Midwest Electricity Prices Surge to 1-Year High Amid Prolonged Heat Wave By Josh P. Hamilton
Midwest Power Surges to 1-Year High Amid Heat Wave (Update1) (Adds detail about June 1998 in 5th paragraph; updates prices; adds comment in 11th-12th paragraphs.)
New York, July 23 (Bloomberg) -- Midwest power prices surged for a third day, reaching the highest levels since skyrocketing to a record last summer, on expectations for strong demand during a heat wave in the central and eastern U.S.
Cinergy Corp., parent of Cincinnati Gas & Electric Co., asked customers in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky to conserve power to prevent shortages, expecting a second day of record demand for air conditioning. Regional prices surged to 26 times their average of the past year, though short of the June 1998 record.
Utilities in the Midwest ''have the possibility of setting new records'' for demand, said Kevin Fox, general manager of power trading at Aquila Energy Corp. in Kansas City, Missouri. Companies in a nine-state power grid from Michigan to Tennessee have been reporting record-high demand in recent days, Fox said.
Electricity for guaranteed next-day delivery in the East Central Area Reliability Coordination Agreement region rose as much as $410, or 38 percent, to $900 a megawatt-hour. Just two weeks ago, next-day power was trading at $19 a megawatt-hour amid mild temperatures.
Prices haven't been this high since last summer, when a blistering heat wave coincided with some unexpected shutdowns of power plants. Next-day prices jumped to $1,584 a megawatt hour in June 1998, and utilities paid as much as $7,000 to get power for immediate delivery.
In New York today, electricity for August delivery at the Ohio Cinergy hub rose as much as $10, or 10.2 percent, to $108 a megawatt-hour on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices have risen 57 percent this week.
Trading in the August contract was halted for a half hour early in the afternoon after the contract surged the exchange- imposed limit of $10 to $108 a megawatt-hour. After the break, trading resumed with an expanded $20 limit. $3,000 ''We sold power for immediate delivery in excess of $3,000 yesterday,'' Aquila's Fox said. ''I expect to see that again today.''
While prices in the neighboring power grid for Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Maryland fell slightly today, the grid ''is curtailing exports, putting a squeeze on mid-continent power,'' Fox said. Yesterday, when the grid stopped shipping power outside its region, Midwest prices soared from $200 to $3,000, Fox said.
First Energy Co., which serves more Ohio customers than any other utility, is cutting power to business customers with special contracts to conserve energy, said Ralph DiNicola, a company spokesman.
LG&E Corp., the owner of Kentucky's largest utilities, said it was curtailing power service to its interruptable customers this afternoon. The company said it had record electricity demand yesterday.
Utilities said they curtailed supplies to interruptible customers this week, and expect to do so today. Utilities give discounts to some business customers in exchange for being allowed to cut their power when supplies are short.
Tight Supplies ''Assuming no outages, we're tight but manageable,'' said ECAR's executive manager, Brant Eldridge. ''If this heat keeps up for four or five days we could see a record next week.''
ECAR coordinates efforts to ensure power deliveries in Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and parts of Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Tennessee. ECAR forecast peak load of 94,000 megawatts this summer, up from last year's peak of 91,605.
Prices should ease late this afternoon as demand typically begins to fall off on Fridays and over the weekend, traders said. Power for delivery Monday into the Cinergy grid is selling for around $500 a megawatt, traders said.
Late Wednesday, the National Weather Service issued a six-to 10-day forecast calling for above-normal to much-above-normal temperatures in the Midwest, Plains and East Coast as far South as Virginia from July 27 through July 31.
Cooling demand is expected to be 64 percent above normal in the U.S. Midwest over the next seven days, according to Weather Derivatives, a Belton, Missouri-based forecasting firm, with temperatures in Chicago and Detroit in the low to mid 90s Fahrenheit. Northeast cooling demand is expected to be 29 percent above normal.
Last Year
In June 1998, Midwest electricity prices surged from around $30 a megawatt-hour to as high as $7,000, when a heat wave increased air conditioner use just as power-plant and transmission-line outages limited electricity supplies.
Electricity prices are volatile because power can't be stored in large volumes. Shortages, or perceptions that a shortage is possible, can start a bidding war among utilities that need a steady stream of supply.
Before the introduction of wholesale electricity competition three years ago, utilities would cooperate to keep supply adequate and prices stable, and supply extra power to each other at or close to cost. Now, with competitive markets, supplies go to the highest bidders.
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