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GOP contenders wrestle with California's energy woes
source: Jennifer
Coleman AP in SF Chronicle 2002.1.28
SACRAMENTO (AP) -- After following the energy crisis for more than
a year, Davis resident Dobey Fleeman has had enough. He's installing
a solar
system on his roof, determined to cut his electric bill this year.
And he's listening to what candidates for the state's highest
office say they'll do to help him.
"In terms of politics, I think it's going to be an issue
for Gov. Davis, to explain why the decisions he made were good ones,"
Fleeman said.
In normal times, a candidate for California governor could get
through a campaign without mentioning energy policy.
But these are not normal times for California, which is recovering
from more than a year of soaring energy costs, electricity shortages
that led to rolling
blackouts and the bankruptcy of its largest utility as the state
tried to change to a deregulated energy market.
"It's a question of do we try to stick with a deregulated
market, or do we go back to some sort of government control over
the market?" said Clark Kelso, a
professor at the McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento.
The next governor will likely shape California's energy market
-- making decisions such as whether the state should continue in
the power business.
"We don't have a plan going forward and someone is going
to have to deal with that," said Severin Borenstein, director
of the University of California
Energy Institute at Berkeley. "We're not in a place that's
stable."
And if California's state of emergency continues through the fall,
the governor elected Nov. 5 will have extraordinary authority to
affect the state's
electricity market and shape the future of California's energy market,
Kelso said.
When months of sky-high wholesale electricity prices, coupled
with capped retail rates, left three California utilities broke,
the state stepped in to buy power
for their customers.
Declaring a state of emergency last January gave Davis extraordinary
power to waive regulations, reorganize executive offices and implement
new
programs.
He has used that authority to move the state away from deregulation
-- authorizing the state's Department of Water Resources to buy
power, approving
$43 billion in long-term power contracts over the next 10 years,
and creating conservation programs. He also signed the law that
created the state's
Consumer Power and Conservation Financing Authority.
The lights stayed on and wholesale prices dropped, but those actions
are prime targets for the three GOP candidates.
All three said, if elected, they would immediately do away with
the Power Authority, which opened for business in August and has
$5 billion in bonds
available to build, buy or lease power plants.
The three challengers -- former Los Angeles mayor Richard Riordan,
Secretary of State Bill Jones and businessman Bill Simon -- have
also criticized the
long-term contracts that Davis says tamed the runaway wholesale
market. But none has specific plans on how to renegotiate the binding
agreements, some
of which Davis administration officials are now trying to rework.
Harvey Rosenfield, executive director of the Foundation for Taxpayer
and Consumer Rights, expects the energy crisis will be a major campaign
issue
because there's a lot of fodder for Davis' critics.
And even if campaign ads don't jog voters' memory, "they'll
be reminded every month when they open their electricity bills and
they're paying higher
prices," he said.
A poll by the Public Policy Institute of California this month
found that electricity prices and deregulation still ranked high
among voters' concerns. The
survey found 14 percent of voters questioned named energy as their
highest priority. In 2001, as the state was running out of electricity
and running up
huge tabs to buy power, 25 percent of voters surveyed said it was
their biggest concern.
Voters' assessments of Davis' handling of the crisis has improved,
the PPIC found, but 54 percent still disapprove of what he has done.
But that's up from
last year's poll, which found 62 percent disapproved of Davis' job.
Though unhappy about how the state's attempt at deregulation has
gone so far, Fleeman, the Davis homeowner, said he's not ready to
abandon the idea.
"I'm more of a free-market advocate," he said. "If
rates are lower yet in Texas, maybe we ought to look at their models.
There are other states that have
deregulated that have done it well."
Simon said he believes in the free-market argument -- that left
alone from excessive regulation, demand and supply will level out
and competition will
result.
"It's not the fault of deregulation what happened,"
Simon said. "I'd go back to the free market. The best way to
ensure cheap, safe, reliable power is to get
as close to a free-market situation as possible."
Jones, too, advocates the continued deregulation of the energy
market.
"Markets eventually seek their own level," he said.
The state should have removed caps on wholesale and retail prices
simultaneously, he said.
Riordan, however, opted to keep the Los Angeles Department of
Water and Power out of the deregulated market. The municipal utility
was one of the
few "islands" within the state that escaped rolling blackouts
and price hikes in 2001 because of that decision.
Riordan now says that it wasn't a philosophical decision -- that
LADWP "didn't have a very efficient infrastructure at the time."
Fleeman, a Republican, said he also wants to hear what the GOP
candidates have to say on tax credits and other incentives for renewable
energy systems.
"There's a lot of alternatives, a lot of things we can do.
We have to put some dollars into renewable and nonpolluting technologies,"
he said. "There's
energy cells and some interesting geothermal technology. We still
have some oil reserves, but energy that we pull out of the ground
is a limited resource."
Each of the Republicans have criticized Davis, the Democratic
incumbent, for relying too heavily on natural gas-fired plants instead
of renewables.
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