HomeMy WebLinkAboutItem 09 - CAPP Legislative Agenda MEMO TO: HONORABLE MAYOR AND MEMBERS OF THE CITY COUNCIL
FROM: BRUNO RUMBELOW, CITY MANAGE
MEETING DATE: MARCH 24, 2009
SUBJECT: RESOLUTION ENDORSING CITIES AGGREGATION POWER
PROJECT'S (CAPP) LEGISLATIVE AGENDA
RECOMMENDATION:
City Council consider a resolution supporting CAPP's legislative agenda for 2009.
BACKGROUND:
The City of Grapevine became a member of CAPP in August 2008. Subsequently, the
City elected to also take part in CAPP's five year contract for electricity which is
estimated to save the City in excess $600,000 annually over the next five years. The
CAPP Board of Directors has voted to authorize certain legislative efforts on behalf of its
members during the 81st Texas Legislative Session. CAPP believes it can capitalize on
the presence its members established in the last three legislative sessions to apprise
legislators of CAPP Cities' perspective on electric issues and to recommend legislative
action.
In 1999, Texas lawmakers adopted Senate Bill 7, the state's electric deregulation law.
The legislation expanded competition in the wholesale electricity market and opened the
door to competition among electric retailers. Proponents of the legislation promised
lower electric prices. Unfortunately, the reality has been otherwise. Although Texans
paid electric prices well below the national average during the decade before Senate Bill
7 was passed, customers in deregulated parts of the state now pay prices above the
national average. In fact, residential electric prices have increased by a greater
percentage in Texas than in almost every other state — including every other deregulated
state with retail competition.
CAPP believes that many of the current problems that keep the market from achieving
the promise of full competition, stem from defects in the deregulated electricity market.
For example, some generators are able to exercise monopoly-like control in large
swaths of Texas. That has hindered healthy competition. Efforts to address market
design issues by ERCOT have been misguided, mismanaged, gone over budget and
fallen behind schedule.
As an active market participant, CAPP is in the unique position to identify problems that
have developed in the deregulated marketplace and provide a consumer's perspective
March 19,2009(11:18AM)
to legislators interested in fixing those problems. Based upon this point of view, CAPP
has created a legislative agenda that aims to transition the electric market from a
deregulated market to a truly competitive one by limiting market power, eliminating cost
shifting, and creating competitive options for all customers. The following changes are
proposed by the CAPP Board:
• All generators, regardless of size, should explicitly be barred from the unlawful
exercise of market power. Current regulations exempt smaller generators
from market power prohibitions.
• Entities harmed by wholesale market abuse such as municipalities,
commercial customers or retail electric providers should be given explicit
standing to participate in enforcement actions brought by the Public Utility
Commission ("PUC"). Affected parties are currently barred from participating
in such proceedings.
• Ownership and control of generation capacity should be limited to no more
than twenty percent (20%) of total generation capacity within the functional
market (ERCOT zone) in order to enhance competition and mitigate market
power and the ability of any one generator to affect prices. In the alternative,
the PUC should be directed to create a single ERCOT-wide market with
uniform congestion pricing.
• Permit cities to create and implement opt-out citizen aggregation programs, or
alternatively to become Retail Electric Providers or Municipally Owned Utilities.
• Direct the Electric Reliability Council of Texas ("ERCOT"), the organization
that administers the state power grid, to abandon all efforts to transition to a
nodal market and direct the PUC to open a proceeding to consider other
market design options.
Although, the current legislative session is well underway and CAPP's request to
member cities was not made until last month, CAPP is still urging member cities to
express support to its legislative agenda through a resolution.
To date, the following bills (that support CAPP's agenda) have been filed.
• Senate Bill 1480, House Bill 2782: Limiting, investigating, and better prosecuting
market power abuses in the wholesale deregulated electric market
• Senate Bill 1482, House Bill 2781: Ending the over-budget and behind-
schedule transition to the nodal market
• Senate Bill 1481, House Bill 2780: Permitting cities the ability to group citizens
together in opt-out aggregation groups to secure lower prices for electricity
Staff recommends that the City Council adopt the attached resolution.
