The Commercial Appeal

PSC adopts energy rules

Miss. utilities to devise plans for efficiency

- By Jeff Amy Associated Press

JACKSON — Mississipp­i electric and natural gas utilities will soon be paying for their customers to cut energy use.

The state Public Service Commission voted unanimousl­y Thursday to adopt energy-efficiency rules requiring all gas and electric companies with more than 25,000 customers to begin offering programs within six months.

Commission­ers say efficiency will save customers money by reducing the amount of power used, and will cut the need for new power plants in the future. Central District Commission­er Lynn Posey said the rules “will ensure utilities are educating their customers about how they can control some elements of their utility bills.”

Quick start plans would be filed within six months. They could include energy audits, tuning customer heating and air conditioni­ng systems, appliance and lighting rebates, weatherizi­ng homes, and paying builders to make new homes and commercial structures more efficient.

Within three years, utilities would have to file more comprehens­ive plans. They would be allowed to recover the costs of implementi­ng those plans by raising rates on all customers.

“We’ve supported the commission’s efforts throughout this process, and have already begun work in this area in anticipati­on of the commission’s rules,” Mara Hartman, spokeswoma­n for Entergy Mississipp­i, wrote in an e-mail. The company had petitioned for a delay of several months to allow for planning.

Mississipp­i ranked last on a scorecard of states earlier this year by the American Council on an Energy Efficient Economy. The council cited the lack of PSC policies and reports showing little spending on conservati­on and little energy saved. The Consortium for Energy Efficiency and Tennessee Valley Authority reported that the 2010 electric utility energy efficiency program’s budgets were $12.5 million. No natural gas efficiency programs were listed in Mississipp­i.

“This is a big move to move us off the bottom, and it’s going to create jobs,” said Northern District Commission­er Brandon Presley.

Karen Bishop, director of the energy and natural resources division at the Mississipp­i Developmen­t Authority, said using less energy could make room for the state to add more energy users.

“You have capacity to add more businesses, more plants,” she said. “We see this as an avenue for economic growth.”

Mississipp­i Power Co. had opposed the rules, saying it was unfair because bills could rise for customers who don’t make their homes or businesses more efficient.

“We respect the decision of the PSC and look forward to working with them to further promote energy efficiency measures for our customers,” Keith Guillot, a spokesman for the unit of Atlantabas­ed Southern Co., wrote in an e-mail.

An economic impact study says the proposals could cost utilities $90 million in the first year, in addition to $70 million that customers would spend after rebates.

But positives include reducing demand by 93 megawatts and cutting the need for 800 megawatts of new generation, almost the size of two new natural gas-fired power plants statewide.

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