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This presentation by Ron Binz explores the growing utility capital requirements and the need for a new utility business model. It discusses the challenges utilities face, the importance of "risk-aware" regulation, and the opportunity for consumer leaders. The presentation also highlights investment risks and essential strategies for risk-aware regulation.
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Financing Reliability NASUCA Annual Meeting - 2012 Ron Binz, Public Policy Consulting November 12, 2012 • Baltimore
Outline of this Presentation • Utility capital requirements are growing sharply amid difficult circumstances • Reliability investments are special case of a larger trend • A new utility business model will emerge • This challenge requires two fundamental changes • “Risk-Aware” regulation • A new regulatory model • This presents an opportunity for consumer leaders
Authors • Ron Binz • Richard Sedano • Denise Furey • Dan Mullen • Available at www.ceres.org
High Stakes • The US electric industry is entering a “build cycle” with much higher investment than in recent history • Brattle Group estimates $2 trillion by 2030 • Causes • Aging infrastructure • New transmission requirements • Demand side and smart grid • Much stronger air and water regulation, including GHGs • Fuel economics • Challenges to utilities • Flat load growth • Distributed generation • Uncertain economy • Financial metrics less forgiving than in 1980s
US Electric IOUs Rating History1970 – 2010 4% AA A AA AA 22% A AA A A BBB 46% BBB A BBB BBB 27% BBB- 1% Source: Standard & Poor’s, Macquarie Capital
The Key Question How do we ensure that $2 trillion is spent wisely?
Notes • Unadjusted 2010 cost estimates were used for consistency • Costs for wind and photovoltaics have fallen sharply in last two years (faster than these 2010 estimates) • Cost of nuclear power has risen post-Fukushima (more than these 2010 estimates) CO2 costs With incentives No incentives
A Catalog of Investment Risk • Seven categories of risk used in scoring… • Construction cost • Fuel and Operating cost • New Regulations • Carbon Price • Water Constraints • Capital Shock • Planning • Cost-related • Construction cost overruns • Capital availability • Operational surprises • Fuel cost escalation • “Bet the company” investments • Management imprudence • Resources limited • Consumer reaction to rates • Time-related • Construction delays • Changing markets • Environmental regulations • Changes in load • Technology advancement • Catastrophe • Contingent projects • Government policies
Cost Risk
Seven Essential Strategies for Risk-Aware Regulation • Diversify utility supply • Utilize robust planning processes • Employ transparent ratemaking practice • Use financial and physical hedges • Hold utilities accountable • Practice active, “legislative” regulation • Reform, re-invent ratemaking policies
Foundation funded Run by two former state regulators named Ron Advised by board of experts Goal: to explore new business models and advocate new regulatory models to enable new utility business models to evolve. Utilities 2020
The Thesis: Regulation may not be up to the task • May not reward utilities for desired behavior • Society’s goals for utilities are changing; regulation is not • Progress on demand side, not so much on supply side • Lack of incentives for • firm efficiency • clean energy investment • energy efficiency • innovation • Rate structures need revision • Examples of “poisoned” relationship
Advisory Council Members • John Bohn • GlobalNet Partners, LLC • Paul Bonavia • Tucson Electric Power • Ashley Brown • Harvard Electricity Policy Group • Ralph Cavanagh • NRDC • Richard Cortright • Standard and Poor’s • Peter Fox-Penner • The Brattle Group • James Newcomb and Lena Hansen • Rocky Mountain Institute • John Nielsen • Western Resource Advocates • Sonny Popowsky • PA Office of Consumer Advocate • John Quackenbush • Michigan Public Service Commission • Lisa Schwartz • Regulatory Assistance Project • V. John White • CEERT
Methods: • Interviews with utility CEOs and leading states regulators • Evaluations of other systems here and abroad • Dialogues with utility execs and commissioners
CEOs want a clearer, more consistent direction from state energy policies Utilities have little incentive for innovation, firm level efficiency Commissions need a better understanding of the utility business and its needs Utilities want certainty on climate policy Utilities want healthier working relationships with commissioners and staff utility CEOs: What we’ve heard from
A primary concern is with increasing utility rates Regulators are open to modifying the regulatory model; looking for ideas Some commissioners are dissatisfied with the adversarial process Many commissioners face severe barriers to communications with stakeholders, and even fellow commissioners Commissions have inadequate resources What we’ve heard from commissioners:
Three Potential Regulatory Models • The UK “RIIO” model • Price cap built on RPI-X • Output regulation • Reliability, Environmental, Innovation, Price, Efficiency, Social Responsibility • The “Iowa Model” • Seventeen years of constant rates, settlements • The “Grand Bargain” • Comprehensive multi-year output-oriented deal • Regulator led
Thanks for the invitation I look forward to your questions.