: PG&E president defends request for $17.5 million in=20
bonuses

SD Union, Fri, 6/8: PUC lowers electric bills by 5 percent for low-income=
=20
ratepayers

LA Times, Fri, 6/8: THE NATION Emergency-Power Price Cap Is Working, Data=
=20
Indicate Energy:
Much-criticized plan cut costs by 64% the first time it was used, source=20
shows.
Broader downturn also seen

LA Times, Fri, 6/8: THE ENERGY CRISIS Paying for Power a Struggle for Some=
=20
Utilities:
Consumers on tight budgets face crises. Requests for aid flood agencies, bu=
t=20
many of those
eligible for discount programs are not signing up=20

LA Times, Fri, 6/8: Los Angeles THE ENERGY CRISIS Universal May Get Break o=
n=20
Electricity
Bills Legislature: Senate passes bill to allow the theme park and several=
=20
other businesses to=20
buy DWP's cheaper power

LA Times, Fri, 6/8: California L.A. Businesses to Get 'Real-Time' Electrici=
ty=20
Meters Energy:
Devices are part of larger plan to cut peak summer demand by at least 2,000=
=20
megawatts=20

LA Times, Fri, 6/8: California Sonoran Has Customers Lined Up for Gas=20
Pipeline=20

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: A tax on greed (Editorial)

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: Crisis propels obscure federal regulators into limeligh=
t

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: State 'turning a corner' / Davis expresses optimism abo=
ut=20
crisis,=20
seeks blackout protection for refineries

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: Legislators considered acquisition of PG&E @dk,1,18 Pla=
n=20
also included=20
buying Edison firm @t

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: More poor to pay less for their PG&E bills / PUC votes =
to=20
increase low-income discount

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: Creditors hear PG&E's bonus defense / Executives say=20
retention is critical
to smoothing bankruptcy process

SF Chron, Fri, 6/8: Investigators request records from L.A. utility brokers

Mercury News, Fri, 6/8: Voltage-reduction project may stave off blackouts

Mercury News, Fri, 6/8: Lieberman hearings spotlight regulators' role, his=
=20
ambition

Contra Costa Times, Fri, 6/8: Davis touts conservation success

Contra Costa Times, Fri, 6/8: Martinez investigates power plant possibility

Contra Costa Times, Fri, 6/8: State reviewing 2 proposed Valero power plant=
s

Contra Costa Times, Fri, 6/8: Energy prices drop in California

OC Register, Fri, 6/8: California's energy prices suddenly drop

OC Register, Fri, 6/8: Energy notebook
State on track to spend $20 billion buying electricity

OC Register, Fri, 6/8: PUC raises rate discount for poor families

OC Register, Fri, 6/8: Taco Bell's taco bill includes energy fee

AP Newswires, Fri, 6/8: Developments in California 's energy crisis

NY Times, Fri, 6/8: California Gets a Reprieve as Power Prices Fall

NY Times, Fri, 6/8: Senate Democrats to Press Inquiry Into High Energy Pric=
es=20
(Ken Lay mentioned)

WSJ, Fri, 6/8: Electricity Prices Fall in California, But Can It Last?

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

As prices fall, state seeks better deals
By Dale Kasler and Emily Bazar
Bee Staff Writers=20
(Published June 8, 2001)

A dramatic decline in wholesale electricity prices left California official=
s=20
so confident Thursday that they threatened to back out of some long-term=20
power contracts unless suppliers agree to lower their prices.=20
But private experts cautioned that spot-market prices could rebound and sai=
d=20
the state would be taking a huge risk by wriggling out of any long-term=20
contracts.=20
The state, which got into the power-buying business in mid-January, has bee=
n=20
signing long-term contracts in order to stabilize prices and supply. On=20
Thursday state officials said they've essentially tamed the market by signi=
ng=20
38 long-term contracts and by threatening power generators with reprisals f=
or=20
alleged price gouging.=20
"These contracts are taking a big chunk out of the market," said Ray Hart,=
=20
who oversees power buying for the Department of Water Resources.=20
By signing the contracts, the state doesn't have to buy as much last-minute=
=20
power at notoriously unpredictable prices. This summer the state will have =
to=20
make only about half its purchases on the spot market during peak-demand=20
times, when prices are highest.=20
While a drop in temperatures, conservation efforts and the return to servic=
e=20
of several major power plants have helped, state officials said the contrac=
ts=20
are driving down spot-market prices.=20
Spot prices are so low, Hart said the state would scrap 23 long-term=20
contracts -- deals that have been agreed to in principle but not finalized =
--=20
unless suppliers give in to the state's demands for lower prices.=20
"We will walk away," Hart said.=20
He said the state will honor the contracts that have been finalized.=20
Suppliers said they'd resist any attempt to reduce prices long term. "I don=
't=20
think that the spot prices we're seeing this week will have much impact on =
a=20
four- or five-year deal," said John Stout, senior vice president of Reliant=
=20
Energy Inc., a power generator that's in negotiations with the state water=
=20
department.=20
Analysts said the markets are still volatile enough that the state shouldn'=
t=20
back out of any long-term contracts.=20
"It would be really foolish for them to bail on any of those contracts," sa=
id=20
Arthur O'Donnell, editor of California Energy Markets.=20
"It's not like we have a significant cushion (of power) to withstand an=20
extended heat wave," O'Donnell said. "We don't know what's going to happen.=
"=20
While the state hasn't released the terms of specific contracts signed so=
=20
far, it said they carry an average price of $138 a megawatt-hour through=20
year's end and $70 over 10 years.=20
While that's barely half the spot market prices the state was paying for=20
power the first four months of the year, it's higher than current spot mark=
et=20
prices.=20
Spot prices Thursday ranged between $50 and $60 a megawatt-hour, the lowest=
=20
California has seen in about a year.=20
The irony is that wholesale prices are dropping just as most Californians a=
re=20
starting to feel the impact of the energy crisis on their wallets. The=20
just-approved 37 percent rate hike will show up in bills mailed this month =
to=20
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern California Edison customers, whil=
e=20
Sacramento Muni-cipal Utility District customers were handed a 22 percent=
=20
increase last month.=20
Still, if wholesale prices stay low, it would be undeniably good news to=20
California. It could ease the strain on a state treasury that has committed=
=20
more than $8 billion to buy power on behalf of its troubled electric=20
utilities. It could also lower the chances of chronic rolling blackouts tha=
t=20
some experts have forecast, although Hart said the threat of blackouts is f=
ar=20
from over.=20
"If we have a period of five days of 105 degrees in the Valley and high=20
temperatures in Southern California, it's going to be very difficult to fin=
d=20
enough energy to meet the need," the water department official said.=20
Nancy McFadden, senior adviser to Gov. Gray Davis, said power generators ma=
y=20
be softening prices in response to recent allegations of price gouging and=
=20
market manipulation.=20
She called the scrutiny of generators a "factor that is difficult to quanti=
fy=20
but is nonetheless there."=20
Davis has threatened generators with plant seizures, windfall profits taxes=
=20
and other measures as a response to spot prices that got as high as $1,900 =
a=20
mega-watt-hour last month. Meanwhile, the new Democratic control over the=
=20
U.S. Senate could bring a push for price caps on wholesale power.=20
But Reliant's Stout, whose company was ripped by the governor for charging=
=20
$1,900 per megawatt-hour for power from one plant, said the political heat=
=20
has had no effect on prices.=20
"I don't think anybody like Enron or Reliant is too scared," added Patrick=
=20
O'Neill, who follows Western power markets for the Portland, Ore., consulti=
ng=20
firm Economic Insight Inc.=20
O'Neill and other analysts said much of the price drop is due to weather an=
d=20
other factors beyond the state's control -- factors that could easily turn=
=20
against California.=20
It's too early to tell if the price drop is a lasting trend "or just a=20
short-term anomaly," Stout said.=20
O'Donnell noted that futures prices -- an indicator of where traders believ=
e=20
the market is heading -- are still hovering near $200 a megawatt-hour for=
=20
August supplies.=20
"Let's wait four to six weeks and see where we stand," said Gary Ackerman o=
f=20
the Western Power Trading Forum, an association of generators and traders.=
=20
The great unknown is the weather, which lately has helped California. Hot=
=20
weather in May caused prices to shoot up temporarily but melted the snow=20
earlier than usual in the Pacific Northwest, filling reservoirs and bringin=
g=20
in surprisingly strong supplies of cheap hydroelectricity, O'Neill said.=20
Now the weather has cooled off, keeping demand down, O'Neill said.=20
Yet the early snowmelt, coupled with drought-like conditions, means there=
=20
will be less hydro power available later this summer and beyond, he said. A=
nd=20
if the summer turns hotter, prices are likely to move up.=20
The lack of hydro could raise the price of natural gas, another key source =
of=20
electricity generation in California, said analyst David Costello at the U.=
S.=20
Department of Energy.=20
Natural gas prices have come down in the past two months, but that could=20
change when gas-fired power generators crank up in earnest for the summer.=
=20
"When peak demand (for power) comes in, there's going to be a lot of pressu=
re=20
on gas," Costello said. "The situation in California's so uncertain that no=
=20
one should say 'Don't worry about gas prices.' "=20
One reason California natural gas prices have dipped: A key company has=20
relaxed its stranglehold on the major pipeline into Southern California, sa=
id=20
Severin Borenstein of the University of California Energy Institute.=20
El Paso Natural Gas Co. sold almost 40 percent of the pipeline's capacity=
=20
last year to an affiliate, El Paso Merchant Energy, prompting state officia=
ls=20
to charge that El Paso could manipulate the market. The contract expired la=
st=20
week, and the pipeline capacity is now owned by 30 companies.=20
El Paso, whose behavior is the subject of hearings by the Federal Energy=20
Regulatory Commission, has denied any wrongdoing.=20
The Bee's Dale Kasler can be reached at (916) 321-1066 or dkasler@sacbee.co=
m.=20



