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The Other Shoe

11/7/2011

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Bill has the news on The Power Line here.

Sierra Club, Piedmont Environmental Council, Earth Justice and National Resources Defense Council have filed a brief at FERC.

Now if you'll pardon me, I'm going to go stick my toes back in the sand and order another fruity drink with a little umbrella in it.
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One Shoe Drops

11/3/2011

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If you've been following PATH's activity at FERC, here are links to the Answers, filed at FERC this morning, to PATH's Motion to Dismiss the Formal Challenge and Motions to Compel Filed by Keryn Newman and Alison Haverty.

Joint Answer to Motion to Dismiss the Challenge

Keryn Newman's Answer to Motion to Dismiss the Motion to Compel

Alison Haverty's Answer to Motion to Dismiss the Motion to Compel


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AEP: Rum Pa Pum Pum Pum, Isn't This Dumb?

11/1/2011

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So, you all know that too much being serious causes me to itch severely.  And I've been itching for days to comment on the AEP freak show that's been going on while I was otherwise engaged in serious stuff.

AEP has finally officially handed the corporate drumsticks to The Little Drummer Boy, announced a staggering 3rd quarter profit, and packed Mikey into his Popemobile for one final journey to Filthy Rich Retirement Acres.

First let's talk about AEP's new CEO - Little Drummer Boy Nick Akins.

“I grew up wanting to be a rock star,” he said.

He played drums in the high-school band and idolized Neil Peart, the drummer for the Canadian rock band Rush."

Don't be fooled by all that "humble beginnings" drivel, our pal Nick raked in over $3.4M in compensation last year while senior citizens and single parents in 11 states struggled to pay their ever-increasing AEP subsidiary electric bills.  Nick's long since forgotten where he came from.

Who besides the Columbus Dispatch reporter dreams of future corporate hijinks where the rhyming Nick and Rick trade places for a week, ala Hayley Mills and Hayley Mills in The Parent Trap?  Sadly, this interview is probably the highlight of this reporter's career.  The evil twin, switching identities thing has been overdone ad nauseam.  Remember Jeannie and her evil twin, Jeannie?  How about Samantha and her evil cousin Serena?  I suppose this will come in handy for future Little Drummer Boy double-speak though -- he can just blame any future gaffes on evil twin, Rick, who doesn't know diddly squat about running a utility.

But it will hardly matter, because Mikey is going to hang around as Chairman of the Board and breathe down The Little Drummer Boy's neck instead of signing up for Mahjong down at the Senior Center.  Some people just can't let go, can they?  Maybe that's because AEP's earnings were up 67 percent in the 3rd quarter.

"Waves of extreme heat in both the eastern and western U.S. were good for power demand and for AEP, said Michael G. Morris, chairman and CEO.

"We had solid financial performance in the third quarter, with load created by warmer-than-normal weather," Morris said in a statement.

AEP said its results also benefited from a Texas Supreme Court decision worth $425 million that allowed the company to recover some costs related to retail competition."

Only Mikey could get so excited about extreme weather caused by all his stinking, coal-fired dinosaurs and wresting millions from Texas electric consumers while also simultaneously crying "poor me" to Congress about how the EPA is causing the financial ruin of AEP and driving up electric rates with new air pollution rules.

Mikey gets a few last words in before his impending November 11th date with doddering destiny during AEP's Q3 Earnings call:

"We think that the order on RITELine by the FERC was an appropriate order. It has reasonable rates of return, not the high numbers that we saw in the early undertakings and joint venture transmission plays through the FERC. But reasonable for sure, north of 11%, we think is a great place to put money to work.

Our well discussed and brought forth Transco project concept in our traditional service territory is also on a pretty reasonable path. We'll be north of $1 billion invested some time in calendar year 2012. We will continue to see pretty substantial earnings strength from those activities by improving the reliability and the intellectual capacity of our energy delivery system in our traditional service territory. So we really feel good about the things that are going on there."

Intellectual capacity of an energy delivery system?  ???  Oh, poppycock, Mikey!  Isn't there a glass of warm milk and a dribble bib waiting for you somewhere?

Nick, you should have gone with the rock star thing instead.  Just sayin'.


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FirstEnergy: Suavely Meeting Their Targets

11/1/2011

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You didn't think FirstEnergy was going to escape scrutiny tonight, did you?

In their earnings call today, FirstEnergy claims:

"As Tony mentioned, we continue to be pleased with the integration of Allegheny, and we believe that we are suavely on track to achieve the benefits we expected from this combination."

This can only come under the category of:  What the... ???

Suave wouldn't be my first choice of adjectives for FirstEnergy's merger finances.


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Industry Lobbyists Try Again To Give FERC Transmission Permitting Authority With H.R. 3280

10/31/2011

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I'll give the investor owned utilities credit for their persistence.  They simply refuse to give up on the idea of putting FERC in charge of high voltage electric transmission permitting and siting.

