Los Angeles Times

Utilities near settlement

A new deal is all but formalized in 2014 suit over closed nuclear plant, attorney says.

- By Jeff McDonald jeff.mcdonald @sduniontri­bune.com McDonald writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

More than three years after state regulators permitted Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric to start charging consumers billions of dollars for the failure of the San Onofre nuclear plant, utility executives and consumer advocates appear to have settled a long-running dispute over premature-closure costs.

In a joint filing to the California Public Utilities Commission, key parties alerted regulators that mediation efforts had paid off and a notice of settlement conference would follow soon.

Parties that signed off on the notice included Edison, SDG&E, the Utility Reform Network, the Alliance for Nuclear Responsibi­lity, Citizens Oversight and the utilities commission’s Office of Ratepayer Advocates.

Holding a settlement conference is the last step before announcing terms of a deal. The meetings allow other interested parties to weigh in on a proposal before it is submitted to the commission for approval.

Similar negotiatio­ns between Edison and TURN led to an agreement in 2014 that was approved by regulators later that year. But other groups complained they were shut out of the discussion­s, and in 2015, it was disclosed that a framework for the deal had been outlined at an undisclose­d meeting in Warsaw in 2013.

San Diego attorney Michael Aguirre, who represents ratepayer Ruth Henricks and the Citizens Oversight advocacy group, sued the commission over its 2014 vote to allow the utilities to charge customers $3.3 billion of the $4.7 billion in costs related to the San Onofre plant closure.

He said a new deal is all but formalized.

“I’m looking forward to the time to discuss in greater detail the terms and conditions of the settlement,” Aguirre said.

Edison issued a brief statement saying it was among several parties to reach a preliminar­y agreement in the San Onofre case.

“Southern California Edison, along with other parties in the San Onofre nuclear plant closure proceeding, today advised a California Public Utilities Commission administra­tive law judge of their intent to serve notice of a settlement conference within 15 days,” spokeswoma­n Maureen Brown wrote in an email Wednesday.

The company also alerted investors to the developmen­t through a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing, although the five-page document warns shareholde­rs that a decision is not final.

It is not clear how the settlement might affect a criminal investigat­ion of the utilities commission, which has been under scrutiny by the attorney general’s office for its handling of the San Onofre plant failure and other proceeding­s. Back-channel dealings between regulators and utility executives are under review.

Also unclear is the agreement’s effect on a series of lawsuits Aguirre filed as a result of the San Onofre case, including a review by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals and a state lawsuit seeking access to scores of San Onofre-related emails to and from the governor’s office.

The conceptual agreement comes after earlier mediation efforts failed to secure a deal last summer.

Even though neither side would discuss terms, the tentative deal likely involves suspending millions of dollars Edison and SDG&E have been charging customers every month under the 2014 commission decision.

The nuclear plant north of Oceanside leaked a small amount of radiation in January 2012, months after a steam generator replacemen­t project was supposed to add decades to the life of the facility.

The settlement adopted by commission­ers in 2014 effectivel­y ended an investigat­ion into what caused the plant breakdown. Last year, amid a looming federal court review and continuing criticism, the commission agreed to reconsider the division of costs.

According to Edison, the utility already recovered more than $1.1 billion from ratepayers for the San Onofre breakdown.

SDG&E, which owns 20% of the shuttered nuclear plant, collected a proportion­ate amount of money from its customers.

Aguirre has been trying to stop those charges for years, through the commission, the courts and mediation.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? UTILITY CUSTOMERS were put on the hook for billions of dollars in costs after the San Onofre nuclear plant, pictured in May, was closed prematurel­y. Parties in a 2014 lawsuit say they will soon finalize a new deal.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times UTILITY CUSTOMERS were put on the hook for billions of dollars in costs after the San Onofre nuclear plant, pictured in May, was closed prematurel­y. Parties in a 2014 lawsuit say they will soon finalize a new deal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States