CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 24, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“REMEMBER THE ENERGY CRUNCH? SAY NO TO REGIONAL ELECTRIC GRID”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 24, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“REMEMBER THE ENERGY CRUNCH? SAY NO TO REGIONAL ELECTRIC GRID”
Way
back in 1990, when Californians overwhelmingly voted to impose term limits on
state officials, critics warned about the loss of “institutional memory” the
move would inevitably bring with it.
This
summer, we may see just how much damage that can do. For there’s virtually no
one now serving in the California legislature who was there in 1998, when
previous legislators and then-Gov. Pete Wilson opted to deregulate the state’s
electric grid.
Their
action allowed any electric user to buy power from any seller. It encouraged
California’s three big privately-owned power companies to sell off older power
plants whose construction expenses had long ago been completely written off. It
allowed out-of-state players to manipulate the California’s electricity market
and led to the energy crunch of 2000 and 2001, complete with rolling blackouts,
frequent brownouts and eventual criminal convictions for executives of
companies like Texas-based Enron.
People
now holding office in Sacramento should remember all this, if only because
everyone there was at least six years old during the power crisis.
But
this summer, many are acting as if they don’t remember a thing. As if they have
no memory of the last time California allowed people in other states to tinker
with its electricity supplies.
That’s about the only
plausible explanation for the so-far steady progress through the Legislature of
a bill that would make this state part of a Western electricity grid with a
governing board whose makeup is yet to be determined.
Essentially, it could place
California’s power fate in the hands of people from Utah and Idaho who know
little about this state’s needs and wants. It could make a joke of California’s
own laws governing renewable energy, which dictate that a massive share of the
state’s energy must come from solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal or other
sources that can never be completely exhausted, as oil, coal and natural gas
can.
California
has avoided problems for the last 15 years largely because it has its own
agency overseeing the grid, the so-called Independent System Operator, run by
appointees of the governor, who would suffer political consequences for any
blunders they might commit.
Not so
the proposed new Western regional board, which would be appointed largely by
electric industry stakeholders. That’s like letting Enron or its modern
equivalent run the grid. The fox would run the henhouse.
But the
plan, known in the Legislature as AB 813, has strong backing from Gov. Jerry
Brown, whose term expires Dec. 31, meaning he can never suffer politically for
whatever it might produce.
It
passed the state Senate’s Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee on a
6-1 vote earlier this summer, with only Republican Andy Vidak of Hanford
dissenting.
One who
voted for the bill was Democratic Sen. Robert Hertzberg, a rare bird in
Sacramento who was around to see the ill effects of deregulation and therefore
should have known better. Hertzberg, speaker of the state Assembly during the
energy crunch, told a reporter “I generally like the notion of
regionalization,” noting that it gives California utilities a chance to sell
excess solar energy produced during the daytime into other states. That, some
suggest, could lead to lower power rates for Californians.
But
Hertzberg said the current bill doesn’t include enough assurances of protection
for this state’s clean energy policies, already threatened by the pro-coal,
pro-pollution policies of the Donald Trump administration, to whom the new
grid’s officers would ultimately be responsible.
Hertzberg
said he only voted for the bill in committee to give its author, Democrat Chris
Holden of Pasadena, a chance to fix it.
But
there is no sign Holden wants to do that.
And
there is also no answer in sight to the ultimate question every legislative
bill should answer before becoming law: Do we need this?
In the
case of a regional electric grid, we clearly don’t. We don’t need to get mixed
up with states like Utah that draw much of their electricity from coal. We have
excess power now, and that’s just fine, so why risk shortages if folks from
other states choose to send California-generated electricity elsewhere?
The
answer is there is no reason to do this, and it likely would not have gotten
this far if legislators had any sort of institutional memory.
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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
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
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