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News
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Public
Power Urges Congress to Fix the Grid, Both Physically and
Institutionally
WASHINGTON,
D.C., Oct. 10, 2001 - Getting transmission "right"
is the key to building an effective, competitive wholesale
market, and expansion of the grid is critical to making the
interstate transmission system more robust and efficient,
FMPA General Manager and CEO Roger Fontes said today before
a House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Energy and Air
Quality hearing on electricity transmission issues.
"It
is widely recognized that our current transmission system
is weak and highly constrained," said Fontes, speaking
on behalf of the American Public Power Association, the national
service organization representing the nation's more than 2,000
community and state-owned electric utilities. "The weaknesses
of the grid not only threaten reliability, they undermine
our ability to achieve robust competition. Competitive wholesale
markets simply cannot work unless numerous competitors are
able to deliver their product to buyers."
Fontes
offered subcommittee members four recommendations to get transmission
"right":
Reform
the balkanized, state-by-state transmission process, including
efforts that would allow for federal eminent domain to be
used after appropriate consultation and cooperation with state
and local governments; Stop looking to entities that own both
generation and transmission to build new transmission facilities,
and steer clear of incentive pricing, which will unnecessarily
increase electricity costs for consumers;
Grant the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) authority
to establish large, rationally-scoped and truly independent
Regional Transmission Organizations with full authority to
plan and expand the regional transmission system; and Ensure
that RTOs fully compensate all transmission owners for their
investment in transmission facilities turned over to the RTOs.
RTOs should be specifically authorized in legislation to build
transmission or bid out passive ownership, Fontes advised
the subcommittee. Currently, many of those being formed are
not permitted to construct transmission lines themselves,
which gives tremendous leverage to existing vertically-integrated
transmission owners to build while seeking rate incentives
to do so.
APPA supports the North American Electric Reliability Council's
consensus proposal and concurs with NERC's suggestions to
change Title III, Section 301, of Subcommittee Chairman Joe
Barton's draft bill in order to explicitly require electric
utilities to comply with reliability standards and practices,
Fontes said.
On other
issues, Fontes emphasized APPA support for:
The principle of local control, while recognizing that some
limited jurisdiction over public power transmission facilities
would be acceptable, such as that contemplated in Chairman
Barton's restructuring bill (H.R. 2944) from the 106th Congress.
Dubbed "FERC-lite," this concept would extend partial
FERC jurisdiction to public, cooperative and federal utilities
with transmission facilities interconnected to the national
grid to ensure comparability of service. FERC would not be
given transmission rate-setting authority for these transmitting
utilities, but would determine only whether rates to others
are comparable to those utilities charge themselves, remanding
the issue back to the utilities if deemed necessary. However,
APPA said it could not support the heavy regulation proposed
by Rep. Barton in his draft bill that would allow FERC authority
to order refunds by public power systems.
FERC authority to establish and require public utility (investor-owned
utility) participation in strong, truly independent RTOs,
as well as accommodating the unique characteristics and legal
requirements of public power to ensure public power's participation
is not inconsistent with state laws and constitutional requirement,
or bond covenants. FERC authority to order public power systems
to join an RTO should be limited to situations in which FERC
finds a utility has engaged in undue discrimination in the
provision of transmission service or abused its control, or
that the FERC open access transmission tariff will not remedy
the problem. Then, FERC could require the public power utility
to surrender control of its transmission to an independent
RTO that meets FERC RTO criteria, Fontes suggested.
To view
the full testimony click here.
To view
the summary of the testimony click here.
To
see a photo, click here.
FMPA
Contact:
Mark McCain
Public Relations/Public Affairs Manager
(407) 355-7767

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