FirstEnergy and other utilities began to slide in May after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke suggested that the central bank could begin go to pull back on its stimulus measures.
FirstEnergy, which serves 6 million customers across the Midwest and the Mid-Atlantic, also got hit after the company posted a nearly 50% drop in earnings for the third quarter due to cooler than usual summer temperatures cutting the need for air conditioning. Shares have recently been trading at their lowest levels in a decade.
Wow! Looks like FirstEnergy made all sorts of important lists in 2013! Here's another stunning accomplishment for the company: The long, slow slide into irrelevance will be enjoyed by many!
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Remember Jonathan Fahey? He wrote an article in 2011 headlined Shocker: Power demand from US homes is falling that pioneered the idea that even though we're using more electric "gadgets" than ever, power use is dropping. Well, now he's back with a similar article, Home electricity use in US falling to 2001 levels. The trend Fahey first reported in 2011 continues, more than 2 years later. Have utilities gotten any smarter since then? Partially. It took them forever to admit that dropping demand wasn't tied to the economy and that a rebound of electric use wasn't just over the horizon. However, some utilities have simply moved on to other unsound business plans that continue to bank on the same old ideas that are no longer sustainable. Now utilities have moved on to transmission investments as their savior. This is pretty puzzling, considering that long-distance transmission champion AEP concluded a year ago that enormous projects built across multiple states were an impossible dream. Mr. Akins said he wants to avoid the bruising battles that delayed or doomed big projects in the past, like the 275-mile Potomac-Appalachian Transmission Highline project from West Virginia to Maryland. AEP and partner FirstEnergy Corp. dropped development plans for the complex project in 2011. The transmission investment gravy train has also left the station. The sheer number of new transmission projects proposed combined with today's ease of online information sharing and social media tools has led to an explosion of knowledgeable, interconnected transmission opposition groups who are combining resources across the country to delay or stop unneeded projects altogether. Instead of embracing innovation and new technology to make the existing grid smarter, some utilities are intent on merely building more of the same old dumb grid, or actively attempting to stifle innovation by forcing us all into an historic "consumer" position where we must funnel money to incumbent utilities in order to survive. Ultimately, this plan will also fail, because technology marches relentlessly on. How we produce and use electricity is also changing. Not only is producing our own electricity locally better for our economy, it's also much more reliable. Hurricane Sandy was one of the biggest wake-up calls we've had recently, and the inevitable Monday morning quarterbacking of that disaster reveals that increasing long distance, aerial transmission from remote generation is simply dangerous. Making our grid more reliable isn't about building more transmission. It's about change: This includes traditional tactics, such as upgrading power poles and trimming trees near power lines. But it also encompasses newer approaches, such as microgrids and energy storage, which allow operators to quickly reconfigure the system when portions of the grid go down. Implicit to such plans is the need to ensure uninterrupted power to critical sites such as oil and gas refineries, water-treatment plants, and telecommunication networks, as well as gasoline stations, hospitals, and pharmacies. Elected officials, progressive regulators, energy producers, energy consumers, and innovative companies embracing new technology are also increasingly joining forces to move our energy economy forward and away from the dated centralized generation and transmission business plan of the past. Companies who continue to deny the inevitable will ultimately be the ones left behind in irrelevance.
Sell, sell, SELL!
Do you suppose the Citi analyst knows that FirstEnergy subsidiary Potomac Edison's crappy customer service was the #2 story in 2013 in its West Virginia service territory? |
About the Author Keryn Newman blogs here at StopPATH WV about energy issues, transmission policy, misguided regulation, our greedy energy companies and their corporate spin.
In 2008, AEP & Allegheny Energy's PATH joint venture used their transmission line routing etch-a-sketch to draw a 765kV line across the street from her house. Oooops! And the rest is history. About
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