Title: Electric Industry Overview
1Electric Industry Overview
- AGMA/ABMA Annual Meeting
- March 3, 2006
2Status of U.S. Electric Industry
- Changing supply / delivery picture
- Period of overbuilt generation (gas-fired)
- Concern over supply / price for natural gas
- Concern over coal deliveries
- Inadequate transmission in some regions
- Focus on reliability after 2003 blackout
- More reliance on renewable resources, demand
response and efficiency - Deregulation no, Changed regulation yes
- Electricity Markets vary blend of competition
and regulation - Wholesale competition
- 19 states plus DC with retail competition
- Differing approaches to build new generation
- How to spur non-gas generation in market states?
3Status of U.S. Electric Industry
- Strong regional approaches to wholesale
competition - SE, West
- Strongly oppose a one-size-fits-all market design
and Federal intrusion into planning, siting and
power supply adequacy - NE, Mid-Atlantic, Mid-West
- Favor w/sale competition and Regional
Transmission Organizations (RTOs) - State regulators seek deference from Feds on
- Power supply planning, acquisition and adequacy
- Siting and pricing of transmission expansion
- Reliability
- Mergers
- And more
4Status of U.S. Electric Industry
- Multi-emissions legislation stalled / Climate and
Politics - Congress passes The Energy Policy Act of 2005
- Most significant changes to electricity and gas
laws since 1930s - Wall Street views shape new investment
- Bankruptcies and erosion of merchant power and
energy trading sectors - Wholesale market development stuck in
transition - Federal / state conflicts on resource procurement
- Wall Street is demanding greater certainty for
infrastructure investment - Appropriate implementation of The Energy Policy
Act of 2005 - Evolving environmental rules and costs
- Rising energy prices and rate proceedings
5Average Retail Prices of Electricity 1960-2004
Source Energy Information Administration (EIA),
Annual Energy Review (AER) 2004
6Electricity End-Use Prices 2005-2030
Source Energy Information Administration (EIA),
Annual Energy Outlook (AEO) 2005
7What Powers Our Plants?
8Trends in electric power generation chart
Trends in Electric Power Generation 1980 - 2025
Coal
Gas
Nuclear
Renewables
Oil
Source US Department of Energy, Energy
Information Administration
9Regional Differences
10Generation Options Affected By Public Policy
New Generation Capacity By Fuel Since 1950
Source Henwood Energy Consulting
11Challenges with Each Option
- Coal Certainty on environmental rules /
policies, transportation, land use - Nuclear Relicensing, waste storage,
decommissioning - Gas Infrastructure enhancement, supply, price,
quality - Hydroelectric New sites? Relicensing
streamlining, fish mitigation - Renewables / new technologies Funding,
integration into grid - Purchase power imputed as debt on balance
sheets - DSM Cost recovery, price responsive demand
Goal Diverse resource portfolio
12Energy Policy Act of 2005Generation
- Coal
- 3 investment tax credits for clean coal
facilities - Enhanced tax treatment for pollution control
- Nuclear
- Production tax credit for new advanced nuclear
- Modify decommissioning trust fund
- Reauthorizes Price-Anderson Act
- Gas
- Changes distribution pipeline depreciation (20 -
15 yrs thru 2010) - Various other delivery incentives
- Hydroelectric
- Licensing reform
- Fish mitigation
- Renewables / new technologies
13Impact on Transmission Congestion Dramatically
Increasing
2005
Requests for transmission loading relief (TLRs)
in the Eastern Interconnection
2003
Level 2 or higher TLRs
2001
1999
Source NERC Transmission Loading Relief
Procedure Logs
14Energy Policy Act of 2005Transmission
- Siting streamlined
- Grants FERC back stop siting authority
- Facilitates siting across Federal lands by
designating DOE as lead agency - Incentives
- Reduces depreciable lives for transmission assets
from 20-15 yrs - Encourages FERC to provides incentives for
construction of new transmission - Transmission spending expected to jump 60 in
next 5 years
15Post Energy Act -- Conclusions
- Likely Outcomes
- Electricity growth follows economic growth (but
less than 11) - More coal plants will be built
- Nuclear construction will restart
- There will be a lot of renewables, but not
salvation - More transmission will be built
- Risks
- Gas prices spike again
- Gas prices drop back to lower levels
16Thank you!
- AGMA/ABMA Annual Meeting
- March 3, 2006