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Electric
Deregulation
Virginia stays the
course, extending rate caps to give competitive market
more time to mature. For businesses, keeping power affordable
and reliable is key.
by
Jim Strader and Paula C. Squires
Virginia Business
August
2004
Five
years after Virginia joined other states in the shift
to deregulate electricity, the effort had all but sputtered
by early 2004. No competitive suppliers had come in
with offers that would beat Virginia’s already
low electricity prices. Fresh in many people’s
mind was a massive blackout the previous summer, which
highlighted weaknesses in the country’s transmission
grid. While Virginia wasn’t affected, many residents
here did get a taste of the challenges of being without
juice when Hurricane Isabel rampaged through the state
last September, knocking out power lines that took days
and sometimes weeks to repair.
The blackout and hurricane reminded everyone how essential
electricity is to modern life and business. By the time
the General Assembly convened in January a continuing
lack of competition had some former proponents of deregulation
telling lawmakers to suspend parts of the law, including
retail choice.
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“The
promised benefits of electricity deregulation have failed
to materialize,” declared full-page ads taken
out by the Consumer Coalition, a group backed by retailers,
consumer groups, the state’s electric co-ops and
some of Virginia’s largest industrial users of
electricity. “…Capped rates have cost consumers
hundreds of millions of dollars.”
Yet intense lobbying by Dominion Virginia Power to extend
capped electricity rates carried the day. Despite the
revolt by some businesses, the General Assembly amended
the restructuring law, extending capped rates for three
and a half more years—from mid-2007 through the
end of 2010 — to give the competitive power market
more time to develop. Without the extension, Virginians
might have faced a daunting scenario: a market of unregulated
monopolies, which is why the caps were proposed by the
attorney general and governor’s offices and approved
by wide margins.
The amendment brought other changes to stimulate competition.
Chief among them: an end to charges for customers who
switch suppliers and a freeze on the fuel rate charged
by Richmond-based Dominion Virginia Power, the state’s
largest utility. The rate will stay at its current level
until 2007, after which it can be adjusted only once
during the life of the rate caps. “This is a very
significant part of advancing deregulation,” says
Thomas F. Farrell II, president and COO of Dominion,
the utility’s parent company. “It’s
hard for suppliers to get a fix on what their price
to beat is going to be” if fuel costs continue
to be variable. Removing fluctuations helps level the
competitive field.
The assembly’s action sets up the next few years
as make-or-break time for Virginia’s experiment
with electric deregulation. In a sense, the state is
moving into a period much like the eye of a hurricane.
There’s an uncertainty about how events will play
out, but also an expectation that some big jolt might
come. Will the latest legislative tweaking create enough
of a surge to fulfill the promise of a free energy market?
Or three years down the road will Virginia decide, as
some states already have, to pull the plug on electric
deregulation?
Virginia businesses are keeping a close watch on the
next wave of activity. “The fighting’s done
and now we have to work together,” says Brett
Vassey, president and CEO of the Virginia Manufacturer’s
Association, which represents some of the state’s
largest commercial users of electricity. For manufacturers,
affordability and reliability are key concerns. “Our
survival depends on those variables being predictable,”
says Vassey, particularly at a time when electricity
costs are way up for some manufacturers due to increased
automation. Last summer’s sudden blackout in Ohio,
he adds, cost manufacturers there $1 billion.
Opinions vary within the association on whether capping
base rates—the costs of power excluding fuel —
will provide the lowest costs while the competitive
market matures. Vassey says some manufacturers preferred
a bill backed by the Consumer Coalition that would have
restored authority to Virginia’s State Corporation
Commission to set retail electric rates. “Some
members just feel that they can’t predict the
future with a market-based rate. They can with a cost-of-service
[regulatory] rate.”
One attorney, who represents major industrial users
of power, says that in the beginning customers of Dominion
Virginia Power backed the development of competition.
But some businesses are disappointed in restructuring
so far, says Edward Petrini. ”Restructuring has
failed to produce savings. Our clients remain concerned
about the prospect of paying excessive rates in the
future.”
Farrell, viewed as a possible successor to Dominion’s
current CEO Thomas E. Capps, was one of the most visible
proponents for capped rates, selling the measure to
legislators as a way to protect customers and save them
money. A study commissioned by Dominion Virginia Power
claims that extending rate caps will save as much as
$1.8 billion for residential customers during the capped
rate period of 1998-2010, with $700 million coming during
the three-year extension.