Energy rebate may reward ex-gluttons
By Edie Lau
Bee Science Writer=20
(Published June 8, 2001)

When it comes to saving electricity, the hard truth is that the more=20
extravagant your past power use, and the more money you're willing to inves=
t=20
in energy-efficiency, the more likely you can conserve a lot -- and perhaps=
=20
be rewarded with a rebate for your efforts.=20
California's "20/20 Program," which began this month, gives a 20 percent=20
discount to most power users who use at least 20 percent less electricity=
=20
this summer than last summer.=20
The offer applies to customers of the investor-owned utilities -- Pacific G=
as=20
and Electric Co., Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric C=
o.=20
People served by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District and other public=
=20
utilities are not eligible. However, Roseville is funding its own program=
=20
modeled after the state's, with one key difference: Customers get a 10=20
percent discount for cutting their power use by 10 percent.=20
Roseville chose a more modest goal to enable more people to be successful,=
=20
said Bernie Fargen, city utility spokesman.=20
"We looked at the state's program," he said, "and it appeared to us that=20
customers were either going to have to make a major investment in some majo=
r=20
energy consumer in their home -- it could be replacing a refrigerator or=20
replacing their air conditioner -- or they were going to have to reduce=20
consumption through conservation ... at a level that would cause some major=
=20
comfort sacrifice."=20
Roger Salazar, a spokesman for Gov. Gray Davis, who established the 20/20=
=20
program by executive order, said the governor hopes all Californians will c=
ut=20
back at least 10 percent. The rebate, he said, is meant for those who "go=
=20
above and beyond the call of duty."=20
More to the point, the issue is not moral, but practical. "The people who=
=20
have been conserving all along are the true heroes in this situation,"=20
Salazar said. "We're in a tough situation here; unfortunately, we have to g=
o=20
where the megawatts are. It's a sad truth that most of the megawatts we can=
=20
save ... are going to come from those who've been energy guzzlers."=20
Chris and Shannon Devine of Chico are among those who historically have use=
d=20
little electricity. They turn off all unnecessary lights in their two-bedro=
om=20
apartment, and set the thermostat at 82 in summer.=20
Now, Chris Devine said, it feels like they're being penalized. "To think=20
about conserving now, what are we going to do? Any hotter in the apartment,=
=20
and we can't sleep. Any less lights, and we'll be in the dark."=20
Still, he said he understands the state's needs. "We're not the people=20
they're after."=20
The state estimates that if one out of 10 Californians cut power use by 20=
=20
percent this summer, the savings in electricity costs will equal between $4=
00=20
million and $1.3 billion.=20
The Hathaway family in Rocklin has its sights set on the rebate and has=20
invested heavily to save electricity.=20
The biggest expenses: erecting a large patio cover to shade the south and=
=20
west sides of the house ($5,000); installing a whole-house fan ($1,000); an=
d=20
replacing incandescent light bulbs with compact fluorescents ($150).=20
The family also unscrewed a bunch of unnecessary light bulbs (there are thr=
ee=20
bathrooms, each with a vanity mirror ringed by 10 bulbs); turns off porch=
=20
lights except when company's coming; closes the blinds during the day; uses=
=20
the clothes and dishwashers for full loads only; and has unplugged two of=
=20
three VCRs.=20
The savings have been huge. Robin Hathaway's records show they used 42=20
percent less electricity this April than last April; and 21.5 percent less =
in=20
May.=20
It's not just for the money that the family has altered its power=20
consumption. "We just want to feel like we're doing our part," Hathaway sai=
d.=20
"In the long run, who says this (energy shortage) is going to go away?"=20
The state rebate offer stands from June through September. Utility company=
=20
customers who save 20 percent or more will get an automatic 20 percent=20
discount on each month's bill. (San Diego customers, who saw the state's=20
first price spikes last summer, need save only 15 percent to get the rebate=
,=20
a nod to the conservation they achieved last year.)=20
In Roseville, those who wish to participate must sign up by June 30; bill=
=20
credits will be available after summer. Details are available by calling=20
774-5110.=20
In Sacramento, SMUD considered offering a similar rebate, but decided to=20
concentrate on programs that promote longer-term conservation measures, sai=
d=20
district spokeswoman Dace Udris.=20
The absence of a rebate has not discouraged many SMUD customers from avidly=
=20
playing the conservation game.=20
Bruce Cherubin brings his bills to the office every month, bragging about h=
ow=20
low they are. (Last month's was $24.) "We've all been doing that," said=20
Cherubin, who works for the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs.=
=20
When the temperature rose to 106 last week, it was 90 degrees inside=20
Cherubin's three-bedroom house in Valley Hi. He did not turn on the air=20
conditioner.=20
"If there are major outages, I want to be prepared to live without=20
electricity," he said. "I think we have all been pampered. We have gotten=
=20
used to the easy life."=20
A Web site created by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,=20
http://savepower.lbl.gov, offers a prescription for cutting electricity use=
=20
by 20 percent.=20
The Bee's Edie Lau can be reached at (916) 321-1098 or elau@sacbee.com.



