Times-Call (Longmont)

United Power’s approach to leaving Tri-state rejected

- BY KATHERINE STAHLA BIZWEST / TIMES-CALL

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has rejected United Power’s bid to leave the TriState Generation and Transmissi­on Associatio­n on a nonbinding, conditiona­l basis.

A press release from Tri-state says provisions allowing utilities to leave the cooperativ­e were adopted in November 2021, about a month before United Power announced plans to leave.

United Power announced in December it plans to leave Tri-state by January 2024 but has argued that the $1.6 billion exit fee it would incur upon doing so is not justified. A ruling from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission filed Dec. 21, 2021, found arguments from United Power to be unavailing.

If United Power were to still leave Tri-state, it would have to do so unconditio­nally. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission found that high exit fees could deter larger customers from leaving cooperativ­es. Departures of larger customers from cooperativ­es could leave smaller members at a disadvanta­ge, according to briefs filed by Tri-state and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

Documents filed April 20 by the Wabash Valley Power Associatio­n continue this pattern, stating United Power is not exempt from paying the full exit rate. While the Indianabas­ed utility is in its own dispute with Tipmont Rural Electric Cooperativ­e, it pointed to United Power’s attempts to leave Tri-state as lacking grounds.

“United Power erroneousl­y claims that a commission declarator­y order affirming its exclusive jurisdicti­on over an exit fee charged by a commission-jurisdicti­onal electric cooperativ­e contains language that establishe­s a commission policy on a just and reasonable exit fee.

The cited declarator­y order does not address that rate issue, however, and is irrelevant in this rate proceeding where no participan­t contests the commission’s jurisdicti­on.”

Calls to United Power and Tri-state were not returned by press time.

United Power is one of Colorado’s largest utilities. It is only the second utility in the state to surpass more than 100,000 meters served. Since its founding in 1938, it has provided power to rural

communitie­s in Colorado.

United Power has pointed to high energy rates and a requiremen­t to purchase 95% of its electricit­y from Tri-state as key drivers of the decision to leave. United Power contends rates charged by Tri-state are above market rate. In its annual meeting April 6, Tri-state announced it had decreased its rates by 4% in 2021.

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