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Why New England Was Greatly Harmed by the “Deregulation” of the Electricity Industry. Dr. Richard A. Rosen Tellus Institute – Boston, MA 100 th Restructuring Roundtable March 30, 2007. The three main harms:.
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Why New England Was Greatly Harmed bythe “Deregulation” ofthe Electricity Industry Dr. Richard A. Rosen Tellus Institute – Boston, MA 100th Restructuring Roundtable March 30, 2007
The three main harms: • Electric rates ended up being far too high – restructuring couldnot have worked to lower rates. Generally, led to more financial transfers from poor to rich. • Climate impacts of electric generation became harder to control due to more federal regulation and less state control. • Democratic input into planning and ratemaking became much more difficult. Tellus Institute
Stranded costs implied no savings. • PV of rates after restructuring = stranded costs + PV of market prices • Stranded costs = PV of cost-of-service prices - PV of market prices (definition) • Therefore, PV of rates after restructuring = PV of cost-of-service prices Where’s the beef? Of course, we should have computed stranded costs correctly – and this is one cause of overcharges. Tellus Institute
Why deregulation causes the price of electricity to rise: • Dismantling vertically integrated utilities is economically inefficient and endangers system reliability. • Deregulated generation faces a much higher cost of capital and pressure for much faster depreciation (10 yrs or less vs. 30 yrs or more). • Operating wholesale markets is more expensive than operating cost-sharing power pools. • Markets hide new sources of cost. Tellus Institute
More reasons for higher prices: • No one had a clear idea for a “competitive” market structure. • Market clearing prices are likely to be much higher than embedded costs for some units – particularly with natural gas prices rising. (Negative stranded costs.) • Single price auctions – the type of markets advocated - are inefficient for both energy and capacity, and send wrong price signals. They are also illegal! • Typical sub-regional ownership concentrations for generation make competitive markets unlikely. Tellus Institute
Dismembering vertically integrated utilities was inefficient. • Coordinated planning is difficult and more costly with separate distribution, transmission, and generation – and a regional transmission organization (RTO). Least-cost outcomes are unlikely. • Direct costs tend to rise and environmental costs are harder to take into account. • Energy conservation investment programs were undermined, further adding to consumer costs. Tellus Institute
Generation markets are unlikely to ever be competitive. • Even three or four generation owners in a small transmission-constrained region will not allow for competition in electricity markets. • Strategic bidding (manipulation) is easy in single-price auctions, partly because of different plant variable costs and changing demand. • Cost-effective transmission constraints make market power easy to exercise. • Generation capacity can also be withheld (retired) to make supply and demand tight. Tellus Institute
FERC regulation has been less effective than state PUC regulation. • The Federal Power Act requires that rates be “just and reasonable” – precedents are cost-of-service based. • This was not applied properly to wholesale market prices for generation. Monitoring markets for price manipulation was done improperly. • FERC favored policies to support the ability of new generators to “compete,” even if doing so undermined state or regional least-cost planning. • FERC could not promote cost-effective conservation or incorporating environmental externalities in planning. Tellus Institute
Deregulation adds many layers of new costs to retail prices. • Vertically integrated utilities with cost-of-service regulation are economically efficient. This is why that had been the US tradition since the 1930s. • Distribution, transmission, and generation can be better operated and coordinated by one set of utility managers. • Cost sharing through power pooling makes sense as we used to do. • Adding retail markups to cost-of-service wholesale prices drives up prices – and is a complete social waste. Monopolies make sense at the retail level with PUC regulated products. Tellus Institute
CONCLUSIONS • The so-called “deregulation” of the electric utility industry could have been predicted to greatly increase prices for consumers. For example, several Tellus reports prior to 2000 made this prediction. • Moving away from cost-of-service regulation for electricity has been a total failure. • There is no way to save specific aspects of “deregulation,” nor should one want to. • It must be reversed as soon as possible through re-regulation of generation plant, where possible, and new COS built units and/or publicly-owned units. • Simultaneously, we must work hard to reduce demand, add many more renewable generation sources, and phase-out high carbon emitting plants. Tellus Institute