PG&E may pay small creditors first, execs say
Generators and banks may have to wait until lesser claims clear
By Claire Cooper
Bee Legal Affairs Writer=20
(Published June 8, 2001)

SAN FRANCISCO -- The top executives of Pacific Gas and Electric Co. on=20
Thursday told some of the utility's smallest creditors -- a woman who sells=
=20
rubber gaskets, a man who can't cash a rubber check -- that they may be pai=
d=20
first in PG&E's bankruptcy reorganization plan.=20
The largest of PG&E's 30,000 creditors -- power generators and banks -- may=
=20
have to stand in line behind what PG&E bankruptcy lawyer James Lopes referr=
ed=20
to as "an administrative convenience class," often made up of small=20
businesses whose claims clutter the books.=20
"It's certainly something that will be considered," Lopes said in answer to=
a=20
question from creditor Howard T. Ash, a market consultant, who suggested=20
paying people with claims of less than $10,000 ahead of "those who put you =
in=20
the problem."=20
The executives were unable to say how many creditors fall in that category.=
=20
The exchange was the most productive of the debtor-creditor meeting, one=20
required under the bankruptcy law. A scattering of protesters gathered=20
outside the Hastings College of Law auditorium where the meeting was held.=
=20
Inside, the harshest criticism came from consumer activist Medea Benjamin,=
=20
who scolded the executives for "doubling your salaries when your company is=
=20
bankrupt."=20
The utility has requested court permission to pay $17.5 million in bonuses =
to=20
keep managers from quitting.=20
"Which of you is going to jump ship if you don't get those raises?" Benjami=
n=20
demanded.=20
No one volunteered. But Gordon Smith, the utility's president and chief=20
executive officer, said a steady management team is essential while "PG&E i=
s=20
doing its darnedest to provide electricity day in and day out."=20
He noted that the official creditors committee supports the bonuses.=20
The San Francisco-based utility sought bankruptcy court protection April 6=
=20
after running up more than $8 billion in debt for electricity purchases aft=
er=20
wholesale rates spiked while customer rates remained frozen.=20
After the meeting, however, U.S. trustee Linda Ekstrom Stanley, the=20
bankruptcy court's administrator, said she'll formally oppose the bonus=20
request next week.=20
On other issues the executives acknowledged they've hired a law firm to loo=
k=20
into matters concerning their supplier generators but refused, on Lopes'=20
advice, to say whether the firm is investigating possible wholesale energy=
=20
overcharges. Lopes also cut short discussion of a law that bars PG&E from=
=20
selling off its own remaining power plants before 2006.=20
Kent Harvey, PG&E's senior vice president and chief financial officer, deni=
ed=20
that the utility's crisis was caused by shifting billions of dollars to its=
=20
parent corporation.=20
But several creditors were focused on smaller sums.=20
The issue for Aline I. Varanese of Bay Rubber Co. in Oakland was a $600=20
discrepancy between her records and the amount PG&E claims it owes her for=
=20
gaskets.=20
For Jim Gormly, it was a check PG&E sent him before filing for bankruptcy=
=20
protection. He hasn't been able to cash it. Lopes told him the check is "de=
ad=20
and void," and he's now a creditor, like 30,000 others.


Energy Digest: Low-income discounts grow=20


(Published June 8, 2001)=20
With utility bills rising, state regulators Thursday expanded the discounts=
=20
available to low-income Californians.=20
The Public Utilities Commission deepened the discounts and eased the=20
eligibility requirements for its CARE program, or California Alternate Rate=
s=20
for Energy. The decision applies to customers of Pacific Gas and Electric=
=20
Co., Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric and Southern=20
California Gas Co.=20
The discount will increase to 20 percent from 15 percent. Californians maki=
ng=20
175 percent of the federal poverty level will now be eligible; the old figu=
re=20
was 150 percent.=20
The decision will shift about $47 million in costs to other ratepayers, sai=
d=20
a spokeswoman for the commission.=20
-- Dale Kasler=20
Matsui energy bill
WASHINGTON -- Tax legislation designed to promote energy production and=20
conservation was introduced in the House Thursday by Rep. Robert Matsui,=20
D-Sacramento.=20
The Matsui bill is identical to legislation that's been pending in the Sena=
te=20
since March sponsored by New Mexico Sen. Jeff Bingaman, the new Democratic=
=20
chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.=20
Called the Energy Security and Tax Incentive Policy Act, it includes tax=20
incentives and credits for a wide range of developments in energy=20
conservation and production.=20
The House and Senate bills would provide tax credits or deductions for home=
=20
and commercial building energy efficiency additions.=20
-- David Whitney=20




PG&E president defends request for $17.5 million in bonuses=20



By Karen Gaudette
ASSOCIATED PRESS=20
June 7, 2001=20
SAN FRANCISCO =01) The head of California's largest utility defended a rece=
nt=20
request for $17.5 million in employee bonuses, saying the money is necessar=
y=20
to keep valuable employees from jumping ship at the bankrupt company.=20
"The restoration of the company's financial health requires that we have a=
=20
rank-and-file team," said Gordon Smith, president of Pacific Gas and Electr=
ic=20
Co. "Retention is a key factor."=20
Several hundred of the more than 50,000 cities, businesses and individuals =
to=20
whom PG&E owes money had the chance Thursday to ask about the utility's=20
financial health and its plans for paying its creditors. PG&E executives to=
ld=20
the room of more than 300 people it would file its plan for paying back=20
creditors as soon as possible.=20

Steve Johnson, an attorney with the U.S. Trustee's office that is overseein=
g=20
the bankruptcy proceedings, grilled a handful of PG&E executives and=20
attorneys about the utility's financial activities during the past few year=
s.=20
The $17.5 million bonus program, which must be approved by a bankruptcy=20
judge, is designed to encourage about 226 top managers to remain with the=
=20
company through the next two years=20
The planned payments are modest compared with the billions of dollars PG&E=
=20
owes to tens of thousands of creditors in the biggest utility bankruptcy in=
=20
U.S. history.=20
PG&E's petition for the bonuses has drawn fire from consumer critics, who f=
or=20
months have argued the utility's management could have avoided the financia=
l=20
crisis if it had reacted more swiftly to rapidly changing conditions in the=
=20
power market.=20
This isn't the first time PG&E's employee compensation has rankled the=20
utility's critics.=20
The night before filing for bankruptcy on April 6, the utility transferred=
=20
$50 million in bonuses and raises to 6,000 workers. At the time, management=
=20
said it wanted to ensure its employees received adequate paychecks before t=
he=20
company plunged into the uncertainty of bankruptcy court.







