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Energy Economist supports electric industry competition.

November 23, 2007 - Jonathan Lesser, Ph.D., expert on competitive electricity markets, said that electric industry restructuring has provided benefits to Pennsylvania consumers and businesses, such as shifting risk from ratepayers to investors. In a white paper titled The Benefits of Electric Restructuring to Pennsylvania Consumers, he offers several points including that since restructuring its electric industry in 1996, the state's nuclear plants alone generate almost 2 million megawatt-hours.
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Press Release

Electric Power Supply Association

Release date: November 13, 2007

Leading Energy Economist: Electric Industry Competition Spurs Efficiency and Puts Risks on Investors, Not Consumers

Harrisburg, PA - Another expert today joined the chorus of voices arguing that competitive electric markets are benefiting Pennsylvania customers. Jonathan Lesser, a Ph.D. economist and nationally known expert on competitive electricity markets, said "Electric industry restructuring has provided real and measurable benefits to Pennsylvania consumers and businesses." Lesser made his remarks in a white paper written on behalf of the Electric Power Generation Association and the Electric Power Supply Association, two groups that support competitive electricity markets.

In support of his point that competition has produced measurable benefits, Lesser pointed out that since Pennsylvania restructured its electric industry in 1996, "The state's nuclear plants alone generate almost two million megawatt-hours more electricity enough to power almost 170,000 homes."

Lesser's paper, titled "The Benefits of Electric Restructuring to Pennsylvania Consumers," makes several other points about restructuring, including:

Traditional regulation had shortcomings. Lesser said, "Prior to electric competition in Pennsylvania, retail customers in Pennsylvania absorbed significant and steady rate increases resulting from a number of factors, including inefficient operations, construction cost overruns and higher fuel prices."

Competition has benefited Pennsylvania customers. As Lesser put it, "Pennsylvanians have benefited by millions of dollars each year from more efficient generation with increased output and lower operating costs and new market entrants providing both innovative generation and demand side response programs."

Shifting of risk from ratepayers to investors. "Pennsylvania consumers," Lesser said, "no longer bear the financial risks of failed generating plants or cost overruns, as they did under the old regulatory system." Instead, he said competition has "shifted generation construction and operation risk from consumers, provided market incentives to improve plant efficiency and promoted competition and innovation in retail electric markets."

Markets provide best answer to price increases. Lesser acknowledged that higher prices are expected after multi-year rate caps expire in the next few years. However, he argued, "It is the market itself that provides a self-correcting mechanism to resolve transient price increases." Instead of more regulation, Lesser said, "The better answer is to apply competitive procurement principles, while at the same time pursuing rate mitigation strategies such as energy efficiency and demand response programs and rate phase in and budget plans to ease the transition to market prices for all consumers."

Lesser concluded, "There are no 'silver bullets' policymakers can use to prevent an increase in electric prices. Neither regulation nor competition can prevent the tremendous increases in worldwide demand for fossil fuels that have driven electric prices higher. But, unlike more regulation, competition can provide the lowest available cost."


Company Information:
Name: Electric Power Supply Association
Address: 1401 New York Avenue
City: Washington
State: DC
ZIP: 20005-2110
Country: USA
Phone: 202-628-8200
http://www.epsa.org

Other News from this company:
Jun 19, 2008 - FERC Briefing Confirms Importance of Both Existing and New Generation to Reliability
Jun 17, 2008 - EPSA Releases Paper on Rising Costs of New Power Plants in Advance of FERC Briefing This Week
Jun 09, 2008 - New APPA Report Shows Need to Step Down From Ivory Tower
May 20, 2008 - EPSA Provides Its Vision of Pathways to Energy Security at 2008 Deloitte Energy Conference
May 12, 2008 - New Federal Report Confirms That Organized Markets Facilitate Wind Energy
May 06, 2008 - EPSA Says Capacity Markets Show Early Promise for Consumers and Reliability
Apr 09, 2008 - EPSA Submits Round-up of State Competitive Procurement Case Histories to NARUC-FERC Competitive Procurement Group
Feb 21, 2008 - EPSA Welcomes FERC Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Wholesale Electricity Markets
Feb 21, 2008 - EPSA Supports Proposed Cost of New Entry Increase in PJM to Better Reflect Current Costs of Investment
Feb 15, 2008 - ICT's Annual Report Underscores Need for FERC Technical Conference to Address Transmission Concerns in Entergy Region
Feb 13, 2008 - Addressing Climate Change Is Best Accomplished With Innovation and Investment Through Competitive Markets, EPSA Says
Feb 06, 2008 - Competitive Electricity Suppliers Are Critical to Achieving a Low Carbon Future, EPSA Says
Feb 01, 2008 - PJM's Capacity Auction Shows Competitive Power Suppliers Are Responding to Meet Future Needs
Jan 10, 2008 - EPSA Statement on Renewable Energy in Organized Electricity Markets
Dec 20, 2007 - EPSA Commends Senate for Reconfirmation of Kelliher and Wellinghoff at FERC
Dec 17, 2007 - EPSA Statement On Organized Markets Complaint
Dec 12, 2007 - Allowing Energy Imbalance Flow to Be Interrupted Could Impair Competition in SPP, EPSA Tells FERC
Nov 29, 2007 - EPSA-Led Coalition Urges Supreme Court to Preserve Integrity of Market-based Energy Contracts
Nov 13, 2007 - EPSA Recommends Model State Rule on Competitive Procurement to State Utility Commissioners

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