Los Angeles Times

PICKING UP THE TAB FOR WASTE

Utility ratepayers have borne the brunt of failed projects

- By Ivan Penn

Fifteen years after blackouts rolled through some California neighborho­ods, utility customers are still feeling the effects of post-energy-crisis regulatory changes that pushed the risk of costly projects from utility investors to ratepayers. This little-noticed change in how utility rates are set has had profound repercussi­ons for utility customers, leaving them on the hook for billions of dollars even when projects fail.

Southern California Edison spent $680 million to replace steam generators at the San Onofre nuclear plant. The generators proved faulty, leaking a small amount of radiation. Current cost to ratepayers for the botched project and plant closure: $3.3 billion.

Edison collected $31.9 million for an upgrade at the Mohave Generating Station, which closed at the end of 2005 after the Nevada coal-burning facility was found in violation of the Clean Air Act. Total customer bill for upgrade and closure: $122 million.

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. scrapped a plan to build a 1,000mile transmissi­on line to Canada after partners PacifiCorp and others pulled out. Edison abandoned a separate line in Arizona after failing to get a permit. Total cost to ratepayers for the projects, which were dropped in 2011: $20 million.

Now, in the aftermath of a natural gas leak near Porter Ranch, Southern California Gas Co. customers might be required to pay for in-progress upgrades to the Aliso Canyon natural gas field even if the facility never reopens. Potential cost: $200 million or more.

“Shifting the costs of bad bets and stupid bets is akin to stealing,” said Loretta Lynch, an outspoken former president of the California Public Utilities Commission. Putting the risk on consumers, she said, “has allowed the utilities to spend like drunken sailors.”

Before the 2001 blackouts, a dec-

ades-old regulatory policy known as “used and useful” meant that customers wouldn’t bear financial responsibi­lity for new utility projects until they were benefiting from them. Regulators vetted completed projects before utilities could collect money from customers to ensure that the investment­s in power plants, transmissi­on lines and other projects were needed and being used.

Then in 2002, state lawmakers tweaked the language to remove that historic accountabi­lity to protect utilities’ financial health. As a result, the companies could collect money from customers with only a cursory preliminar­y review.

Roderick Wright was a Democratic assemblyma­n from Los Angeles when he wrote the legislatio­n that changed regulatory policy. Wright said he was motivated by the state’s energy crisis, when electricit­y prices soared through a combinatio­n of power shortages and market manipulati­on, pushing Edison and PG&E into technical insolvency and making them unable to borrow money to build capital projects.

The law tells utilities and Wall Street, “‘If you make this investment, Southern California Gas Co. or Edison, we will make sure you get your money back,’ ” Wright said in a recent interview. “It put some level of certainty back into the marketplac­e so that they were creditwort­hy.”

New projects are a way for utilities to bolster their revenue because they collect as much as 11% of a project’s cost. That’s the state’s way of ensuring vital services such as electricit­y and natural gas are available when customers need them.

“They have to keep feeding the beast to make their profit,” said Lynch, the former utility commission­er.

The changes in the law contribute­d to a building boom. Over time, however, the altered approach has led to weaker consumer protection, said San Diego lawyer Michael Aguirre, a longtime critic of the utilities and how they charge their customers.

Now, there is little accountabi­lity — even when projects fail, Aguirre said.

“Whatever the utilities want, the CPUC will make sure they will get from the ratepayers,” said Aguirre, a former San Diego city attorney. “It’s resulting in billions of dollars in cost for what is not used or useful to utility customers.”

PUC Commission­er Mike Florio raised concern about abandoning the “used and useful” principle in an April 2013 vote that gave deference to a utility over ratepayers in a dispute over a San Clemente water project.

“The basic reasoning behind the used and useful principle is that ratepayers should only pay for [a] utility plant that is actually benefiting them,” Florio wrote in his dissent.

In a recent interview, Florio said determinin­g how costs are divvied between ratepayers and shareholde­rs is a complex decision shaped by politics, regulators and the energy issues of the day.

PUC President Michael Picker, who joined the agency two years ago, said that determinin­g who pays — especially when projects go wrong — is a balancing act.

“You have to kind of decide it on the facts,” said Picker, adding that because of his limited tenure he doesn’t know all the history. “I will confess that I tend to rely on staff legal analysis.”

State and federal policies are designed to look at the big picture, said Maureen Brown, an Edison spokeswoma­n, adding that customers have long shouldered various costs of developing, maintainin­g and shutting down parts of the electric grid.

