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March 2001
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
California's Electricity Woes: A Vision
for the Future?
California has long been in the vanguard
of national trends. Since mid-2000, California has experienced
a considerable number of problems with its electricity market,
including fluctuating prices and shortages. California’s electricity
woes give us a reason to take pause and consider the future
of U.S. electricity markets and of energy policies in general.
Electricity is an important part of
the U.S. energy infrastructure—accounting for more than one-third
of U.S. energy consumption (Figure 1). If other states
experienced problems with their electricity markets similar
to those in California, the effects would be felt throughout
the economy.
Nearly half the states are restructuring
their electricity markets, and many more are considering doing
so. The eight states shown in blue have already implemented
restructuring of their electricity markets (Figure 2).
The 16 states shown in lighter blue and the District of Columbia
have enacted legislation or issued regulatory orders that
will restructure their electricity markets. The 18 states
shown in purple are investigating the possibility of restructuring
their electricity markets. Only the eight states shown in
gray are not currently taking any steps toward electricity
market restructuring.
The problems with the California electricity
market are the result of several factors, including a poorly
devised restructuring that took place nearly three years ago.
As the states progress toward restructuring their electricity
markets, we should ask: Are California’s electricity woes
a dark vision of the future or an isolated incident in a state
where policymaking was not sufficiently informed by economic
reality?
What Is Restructuring?
It is convenient to think of the
electricity industry as made up of four functions: electricity
generation is simply the production of electricity; transmission
is the movement of electricity over high-voltage lines from
the generators to power substations located in cities, towns
and rural areas throughout the country; distribution is the
movement of electricity over lower voltage lines from power
substations to customers; and marketing/sales is the sale
of electricity to customers.
Currently, most regions of the country
are served by integrated electric utilities, each of which
performs all four of the functions from generating electric
power to selling it. These utilities established natural monopolies
in transmission and distribution—which were extended into
generation and marketing. (Transmission and distribution are
considered natural monopolies because one provider is thought
to be the most efficient means of production.) A utility’s
electric rates are subject to regulation at the state level,
and in the typical process, rates are set to earn what the
regulators deem to be a fair rate of return on the investment.
Restructuring consists of opening one
or more segments of the current system to competition. A number
of variations are possible across the 50 states and the District
of Columbia. As typically envisioned by policy analysts, however,
restructuring has five fundamental elements (in which some
regulation is retained): 1) electricity generation is opened
to competition with free entry of new power plants and private
contracts, 2) transmission and distribution remain in the
hands of the utilities and under regulatory control because
they are viewed as natural monopolies, 3) marketing/sales
to consumers is opened to competition, 4) electricity prices
are free to move, and 5) a range of market instruments, including
long-term contracts, spot sales and market-making activities
is allowed and encouraged.
A mixture of market instruments for
conducting sales of electricity is important in creating well-functioning
markets. Long-term contracts distribute the risks between
buyers and sellers and enable planning. Spot sales allow a
response to changing market conditions.
Market-making is an activity of firms,
such as Enron, that act as intermediaries in the electricity
market. They buy electricity under contracts of a given duration
and sell it under contracts of another duration. This intermediation
helps make electricity markets more efficient and restructuring
more successful.
California’s Restructuring Not Prototypical
The restructuring of California’s
electricity markets provided for much less deregulation than
is prototypical: 1) California opened its generation markets
to competition, but the state did not permit the free entry
of new power plants, 2) California retained regulation of
transmission and distribution as is prototypical, but a public
agency assumed control of some transmission lines, 3) California
did not open up marketing/sales to competition, 4) California
froze retail electricity prices, and 5) California banned
the use of long-term market instruments and forced all power
to be transacted through a daily spot market operated by a
public agency. In doing so, California obviated market-making
activities. In short, California has not created a transition
to a free electricity market, and its restructuring should
not be considered deregulation.
Growth and Seasonality in California
Electricity Demand
For years California’s electricity
consumption has grown. In 2000, it grew by a surprising 8
percent (Figure 3). We can think of California’s
electricity demand as met by three forms of supply: baseload,
imports and peaking. The baseload supply of electricity is
the lowest cost and is typically produced in coal-fired, nuclear,
hydroelectric, and some oil-fired power plants that operate
nearly continuously. Imports from baseload facilities in other
states generally have intermediate costs as the result of
the added transportation costs. Peak supplies of electricity
are the highest cost and are typically produced in oil- and
natural gas-fired power plants that operate intermittently
to meet peak demands in electricity.
As its electricity consumption grew,
California became more reliant on costly sources of electricity
because it had not developed additional baseload capacity.
The expense of operating peaking facilities rose substantially
as oil and natural gas prices began rising in 1999.
Seasonality is an important aspect of
California’s electricity woes. As shown in Figure 4, the demand
for electricity varies by season, with strongest demand in
summer and the second strongest demand in winter. When demand
is weak in the spring and fall, lower cost baseload facilities
can provide all or most of the electricity. As demand strengthens
seasonally, electricity is drawn in from other states and
produced in higher cost peaking facilities.