However, critics note that the extension also helps
Dominion’s bottom line, with executives expecting
increased profits of between 5 to 7 percent a year through
2010. One report by the Wall Street firm of Morgan Stanley
says capped rates will add nearly $500 million to the
value of Dominion. An SCC study pointed out that in
2002, the utility earned $680 million more under rate
caps than it would have under the old system of cost-of-service
regulation.
At Dominion, executives are encouraged by the assembly’s
action. “I think we’re getting the pieces
in place,” says Farrell. “The whole process
was supposed to be deliberative. I think there will
be more competition.” Company officials say capped
rates — set at 1993 levels — are a good
deal for customers. And as for Dominion profiting from
the move to deregulation, executives point out that
the company has already spent hundreds of millions preparing
for a market-based system of supply. There’s the
new $17.5 million energy clearinghouse on the banks
of the James in downtown Richmond across from the company’s
corporate headquarters not to mention the money Dominion
spends annually lobbying the General Assembly. In 2003,
Dominion’s political action group spent more than
$200,000 lobbying on various issues including electric
deregulation.
With capped rates shifting the risk to the company’s
shareholders, Farrell says Dominion will have to cover
more than $2 billion in additional costs and investments
during the rate caps with no opportunity to recoup the
money through higher customer rates. Even so, critics
note that in December, the SCC granted Dominion Virginia
Power a $386 million rate settlement to cover its fuel
costs over the next three years. And to bring American
Electric Power-Virginia on board with extended rate
caps — the state’s second largest-utility
had originally sided with the coalition in rolling back
retail choice — the assembly is requiring the
SCC to let AEP recover its environmental and reliability
costs as it prepares for deregulation.
Deregulation has enjoyed some success in other states,
and Dominion seems confident that its investments will
pay off. “Consumers do benefit,” says David
F. Koogler, director of regulation and competition at
Dominion Virginia Power. “What they’ve seen
in Ohio with natural gas is that instead of a fuel factor
that changes every quarter, causing bills to jump up
and down, a competitor will come in and offer them a
two-year contract, and they love that certainty. We’ll
see the same thing here, hopefully.”
Another possible area for growth, he adds, could come
from the expanded ability of municipalities to form
buying groups (aggregations) to purchase electricity
for their residents and to make a profit from such aggregation,
another development made possible with the new legislation.
In Ohio, most of the 1 million customers who have switched
are aggregation customers. A free market also would
give retailers with multiple locations the opportunity
to buy power from a single source at a possibly lower
price.
While Dominion paints an optimistic picture for the
future, other industry watchers are more skeptical.
About a dozen competitive suppliers are licensed to
market electricity to Virginia customers. But for now
they are “sitting on their licenses,” says
Ken Schrad, a spokesman for the SCC, and renewing them
in case the market takes off. “No one is making
any offers of any electricity in Virginia.” Still,
there’s interest. Nearly 90,000 residential and
small business customers have signed up to participate
in a pilot program to shop from competitive suppliers.
About 2,000 industrial customers recently vied for 200
slots in another pilot. Yet, Schrad asks, “Where’s
the shopping? There wasn’t any a year ago; there
isn’t any today. Deregulation was sold as better
price, better price, better price. That isn’t
what’s happening.”
As the state’s traditional utility regulator,
the SCC is charged with overseeing the transition to
deregulation. It issues an annual report to a General
Assembly task force on the status of retail choice.
The 2004 report is due out next month, but Schrad doesn’t
expect any major changes since last year. “We’re
still in sort of a holding pattern in Virginia, for
a variety of reasons. The primary thing is that because
of our rate caps, which are really rate freezes, the
price of electricity is lower than the wholesale price.
It’s almost impossible for anyone to come into
Virginia and beat the frozen capped rate prices. …
There’s just not any incentive for them to come
in.” Until new companies come, the state’s
customers will continue to be supplied by Dominion Virginia
Power, which has about 2 million customers; AEP -Virginia,
500,000 customers; Allegheny Power, Conectiv and a dozen
electric cooperatives.
In the 2003 report, the SCC recommended that the assembly
suspend the act, rebundle retail electric rates and
continue a moratorium on transfers of control of Virginia’s
transmission systems to federally regulated RTOs (regional
transmission organizations). Virginia isn’t alone
in having doubts about the wisdom of deregulation. It
is among only 17 states that have active utility restructuring
programs under way. Five states have delayed their plans,
and California suspended restructuring three years ago
following a crisis that sparked brownouts and skyrocketing
prices.
