To: Secret_Agent_Man who wrote (48) | 1/14/2001 10:49:27 PM | From: Secret_Agent_Man | | | Calif. Gov. to Push Plan to Buy Power
Jan 14 7:17pm ET
By Nigel Hunt
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California Gov. Gray Davis will talk with California lawmakers over the next couple of days to push a plan under which the state would buy power for its near bankrupt utilities, his spokesman said on Sunday.
The proposal involves the state signing long-term contracts with power producers which would then be resold at cost to the California's two largest utilities, Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric.
California is in the midst of a power crisis with a chronic shortage of supply threatening to plunge the country's most populous state into darkness. The supply crunch has helped to send wholesale prices to record levels.
San Francisco-based Pacific Gas and Electric and Southern California Edison, which is based in the Los Angeles' suburb of Rosemead, have run up billions of dollars of debt this year because they have not been allowed to pass on skyrocketing wholesale power costs due to a rate freeze imposed under the state's much-criticized power deregulation program.
The burden has driven them to the brink of bankruptcy.
Neither utility would comment on Sunday, saying they needed more time to study Davis' proposal.
Last week the lights nearly went out in 2 million homes with the two utilities credit problems contributing to a desperate shortage of electricity.
Blackout were averted only when a solvent state agency -- the California Department of Water Resources -- stepped in to buy power on behalf of the utilities.
Davis wants the state legislature to approve setting up a fund to buy and sell electricity for the utilities. His spokesman, Steve Maviglio, noted that the CDWR did not have sufficient money to finance deals indefinitely.
"There is not an unlimited till (at the CDWR)," he said.
Southern California Edison is a unit of Edison International while Pacific Gas and Electric is a subsidiary of PG&E Corp. . They serve a total of about 24 million of the state's 34 million residents.
A leading consumer group reacted with caution to the plan, demanding that any deal should include provisions preventing the utilities from collecting previously incurred costs.
A statement issued by the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Right said the deal could force California ratepayers to spend an extra $10 billion to bail out the two utilities from the effects of deregulation.
FTCR wanted the state legislature to ensure the two utilities cannot collect excess charges from customers to help pay down the billions of dollars of debt they have already incurred, limiting any recovery to future costs.
Clinton administration officials on Saturday ended a marathon negotiating session saying it was up to California lawmakers and the governor to finalize a plan by Tuesday to stave off bankruptcy for the utilities.
Gene Sperling, director of the president's National Economic Council, made it clear that the ball was now in the court of Gov. Davis and state lawmakers. They must hammer out a solution to the state's chronic power woes over the next two days before Wall Street reopens on Tuesday.
"The governor laid out a framework for him and the legislative leadership to work on," Sperling told reporters after a meeting with state officials and industry executives. "The issue is now for them to work out the proposal."
Tuesday is considered crucial because that is when Wall Street traders and analysts return to work after a three-day U.S. holiday weekend. Financial markets have been anxiously watching the negotiations to evaluate the bankruptcy threat to PG&E and Edison.
siliconinvestor.com |
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To: LTK007 who wrote (52) | 5/2/2001 7:56:21 AM | From: Secret_Agent_Man | | | Yup, I figure the closer we get to summer the further she goes, i was getting tired of the sevens, she usually runs to the tens and then pulls back, hopefully, this time will be different also, watch PRTN, it's sneaky.
cheers |
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