Those of you living in areas where electric power is unregulated, BEND OVER

Le Jacquelope

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you're about to really and truly get ass raped by corporate America - even worse than everyone else who isn't using solar power...

http://finance.yahoo.com/family-home/article/105023/Expect-a-Jolt-When-Opening-the-Electric-Bill

Expect a Jolt When Opening the Electric Bill
by Rebecca Smith
Thursday, May 1, 2008

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Surging fuel costs are about to inflict more pain on consumers, this time in the form of rapidly rising electricity bills.

Power prices are being pushed up across the U.S., with increases sometimes soaring into double digits, due to costlier coal and natural gas, the fuels used to make 70% of the nation's electricity.

It usually takes awhile for fuel-price swings to show up in electricity bills because utilities typically buy most of what they need under long-term arrangements. As older contracts expire, though, utilities are facing the reality of higher costs.

Proposed electricity-rate increases are cropping up all over the country. Potomac Edison Co., a unit of Allegheny Energy Inc., is asking Virginia regulators for permission to raise rates in July by 29%. In its rate request, the utility cited higher fuel and purchased-power costs.

In Oregon, Portland General Electric Co. is seeking a 9% rate increase effective in January 2009, about a third of which is attributable to higher fuel costs. "There's huge push-back against this rate increase," said Bob Jenks, executive director of the Citizens' Utility Board of Oregon, a group that represents consumers. The increase would come on top of a 10% overall increase since January 2007, and he said customers fear rate "pancaking" in which small increases add up to big jumps.

Company spokesman Steve Corson said Portland General pursues "many, many small measures" to control expenses but can't do much about fuel increases.

More than 90% of coal burned in the U.S. goes for electricity production, and fuel is the industry's largest single expense. Appalachian coal, which on Tuesday closed at $99.50 a ton, costs more than twice as much as it did in the first months of 2007 when it fetched about $45 a ton. Natural gas, closing at $11.15 on Tuesday, costs 45% more than it did early in 2007.

Rising global demand for coal and supply disruptions in Indonesia and Australia are also contributing to price pressures.

In the state of Washington, one retailer -- worried about double-digit increases in energy costs -- has upped its investment in renewable power and energy efficiency for its roughly 100 stores and distribution centers. Recreational Equipment Inc., Kent, Wash., has saved $100,000 in the past year -- far more than it expected -- because it's better protected against rising fossil-fuel costs, said Kevin Hagen, the company's director of corporate social responsibility. Its newest distribution center in Bedford, Pa., for example, has efficient lighting and ventilation.

Electricity Auctions

Recent electricity auctions in Maryland and New Jersey -- in which utilities buy electricity from deregulated generation companies -- are exerting upward pressure on retail rates, and it's likely to continue in coming months, indicating the worst is yet to come.

In Maryland, for example, residential customers of Baltimore Gas & Electric Co., a unit of Constellation Energy Group Inc., will see a 7.6% increase in their bills in June as a result of the latest wholesale auction conducted in April. (Under the state's deregulation law, utilities sold their plants to competitive suppliers and now get power off the open market.)

An average home bill will jump $137 a year to about $1,800 annually, said the Maryland Public Service Commission. Commercial customers will be hit even harder, with 27% to 41% price increases for the June through August period, versus prices a year earlier.

In New Jersey, an energy auction in February resulted in power prices based on natural-gas costs of about $8.50 per million British thermal units, said Ralph Izzo, chief executive of Public Service Enterprise Group Inc., a big utility company. But natural-gas prices projected for early next year are about 30% higher, or roughly $11 a unit, showing more increases could lie ahead.

Mr. Izzo said he thinks utility regulators will apply more pressure on utilities to cut costs they can control and will take a hard look at profit levels. "Regulators respond to social pressures and public forces," he said. "Regulators will be hard-pressed to allow the same returns on equity [for utilities] as in the past."

Atlanta coal-burning utility Southern Co. said its fuel costs jumped 12% in the first quarter, versus the first quarter of 2007. Southern's utilities buy fuel under contracts as long as five years to minimize the impact of any single year. Southern's biggest utility, Georgia Power Co., is seeking a $222 million rate increase but may increase that number as fuel prices continue to soar.

The impact of higher fossil fuel prices is felt beyond just the price of electricity. It is also provoking states to explore expansion of nuclear power plants and renewable energy, such as wind and solar power, to break the grip of fossil fuels.

Last week, Ohio became the latest state to take a tentative step away from fossil fuels. Democratic Gov. Ted Strickland signed legislation requiring electric utilities to satisfy one quarter of their customers' energy needs, by 2025, through such means as renewable energy, new nuclear reactors and energy efficiency measures.

"There's definitely interplay between fuel costs going up and the willingness of states to invest in other sorts of resources," said Mr. Strickland.

Some Profits Seen

Of course, it follows that high costs, for some, could result in higher profits, for others.