The SCC’s reticence over relinquishing control
over the state’s power supply is sure to be the
subject of debate as Dominion and Columbus-based AEP
prepare to join an RTO this fall. This step is considered
crucial in laying the groundwork for competition, because
RTOs provide a larger pool of power with access granted
to all competitive suppliers. They also allow customers
to pay a single cost for power transmission, rather
than accumulated fees as power moves across borders.
Both utilities plan to join PJM Interconnection, a regional
electric transmission system operator that serves a
population of more than 35 million people in all or
parts of Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, New Jersey, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and the District
of Columbia.
Virginia’s restructuring law requires membership
in an RTO, and it’s also a requirement of the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). Originally,
Virginia utilities were supposed to join an RTO by Jan.
1, 2001. However, fears over the state’s ability
to ensure that consumers get reliable service at reasonable
rates once control over its power supply is turned over
to FERC-controlled RTOs prompted Virginia to delay the
date to Jan. 1, 2005.
The delay, says Farrell, has impeded competition. “The
biggest reason why we haven’t had progress is
because we aren’t in PJM,” he says. Dominion
has filed for PJM membership in applications with both
the SCC and FERC. Action is expected this fall. Federal
regulators approved AEP’s application for membership
in June, clearing the way for the company to join the
transmission group in October. AEP Virginia, which serves
the Southwestern part of the state and offers rates
as low as three cents per kilowatt hour —thanks
to its relatively inexpensive coal-fired plants—initially
sought to join a different RTO, known as Alliance, says
Dan Carson, AEP-Virginia’s president. That effort
was turned down by FERC, forcing the company to revise
its plans and apply to PJM. “We had worked for
a long period of time to meet the requirements of the
law to join an RTO, only to have that process interrupted,”
Carson says. With the approval of its PJM membership,
“things have worked out relatively well.”
Dominion had also originally planned to join Alliance.
FERC’S decision to allow AEP to join the PJM transmission
organization came over objections raised by Virginia
officials. In its ruling, FERC said utilities could
be exempted from state laws and regulations that prevent
them from taking steps to improve competitive conditions.
Schrad questions whether the decision is a sign that
Virginia is “slowly losing its authority to federal
regulators,” putting at risk its long history
of overseeing utilities for the good of Virginians.
The FERC ruling, Schrad adds, indicates that the federal
agency feels that the greater reach of a regional power
group and the “broader good” of facilitating
its competitive operation outweigh the interests of
any individual state.
One issue with Dominion’s PJM application has
already prompted public criticism. The utility has asked
FERC for permission to begin tracking the costs of joining
an RTO with the thought of recovering those costs later
by passing them along to customers in the form of transmission
tariffs. The costs are estimated to be about $280 million.
“We certainly believe these costs were not part
of the original language … of the legislation,”
says Dominion spokesman Jim Norvelle. State lawmakers,
regulators and customers have spoken out against the
idea, saying it violates the intent of the 1999 electric
restructuring law. Yet Dominion points out that the
benefits of joining PJM would flow to customers in the
form of reliability and lower bills. PJM coordinates
a pooled generating capacity of more than 106,000 megawatts
and operates the country’s largest wholesale electricity
market.
Some people wonder if joining a regional RTO is a good
deal. Why should Virginia send its low-cost electricity
out of state and will such a move mean higher prices?
Koogler says the opposite is true. The importing of
cheap, coal-generated power would lower prices. “We’ll
be able to bring in lower-cost power from the Midwest
— buckets of it,” he says. In general the
idea of RTOs appeals to large industrial customers,
because they allow access to a wider electricity pool.
The importance of transmission reliability jumped to
the front pages after the blackout last August left
millions of people in the dark in eight states and two
countries, including the U. S. and Canada. One concern
raised at that time is that the country’s aging
transmission grid isn’t equipped to handle the
increased wholesale trade of electricity prompted by
deregulation. PJM plans $700 million dollars worth of
transmission upgrades.
With so many complex issues, the slowness in developing
a robust power supply market comes as no surprise to
Koogler. “We essentially were trying to open a
retail market without a wholesale market to support
it and that’s tough. That’s about impossible
to do,” he says. Besides, there’s recognition
that an industry that’s been heavily regulated
for decades can’t be transformed overnight. “You
can’t expect competition to come in over night
in just a matter of a year or two. It’s going
to take some time. We’ve got another three and
a half years.”
Return to Virginia Business - August 2004
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