PUC lowers electric bills by 5 percent for low-income ratepayers=20



By Karen Gaudette
ASSOCIATED PRESS=20
June 7, 2001=20
SAN FRANCISCO =01) Low-income ratepayers of California's public utilities w=
ill=20
save 5 percent more on their electric bills, state power regulators ordered=
=20
Thursday.=20
The Public Utilities Commission voted unanimously to expand the low-income=
=20
discount from 15 percent to 20 percent. Commissioner Carl Wood said the=20
savings would help ease the financial worries of the state's poorest=20
ratepayers.=20
"It is critical that we act to provide relief to these most vulnerable=20
customers," Wood said.=20
The PUC delayed action on a proposal to order the state's two largest=20
utilities to pay 15 percent of the more than $1 billion they owe small powe=
r=20
plants throughout the state for past electricity deliveries.=20
Money previously allocated by the Legislature to help low-income users woul=
d=20
cover the cost of expanding the discount through the year, said Paul Clanon=
,=20
executive director of the PUC's energy division.=20
To get the discount, low-income ratepayers usually have to apply by mail to=
=20
the California Alternate Rates on Energy program. Many of those eligible=20
haven't signed up, and Wood and PUC President Loretta Lynch are looking at=
=20
creating an automatic enrollment system.=20
The PUC also approved a request from San Diego Gas & Electric Co. and San=
=20
Diego County businesses to be paid by the utilities for using diesel=20
generators during power emergencies, thus lowering the state's electricity=
=20
demand.=20
The PUC lowered the payment from a proposed 35 cents per kilowatt hour save=
d=20
to 20 cents per kilowatt hour. Those customers already avoid paying for=20
electricity by running generators during those times, the PUC said.=20
San Diego County representatives countered that it costs thousands to rent,=
=20
buy and fuel generators, and say they are being good citizens by finding=20
alternative solutions.=20






National Desk=20
THE NATION Emergency-Power Price Cap Is Working, Data Indicate Energy:=20
Much-criticized plan cut costs by 64% the first time it was used, source=20
shows. Broader downturn also seen.
RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR
?=20
06/08/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page A-22=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
WASHINGTON -- A widely criticized federal order to limit California power=
=20
prices significantly reduced rates for last-minute electricity purchases=20
during two power emergencies last week, new data show.=20
Also Thursday, more evidence emerged of a broad downward trend in Californi=
a=20
energy prices--well beyond what can be attributed to the consequences of=20
government intervention.=20
The unexpectedly positive data on the initial effect of the Federal Energy=
=20
Regulatory Commission's price limits immediately touched off a stormy debat=
e.=20
The agency's besieged chairman claimed vindication. But critics said=20
electrical generators were already finding loopholes in the price limits an=
d=20
argued that the order needs more toughening to be truly effective.=20
The FERC order--which went into effect May 29--resulted in a 64% cut in the=
=20
wholesale price of power immediately after an emergency was declared the ne=
xt=20
day, according to data posted on the California Independent System Operator=
's=20
Internet site.=20
Prices dropped from $300 per megawatt-hour just before noon to $108.47 the=
=20
following hour after Cal-ISO, the state's power grid operator, declared an=
=20
official emergency that triggered the federal price limits.=20
A similar scenario unfolded during another declared emergency on May 31.=20
Prices dropped from $187 per megawatt-hour before the emergency declaration=
=20
to $66.51 immediately after.=20
During the May 31 emergency, power plant owners in California began selling=
=20
more electricity to out-of-state buyers. That electricity can later be sold=
=20
back to the state by out-of-state marketers, who are not as tightly=20
controlled by FERC's order. Market watchers call that "megawatt laundering.=
"=20
"We saw an increase in exports pretty quickly as a result of that" FERC=20
order, said Ray Hart, deputy director of the state Department of Water=20
Resources, in an interview. "So that clearly shows they're looking for ways=
=20
around it. As soon as they export it, they bring it right back through a=20
marketer, and then the marketer has a price that's not challengeable under=
=20
the FERC order."=20
FERC Chairman Curt Hebert disputed that, saying the agency can order=20
marketers to justify their prices.=20
Meanwhile, the continued across-the-board drop in California power prices i=
s=20
beginning to attract at least as much attention as the controversy over=20
FERC's actions.=20
According to analysts at Platts Electric Utility Week, which monitors the=
=20
industry, forward-looking prices for August delivery of electricity in=20
Southern California have fallen 69% since April. Prices for August=20
electricity stood at $220 per megawatt-hour on Wednesday, down from $700 in=
=20
April.=20
The figures are significant because they apply to purchases made under=20
long-term fixed contracts, not just the emergency purchases made by Cal-ISO=
=20
and subject to the FERC order.=20
Market watchers at Natural Gas Week reported that gas prices at a key=20
pipeline junction on the California -Arizona border had dropped=20
precipitously. Prices fell from $8.16 per million British thermal units on=
=20
Wednesday to $5.93 at the close of business Thursday--a 27% plunge in one=
=20
day.=20
High natural gas rates have been widely blamed for aggravating California '=
s=20
power crisis, since gas is the fuel most commonly used by electricity=20
generators.=20
At FERC, a small federal agency that functions like a national utility=20
commission, Hebert said the lower prices during last week's power emergenci=
es=20
show that the commission's efforts are finally paying off.=20
"Thus far, what we are seeing is that the price mitigation order is bringin=
g=20
real-time prices down, which is exactly what I said it would do," Hebert sa=
id=20
in an interview.=20
But Cal-ISO officials said it was too soon to break out the champagne.=20
Indeed, the state is threatening to sue Hebert's agency for not doing enoug=
h=20
to restore "just and reasonable" prices in California .=20
"It is too early to make any conclusions at this point," said Stephanie=20
McCorkle, a Cal-ISO spokeswoman. "We just feel we need more days of=20
emergencies to see how it is really working."=20
And there were signs that generators were looking for ways to sidestep the=
=20
FERC order.=20
The federal order relies on a complex formula to limit the price power plan=
t=20
owners can charge whenever the state's electricity reserves are depleted. T=
he=20
maximum price allowed in any given hour can vary according to factors=20
included in a formula. The FERC order requires California generators to off=
er=20
all their available power for sale when Cal-ISO declares an emergency.=20
But by contracting to sell electricity a day or more in advance, generators=
=20
can essentially tell Cal-ISO they have no power available to sell in an=20
emergency. Such a maneuver becomes all the more attractive if prices being=
=20
paid in surrounding states are higher than the controlled price offered in=
=20
California during an emergency.=20
Mike Wilczek, a senior market reporter for Platts, said that on Wednesday o=
f=20
last week, when the first emergency was declared under the FERC order,=20
generators were unsure how to respond. But by the second emergency on=20
Thursday, a strategy seemed to be emerging.=20
"People were selling ahead to try to get away from the order," Wilczek said=
.=20
"They wanted to avoid being 'mitigated.' In the northern part of California=
,=20
we saw some hours in which the ISO couldn't get any offers, even when they=
=20
[generators] were being forced to sell into the ISO."=20
Hart said his market watchers observed the same ploy. The Department of Wat=
er=20
Resources is purchasing power for the state's financially hobbled utilities=
.=20
Rep. Doug Ose (R-Sacramento) said FERC needs to toughen the order by=20
extending it to all hours--not just periods covered by power emergencies--a=
nd=20
to every Western state. Ose said his proposal is picking up support among=
=20
Republicans who oppose Democratic demands for FERC to impose fixed price ca=
ps=20
on wholesale electricity in the West.=20
"The evidence is that the FERC order is working," Ose said. "If it works,=
=20
then let's use it. They need to take their order and extend it. Let's take =
it=20
to all the Western states. Twenty-four/seven coverage needs to be in there=
=20
also."=20
Paul Joskow, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist who supports=
=20
temporary price caps, said strengthening the FERC order may prove to be a=
=20
workable compromise to rein in costs for the rest of the summer. "It's=20
getting late in the game, and expanding the number of hours of mitigating,=
=20
making sure there aren't loopholes, would be a very productive thing to do,=
"=20
he said.=20
FERC Chairman Hebert said the commission plans to review the order, but he=
=20
would not commit in advance to suggested changes. "My position as chairman =
is=20
not to follow House or Senate members, or anybody else, but to do what is i=
n=20
the best interest of America," he said.=20
Meanwhile, power generators complained the FERC order is forcing them to se=
ll=20
at rates below their costs. "We had no power plants that were producing pow=
er=20
at a cost of $108 on Wednesday," said John Stout, a vice president of=20
Reliant. "Some were in the mid-$100s, others were above $200."=20
Reliant is urging FERC to adopt a new formula to more fully account for=20
higher natural gas prices in Southern California .=20
*=20
Times staff writer Nancy Vogel in Sacramento contributed to this story.






