As California
moves to stabilize the state's electricity market, a clear
picture of that market's future shape may not emerge for weeks
or longer. This month's blackoutsthe first ones forced
since California's deregulation experiment began in 1998cemented
lingering doubts about the approach's future. On Jan. 23,
the Bush administration gave the state some breathing room
by extending for two weeks two emergency orders from the U.S.
Energy Dept. requiring energy producers to sell the state
electricity and gas.
Proposed fixes for the ailing system,
including calls for massive state intervention, are drawing
cautious responses from observers. Yet developers remain confident
in the state's appeal. "All indications are that the
private sector is prepared to invest billions of dollars in
California," claims Steven Kelly, policy director for
the Independent Energy Producers Association, Sacramento.
"I don't think the California economy is going to suffer
greatly," says Bill Highlander, a spokesman for power
developer Calpine Corp, San Jose.
The rolling blackouts that began
in mid-January riveted the nation's attention on the severity
of the state's electricity shortage. Despite a theoretical
capacity of about 48,000 Mw, supplies were barely able to
meet typical peak demand of over 31,000 Mw, in part because
an estimated 10,500 Mw were taken off line for planned and
unplanned outages, according to the California Independent
System Operator, the agency that controls power distribution
to 75% of the state.
On Jan. 19, Gov. Gray Davis (D)
signed legislation authorizing $400 million for the state
to purchase electricity from power providers for resale to
the utilities. The move temporarily eases the pressure on
Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas & Electric
Co. The giant investor-owned utilities are staggering under
an estimated $10 billion in debt caused by massive jumps in
wholesale prices despite retail price caps. Now, power providers
have been reluctant to sell electricity to utilities for fear
they will not be repaid. And San Francisco filed a $1-billion
class action suit accusing generators and marketers of price
collusion.
DOE's order "is designed
to give the governor, the California legislature and other
relevant parties time to take necessary action," says
new Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham. He noted the need for
more electric power construction.
The crisis is affecting many industry
segments. The West's leading producer of flat-rolled steel,
California Steel Industries Inc., Fontana, began foregoing
power Jan. 16 for as much as 18 hours at a time. The bleak
situation left the company reassessing its 14-year-old agreement
with Edison for 290,000 Mw annually.
"This has not yet affected
our ability to deliver steel to our customers," says
company spokeswoman Kyle Schulty. She says prices won't be
raised.
State legislators called into
special session by Davis are sorting through a raft of proposals.
State Senate President Pro Tem John Burton (D) wants to create
a public power authority to finance powerplant construction
and retrofitting. "I haven't seen anything that...will
be a comprehensive and long-term solution," says Craig
B. Smith, a longtime consultant on energy issues and president
of Orange, Calif.-based DMJM/ Holmes & Narver. He prefers
a simplification of the state's tough siting process.
Because of the proposals' political
sensitivity, industry officials hesitate to comment on some
of the more interventionist proposals. State officials have
threatened to take over powerplants by eminent domain to assure
the power supply (ENR 1/15 p. 16). But such threats are "going
to cause people to be cautious," says Kelly. Most industry
sources agree with Highlander that "the only long-term
solution is to get more generation on line and have a free
and open market."
Large-scale relief is still several
years away, but the supply shortage will ease this year with
2,412 Mw set to come on line. Another 1,940 Mw are under construction
and 14 other projects totaling 6,743 Mw and $4.4 billion in
investment are in the approval process. Commercial operation
dates start in 2002. Kelly maintains that "we just have
to fix the rates and fix the structure and we can have the
benefit of a competitive marketplace."