As the California economy grew, its
energy demand also grew, but the ability to produce electricity
in less expensive baseload plants was not expanded. The development
of new electricity generation facilities in the state of California
was checked for environmental reasons. Californians did not
want the pollution associated with the additional electric
power plants. In addition, electric utilities, fearing they
would be unable to recover their costs as the state moved
away from rate-based regulation, stopped trying to build new
generation facilities. The imposition of price caps on retail
electricity prices under the state’s restructuring plan further
deterred the development of new generation facilities.
Without additions to baseload capacity
or additional imports, an increase in demand increases the
reliance on higher cost peaking facilities and could result
in a shortage during periods of extreme demand that might
be seen in summer. An increase in the strength of seasonality—as
occurred last year—accentuates the problem. Moderate reductions
in baseload supply and imports further increase reliance on
peaking facilities and expose the state to more episodes of
power shortages.
But many Californians seem surprised
to be paying the higher electric rates that resulted from
the policies that made electricity scarce. They did not seem
to make the connection between the opposition to new power
plants and the increased reliance on higher cost sources of
electricity.
The California Electricity Market:
An Economics 101 Perspective
Most aspects of California’s electricity
problems can be illustrated with a supply and demand diagram
(Figure 5). First consider the market before restructuring.
California’s electricity supply comes from lower-cost baseload
plants, intermediate cost imports, and higher-cost peaking
facilities. Higher prices support production at more facilities,
and therefore, more electricity is available at higher prices
along the supply curve (S1). A demand curve (D1) shows consumers
willing to purchase more electricity at lower prices. Together
supply and demand establish a market-clearing price and quantity
(at Pa and Qa, respectively).
When California opened its electricity
generation market to competition, policy makers hoped that
competition between the owners of power plants would shift
the supply curve outward, but they also imposed a price ceiling
(at Pc) to maintain stable retail prices. Rising energy prices
and the reduced availability of baseload capacity and imports
reduced electricity supply in California (to S2). Costs rose
the most at peaking plants that rely on natural gas. At the
same time, strong economic growth and more severe weather
boosted electricity demand (to D2). These changes should have
established a new market-clearing price and quantity (at Pb
and Qb, respectively).
As shown by the figure, however, the
market-clearing price was higher than the price ceiling and
could not be charged to the consumers. With the price ceiling
in place (at Pc), consumers tried to purchase much more electricity
(Qd) than producers were willing to sell (Qc) at the ceiling
price.
If we stopped here, we would have a
classic shortage at the price ceiling, but electric utilities
have a duty to serve under the law. Consequently, California’s
utilities were legally obligated to supply all the electricity
consumers wanted to purchase (Qd) at the ceiling price. To
do so, utilities were forced to pay a much higher price (Pd)
for electricity on the open market. Because the utilities
did not quite succeed in obtaining all the electricity that
customers want at the ceiling price, the result was a combination
of shortages and utilities paying higher prices for electricity
than they can sell it for to their own customers.
By the end of 2000, California utilities
were paying a wholesale spot price of about 40 cents per kilowatt
hour while they were only allowed to sell it for about 10
cents per kilowatt hour to their customers (Figure 6).
California’s failure to allow retail prices to rise to reflect
market conditions has had several effects. The most obvious
is that it puts a financial burden on the utilities. In addition,
low prices discourage the development of additional supply
while encouraging customers to continue low-valued uses of
electricity.
Economic Effects Are Relatively Small
Although we have heard stories
about how the electricity blackouts are affecting industry,
the disruptions of electric service appear to have had only
a mild aggregate effect on the California economy. A few analysts
have speculated that sustained disruptions of electric service
that are no worse than those already experienced, would reduce
California’s gross state product by about 0.2 percentage points
below what it would otherwise be. Taking into account California’s
size and the negative ripple effects to other states, we might
guess that the total impact on the national economy would
be to reduce gross domestic product by about 0.1 percentage
points below what it would otherwise be—though some analysts
have suggested the spillovers to the national economy would
be smaller.
If California does not resolve its electricity
problems, however, the longer term effects on the state may
be significant. Unreliable electricity service could make
California less attractive to business and slow the state’s
economic growth. Some of that growth could be displaced to
other states.
Successful Electricity Market Restructuring
To develop standards for evaluating
the restructuring of electricity markets, we can draw upon
what to appear to be the successful experiences in Pennsylvania
and the United Kingdom as well as fundamental strategies suggested
by analysts. These standards can be used to evaluate and suggest
changes in the electricity market restructuring in California,
Texas and other states.
Important elements of a successful restructuring
of electricity markets seem to be sufficient generation capacity
(and fuel supplies); opening power generation to competition
with the free entry of new power plants and private contracts;
opening marketing/sales to competition; freeing electricity
prices to move with changes in market conditions; allowing
a range of market instruments including long-term contracts
and spot sales; and encouraging private market-making activity.
Success should not be judged by the
often used political barometer of stable prices, but rather
by the extent to which the market is allowed to operated freely
with the minimum of disruption. With energy prices rising
and environmental restraints on electricity production, higher
prices will help allocate scarce electricity and clarify the
costs of environmental protection.
