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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: American Spirit who wrote (424001)7/7/2003 10:11:59 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
The ENRONing of American/California is still on the books

latimes.com
July 7, 2003

E-mail story


Print

Two Sides Focus on Wider Probe of
Energy Crisis
Firms accuse FERC of moving toward unfair sanctions. State parties say regulators take
a too-mild approach.

By Jonathan Peterson, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators are likely to
sweeten the pot for California under a widened
investigation into the state's energy crisis, but the
expanded probe is drawing fire from energy companies
that say they are being blamed for flaws in the market.

The inquiry is focusing on bids to supply short-term
power between May 1 and Oct. 2, 2000. Regulators,
who have excluded this time period in the past, are
looking at bids to supply power at rates of $250 per
megawatt-hour or more.

California officials contend there was widespread
mischief during these five months, and the decision to
scrutinize the period was one of several actions taken
by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission on June
25. Although FERC's moves to uphold California
energy contracts and sanction power companies
garnered the most attention that day, the broadened
investigation is considered important on both sides of
the divide.

Of all the issues outstanding from the 2000-01 California energy crisis, "this is the
hardest one left," FERC Chairman Patrick H. Wood III said.

Companies are accusing FERC of moving toward belated and unfair sanctions,
while California parties say FERC is taking an overly gentle approach toward
those same firms.

What is agreed on is that the push to examine bids early in the crisis has put
significant new money on the table for California, depending on how FERC
ultimately judges the conduct of suppliers and chooses to treat them.

"My guess is that if you only looked at prices above $250, you could get up to a
billion [dollars] for that period," said Frank A. Wolak, an economics professor at
Stanford University and chairman of the market surveillance committee of the
California Independent System Operator, which runs the electricity grid.

Although Enron-style trading schemes with nicknames such as "Fat Boy" and
"Get Shorty" have gained more notoriety in California's energy woes, some
economists and consultants say the deeper trouble lay elsewhere — with
companies effectively withholding electricity by offering bids to provide it at
exorbitant prices, knowing there would be no takers.

To explore the allegations, FERC's staff has begun a review of an estimated
800,000 energy bids offered in the state's main short-term energy markets for
the five-month period in 2000.

California agencies have presented evidence purporting to show that many bids
in the spring and summer of 2000 sharply exceeded the costs to deliver energy,
representing an illegitimate attempt to exploit the marketplace.

Companies and utilities including the Los Angeles Department of Water and
Power emphatically deny the allegations, contending that they offered legitimate
bids in a market under stress from its own imperfections and a shortage of
energy.

The companies point out that the California energy market's overseers did not
challenge the bids as excessive at the time. They also say FERC staff is moving
forward with a tardy and novel interpretation of rules that in effect victimizes the
companies for seeking profits in a deregulated marketplace.

*

'Consistent With Rules'

"We marketed power in a way that ensured reliability and was consistent with
market rules at the time," said Brad Church, a spokesman for Williams Cos., in
Tulsa, Okla., which is one of several suppliers whose bids are being reexamined.
"It disheartens us," he added, that FERC is scrutinizing bids above $250, when
bidding caps at the time were as high as $750.

Other companies and utilities whose bids are being looked at include Reliant
Resources Inc., Mirant Corp., Dynegy Inc., Enron Corp., Powerex Corp.,
the Los Angeles DWP, Idaho Power Co. and the Bonneville Power
Administration.

California officials have long pointed to the bidding practices of energy
companies as an important factor in the early months of the crisis. As long ago as
November 2001, Southern California Edison asked regulators to consider the
spring and summer of 2000 as within the period for which the state could collect
refunds.

But it was not until earlier this year, armed with a favorable appeals court
decision, that California parties were able to collect and submit to federal
regulators their evidence related to past bidding behavior. In voluminous
testimony, the state alleged that electricity suppliers behaved improperly by
frequently offering bids to provide energy at levels that greatly exceeded their
immediate costs.

For example, California parties say that costs typically faced by electricity
suppliers should have dictated bids of about $50 a megawatt-hour. In reality,
some bids were around $750 — 15 times that amount. In summer 2000, as the
state's price cap was clamped tighter — from $720 to $500 to $250 — bids
also declined. Yet even as bids declined, costs faced by suppliers were rising.

In testimony to FERC, a coalition of California state agencies and power-buying
utilities such as Edison also accused companies of inexplicable "spikes" in their
bids for energy from the same generator unit, with spikes often coming during
statewide energy emergencies. According to the testimony, one Williams unit
was bid into the real-time market at an average price of $749.09 per
megawatt-hour in May 2000. By September, when the state had imposed a
tighter price cap, the average bid from that unit had slipped to $139.57.

