CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 20, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MAY 20, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“PUC
KABUKI DANCE EXTENDS TO SAN ONOFRE, SAN BRUNO”
Kabuki Dance -- an
activity carried out in real life in a predictable or stylized fashion… refers
to an event that is designed to create the appearance of conflict or of an
uncertain outcome, when in fact the actors have worked together to determine
the outcome beforehand -- Merriam Webster Dictionary
For
many decades, the California Public Utilities Commission and the big companies
it regulates – Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison, Southern
California Gas and San Diego Gas & Electric have engaged in an elaborate
Kabuki dance every time any company wants to raise rates.
Each time, the companies name a figure
that’s preposterously high, then moan a little when the PUC knocks it back –
and the consumers end up paying steadily more and more, to the point where
California electric rates are the highest in the 48 contiguous states.
Now the Kabuki pattern has extended to
other forms of PUC business with those same companies, including the
commission’s entirely justified efforts to penalize PG&E for its negligent
(word employed by federal authorities who have indicted the firm) management of
natural gas pipelines and the efforts by Edison and SDG&E to have their
customers foot most of the bills for their blunders at the now-shuttered San
Onofre Nuclear Power Station.
As usual, the new Kabuki dances take
the form of utilities asking preposterous amounts. Also as usual, they will get
knocked back but, it now appears, not nearly as far as they should be. In both
cases, the companies should get no new money at all for handling disasters
they’ve created and trying to prevent new ones.
PG&E, for example, seeks billions
of dollars in new rates plus more money to upgrade its pipeline system, when it
has been dunning consumers since the 1950s for just such upgrades and
maintenance, while not carrying enough of it out. No one knows just where the
maintenance money went, or how much has not been spent as it should have been.
The obvious decision here should be to deny any PG&E rate increase until
the pipelines are up to snuff, as determined by an outside authority.
San Onofre, involving majority plant
owner Edison and its minority partner SDG&E, is a bit different. This plant
operated well until February 2012, when a tube leak caused the failure of
costly steam generators, eventually forcing one of California’s two nuclear
power plants into retirement.
Immediately, Edison and SDG&E
began buying replacement electricity, much of it from “peaker” plants nearby
that operate mostly at times of the greatest power use. The companies right
away charged their customers not only for the usual costs associated with
maintaining San Onofre and their guaranteed rate of profit on their investments
in it, but also for the replacement power.
So customers were paying twice for the
same power, all due to the mistakes of Edison (the plant’s manager) and its
supplier, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.
Edison is trying to get billions of
dollars back from Mitsubishi, which designed the faulty steam generators.
The utility has essentially asked $4.7
billion from its customers for retirement costs at San Onofre, the replacement
energy and continuing San Onofre costs. When Edison and SDG&E last month
agreed to take about one-fourth less, there were major headlines like this
incorrect one from the Los Angeles Times, “Customers would get $1.4 billion in
refunds in San Onofre deal.”
Not exactly. Customers looking for
such refunds on their monthly bills will be disappointed, for even Matthew
Freeman, attorney for the consumer group Toward Utility Rate Normalization, who
negotiated the agreement with the San Onofre partners, says funds returned to
consumers would come as reduced future rates, rather than cash.
“We started out this negotiation
saying the customers should not pay for replacement energy if they’re still
paying San Onofre operating costs,” he said. “That principle is preserved
here.” So Freeman and TURN think they got the best deal the PUC would ever
approve.
But Ray Lutz, head of the El
Cajon-based consumer group Citizens’ Oversight (not part of the negotiation)
says that leaves the utilities with what he calls “an outright theft of $3
billion.”
“Edison was imprudent, they made a big
design mistake and blew it with San Onofre,” he said. “The ratepayers should
not be paying for this.”
But they likely will, just as PG&E
customers figure to pay plenty for PG&E’s negligence. That’s what the
kabuki dance is about, and there are no signs it will end soon.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
No comments:
Post a Comment