Now I will leave this matter to the experts - how do they store energy
for suddenly California has so much energy it is selling it?   Do they
put it in little boxes.......look at the money the people save now, for
you see this Weather Mod problem does have its advantages.

So now the City Fathers pray for a long hot Summer?    They now sell
energy they have so much, but where the hell do they keep this stuff
anyway.

Can you imagine all those little lightning bolts stores neatly away - so
they got what they wanted like the NAACP in Cincinnati got what they
wanted and they still complain?

So it is written God made the simple to confound the wise?    Now how
the hell do you get rid of all these "simple" folk and restore law and
order and justice, for all who have enough money to pay for same.
(lawyers do come high)\

Bitch, Bitich, Bitch - that is all they do.



Saba


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July 19, 2001
California's New Problem: Sudden Surplus of Energy

By JAMES STERNGOLD
The Associated Press

Cecelia Paez sorted customer bills on Wednesday at Southern California
Edison's office in Rosemead, Calif. After months of blackouts, the power
situation took an unexpected turn this month, leaving the state with a
surplus.

LOS ANGELES, July 18 � After months of warnings about power shortages
and forced blackouts, an unusually cool July and surprisingly effective
conservation efforts have put California in a stunning position: it has
so much electricity on its hands that it is selling its surplus into a
glutted market.

In fact, state officials said today, after spending much of the winter
and spring scrambling to line up new supplies of electricity at a cost
of tens of billions of dollars, the agency that is in charge of buying
power has actually been selling some back at a loss this week.

Oscar Hidalgo, the spokesman for the Department of Water Resources,
which became the state's main buyer of power after soaring wholesale
prices pushed private utilities toward bankruptcy this year, would not
provide exact figures on how much the state was selling or how much
money it was losing.

But the department has said it was paying on average $133 per
megawatt-hour this month, much of which it is obliged to buy whether it
needs it or not, under long-term contracts signed in recent months. By
contrast, officials say, the department at times has sold some of that
power back into the market at prices as low as $15 per megawatt-hour.

Mr. Hidalgo insisted that the surplus power could quickly vanish if
temperatures soar as expected in August.

Some consumer groups, which have bitterly criticized the state's energy
policies in the crisis, seized on the sales as evidence of what they
said was a poorly thought-out plan that had left the state at the mercy
of a merciless market.

"This state agency has no expertise in trading," said Harvey Rosenfield,
an official at the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.
"It is amateurish at best and sometimes incompetent, negotiating with a
bunch of M.B.A.'s whose goal is to soak California. The state was
panicked into leaping into this business, and it is being outwitted."

But a spokesman for Gov. Gray Davis defended the state's purchases,
saying its response to an emergency has produced greater reliability
and, in the long term, a greater supply of power.

"Like we said all along, we're doing everything within our power to
control the situation and stabilize things," said Steve Maviglio, the
governor's spokesman. "But the weather is not within our control. When
the utilities were in this business, they ran into this situation
routinely."

On Monday, for example, the high temperature in San Diego was 70
degrees, compared with an average of 77 degrees. In San Francisco, the
high was 66, compared with an average of 72, and in Fresno it was 87,
down from the average of 99. That meant that air-conditioners across the
state were turned down.

But officials said that the weather was not the only factor in relieving
the sense of crisis in California and that the state's conservation
program had produced a significant reduction in demand.

The state energy commission has said that total demand was down 12
percent this June from June 2000, adjusted for the weather and economic
growth.

The conservation program provides rebates for buying certain
energy-efficient appliances and special discounts for large consumers
that reduce their power needs sharply from previous years.

In addition, state and federal office buildings have instituted
conservation measures, including turning off lights and computers at
night and adjusting thermostats.

Also, big rate increases, of as much as 40 percent in certain instances,
kicked in this June, encouraging consumers to cut electricity use
further.

Some experts have warned that while a sense of crisis has helped produce
the big reductions in demand, as soon as people feel that the emergency
has passed at least some will return to their old ways and demand may
rise again.

According to the California Independent System Operator, which manages
the power system, peak demand today was expected to be 32,651 megawatts,
and the available supply was slightly above 40,000 megawatts.

In January, the state suffered several power emergencies in which it was
forced to pay more than $1,000 a megawatt at times of critical
shortages.

But even with those purchases, utilities were forced to cut power in
some places when the demand exceeded the supply. The last time the state
had to resort to blackouts was on May 8.

After the emergencies in the winter, the state frantically lined up
power purchases on contracts ranging from a few months to 10 years and
more.

The state tried to put together a diverse portfolio of contracts that
would ease the shortages but not lock the government into paying too
much if prices declined in the future. Energy experts expected some
declines in prices but not this quickly.

The Department of Water Resources paid an average of $243 per megawatt
in May, but the price has now dropped to $133 per megawatt on average
this month, some of that in the form of spot purchases and some under
the long-term contracts. Mr. Hidalgo said the department's sales of
power back to the market had been at $15 to $30 per megawatt.

Some energy traders said the state was just paying the price any market
participant must accept.

"They're not doing anything imprudent," said Patrick Dorinson, a
spokesman for the Mirant Corporation, a large power generator and
trader. "They're just finding out how the markets work. Everything is
built on forecasting, and sometimes the forecasts are wrong."

Mr. Maviglio, the governor's spokesman, said the state's planning was
built on forecasts of a harsher summer and less conservation. "The
forecasts have turned out to be far more conservative than the reality,"
he said.

Mr. Rosenfield countered: "We've been outwitted. They goofed, and it
looks like taxpayer money is being thrown down the toilet."

In May, the amount of power the state needed to buy on the so-called
spot market, which means purchases in which the electricity would be
supplied immediately, accounted for close to 45 percent of the total
purchases. Typically, longer-term contracts are at fixed prices, while
spot purchases can be enormously volatile.

But because of the reduced demand in July, spot purchases have made up
just 5 percent or so of the Department of Water Resource's total
purchases, and at the times of lowest demand, like this week, officials
have decided to get what they can by reselling excess power.

"This is a normal business practice," Mr. Hidalgo said. "We can buy
power and we can sell power. I don't think anyone would have predicted
that we would have found ourselves in this position in July. But we're
not out of the woods. August could be raging hot."
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SABA NOTE:   Now who made the big bucks?  Now that they created the
shortage, bought at a high - now they sell at a low for its time to fold
before the taxpayers get up a lynch mob?



http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/19/national/19CALI.html?todaysheadlines


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