The companies that appear to be doing the best, so far this earnings season, are those firms in deregulated power markets, where price increases in raw materials can be readily passed on to consumers and where generators with the highest costs set overall market prices.

Duke Energy Corp.'s commercial power unit, for example, earned $146 million for the first quarter, versus $13 million a year ago, an increase the company credited to several things, including successful hedging and better profit from its gas-fired generating plants in the Midwest. Power production also increased.

FPL Group Inc. in Juno Beach, Fla., last week reported that its deregulated power plants gleaned nearly four times as much profit in the first quarter of 2008 as a year earlier. Meanwhile, Potomac's parent company, Allegheny Energy, reported a 24% increase in net income for the first quarter, crediting part of the boost on higher prices for wholesale electricity sales.

Write to Rebecca Smith at rebecca.smith@wsj.com
Copyrighted, Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All rights reserved.
 
De-regulated

Well , come to texas now we have been de-regulated for approx: 8 yrs now. I firmly believe it is much better to be able to make a choice on whom your electrical provider might be than having yourself at the mercy of one company , even with the regulating state controlling the cost escalations for a one provider area. Most organizations who have such authority over an area wihout competition of other electrical providers have enough political clout to influence the state authorities to allow them to increase your electrical costs in one form or another whether it be thru transmission fees, kwh increase, etc. Now with a de regulated electrical state or area you do have the choice of whom you want to utilize and have the right within that contractual agreement to lock down your pricing , hedge it negotiate to what you feel is in your best interest. Now has california opened any more electrical plants whether they be coal fired , natural gas, or water generated elctricity.. Im curious how did the state of California end up in there litigation against Houston Lighting and power when they had the brown outs several yrs ago ?? Also part of the de-regulation is that the initial largest electrical company within the area had to give up 40% of its customer base to open the door for competition within that region. Im not the worlds foremost authority on the electrical thing but i try to educate myself on a continous basis pertaining to it. 85% of the electric generated in texas is thru natural gas. I am much happier being able to choose who fucks me rather than having one organization or electrical provider pounding my butt as they wish.
 
In my part of the woods you have a choice between AEP and AEP. They really aren't that bad though and I can't complain too much because they put food in my mouth and a roof over my head when I was growing up.
 
Semi-regulated.
And we're about 40% nuclear, 40% hydroelectric and 20% coal.
I expect our rates are going to increase, but we still have some of the lowest rates on the continent.
 
Well , come to texas now we have been de-regulated for approx: 8 yrs now. I firmly believe it is much better to be able to make a choice on whom your electrical provider might be than having yourself at the mercy of one company , even with the regulating state controlling the cost escalations for a one provider area. Most organizations who have such authority over an area wihout competition of other electrical providers have enough political clout to influence the state authorities to allow them to increase your electrical costs in one form or another whether it be thru transmission fees, kwh increase, etc. Now with a de regulated electrical state or area you do have the choice of whom you want to utilize and have the right within that contractual agreement to lock down your pricing , hedge it negotiate to what you feel is in your best interest. Now has california opened any more electrical plants whether they be coal fired , natural gas, or water generated elctricity.. Im curious how did the state of California end up in there litigation against Houston Lighting and power when they had the brown outs several yrs ago ?? Also part of the de-regulation is that the initial largest electrical company within the area had to give up 40% of its customer base to open the door for competition within that region. Im not the worlds foremost authority on the electrical thing but i try to educate myself on a continous basis pertaining to it. 85% of the electric generated in texas is thru natural gas. I am much happier being able to choose who fucks me rather than having one organization or electrical provider pounding my butt as they wish.
That's gonna be a cold comfort when your rates skyrocket even faster than regulated markets.
 
I am not sure what you mean by "unregulated"


Luckily my area is mostly wind power
 
article said:
The companies that appear to be doing the best, so far this earnings season, are those firms in deregulated power markets, where price increases in raw materials can be readily passed on to consumers and where generators with the highest costs set overall market prices.

This is interesting. How much of the US market do you think would be deregulated?
 
skyrocketing

That's gonna be a cold comfort when your rates skyrocket even faster than regulated markets.

Well hopefully the private utilities commission wil somewhat govern the price index and not accomodate big business...
 
The wizards who run our state already deregulated electricity, it took effect at the start of 2007 and people got screwed royally with increases of at least 55%. The state made the power company work out something to where they had to phase the increases in over 3 years I think. And sure enough they had record profits. Deregulation is never a good thing. It failed with airlines, it failed with electric companies and it will likely fail for anything else that suddenly gets deregulated. Corporate greed takes over then.
 
Well hopefully the private utilities commission wil somewhat govern the price index and not accomodate big business...
Deregulation almost automatically means big business will take over and be accommodated... kind of like the way a rapist makes himself accommodated.

And if they don't get their way, they always cut production and shut down factories in order to create shortages.

There hasn't been a real shortage of ANYTHING in the last 100 years: it has all been manufactured.
 
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