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Finance...
Paying the
Rates Obama Demands
by Marita Noon
November 28, 2011
Electricity
rates now depend more on
public policy and regulatory decisions than on actual costs.
Based
on a newly released report from
Oliver Wyman, a leading global management consulting firm, “There is a
growing
need to increase electricity prices. These rate increases are largely
being
driven by environmental, regulatory, and security requirements.” And
they are
adding to “financial strain at the worst possible moment.”
The
report, designed to help utility
companies deal with customer wrath, states that “the increases have
been the
most significant in the residential segment”—where they grew more
quickly than
other sectors. Despite declining pricing on some fuels, such as natural
gas,
electricity rates have risen 2.7% per year with some regions
experiencing
average price increases of 5.1% annually. In contrast, the consumer
price
index—excluding food and energy—rose by 1.7%.
Residential
customers experiencing the
highest increases, and/or potential increases, are those who are
heavily
dependent on coal-fueled generation, as required retrofits cannot
economically
meet existing environmental requirements—resulting in the proposed
retirement
of older coal-fueled plants. Existing and proposed EPA rules are having
a
significant impact on rates—with the vast majority of compliance costs
falling
on residents. The report states: “If these are enacted and enforced,
the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission staff has informally estimated
that 8% of
our electric generation capacity, representing 81 GW of the nation’s
generating
capacity, will need to be retired.”
Lisa
Jackson, EPA Administrator, was
recently asked about the mass retirements of coal-fueled power plants
as a
result of EPA regulations. While they do not technically require
shutting down
any plant, the rules are such that plants cannot be operated
economically—but
Jackson doesn’t see that as her problem. “I can’t say what a business
will
decide to do. Some businesses are investing in nuclear, some are
looking at
natural gas. There are states that are leading the way on solar or
wind.”
Jackson’s
comment, plus the Department
of Energy’s loan guarantees, makes clear that the only correct path is
wind and
solar. But why?
Because
most states have renewable
portfolio standards (or renewable energy standards) that require power
companies to produce a set percentage of their electricity from sources
such as
wind and solar. These renewable sources, however, increase electricity
prices,
use more land, and have other personal impacts.
Increasing
Prices
A
recent article in the Financial
Times quotes Steve Sawyer of the Global Wind Energy Council. He said,
“In areas
of strong wind and plentiful land, such as west Texas or Colorado, wind
power
could be cheaper than fossil-fuel generation even without subsidies.”
Yes, it
“could” be—if the public policy and regulatory decisions keep driving
up the
price of electricity generated from traditional sources. But currently,
renewable
energy is clearly more expensive.
A
few weeks ago, I wrote about the
shenanigans the legislature went through in Rhode Island to push an
off-shore
wind farm—even though the Public Utility Commission declared that it
was
“commercially unreasonable.” That story made clear that renewable
electricity,
despite what proponents say, is more expensive. In short, earlier this
year,
Rhode Island residents were paying 9.4 cents per khw. However, due to a
drop in
natural gas prices, in March the Public Utility Commission approved a
26% rate
decrease, dropping rates from 9.4 cents per kwh to 6.9. By comparison,
the
contract for the wind-generated electricity started at 24.4 cents per
kwh and
includes a guaranteed 3.5% price increase bringing the wind-generated
electricity
to 47 cents per kwh in twenty years—making the wind-generated
electricity
roughly 4-8 times more expensive than the natural gas-fueled
electricity.
While
disposable income for most
Americans has shrunk, rules and regulations—not market forces—have
driven the
price of electricity up, increasing energy’s share of people’s
disposable
income by 12%.
Land
Use
As
Lisa Jackson proudly stated, “There
are states that are leading the way on solar or wind.” If she has her
way, and
utilities need to shut down their coal-fueled power plants and replace
them
with renewable facilities, we know the costs will be considerably
higher—which
some believe to be a worthwhile trade-off—but, what will that really
look like?
In
New Mexico, in order to meet the
state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard, the primary utility company, PNM,
is in
the process of installing five major solar arrays around the state.
Each of
these industrial solar parks occupy fifty acres and have a capacity
factor of
one megawatt—or enough electricity for 1200 “average” homes.