March 19,2009(11:18AM)
C�
RESOLUTION NO.
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS, ENDORSING CERTAIN LEGISLATIVE
CHANGES TO ENHANCE THE COMPETITIVE ELECTRIC
MARKET SUPPORTED BY CITIES AGGREGATION POWER
PROJECT, INC. AND PROVINDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE
WHEREAS, the City is a member of Cities Aggregation Power Project, Inc.
("CAPP"), a non-profit organization created by cities throughout Texas to secure
affordable energy for its members in the deregulated electric market; and
WHEREAS, affordable and reliable power means economic development for our
cities and a better standard of living for our citizens; and
WHEREAS, by deregulating the retail electric market, Senate Bill 7 of 1999 ("SB
7") intended to allow competitive forces to drive down the price of electricity; and
WHEREAS, CAPP's seven-year experience with the deregulated market, including
negotiating power contracts with several different retail electric providers, indicates that ,,
the Texas electric retail market has failed to develop into a truly competitive market as
envisioned by the Texas Legislature and that prices are higher, not lower, after
deregulation; and
WHEREAS, competition has failed to develop in the deregulated electric market
because certain power generation companies own or control enough generation
capacity to exercise market power to the detriment of customers and non-affiliated
retail electric providers; and
WHEREAS, alleged market power abuse inquiries conducted by the Public
Utility Commission ("PUC") are hampered by the lack of adequate resources because
the parties hurt by the illegal activity, like cities, are not allowed to participate in the
investigations; and
WHEREAS, residential customers in Texas communities are unable to obtain
lower power prices that may be available to them through bulk purchasing because
current law makes the creation of citizen aggregation groups unworkable; and
WHEREAS, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas ("ERCOT") is expected to
spend at least $660 million to implement a nodal market in Texas, an unproven market
design program that is several years behind schedule and several hundred million
dollars over budget; and
WHEREAS, the City supports all legislative initiatives that promote a truly healthy
electric market where competition can flourish and consumers can save money; and
WHEREAS, the City endorses efforts proposed by CAPP to modify the electric
deregulation legislation to enhance competition, implement the original intent of SB 7
and reduce costs to the City and its residents.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY
OF GRAPEVINE, TEXAS:
Section 1. That the City supports the introduction and adoption of legislation in
the 81st Session of the Texas State Legislature that promotes affordable power and the
transition of the Texas electric market from a deregulated market to a fully competitive
one. Specifically, the City supports legislation that will address the following issues:
All generators, regardless of size, should explicitly be barred from the unlawful exercise
of market power.
Ownership and control of generation capacity should be limited to no more than twenty
percent (20%) of total generation capacity within the market in order to enhance
competition and mitigate market power and the ability of any one generator to affect
prices. This is in accordance with basic anti-trust principles and as originally designed
in SB 7, although the "market" should be redefined as the functional market (an ERCOT
zone) to reflect real-world conditions. In the alternative, the PUC should be directed to
create a single ERCOT-wide market with uniform congestion pricing.
Entities such as municipalities, commercial customers or retail electric providers harmed
by wholesale market abuse should be given explicit standing to participate in market
power abuse enforcement actions brought by the PUC.
Cities should be permitted to create citizen aggregation groups to combine the power
needs of residents that have not specifically asked to be excluded in order to facilitate
bulk power purchasing and enhance the opportunities for residential customers to
benefit from deregulation and benefit the entire state by increasing competition.
Citizens who have signed a contract with a retail provider would be excluded, as would
those citizens who otherwise opt out.
All efforts to transition to a nodal market in ERCOT should be abandoned and other
market design options that benefit all market participants should be considered.
Section 2. That a copy of the resolution shall be sent to the elected lawmakers
representing the City's interests in the Texas House and Senate and to the Chairman
and legal counsel of CAPP.
Section 3. That this resolution shall take effect from and after the date of its
passage.
RES. NO. 2
PASSED AND APPROVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
GRAPEVINE, TEXAS on this 24th day of March, 2009.
APPROVED:
ATTEST:
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
RES. NO. 3