Improving California’s Electricity
Markets
California has room for improvement
in most areas. California entered deregulation with insufficient
capacity. California has deregulated its power generation
market, but it must also reduce its regulatory impediments
to power plant development. It is taking some steps in that
direction. California should also allow the development of
additional natural gas pipelines to enhance natural gas deliverability
to power plants using that fuel in the state.
California could accomplish much by
opening marketing/sales to competition. California also should
allow electricity prices to move freely with market conditions.
Freely moving prices would encourage consumers to conserve
electricity and at the same time stimulate the development
of new electric power plants.
California has begun seeking electricity
supply under long-term contracts, but it has interjected the
state and its nonprofit electricity system operator into the
process. California needs to allow a range of market instruments
including long-term contracts and spot sales, as well as private
market-making activities.
In the short run, these solutions are
likely to raise electricity prices in California, which would
reflect the scarcity of electricity in the state. But the
philosophy of market determined prices would encourage the
development of new power plants while higher prices would
discourage consumption. In the long run, prices would fall,
but probably not as low as they were prior to restructuring—unless
overall energy prices also fall.
Electricity Market Restructuring in
Texas
Texas is in the process of restructuring
electricity markets in most areas of the state. Restructuring
will be completely phased in by the end of 2001. As Texas
approaches its restructuring, success seems very likely.
Texas is entering deregulation with
sufficient generation capacity (and fuel supplies). It is
opening electricity generation to competition with the free
entry of new power plants and private contracts. Marketing/sales
to consumers will be opened to competition. Electricity prices
will be free to move. Texas is allowing a range of market
instruments including long-term contracts and spot sales and
encouraging private market-making activities.
Electricity Market Restructuring in
Other States
Most states progressing toward
a restructuring of their electricity markets are creating
freer markets than California did. Of the 24 states and the
District of Columbia that have deregulated or have taken concrete
steps toward deregulation, the eight states shown in green
on Figure 7 seem to meet the criteria for a successful transition
to a free market. The 11 states shown in yellow are entering
deregulation in pretty good shape. Nine of these states have
price caps but sufficient instate generating capacity. Connecticut
and Virginia do not have price caps but do import significant
quantities of electricity. The three states shown in orange
and the District of Columbia are in only slightly better shape
than California. They import significant quantities of electricity.
In addition, Maryland, Delaware and the District of Columbia
have price caps, and New York has other impediments to freely
functioning electricity markets. Only Oregon, shown in red
along with California, seems to be freeing its electricity
markets as little as California. Oregon imports significant
quantities of electricity, is not allowing for entry into
marketing and sales, is retaining regulated prices, and discourages
market-making activities. The other 26 states, shown in gray,
do not currently have concrete plans for restructuring and
are in a position to learn from those who are preceding them.
A Wake-Up Call?
In some sense, California’s electricity
woes should serve as a wake-up call for thinking about the
direction of U.S. electricity markets and energy policy. The
U.S. Department of Energy forecasts that U.S. electricity
consumption will grow by more than 30% over the next two decades,
while the use of natural gas to produce electricity grows
by nearly 60% (Figure 8). That forecast calls for
a much stronger growth rate in the use of natural gas to produce
electricity than occurred over the past 30 years.
The infrastructure to produce the additional
electricity and supply the additional natural gas does not
currently exist. If people in other states take the same attitude
toward the development of new electric power facilities and
natural gas pipelines as Californians seem to have taken over
the past 20 years, electricity will be relatively scarce,
and either higher prices or shortages of electricity will
result.
In a broader sense, we face the same
issues in thinking about future economic growth and the resulting
growth in energy demand. As shown in Figure 9, the U.S. Department
of Energy forecasts that U.S. energy consumption will grow
by more than 40% (about 1.8 percent annually) over the next
20 years while real GDP grows by 3.0% annually.
Restricting the growth of energy consumption
to pursue other goals—such as a cleaner environment—will reduce
economic growth. This is not to say that we should not pursue
a clean environment. Rather it is to acknowledge that a clean
environment has a cost. Some analysts have promoted the notion
that a clean environment can be had without cost. That view
helped shape the policies that created California’s electricity
crisis.
Conclusions: Learning from California
The effective restructuring of
an electricity market creates a transition to a free market,
but California’s restructuring plan was far from yielding
a free electricity market. California’s course corrections
to date do not represent much more of a transition to a free
market. Most of the states that are moving toward electricity
market restructuring seem to be going much farther toward
creating free markets for electricity than California has,
but only eight seem to be making a complete transition to
free electricity markets.
If they do not worsen, California’s
electricity woes should have a small but possibly noticeable
effect on economic growth. Nonetheless, California’s electricity
problems remind us that economic growth is facilitated by
abundant energy supplies. Limiting energy consumption in the
pursuit of other goals—such as a cleaner environment—has a
cost. In making policy, we should explicitly consider these
costs rather than pretend they do not exist. The resulting
policy will have a much sounder basis in economic reality
rather than wishful thinking. And California’s woes will be
wake-up call, rather than a vision of the future.
—Stephen P. A. Brown
| About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by Stephen P. A. Brown, director
of energy economics and microeconomic policy analysis
and assistant vice president, Research Department,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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