California ; Metro Desk=20
THE ENERGY CRISIS Paying for Power a Struggle for Some Utilities: Consumers=
=20
on tight budgets face crises. Requests for aid flood agencies, but many of=
=20
those eligible for discount programs are not signing up.
TIM REITERMAN
?=20
06/08/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page B-1=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
In San Francisco, a retired music teacher with polio came within 48 hours o=
f=20
losing gas to heat his apartment and electricity to charge the motorized=20
scooter that takes him to the doctor and to church.=20
In Santa Cruz County, a former insurance company administrator dropped=20
insurance for her mobile home because she could find no other way to pay he=
r=20
mounting utility bills.=20
In Los Angeles, a former foster care provider whose gas bills are running=
=20
about $100 a month can't make ends meet on her $289 Social Security check.=
=20
Up and down the state, problems encountered by utility ratepayers on fixed=
=20
incomes and tight budgets are bad and getting worse, according to the state=
's=20
anti-poverty agency.=20
Tens of thousands of Californians are flocking to special programs that off=
er=20
discounts on energy bills, cash assistance and home weatherproofing that=20
reduces utility costs.=20
Social service agencies say they are swamped with applications for assistan=
ce=20
from low- and moderate-income people, even before the largest electricity=
=20
rate increase in state history starts showing up on bills this month. The=
=20
clients, they say, range from single-parent and working-class families to=
=20
seniors who have sold their estate jewelry and even condominiums because=20
utility bills pushed them beyond the limits of fixed incomes.=20
Several agencies contacted by The Times say they already have provided more=
=20
assistance this year than during all of last year. Some have been forced to=
=20
hire extra staff to handle the crush. Others temporarily ran out of funds.=
=20
Many people are turned away because there is not enough money to go around =
or=20
they do not qualify under the income guidelines or other criteria for=20
assistance.=20
"We have to make tough choices about serving eligible seniors or disabled o=
r=20
people with children," said Sigmund Vays, president of Community Enhancemen=
t=20
Services, which serves Hollywood and the San Fernando Valley. The agency is=
=20
able to assist about one of five applicants.=20
The state Public Utilities Commission approved a rate increase of 3 cents p=
er=20
kilowatt hour on March 27. Officials say that translates to an increase of =
$4=20
to $85 a month for residential customers. Natural gas rates have soared=20
throughout the state as well.=20
Rising energy costs hit people living at the margins particularly hard=20
because utilities eat up such a high proportion of their income. Some are=
=20
saddled with bills of $1,000 or more; others are doing without medicine and=
=20
scrimping on food to keep their power on.=20
"We got numerous e-mails from seniors, the disabled and others on fixed=20
income because their utility bills have increased two, three or four times,=
"=20
said Toni Curtis, chief deputy of the state Department of Community Service=
s=20
and Development. "They can't pay them."=20
Elizabeth Berryhill, 81, longtime artistic director of a Bay Area theater=
=20
group, was getting by on frugality, Social Security and a little money from=
=20
renting space in her house in San Anselmo.=20
Then her utility bill tripled last winter to about $300. A community=20
organization now provides up to $230 a month in assistance.=20
With the new electricity rate increases, Berryhill said, "I am hugely=20
concerned. . . . I don't know how long the program will go on, or how long=
=20
they will be able to help me."=20
'More Lip Service Than a Real Safety Net'=20
State regulators recently directed utilities to redouble efforts to enroll=
=20
low-income customers in programs infused with tens of millions from state=
=20
coffers.=20
While encouraged by the increased funding, consumer advocates and community=
=20
service agencies are worried that the programs will not reach the millions=
=20
who qualify, let alone those who might need help even though they don't=20
qualify.=20
"The promises of protection become more lip service than a real safety net,=
"=20
said Doug Heller of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights in Sant=
a=20
Monica.=20
California officials estimate that one-fifth of the state's households, or=
=20
2.7 million customers, are eligible for two major utility-run programs.=20
But only 60% of them are participating in the California Alternate Rates fo=
r=20
Energy program, which provides low-income customers a discount that the PUC=
=20
increased from 15% to 20% Thursday and exempts them from this year's rate=
=20
hikes.=20
Only a small portion of those in the program are also enrolled in the=20
Low-Income Energy Efficiency program, which provides home energy improvemen=
ts=20
such as insulation and new appliances.=20
Utilities administer the programs and receive $200 million to fund them=20
through small surcharges on customer bills. Recent legislation provides an=
=20
additional $120 million.=20
The federal Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, created during the=
=20
energy crisis two decades ago, pays customers' bills when they face cutoff =
of=20
their utilities for nonpayment. Even with another $120 million from=20
California , state officials say, the program has enough money for less tha=
n=20
10% of the 2.1 million households that could qualify.=20
"Everyone realizes there is not enough to go around," said Alex Sotomayor,=
=20
director of the Maravilla Foundation in East Los Angeles, which has=20
distributed 40% more money this year than last.=20
San Diego Gas & Electric refused to release figures on service disconnectio=
ns=20
this year. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. sent about 1 million 48-hour notices=
=20
from February through April, and disconnected about 53,000 customers. From=
=20
January through April, Southern California Edison cut off about 133,000=20
customers. The numbers are roughly the same as a year ago.=20
The 22,000 shut-offs at Southern California Gas Co. in the first four month=
s=20
of 2001 represent a 40% increase from last year, but are below its three-ye=
ar=20
average for the period.=20
More Outreach, Funding Cutting Disconnections=20
Utilities say their efforts have helped prevent shut-offs from rising highe=
r.=20
Southern California Gas, for example, notes that it offered nearly 1 millio=
n=20
extensions to customers through April, up 82%.=20
Social service agencies say increased outreach and funding this year also a=
re=20
helping hold down disconnections for now, but with rate boosts, they are=20
concerned about this summer and beyond. "Our concern at this point is how w=
e=20
will help prevent disconnections on an enormous scale and the loss that wil=
l=20
ensue in the coming winter," wrote Dennis Osmer of the Community Action Boa=
rd=20
in Santa Cruz County in a May 21 report for the state Senate Office of=20
Research.=20
To the north, retired organist, singer and teacher John von Spreckelsen, 65=
,=20
lives in a spartan apartment near San Francisco City College. He survived=
=20
polio and a heart attack. He manages to get across town to Grace Cathedral=
=20
for Sunday services and occasionally to the symphony by using his electric=
=20
scooter, public transportation and transit for the disabled.=20
The energy crisis, however, threw him. His electricity and gas bill from PG=
&E=20
went from about $40 to $140 and ate a huge chunk of his $712-a-month=20
disability payment. When he couldn't pay his bills, von Spreckelsen said, h=
e=20
was notified his power would be shut off in two days.=20
"I travel with an electric scooter, and I have to keep it plugged in every=
=20
night," he said. "Because I'm sedentary, I keep my thermostat at 75. They a=
sk=20
us to turn it down to 68, but I freeze to death."=20
A community service agency enrolled von Spreckelsen in the utility discount=
=20
program and paid $840 of his bills. "It was astronomical," he said. "It mea=
ns=20
I even have change for the next bill."=20
Melissa Porter, a 32-year-old mother of two, says she faces the cutoff of=
=20
utilities to her rented house in El Cajon unless she pays a $600 bill by Ju=
ne=20
19. That, she said, will not be easy.=20
Her husband died of a heart attack on March 20. She is in a leg cast with a=
n=20
injury, and can work only one of her two jobs for a private firm that assis=
ts=20
the elderly.=20
"I am cutting everything back," Porter said. "I had to let my car payments=
=20
and insurance go. I managed to pay rent for May just last week and to buy=
=20
food for my kids. It [isn't] much food either. . . . We're eating lots of=
=20
macaroni and cheese." Porter said she has been trying for two weeks to get=
=20
help with her utility bill, without success.=20
A number of customers reached by The Times through service providers did no=
t=20
want their relatives and neighbors to know about their plight, so they aske=
d=20
that their names not be used.=20
One Los Angeles woman is a former foster care provider and part-time studen=
t=20
who receives $289 in Social Security and cannot afford her $100 monthly gas=
=20
bills. "I can never catch up," she said. "I now owe $372." Her children pay=
=20
the mortgage on the Koreatown home she has owned since 1965 and help her wi=
th=20
food.=20
A former insurance administrator lives on a fixed income of $711 a month, b=
ut=20
$495 of that goes to pay her utilities and mobile home space in Soquel, sou=
th=20
of Santa Cruz.=20
"I had to drop my homeowners insurance because I could not pay for it and t=
he=20
utility bill," she said. Like a number of her neighbors, she said, she also=
=20
has cut back on food.=20
Thanks to government programs, she gets discounted electricity and received=
a=20
free high-efficiency refrigerator.=20
"Lots of people are too proud to admit they need help," she said. "That's t=
he=20
way I was too."=20
Marin County is synonymous with the good life, but the energy-price explosi=
on=20
is damaging those least able to roll with it.=20
"It's terrible," said Layne Schneider of Community Action Marin, which has=
=20
helped five times more people with their utility bills this year than last=
=20
and ran out of money a week ago.=20
After 35 years as a travel agent, Christina Thomas of Sausalito did not=20
expect to find herself so frail at 63. She has osteoporosis and emphysema.=
=20
She needs to be on oxygen 24 hours a day. Thomas tried to conserve but fell=
=20
behind on her utility bills.=20
"I seldom put the TV on," she said, "but I can't cut down on my oxygen."=20
She received $300 in one-time assistance, but a 15-day shut-off notice=20
arrived recently, saying she owed $900.=20
Thomas plans to make the minimum payment of $134. "That would keep me going=
=20
until the next bill," she said. "I worked all my life and paid my taxes, an=
d=20
it has come to this."=20
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)=20
Aid to Low-Income Customers Through programs, California provides discounte=
d=20
electricity rates, assistance with bills and weatherization services to=20
low-income customers of investor-owned utilities:=20
CALIFORNIA ALTERNATE RATES FOR ENERGY (CARE)=20
Funding: Surcharge on utility bills, augmented by state money.=20
Benefit: Discounts on gas and electricity bills, which the state Public=20
Utilities Commission increased from 15% to 20% Thursday.=20
Eligibility: Households with incomes below 175% of poverty level, or about=
=20
$30,000 for a family of four.=20
LOW-INCOME ENERGY=20
EFFICIENCY (LIEE)=20
Funding: Surcharge on utility bills, augmented by state funds.=20
Benefit: Weatherization services to low-income households.=20
Eligibility: Households with incomes below 175% of poverty level, or 200% o=
f=20
poverty level for elderly and disabled.=20
LOW-INCOME HOME ENERGY=20
ASSISTANCE PROGRAM (LIHEAP)=20
Funding: $62.7 million in federal funds, plus $120 million in state funds=
=20
this year.=20
Benefit: Payment assistance, with a sliding scale by income levels.=20
Eligibility: For federal funds, households with incomes below 60% of state=
=20
median income. For state funds, households with incomes below 250% of pover=
ty=20
level.=20
UTILITY PROGRAMS=20
Pacific Gas & Electric Co.:=20
Relief for Energy Assistance through Community Help (REACH) is administered=
=20
through the Salvation Army and provides help with bills. Last year, the=20
average was $180 for about 18,000 households.=20
Southern California Edison:=20
The Energy Assistance Fund, administered by the United Way, provided one-ti=
me=20
payments averaging $86 to 5,185 households last year.=20
Southern California Gas:=20
The Gas Assistance Fund provides a one-time credit of up to $150 on the bil=
ls=20
of qualified low-income customers.=20
San Diego Gas & Electric:=20
The Neighbor to Neighbor program provides half the monthly bill, up to $200=
,=20
during winter months.=20
Sources: State Senate Office of Research, Department of Community Services=
=20
and Development, Public Utilities Commission.






