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Rising
Fuel Prices Cause Wholesale Electric Rate Increase
ORLANDO,
Fla., Jan. 30, 2001 – Faced with rising prices for oil
and gas, the Florida Municipal Power Agency (FMPA) approved
a rate increase Jan. 26 that will affect electric customers
in 13 Florida cities. The cities are Bushnell, Clewiston,
Fort Meade, Fort Pierce, Green Cove Springs, Havana, Jacksonville
Beach, Key West, Leesburg, Newberry, Ocala, Starke and Vero
Beach.
The
price of natural gas has increased nearly 300 percent above
where it was a year ago. In January 2000, FMPA paid approximately
$2.39 per million British thermal units (a standard unit of
measurement for natural gas). In January 2001, the price had
risen to $9.25.
FMPA
serves the wholesale power needs of 13 municipally owned electric
utilities in Florida. FMPA is a nonprofit organization formed
by the utilities themselves in an effort to minimize power
costs through joint operations.
The
members of FMPA voted Jan. 26 to increase the wholesale rate
they charge for fuel (the energy rate) from 3.05 cents per
kilowatt-hour to 3.85 cents effective Feb. 1. For the average
city that purchases 45 million kilowatt-hours per month, the
total price of wholesale power for a typical month will increase
from approximately $2.1 million to $2.4 million.
Chances
are that in most cities the wholesale price increase will
result in increased retail costs. How much and when this might
impact the bills of retail customers in each city is undeterminable
by FMPA.
“FMPA
has worked hard to hold costs steady,” said Claude L’Engle,
FMPA General Manager and CEO. “For example, we’ve
diversified our fuel usage, so that some of our power comes
from plants fueled by natural gas, some power comes from coal-fired
plants, some comes from oil-fired plants, and some comes from
nuclear plants. Since FMPA began serving the cities in 1986,
our wholesale power costs have remained stable. And in that
time, we saved the cities millions of dollars compared to
regional competitors.
“It’s
disappointing to incur these extraordinary costs. It’s
not just FMPA that’s being affected, though. Utilities
around Florida and throughout the nation are raising rates
to compensate for increased costs,” L’Engle said.
“Fuel
prices have risen dramatically and remained at such a high
level, beyond what energy analysts had predicted. That’s
why it is necessary for us to raise rates to cover our costs,”
L’Engle said. “If, in the future, natural gas
prices drop back down to normal levels, FMPA’s costs
will come down, and because FMPA is a nonprofit organization,
we will return any excess revenue to our customers.”
FMPA
Contact:
Mark McCain
Public Relations/Public Affairs Manager
(407) 355-7767

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