Albuquerque Journal

PNM/Avangrid merger under heavy fire at PRC

Three commission­ers oppose deal, but final decision still pending

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

At least three of the five elected members of the state Public Regulation Commission said they oppose the proposed merger between PNM Resources and Connecticu­t-based energy giant Avangrid during an open public meeting Wednesday.

Commission­ers didn’t vote on the deal, postponing a final decision until at least next week. But during the meeting, PRC Chairman Stephen Fischmann and two other commission­ers — Cynthia Hall and Theresa Becenti Aguilar — said they agree with PRC Hearing Examiner Ashley Schannauer’s recommenda­tion to reject the merger.

If the commission approves the deal, Avangrid would acquire PNM Resources and its two utility subsidiari­es — Public Service Company of New Mexico and Texas-New Mexico Power — in an all-cash transactio­n valued at $4.3 billion.

But Schannauer — who oversaw eight months of evidencega­thering, plus two weeks of public hearings in August with parties in the case — released a “recommende­d decision” on Nov. 1 that said the potential harm outweighs the public benefits of the deal.

On Wednesday, he reiterated that position in a lengthy online presentati­on to the commission.

“I stand by that,” Schannauer told commission­ers. “I recommend that the merger not be approved.”

Schannauer says Avangrid and its parent firm, Iberdrola, S.A., have demonstrat­ed a clear tendency to put corporate profit over the interests of consumers through consistent­ly “poor performanc­e” in Avangrid’s management of eight electric and gas utilities it operates in northeaste­rn states.

He cited questionab­le busi

ness behavior, including an ongoing criminal investigat­ion of some Iberdrola executives in Spain, plus Iberdrola and Avangrid imposition of business decisions on their northeaste­rn utilities that run counter to customer interests.

PNM ratepayers could face similar problems if the merger is approved, and the PRC could have difficulty effectivel­y regulating PNM post-merger, Schannauer said.

Those concerns were reinforced in the PRC hearing process, he added, during which Avangrid and Iberdrola resisted compliance with commission rules and regulation­s.

The presentati­on provoked harsh reactions from Fishmann, who said corporate control by Avangrid and Iberdrola over PNM could lead to serious regulatory problems for the PRC. In particular, he questioned the companies’ “unethical” behavior, and the possibilit­y that Avangrid and its subsidiari­es could use control of PNM to monopolize energy developmen­t in New Mexico, squeezing out needed competitio­n as the state works to develop renewable resources.

“There seems to be built into the merger huge opportunit­ies for conflicts of interest through intracompa­ny transactio­ns with Avangrid affiliates that we’ll have a hard time regulating,” Fischmann said. “(Their) unethical behavior makes me concerned that the structure of Avangrid and Iberdrola is antithetic­al to promoting the public interest.”

He said the proposed benefits of the merger — which include more than $300 million in rate relief for PNM customers and economic developmen­t programs promised by Avangrid — do little to offset the potential harm if the deal is approved.

“All that is fool’s gold sitting in a pond of quicksand if we can’t address the baseline issues,” Fischmann said.

Avangrid negotiated those benefits with about two-thirds of the 24 parties involved in the case. But Fischmann said the negotiatin­g parties “kind of ignored the fundamenta­ls to get … their little piece of fool’s gold.”

The concession­s reflect “special deals” that favor individual interests, he said.

“Add it all up and it doesn’t equal public interest,” Fischmann said.

Hall said there seems little possibilit­y for correcting the structural problems of the merger.

“They will have a lot of opportunit­y for selfdealin­g,” Hall said. “… All these things add up to a big problem. I don’t see this merger as a good thing for our state.”

Becenti-Aguilar said she too is opposed, given all the concerns raised by the hearing examiner.

Still, the commission will consider more input from parties in the case at its next open public meeting Wednesday, Dec. 8, including filings by merger supporters in response to Schannauer’s recommende­d decision.

Of the 24 organizati­ons involved, 23 now either directly support the merger or don’t oppose it.

PNM said it is disappoint­ed in Schannauer’s “narrow view” presented to the commission.

“We hope the commission looks at all of the opinions of the parties, and not simply a single point of view,” PNM spokesman Ray Sandoval told the Journal in an email.

“We look forward to having both sides of the merger discussed as the commission continues its deliberati­ons. We trust our regulatory system, and we are hopeful that when all the facts are considered, the merger benefits and opportunit­ies will be realized for all New Mexicans.”

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