California ; Metro Desk=20
Los Angeles THE ENERGY CRISIS Universal May Get Break on Electricity Bills=
=20
Legislature: Senate passes bill to allow the theme park and several other=
=20
businesses to buy DWP's cheaper power.
CARL INGRAM
?=20
06/08/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page B-3=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
SACRAMENTO -- Over protests of special-interest favoritism, the state Senat=
e=20
passed legislation Thursday to give Universal City a break on its electrici=
ty=20
bills during the California energy crisis.=20
Bipartisan approval of the measure contrasted starkly with the defeat last=
=20
month of a similar bill that would have cut the power costs of public=20
agencies in Los Angeles County.=20
"The public got shafted while the private interests got taken care of,"=20
complained Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, who fought for th=
e=20
bill that would have benefited the local government entities.=20
The bill, SB 1172, introduced by state Sen. Sheila Kuehl (D-Santa Monica) o=
n=20
behalf of Universal Studios and its theme park, would allow Universal and=
=20
several other businesses to switch from Southern California Edison to the L=
os=20
Angeles Department of Water and Power, whose electricity is cheaper.=20
The bill cleared the Senate on a 29-4 vote despite the objections of Sen.=
=20
Debra Bowen (D-Marina del Rey). Its future in the Assembly is uncertain.=20
Kuehl said saving money for Universal, an influential enterprise that makes=
=20
political contributions, was not the foremost issue. She said Universal was=
=20
more concerned about safety during a blackout because visitors might get=20
stranded on rides.=20
Chances of avoiding a blackout with the DWP seem better than with Edison, s=
he=20
said, adding, however, that there is no "guarantee the DWP won't have=20
blackouts."=20
Bowen warned the Senate against approving a bill that she said would feed a=
=20
perception that special interests can get what they want in Sacramento "if=
=20
they just have enough political clout."=20
She said that if Universal's power bills were to go down, bills for other=
=20
electricity customers throughout California would go up.=20
"How do we expect other businesses and other residents of California to=20
conserve and sacrifice, if not everyone has to do it?" Bowen asked.=20
Universal and about a dozen other businesses straddle the service boundary=
=20
between Southern California Edison Co. and the Los Angeles Department of=20
Water and Power. Those customers are hooked up to both utilities and pay tw=
o=20
electricity bills.=20
The legislation would enable Universal and the other customers, including=
=20
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, to buy all their power from the DWP, a municip=
al=20
utility whose prices are much lower.=20
However, Bowen, one of the Legislature's energy experts, noted that the=20
electricity sold to Universal at low cost would no longer be available to t=
he=20
state Department of Water Resources, which is buying power on behalf of=20
bankrupt Pacific Gas & Electric Co. and financially crippled Edison.=20
"So the bill provides a benefit to these businesses at the expense of=20
everyone else," Bowen charged.=20
"How do we tell a child-care center down the street that they are going to =
be=20
subject to blackout risks, but these businesses are not because they happen=
=20
to have this power?" Bowen asked.=20
Kuehl responded that it was "speculative" for Bowen to predict shifts in=20
power costs.=20
She noted that Universal, a Target department store, the hospital and other=
s=20
would have to pay Edison an "exit" fee. The bill would enable each customer=
=20
to consume a maximum of 50 megawatts, a relatively small amount of power.=
=20
"I resent the implication that I, of all people, am carrying a bill for ric=
h=20
businesses," Kuehl told a reporter later. "I'm always at least No. 1 or No.=
2=20
on the hit list of the California Chamber of Commerce for not generally=20
voting with the rich and powerful."=20
Bowen, who said that "everyone needs to pitch in" to resolve the power=20
crunch, spearheaded the vote to defeat the public agencies' low-cost power=
=20
bill in May. The bill failed in her Energy Committee by one vote.=20
That bill, AB 15x by Assemblyman Roderick Wright (D-Los Angeles), would hav=
e=20
allowed five entities in Los Angeles County to purchase the lower-cost powe=
r=20
from the DWP instead of Edison.=20
Bowen argued against the bill, saying it would drive up electricity costs f=
or=20
other consumers throughout California .=20
Yaroslavsky noted Thursday that the five public agencies face substantially=
=20
higher power bills that would be reduced, freeing funds for other services,=
=20
if they could switch to DWP electricity .=20
The beneficiaries would have been Los Angeles County, the Los Angeles Unifi=
ed=20
School District, a community college district, the county Board of Educatio=
n=20
and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.=20
Yaroslavsky said he and others came up with the idea of government agencies=
=20
switching to the cheaper city power and rejected efforts of Universal and=
=20
others to be included in Wright's bill.=20
"We end up doing the right thing and get screwed, and they [Universal and=
=20
Target] get a piece of legislation out of the Senate," he said.







