Porterville Recorder

State likely dodges a new energy crunch

- Thomas ELIAS Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. For more Elias columns, visit www.california­focus.net.

The only time California ceded control of its power supply to out-of-state interests, it produced utter disaster: an electricit­y crunch that saw blackouts and brownouts proliferat­e in 2000 and 2001, while the fortunes and reputation­s of every politician involved nosedived.

A very similar, repeat disaster is what Gov. Jerry Brown risked this fall, pushing a last-minute legislativ­e bill aiming to put California’s electric grid under the control of a Western regional agency. The new outfit could have been controlled either by five much smaller states or by the Berkshire Hathaway investment firm of Omaha-based Warren Buffett, which in recent years has bought up many Western power plants, transmissi­on lines and moderate-sized electric utilities.

Not to worry, said Brown and his top aides. This was going to be hunky dory. “The goal of regionaliz­ing the grid,” Brown press secretary Evan Westrup told a reporter, “is to lower consumer costs and greenhouse gas emissions and improve electricit­y reliabilit­y and renewable energy.” It’s been hashed out for years, he said, even though the plan was pushed with minimum legal notice during the 2017 Legislativ­e session’s final

week. In short, the Brown folks said, “Trust us.” It’s a good thing not many California­ns did.

The last time California­ns took the word of their governor on something like this came in 1998, when then-gov. Pete Wilson claimed virtually all power customers would save money and enjoy more reliabilit­y if electricit­y were deregulate­d and out-of-state companies allowed to buy up landmark power plants. These belonged for decades to California utilities like Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric.

The utilities loved deregulati­on, just like they do Brown’s regional grid idea: Back then, their plants were too old to be counted any longer among capital investment­s on which their rates and profits are largely based. Instead of nothing, they suddenly could get big money by selling most of these.

So California deregulate­d, and the new owners of generating plants here began selling some power out of state. It was quickly turned around at highly inflated prices and sent back to California in largely-bogus paper transactio­ns that raised prices and created shortages without moving a single electron.

The same sort of manipulati­on was possible under the new Brown plan, carried in the Legislatur­e by Democratic Assemblyma­n Chris Holden of Pasadena. Look out: This plan will probably be back next year. The idea is to sell surplus California solar energy out of state, while bringing in wind power from places like Wyoming. The problem with these putative deals is that they most likely can be managed just like deregulati­on-era deals. Those transactio­ns brought criminal conviction­s against executives of firms like Enron, the Williams Companies and others which sometimes boasted of “robbing grandma” in California. It’s a mystery why a self-styled student of history like Brown believes history can’t repeat itself. Have folks become less greedy?

Then there are California’s high environmen­tal goals: 50 percent of the state’s power must come from renewable sources by 2030 and even more by 2050. No one knows if the planned new setup could have subverted these goals.

But the U.S. Supreme Court decreed that multi-state regional energy agreements fall under the aegis of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. So FERC — completely impotent during the California energy crunch and now controlled by the anti-environmen­talist President Trump — could wind up managing California power and muting its emphasis on wind, solar, hydroelect­ric and geothermal energy, all renewable sources.

Critics worried that Wyoming, America’s No. 1 producer of carbon-rich coal, could get authority over significan­t amounts of energy used in California. Wyoming Gov. Matt Mead made it clear last year that he’s not concerned about California priorities.

“Wyoming has a different perspectiv­e than California does,” he told a reporter.

The last time California tinkered so significan­tly with its energy supply, it contribute­d to the destructio­n of Wilson’s reputation and helped lead to the recall of ex-gov. Gray Davis, who proved unable to contend with what he termed “out of state buccaneers” bilking California­ns for billions of dollars.

It remains a mystery why Brown risked a repeat, but he did and might again soon, with both him and the rest of California bailed out for now only by very loud protests.

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