“Shutdown and decommissi­oning costs,” Brown said, “are a necessary component of generating plant operations and appropriat­ely paid for in rates by customers who benefited from the plant’s generation prior to shutdown.”

But what about when a project never materializ­es, a plant closes prematurel­y or an existing facility fails to meet standards?

That’s where utilities across the country have learned to hedge their bets.

States including Florida, Georgia and South Carolina have passed legislatio­n to allow utilities to charge their customers in advance for projects. Supporters of the policy said paying as the utility incurred expenses would save consumers money in the long run by reducing their finance charges — essentiall­y using customers’ pocketbook­s as collateral on their loans.

But for consumers, the practice has had financiall­y disastrous consequenc­es.

In Florida, a subsidiary of Duke Energy was able to charge its customers in advance for upgrades at an existing nuclear plant and for a proposed nuclear facility. Both projects failed, forcing the 2013 permanent closure of the Crystal River nuclear plant 70 miles north of Tampa, Fla., and costing Florida ratepayers more than $3 billion.

California’s similar practice has been too costly for utility ratepayers, said Matthew Freedman, an attorney for the Utility Reform Network, an advocacy organizati­on that represents consumers before the commission.

“We are frustrated with the historic treatment of utility investment­s in facilities that prematurel­y shut down,” Freedman said. “The Legislatur­e should modify state law to require that utility shareholde­rs assume their fair share of risks.”

Without that consumer protection, utilities are allowed to retain whatever money they can when there are problems.

Edison kept the $680 million it was given preapprova­l to collect for San Onofre’s failed steam generators in 2010 and 2011, said Terrie Prosper, a PUC spokeswoma­n, “as the plant was used and useful at that time.” But the project’s usefulness didn’t last long: Even after the generators proved faulty, no reviews were conducted into what went wrong. The commission ultimately approved a deal, which is now being reexamined, that forced ratepayers to shoulder $3.3 billion for closing the plant and purchasing replacemen­t power; shareholde­rs absorbed $1.4 billion of the costs.

Aguirre and Lynch fear the PUC may follow a similar path with Aliso Canyon if it closes prematurel­y.

Just as with the San Onofre nuclear plant, the commission approved the nearly $201-million upgrade to replace old compressor­s at the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility with no intention of an after-the-fact review — unless the costs exceeded projection­s.

By the end of 2015, the commission said, Southern California Gas had spent $162 million on the upgrade.

With nearly $201 million on the line, the stakes are high to return Aliso Canyon to service.

State leaders continue to weigh the future of the plant and energy agencies recently warned of the potential for blackouts without the facility’s natural gas. The utility says it has not determined the cost of closing the storage facility.

Sen. Fran Pavley (DAgoura Hills) has said twothirds of the Porter Ranch residents want to see Aliso Canyon closed for good. PUC chief Picker said he is working to keep the gas field open to ensure electricit­y and natural gas reliabilit­y.

Melissa Bailey, a spokeswoma­n for Sempra Energy, the parent company of Southern California Gas, said no money for the upgrade has been collected from the utility’s customers to date.

“The project must be deemed ‘used and useful for utility service’ prior to requesting authorizat­ion in rates,” Bailey said.

But Lynch said that’s just semantics: Based on the commission’s approval, Southern California Gas arguably can start collecting the $200.9 million whenever it wants.

 ?? Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times ?? $20 million PG&E and Edison transmissi­on lines
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times $20 million PG&E and Edison transmissi­on lines
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? $200 million Aliso Canyon natural gas f ield
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times $200 million Aliso Canyon natural gas f ield
 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? $680 million San Onofre nuclear plant
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times $680 million San Onofre nuclear plant
 ?? Southern California Edison ?? $31.9 million Mohave Generating Station
Southern California Edison $31.9 million Mohave Generating Station
 ?? Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times ?? A REPLACEMEN­T steam generator is transporte­d to the San Onofre nuclear plant in 2009. The replacemen­ts proved faulty. The current cost to ratepayers for the botched project and plant closure is $3.3 billion.
Don Bartletti Los Angeles Times A REPLACEMEN­T steam generator is transporte­d to the San Onofre nuclear plant in 2009. The replacemen­ts proved faulty. The current cost to ratepayers for the botched project and plant closure is $3.3 billion.
 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? IN 2002, a state policy that had kept customers from bearing financial responsibi­lity for new utility projects until they were benefiting from them was changed. Above, the site of a relief well at the Aliso Canyon facility.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times IN 2002, a state policy that had kept customers from bearing financial responsibi­lity for new utility projects until they were benefiting from them was changed. Above, the site of a relief well at the Aliso Canyon facility.

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