Business; Financial Desk=20
California L.A. Businesses to Get 'Real-Time' Electricity Meters Energy:=20
Devices are part of larger plan to cut peak summer demand by at least 2,000=
=20
megawatts.
NANCY RIVERA BROOKS
?=20
06/08/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page C-2=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
Los Angeles businesses will get first crack at a new program designed to=20
slice peak power usage through sophisticated electricity meters that allow=
=20
utilities to calculate bills based on when power is used.=20
Gov. Gray Davis officially launched a program Thursday to install "real-tim=
e"=20
electricity meters in Los Angeles in order to reduce peak electricity use b=
y=20
as much as 240 megawatts this summer.=20
The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power expects to install more than=
=20
3,400 real-time electricity meters at commercial and industrial customers=
=20
with peak electricity demand of 200 kilowatts or greater. Such customers=20
include large retail stores, manufacturing operations and office buildings.=
=20
Real-time meters measure not only how much electricity is used but also whe=
n=20
it is used. Because wholesale electricity costs more when demand is high,=
=20
such metering encourages businesses to reschedule shifts, conserve or shift=
=20
energy use to take advantage of lower prices during times of low electricit=
y=20
demand.=20
"Real-time metering is another innovative way California is cutting demand=
=20
for electricity as we continue to bolster supply" by licensing new power=20
plants, Davis said. "As other municipal and investor-owned utilities instal=
l=20
these sophisticated electricity meters, this program alone is estimated to=
=20
cut our state's peak energy use by another 500 megawatts this summer."=20
Under the state plan, customers with real-time meters will be able to shave=
=20
15% off their electricity bills by measurably reducing peak energy use, he=
=20
said.=20
"The hope is if people could see the real-time price of energy, they would=
=20
use less of it," said Eric Tharp, DWP vice president of public affairs.=20
Although DWP territory is not part of the power-short electricity grid=20
operated by the California Independent System Operator, the blackout-plague=
d=20
territories of Southern California Edison, Pacific Gas & Electric and San=
=20
Diego Gas & Electric will still benefit, Tharp said. DWP has committed to=
=20
sell power to the state equal to the amount saved under the program at=20
cost-based prices, which are still being negotiated, Tharp said.=20
The DWP meters, and others that will follow across the state, are being=20
funded through AB 29X, legislation Davis signed in April that sets aside $3=
5=20
million for the purchase and installation of such meters. The DWP portion i=
s=20
about $5 million, Tharp said.=20
The meters are part of a larger energy conservation plan to cut peak summer=
=20
demand by at least 2,000 megawatts, or enough to power about 1.5 million=20
homes.=20
How fast DWP and other utilities can get these programs operating depends=
=20
largely on the supply of the equipment, which can be difficult to get, Thar=
p=20
said.






