CrashList,

A looming natural gas-out in the Golden State?

Seth



Progress, warning in state energy fight
By John Hill, Dale Kasler and Carrie Peyton
Bee Staff Writers
(Published Jan. 11, 2001)
Gov. Gray Davis and other officials laid out details Wednesday of their 
efforts to rein in the state's electricity crisis, even as Pacific Gas and 
Electric Co. said it was confronting a new emergency -- it soon may be 
unable to purchase natural gas for its customers.

Davis said a meeting Tuesday in Washington, D.C., with power generators, 
utilities and federal officials resulted in progress on a proposal to 
stabilize electricity prices using long-term contracts with power 
generators.

The generators have been reluctant to make such agreements because the 
utilities -- PG&E, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric 
-- have accumulated massive debt by purchasing expensive power. The 
utilities, who were under a rate freeze that prevented them from passing on 
their costs to consumers, say they face bankruptcy.

The state could solve that problem by either guaranteeing payment on the 
long-term contracts or buying the power itself and reselling it to the 
utilities, Davis and legislative leaders said Wednesday. In the meantime, 
the generators would agree to hold off on demanding payments from the 
utilities for a certain period, still to be worked out.

"I think there's a distinct possibility that we could contract on a 
long-term basis for power that is reliable and priced at a very attractive 
rate," Davis said. "I believe we can do it at a price that's well within the 
existing rate structure, and so it will not require any rate increases."

Davis said he learned at Tuesday's meeting that utilities are paying a 
credit penalty on electricity because of their shaky finances -- a premium 
that could be eliminated with credit backing from the state.

The governor also said he declined to make any commitments about using 
state-backed bonds to pay off the utilities' debt. "They asked me six, seven 
times. I said no. I'm not making any commitments on that," he said.

Two technical groups kept working out details in Washington.

In the meantime, PG&E reported Wednesday that its precarious finances have 
touched off a different kind of trouble.

In a letter to Davis and a filing with the Securities and Exchange 
Commission, PG&E warned that it may soon run out of cash to buy natural gas 
for its customers.

That could bring the crisis home for the first time with Sacramentans, who 
get their natural gas from PG&E. Until now, Sacramentans have been insulated 
from the dilemma because their electricity provider, the Sacramento 
Municipal Utility District, hasn't had to buy much wholesale power at 
inflated prices.

PG&E's "deteriorating credit situation is causing many of its gas suppliers 
to decline to sell the utility any more gas, even under existing gas 
contracts, in the absence of accelerated payments," the company told the 
SEC. "The utility believes that a gas supply emergency exists."

PG&E, in a move sure to rattle shareholders, also said it will skip its 
regular fourth-quarter dividend in order to conserve cash, and that it is 
delaying release of fourth-quarter financial results. The utility said it 
has $2.21 billion worth of wholesale power bills due in the next two months, 
or more than four times its cash reserves.

If enough suppliers break their contracts, PG&E would run out of gas by the 
second week of February, the company said.

In its letter to the governor, PG&E asked him to use emergency powers to 
help it, such as buying gas or providing credit.

"Without the gas supplies currently under contract, gas available to serve 
high-priority customers will be depleted within several weeks, and possibly 
sooner if temperatures fall below normal," wrote Gordon Smith, president and 
chief executive. "At that point, home gas furnaces, stoves and water heaters 
would go off."

Davis, who said PG&E never mentioned the natural gas problem in their 
Tuesday meeting, said he was seeking to verify the claim with the state 
Public Utilities Commission. A PG&E spokesman said the utility was "at a 
loss" to explain the governor's comment because officials had contacted the 
governor's staff twice this week to discuss the situation.

Davis said a move by the electricity generators to hold off demanding 
payments from the utilities also might reassure the gas suppliers.

"The forbearance that the generators are offering the utilities may well 
solve it," he said.