Similarly, one Dynegy unit in June was bid at prices of $100 to more than $700,
a noteworthy variation in price levels, according to the state's filing.

Sellers who submitted bid price spikes during energy emergencies declared
between May 22 and Aug. 4, 2000, included Williams, Dynegy, Mirant, Reliant,
Powerex, the DWP, Idaho Power and the Bonneville Power Administration,
according to the testimony of Carolyn A. Berry, a private economic consultant
and former FERC staff economist.

The California coalition argues that such bidding put tremendous pressure on the
real-time market for energy, run by California's Independent System Operator,
or ISO.

"If you look at the bids, some of them were astronomical — and they were
clearly astronomical at a time when the ISO had no choice," said Severin
Borenstein, a professor at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business and director
of the University of California Energy Institute.

The California coalition filing may have had some influence within FERC. In
March, the agency's staff released its long-awaited analysis of California's market
debacle, backing many of the assertions made by California. Among the bidding
practices at issue was something known as "Hockey Stick," in which the last
power from a unit is bid at a much higher rate than other power from the same
unit — creating a price spike that resembles a hockey stick when it is drawn on a
chart. Also under scrutiny are bids that vary over time in a way that appears
disconnected from the unit's performance or the availability of energy in the
marketplace.

"Staff concludes that input costs and market fundamentals do not explain the
excessive rise in [market] prices during the summer of 2000," said the FERC
report that was supervised by Donald J. Gelinas, associate director in FERC's
office of markets, tariffs and rates.

*

Firms' Response

The companies have been quick to respond to the questions of California parties
and FERC's staff.

They have chided the agency for misreading the market rules, for reaching wrong
conclusions from the data and for seeking to punish firms that were operating in
an environment of growing scarcity and serious flaws in California's own market
design.

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, for example, is being
ordered to explain spiked bids that removed supply from the marketplace in
May and June 2000. But its executives maintain that critics are demonstrating an
ignorance of how the company operates.

"Anything we had less to offer, it's because we had our own needs we had to fill
first," said David Wiggs, general manager of the utility. "That's what drives us. It's
got nothing to do with the wholesale market. The allegation that we would
manipulate the amount we have available to affect the price, it's just not true. It's
not how we run the system. And we can prove it."

Companies also say that the California parties have wrongly diagnosed the
problem, blaming the conduct of suppliers for high prices when basic market
forces were determining rates.

"There was no need to manipulate that market," said Ken Peterson, president
and chief executive of Powerex, a Vancouver, Canada-based marketer of
wholesale energy. "The fundamentals created opportunity for people to make
money if they could get their energy in there."

Others have taken issue with FERC for seeking to interpret rules in a way that
could lead to sanctions for behavior that companies were not warned about at
the time.

"It is one thing for the new cop on the beat to decide to install a new stop sign at
a particular intersection," said Dynegy, Mirant and Williams in an April filing to
the regulators. "It is quite another for that cop to begin issuing tickets to drivers
who were following the rules of the road for the past three years and did not stop
at that intersection precisely because there was no stop sign. Such an approach
is not only unfair but unlawful, contradicting the very fiber of the American legal
system."

Nonetheless, California parties are far from jubilant about the way FERC is
proceeding on the bidding investigation.

They and their allies argue that regulators have set a generously high bar for the
firms, given the claim by Californians that high bids began at levels much lower
than $250. Moreover, if FERC is selective in imposing sanctions, as it has
suggested it may be, the final number would be much lower than if it forced all
companies in the marketplace to return profits.

Borenstein, of the UC Energy Institute, said: "My guess is that in practice, FERC
will narrow it down to a level that will be disappointing to California."

Wolak, of Stanford and the California ISO, agrees: "Why only above $250?
That's preposterous." He suggested that FERC's staff was trying to keep refund
numbers "in the realm of money that we can make the generators pay. That's
FERC playing politics."

Under separate rulings, FERC had indicated that the state could be in store for a
refund of $3.3 billion. The new focus on May-October 2000, while raising the
distinct possibility of adding more dollars, still would not approach the total of
$8.9 billion that California parties have been demanding as redress for the crisis
of 2000 and 2001.

CC



To: American Spirit who wrote (424001)7/7/2003 10:41:40 PM
From: Kenneth E. Phillipps  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769670
 
We did not recognize the criminality of the Nixon Administration until the second term. We did not realize Reagan and Bush were trading arms for hostages until the second term. If Bush is elected to a second term, America may discover they woke up too late.