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The
SCC was right to block Dominion
by
Paula C. Squires
On
the regulatory front, sometimes the rights of everyday
consumers are actually protected. That's what occurred
when the State Corporation Commission denied a plan
in December that would have caused the state to lose
control over much of the power supply generated in Virginia.
Dominion
Virginia Power, the state's largest utility backed by
powerful lobbyists, wanted to transfer $6.7 billion
worth of power plants to a legally separate subsidiary
of its parent company, Dominion. The move would have
switched oversight for sales from the plants from the
SCC, charged with protecting Virginia consumers, to
federal bureaucrats in Washington. The utility pushed
hard for the change - a key step in its drive to realize
huge, money-saving efficiencies that it needs to become
a nationally competitive player in the wholesale electricity
market. Approval of this new set up would have paved
the way for Dominion to consolidate all of its generation
assets into a wholly owned subsidiary, Dominion Generation.
Then, it could run a single trading floor for electricity
sales, rather than multiple floors, saving more than
$6 million a year.
But
while the company seeks to transfer its Virginia generating
assets - paid for primarily by Virginia customers -
the utility didn't want to be encumbered by the $3.8
billion in debt on the assets, at least not initially.
Debt restructuring would have come later after the transfer
was made.
Rejecting
the plan, the commission told Dominion that the utility
was asking for too much, too soon in Virginia's five-year
transition to a fully deregulated market for retail
electric competition. The agency worried that while
the plan might benefit Dominion, it doesn't serve the
public interest or ensure consumer protections such
as capped rates included in Virginia's electric restructuring
law. SCC judges questioned the impact on rates if control
over power plant sales moved to the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission. They slammed Dominion's plan because, "It
imparts unacceptable risks on Virginia citizens and
businesses that depend on Virginia Power to supply the
power for vital commercial, industrial and domestic
needs."
One
major problem is that the deregulated market has just
been born. In Virginia, it began Jan. 1. At present,
there is no competitor in place who could serve as a
reliable substitute for electricity from Dominion Virginia
Power, which supplies 2 million customers. Nor is there
a regional transmission organization in place to ensure
that power can be transmitted at fair prices throughout
the commonwealth. With such big pieces of the puzzle
missing, the commission rightfully decided to go slow.
It didn't rule out legal separation when deregulation
is further down the road.
Dominion's
plan was opposed by the SCC staff, the Virginia Attorney
General's consumer counsel, consumer groups and potential
power suppliers. One consumer advocate pointed out that
not transferring some $3 billion in debt along with
the power plants would be a great deal for a utility
and a bad deal for consumers. Mark Cooper, director
of research for the Consumer Federation of America who
testified against Dominion's plan last fall, says, "If
you haven't carried any costs with you, then everything
the marketplace does is profit for you. It's pure gravy
... The commission had the good sense to tell these
guys to take a hike."
It
appears Dominion plans an end run around the SCC by
appealing to the General Assembly. Before the ink was
dry on December's order, the company jumped on a suggestion
from one commissioner that it get clearer direction
from the legislature on such a major policy change as
ceding over control of the state's power plants to the
federal government. Company lawyers and lobbyists asked
a legislative subcommittee last month to sanction a
group of the interested stakeholders, about 17 different
parties, to see if they can work out a "consensus"
on how legislation might be tweaked to allow for legal
separation. But isn't it a little too soon to be revisiting
the issue? The commission spent nine days during public
hearings last fall listening to testimony from 27 people,
including some of the top officers of Dominion Virginia
Power, before making up its mind. Shouldn't 2,000 pages
of testimony count for something?
For
now, the SCC ruling shows just how much energy deregulation
has been rethought, especially since the California
power debacles and the collapse of once-mighty Enron
Corp., the world's largest energy trader. The Houston-based
company filed for bankruptcy and is the subject of a
government investigation into dubious accounting practices.
As disasters like Enron point out, deregulation needs
more time. So far, only 12 competitive suppliers have
received a license to compete in Virginia. If they can
have enough time to develop their pieces of the market,
then perhaps real deregulation can occur without costly
pitfalls.
Return to Virginia Business - February 2002
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