CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“BLACKOUT BLACKMAIL EXPOSED AS POWER STAYS ON”
Watch out, warned three of
California’s most powerful – and most ethically shaky – state agencies in late
April and again in August. If the notoriously leaky Aliso Canyon natural gas
storage field in northern Los Angeles were not reopened quickly, California
would face the strong possibility of blackouts during the summer.
The reasoning of the state report went
this way: When electricity use peaks during the heat waves of summer and early
autumn, power plants fueled by natural gas might not be able to operate without
fuel from Aliso. Not coincidentally, that report was co-authored by the
Southern California Gas Co., which has the most to gain from reopening its
flawed field above the Porter Ranch area of the San Fernando Valley.
Every major public official went for
this threat. That included Gov. Jerry Brown’s administration, Los Angeles Mayor
Eric Garcetti and many others.
But power plants never shut down this
summer and there’s virtually no chance they will this fall, either.
It should have been obvious
immediately to all that the threat was a bunch of hooey. For the highest gas
use of the last 10 years in the region served by Aliso Canyon came not in any summer,
but in the winter of 2008, when demand in Southern California reached 4.9
billion cubic feet per day (bcfd). Even that quantity was well below the 5.7
bcfd available at all times from incoming pipelines and other storage fields in
the region.
Aliso Canyon, then, is not really
needed in summer or fall for anything but feeding the bottom line of SoCalGas
and its parent company, Sempra Energy.
Meanwhile, the frequent questionable
actions of the April study’s other authors, the state Public Utilities
Commission, the California Energy Commission and the state Division of Oil, Gas
and Geothermal Resources have been thoroughly documented here and elsewhere.
The first acid test for their threat
came during an unusually warm June in Southern California. On June 20, the
temperature in the Los Angeles Basin hit 101 degrees, 22 degrees above normal
for the date, reports the AccuWeather service. Aliso Canyon was not in
operation, but there were nevertheless no gas service curtailments. No backup
fuel was used by either Southern California Edison Co. or the Los Angeles
Department of Water & Power, despite record-level electricity demand.
The same for the heat wave of late
July and early August, when deliveries by SoCalGas, reported on its website,
never reached even 4 bcfd, far below the company’s capacity without Aliso. (For
actual figures, see https://scgenvoy.sempra.com/index.html#nav=/Public/ViewExternalDailyOperations.getDailyOperation%3FFileName%3D%26Class%3D%26estimateDate%3D07%252F30%252F2016%26hiddenEstimateDate%3D08%252F03%252F2016%26rand%3D149).
Edison had its second-highest one-hour
peak load ever between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. June 20 at 23,564 megawatts, while DWP
hit 6,080 megawatts, the highest DWP demand ever in June, and just under its
all-time record.
But there were no blackouts and no
media even bothered to report on the ultra-high electricity use, which itself
was no oddity on a hot day.
“I do not expect we will see higher
demand anytime this fall than what was registered on June 20, and there were no
problems then,” said William Powers, whose Powers Engineering firm has been
instrumental in defending consumer interests, including offering testimony that
was a key factor in preventing California from becoming dependent on hyper-expensive
imports of liquefied natural gas.
There was, then, never a real possibility
of a blackout. This makes the threatening state report little more than bald
blackmail, designed to panic consumers so they would acquiesce in reopening
Aliso Canyon. Only after it is reopened can SoCalGas begin to dun its customers
for an expansion of that field which was routinely approved by the PUC before Aliso’s
months-long leak began last fall.
The sad part of all this is not merely
that the Brown Administration has been caught in a lie and a new instance of
favoring large utility companies over their customers.
What’s truly unfortunate is the loss
of trust for both government and those large, vitally needed and important investor-owned
utilities that comes when a threat like this turns out to be bogus. For now
that it’s clear this warning was worth less than the paper it was printed on,
who would believe any other threat issued by the same agencies, even if the
next one should be genuine?
-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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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, go to www.californiafocus.net
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