Energy bill gets bright reviews
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Deirdre Newman
City leaders are adamantly supporting a state energy bill touted as
having the power to prevent future blackouts despite not being
drastically affected by rolling blackouts during the energy crisis of
2001.
The bill, called the Reliable Electric Service Act of 2004, would
establish a framework of electrical service that supporters say will
entice investment in power plants in the state. It would also ensure
that the California Public Utilities Commission approves and
maintains reasonable rates so utilities can completely recover their
costs of investments, as long as those costs are found to be
reasonable by the commission.
The legislature instituted deregulation of the power companies in
1996, and the utilities were forced to sell at least 50% of their
generation plants, leaving them vulnerable to price gouging and
gaming of the energy market from companies like Enron.
To show Costa Mesa’s support for the bill, Councilman Mike
Scheafer testified for a Senate energy committee Tuesday in
Sacramento. City officials like the bill because they are concerned
about the negative effect of potential future blackouts on things
like public safety, traffic and schools, Scheafer said. They are also
concerned about the cost that would be incurred by public safety
personnel and the loss of revenue from disrupted business activity if
blackouts were to occur.
Supporters point to some alarming statistics in their backing of
the bill. The California Energy Commission and the Independent System
Operator, which operates the state transmission grid, have come to
the same conclusion: The state could experience major energy
shortages by 2006. And of the 10,000 megawatts of generating capacity
that has been approved by the commission, only 3,000 megawatts are
currently under construction and on schedule.
These are among the reasons that Southern California Edison also
strongly supports the bill. Investment in new power plants throughout
the state is desperately needed, spokeswoman Jane Brown said.
“The goal is to secure enough power for the state and to do it
soon,” Brown said. “That’s why it’s so important to do it now,
because it takes a long time to get plants built.”
The bill is opposed by some independent generation companies that
would not like to see the utilities build more power plants, Brown
said. But there’s room for both independent generators and utilities
alike, Brown said.
“The makers of this bill believe that the best framework for
generation would be a mix of independent generational and utility
generation, like a diversified portfolio,” Brown said.
Southern California Edison also supports the bill because it wants
its customers to pay the lowest rates possible, Brown said. The
company would benefit by being better able to put some long-term
investments in its power plants and transmission lines, said Tommy
Ross, Sacramento regional vice president. Because of deregulation,
Southern California Edison owns only 30% of its generational
capacity.
“In order to make long-term investments in the infrastructure,
what we need to have is a durable and stable regulatory framework
that provides some degree of [certainty] that those investments can
be recovered,” Ross said.
The bill ultimately cleared the energy committee and now goes to
the Senate appropriations committee.
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