Business; Financial Desk=20
California Sonoran Has Customers Lined Up for Gas Pipeline
?=20
06/08/2001=20
Los Angeles Times=20
Home Edition=20
Page C-2=20
Copyright 2001 / The Times Mirror Company=20
A venture between Kinder Morgan Energy Partners and Calpine Corp. has=20
attracted more than enough customers to build a $1.7-billion natural-gas=20
pipeline for energy-starved California by the summer of 2003.=20
Sonoran Pipeline, the joint venture, expects to sell capacity on the=20
1,030-mile project within 60 days and gain federal approval by year's end,=
=20
Sonoran Vice President Scott Parker said in a statement.=20
California , which is in the midst of an electricity shortage, depends on=
=20
natural gas to fuel many of its power plants. The Sonoran line would carry=
=20
enough gas to generate 9,000 megawatts of power, Calpine spokeswoman=20
Katherine Potter said. A megawatt can light 750 California homes.=20
The project would deliver 750 million cubic feet of natural gas a day from=
=20
gas fields in northern New Mexico to the California -Arizona border. A seco=
nd=20
segment would connect with other pipelines to deliver as much as 1 billion=
=20
cubic feet a day to the San Francisco area.=20
Sonoran Pipeline received binding agreements and nonbinding interest for mo=
re=20
than 1 billion cubic feet a day for the first run of pipe, and interest in=
=20
1.5 billion cubic feet a day for the second phase, the company said.=20
Calpine, a San Jose-based power plant developer, has committed to ship 400=
=20
million cubic feet a day on the Sonoran line for 20 years.=20
In New York Stock Exchange trading, Calpine shares rose $1.54 to close at=
=20
$45.30, erasing this year's decline, and Houston-based Kinder Morgan's shar=
es=20
fell 95 cents to close at $70.05.=20






EDITORIALS=20
A tax on greed
?=20
06/08/2001=20
The San Francisco Chronicle=20
FINAL=20
Page A.24=20
(Copyright 2001)=20
IT'S TIME to get tough in solving the state's energy crisis. Billions of=20
dollars are flowing from state coffers to electric generators, whose profit=
s=20
have jumped five-fold in the past year. It's greed, gouging or windfall=20
profits -- the winnings collected from a broken market.=20
One sensible rescue plan -- a cap on the wholesale price of electricity --=
=20
was ruled out by President Bush on his trip to California last week althoug=
h=20
a similar proposal remains alive in the Senate. But next week, the state=20
Assembly will take up another answer: a tax on the inordinate profits earne=
d=20
by a handful of energy generators.=20
The measure would set a base of $60 per megawatt (the amount of electricity=
=20
used by 1,000 homes) and impose increasing levels of taxes of 50 to 90=20
percent for prices above the starting point. The proposal, by Assemblywoman=
=20
Ellen Corbett, a San Leandro Democrat, gives California a powerful weapon i=
n=20
restraining a runaway market.=20
Consider the damage done. The state has spent $8 billion to buy power on=20
behalf of financially-weakened utilities. This money is expected to be paid=
=20
back in higher power bills for residents and businesses, but it also means =
a=20
huge diversion of funds from parks, schools, or health care. The revenue=20
flowing to Sacramento from the state's economy is essentially going down an=
=20
energy rathole.=20
The $60 per megawatt figure is nearly double the average charged for=20
electricity in January 2000, a time when major electricity generators were=
=20
already earning healthy profits. The average price on January of this year=
=20
was $278. Since then, the gyrating spot market for power has touched $1,900=
=20
and higher on high-demand days when vital electricity was in short supply.=
=20
Imposing taxes on a lopsided, cartel-dominated market could pay back the=20
state for the enormous expenses of the energy crisis. It could act as a=20
brake, inducing the mulish generators to lower prices that are busting the=
=20
budgets of residents and businesses.=20
The Corbett bill would return the tax money to state coffers. A second=20
similar bill, by state Sen. Nell Soto, D-Pomona, would return the money to=
=20
taxpayers via tax credits. In a session with The Chronicle editorial board=
=20
yesterday, Gov. Gray Davis repeated his willingness to sign such a tax on=
=20
excessive generator profits.=20
A special tax aimed at the flagrant misconduct of a single industry is not=
=20
always the best public policy. But with billions in state money at stake, a=
nd=20
few effective controls over energy prices, a windfall profits levy makes=20
sense at this time.






NEWS=20
Crisis propels obscure federal regulators into limelight
Zachary Coile
?=20
06/08/2001=20
The San Francisco Chronicle=20
FINAL=20
Page A.12=20
(Copyright 2001)=20
For most of its 24-year history, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission w=
as=20
an agency so low-profile that only those in the power business paid it much=
=20
attention.=20
That is, until the lights went out in California .=20
Once viewed as mundane, the commission's written orders and biweekly meetin=
gs=20
now are front-page news. Its acronym, FERC, has become part of the lexicon =
--=20
at least among California residents anxious about rising energy bills and=
=20
blackouts.=20
The five members of the commission and the agency's 1,200 staff members,=20
tucked in a sleek 11-story office tower hidden behind the train tracks at=
=20
Union Station, now find their every move second- guessed by politicians,=20
economists and the media.=20
"At some level, I think they probably are enjoying it," says Larry Foster,=
=20
who edits Inside FERC, a weekly newsletter about the agency read by energy=
=20
executives, lobbyists and state regulators.=20
"I say that because these are people who have worked long and hard for many=
=20
years on important issues with absolutely no recognition at all. Now there =
is=20
public awareness that what they do is important.=20
Foster added: "Having said that, do they enjoy being vilified daily by (Gov=
.)=20
Gray Davis? No, probably not."=20
The regulatory commission's defenders say it hasn't ignored California 's=
=20
power woes. But critics argue that the commission has exacerbated the crisi=
s=20
by refusing to order wholesale price limits on electricity and by not=20
investigating alleged market abuses. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., is=20
asking for hearings into whether energy executives exerted influence over k=
ey=20
decisions by the commission.=20
"Energy companies have learned how to game the system. It really has been t=
o=20
their benefit and to the detriment of California consumers," said Adam=20
Goldberg, energy policy analyst for Consumers Union. "FERC has let that=20
happen and has done nothing to rectify the situation or to punish the=20
wrongdoers."=20
The commission, whose members are nominated by the president, oversees the=
=20
guts of America's energy system: interstate oil and gas pipelines, electric=
=20
transmission lines and hydropower dams. The agency's most critical task is =
to=20
ensure "just and reasonable" energy prices -- a responsibility critics say =
it=20
has abdicated during California 's energy crunch.=20
Because it regulates only wholesale prices for transmitting and trading=20
electricity and natural gas, the commission usually draws less attention th=
an=20
state regulators, who set the energy prices consumers pay. Even in=20
Washington, the agency is far less visible than its regulatory siblings, su=
ch=20
as the Federal Communications Commission and the Federal Trade Commission.=
=20
An independent agency under the Department of Energy, the Federal Energy=20
Regulatory Commission was established in 1977 to replace the Federal Power=
=20
Commission, which had regulated the energy industry since 1920. In the=20
aftermath of an oil embargo and rising energy prices, President Jimmy Carte=
r=20
and Congress renamed the agency and change its mission. The new goal was to=
=20
ease regulation and help energy companies increase production and lower=20
prices.=20
The Federal Power Commission had long set rates for the price of transmitti=
ng=20
gas across state lines, and a 1954 Supreme Court decision gave the age