Unlike electricity rates, which are the subject of fierce court and 
regulatory battles, natural gas rates already cover all of PG&E's wholesale 
gas costs. But gas sellers say they are worried about their payments getting 
caught up in a possible bankruptcy.

On Tuesday, J. Aron & Co., a natural gas trading firm owned by Wall Street's 
Goldman Sachs Inc., told PG&E it wouldn't sell it any more gas unless the 
utility paid cash, utility spokesman John Nelson said. PG&E normally pays 
for gas 20 to 55 days after it takes delivery. Aron is PG&E's single largest 
gas supplier.

On Wednesday, PG&E met with representatives of 30 other suppliers in person 
or by conference call, insisting that the utility would be able to pay for 
the supplies because it can pass gas costs on to consumers.

The meeting ended with "an encouraging sense that no one in the room wanted 
to precipitate a crisis when one didn't have to happen," Nelson said. But 
the representatives gave no firm commitments, saying "they need to go back 
to their folks and analyze their risk," he said.

The developments came as grid operators declared the second Stage 2 power 
alert of 2001 on Wednesday and called on consumers to take extra steps to 
conserve electricity this morning, when supplies will again be short because 
of power plant breakdowns and other problems.

Reaction to the Washington talks among utilities and the new owners of 
California's power plants were cautiously optimistic, but consumer groups 
were wary, stressing that the wrong moves now could boost electric bills for 
years to come.

Consumers could be badly hurt if the price of long-term power contracts is 
set too high, they said, and taxpayers could lose if any state deal to 
purchase power on utilities' behalf turns into a full or partial bailout.

At a minimum, the state would give up investment income on any money it 
devotes to buying power, and if the utilities take months to repay 
California, that forfeited revenue could be in the multi-millions, said 
Harvey Rosenfield of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.

Two bigger risks, he and other consumer advocates said, is that long-term 
contracts could lock in unfair prices for years to come, and that utilities 
could lobby in secret for new concessions from ratepayers or the state.

"The utilities' best shot is in the closed rooms. They don't have a lot of 
sympathy in the Legislature," said Michael Shames, head of the San 
Diego-based Utility Consumers Action Network.

Shames said power markets are so distorted that it's almost impossible to 
name a reasonable long-term price.

Both PG&E and Edison said they were pleased that the talks had begun, and 
they remained hopeful that something solid could emerge, possibly by the 
weekend.

"Some notable progress was made during (Tuesday's) session, including 
agreement on a set of core principles relative to fixed-price, long-term 
electric power contracting and financial issues. However, much more work 
remains to develop concrete solutions," Edison said in a statement.

Wall Street gave the Washington talks a tentative thumbs-up, as PG&E shares 
rose 6.3 cents while Edison International, parent of Southern California 
Edison, rose 12.5 cents to $11.25.

And credit analysts said they were encouraged.

"It's a great start," said Susan Abbott, director of corporate finance at 
Moody's Investors Service in New York. "We're feeling a little bit more 
comfortable today."

But she said Wall Street will soon begin insisting on details. Abbott said 
analysts are encouraged that the wholesalers have agreed in principle to 
delay payments from PG&E and Edison.

One question left unanswered is how the utilities would cover the $11 
billion to $12 billion in electricity costs they have been unable to recover 
in electricity rates.

Assembly GOP leader Bill Campbell of Orange, who attended the Washington 
meeting, said that if the utilities combine their own generating capacity 
with what they get from long-term contracts, they could save enough money to 
pay off the old debt.

Meanwhile, one of the federal officials who attended the Washington meeting, 
James J. Hoecker, announced he will step down Jan. 18 as chairman of the 
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Hoecker, who was the top federal 
official overseeing the state's deregulation, rejected Davis' recent calls 
for FERC to reinstitute some power price caps.

David Whitney of The Bee Washington Bureau contributed to this report.


|     Copyright � The Sacramento Bee


_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com


_______________________________________________
Crashlist website: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base

Reply via email to