The
San Juan Generating Station, one
of the state’s coal-fueled power plants targeted by Lisa Jackson’s EPA,
consistently cranks out 1482 megawatts—or enough for 1.8 million
“average”
homes.
Simple
math and these real life scenarios,
tell us that in order to replace the one coal-fueled power plant (which
is
built right next to the coal mine that provides an abundant supply)
with the
planned industrial solar parks would require 1482 of the arrays—which
would
cover 74,100 acres.
A
similar comparison is available for
wind. The New Mexico Wind Energy Center provides wind-generated
electricity to
PNM through 136 wind turbines on 9600 acres—yielding about 50 megawatts
of
usable power to serve 60,875 homes. To replace the San Juan Generating
Station
with wind would cover, using the New Mexico Wind Energy Center model,
284,544
acres. However, using the industry average, replacing the San Juan
Generating
Station with wind turbines would occupy 509,808 acres.
As
noted in previous columns, environmentalists
are obstructing industrial wind and solar parks due to the massive land
use and
others fight the instillations due to viewscape pollution.
So
public policy and regulatory
decisions are making electricity more expensive while requiring massive
land
use and damaging habitat and degrading the viewscape. But there’s more.
Personal
Impacts
Colette
read an article on renewable
portfolio standards that I’d written earlier this year. Last week she
e-mailed
me to ask about my comment: “It is not that renewable energy is wrong.
There
are many cases where wind or solar are the best option.” Following her
name,
her signature included, “Resident living with the incessant twirling
and
swooshing from 24 industrial wind turbines.” I e-mailed her. In her
response
she said, “I took exception to your statement because I believe that in
the end
things like wind energy are wrong even for those small scale situations
where
someone wants the visceral satisfaction that they are doing ‘something’
toward
their energy usage.”
Colette
proceeded to tell me her story
of living with four wind turbines within about a half a mile from her
backdoor—and 24 within about two miles from her farm and home.
Back
in 2006, Colette, and other
farmers, were approached by a wind-power generation developer and
offered the
opportunity to “host” the industrial wind turbines. Many of the farmers
saw
wind as their “new crop to harvest.”
Before
signing the developer’s
contract, Colette had an attorney review it. She was shocked at the
restrictions
that would be placed on her own land should she sign the
contract—including
putting the long-term ownership of her farm in danger. She did more
research
and found myriad reasons to fight the industrial wind energy project.
She says,
“Unfortunately there were forces in local government that were prepared
for
opposition, and that had already paved the way for development,
regardless of
community reaction.”
Now,
with 24 wind turbines within a
few mile radius of her home, Collette says: “It’s not pretty living
with these
400-foot behemoths and there are many times the incessant swirling and
swooshing has me depressed and angry. The enjoyment of my home and
property has
been taken away. Other residents are suffering deeply with tinnitus,
ear pain,
migraines, and sleep disruption. Luckily my symptoms are not as severe
and,
other than the lack of sleep, I seem to be able to cope. Some neighbors
have
told me that they have resigned themselves to finding a way to live
with the
development because there is no hope of changing anything now that the
turbines
are up and running.”
The
personal impacts have been greater
than sleep disruption, tinnitus, or migraines. They are more than
viewscape
degradation or loss of enjoyment of one’s home and property. Reflecting
on the
multi-year battle, Colette says: it “completely shattered my faith in
government and the environmental movement.”
These
snapshots are representative of
what is going on throughout the western world. Colette is from Canada.
In the
European Union, according to the Financial Times, “energy bills have
become an
increasingly acrimonious political issue, and there are signs of
similar
tensions flaring in the US.”
The
Oliver Wyman report states, “While
the future outlook for electricity rates is largely dependent upon
public
policy and regulatory decisions, one fact is clear: substantial capital
investments are required by the nation’s utilities to modernize the
electric
grid and meet proposed environmental requirements.”
However,
unlike Colette’s neighbors,
we do not have to be resigned to finding ways to live with the current
public
policy and regulatory decisions as they are not yet fully up and
running.
Significant impacts on future consumer prices are being debated today.
In the
midst of an economic war, we should not be arbitrarily raising energy
costs. We
need to push “legislators and regulators to find constructive solutions
to keep
rates low for consumers—including deferring or modifying rules and
regulations
that have significant capital requirements.”
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