Less than three weeks ago, the Department of Energy declined to officially delegate their authority to designate National Interest Electric Transmission Corridors to FERC.  This stunningly bad idea was the brainchild of former FERC Commissioner and current NextEra Energy lobbyist Joe Kelliher as a way to provide free transportation for his company's wind power resources to coastal load centers.  Transmission lines aren't paid for by the utilities who invest their capital in the project, they are ultimately paid for by the ratepayers, with delicious double-digit incentive rates of return for the energy companies.  Building unneeded new transmission lines is a cash cow for the utilities.

Today, Platts reports that new House legislation has been introduced that will give FERC the authority to site transmission lines and repeal the DOE's NIETC authority and replace it with a new FERC authority to designate transmission planning regions.  Same stupid idea, different game plan.

This version of the game is credited to Jim Hoecker, former FERC chairman and lobbyist for the WIRES front group.  Those former FERC Commissioners now raking in the millions by returning to the industry that spawned them in the first place are a dime a dozen.

Here's how it's supposed to work:

"These regions would then propose for FERC's approval high-votage transmission projects already included in the planning process.

Regional transmission planners could propose that FERC grant certificates for specific projects and the bill would require the commission to give these planners "substantial deference" for such requests.

The proposal also would permit FERC to issue permits to build interstate transmission lines.

The issuance of FERC certificates is modeled on FERC's gas pipeline siting authority, but the bill stops short of giving the commission eminent domain to order the construction of any line over the objection of affected landowners.

It also would retain states' authority to make decisions in the siting of local transmission lines."

Okay, so they have given FERC the authority to issue permits, and then "retain states' authority" by making them the bad guys who grant eminent domain to the power companies.  No matter how they sugar-coat it, THIS PREEMPTS EXISTING STATE AUTHORITY, just like the industry lobbyists' last plan!

Once again, the investor owned utilities who stand to rake in huge profits with a new, free and easy, FERC-run, national siting and permitting policy state that:

"Sensenbrenner (who sponsored this wonderful *awful* idea) "appears to recognize that the national interest transmission corridor designation process is broken," Hoecker said."

And

"There is latitude on the part of the agencies but this would be a departure from the broad geographic approach implemented under the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and therefore would likely draw congressional attention," Plaushin said."

Awww... cut the false modesty.  It's going to draw lots more attention than just that of Congress...

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PATH Files Motion to Dismiss at FERC

10/24/2011

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Late last week, PATH filed a Motion to Dismiss the Formal Challenge and Motions to Compel Filed by Keryn Newman and Alison Haverty.

I can't comment here right now, but stay tuned if you want to see how this one turns out.  The rest of you can comment your little fingers into bloody nubs, if you so choose.

If you're unaware of what's been happening at FERC, you can catch up on the filings here.  Change the date range to previous 5 months, and type in Docket No. "ER08-386" and separately "ER09-1256."  Different things have been filed on both dockets.

I'm going to be busy this week, but nothing I can't handle.  However, there may be a dearth of news here while I do other things, so go entertain yourselves at The Coalition for Reliable Power's Blog or The Power Line.  Or you could further amuse yourselves by totaling up the typos and errors in PATH's Motion.  First one to come up with the correct total wins bragging rights as StopPATH's frustrated wanna-be English teacher (well, unless you actually ARE an English teacher)!



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PATH Representatives Push Each Other Under the Bus at 2012 PTRR Meeting

10/19/2011

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Even PATH doesn't take itself seriously anymore, if today's 2012 PTRR "Open Meeting" is any indication.    The meeting was a total farce and they got so busy pushing each other in front of the speeding Interested Party Express Line bus that they didn't even stick to their make-believe "agenda."  They also cut the meeting short by pretending there were no more questions and hanging up real quick.
Picture
Scared much, fellas?  I could have sworn that at the beginning of the phone call we were told that there would be some additional presentations, and the agenda had an item called "closing comments," but PATH pushed the PANIC button instead and the operator announced there were no more questions, even though there were more questions in the queue (but somebody kept canceling them).  Comedy at it's finest!

On the call were PATH counsel Randy Palmer and Becky Bruner (well, at least Randy said she was there, but we never heard her say a word -- they should have tossed her under the bus once or twice, just to get something in return for that billable hour), Milo Pokrajac, who is apparently not the one holding PATH's bag any longer, and some new accounting patsy named Dave Griffing.

It started out bad when Patience Wait asked them if the $14.7M return (profit) on the PTRR was reflective of PATH's old 14.3% ROE, or their new, lower 12.4% ROE.  Of course it's based on the old one, because they haven't filed the revised PTRR for the new one yet.  They pretended that they had no idea what the new return amount would be.

Ali Haverty presented them with the dilemma of the amazing, un-depreciating rate base whereby PATH's "suspension" keeps the amount in the rate base stagnant and as a result PATH does nothing but collect a profit year after year.  *crickets*  I think this is where Dave and Milo threw Randy under the bus for a change.  Randy went blathering on about a whole bunch of nothing but basically alluding to the fact that abandonment of the PATH project is just around the corner.  No real shocker, right?  We all saw that coming.

Robin Huyett Thomas quizzed them about CWIP balances bouncing around like a yo-yo in 2012.  They keep trying to blame it on forfeited option payments that are being expensed, but really, they didn't make much sense.  Just another question they couldn't answer.

Continuing the theme, Steve Smith tried to get some detail out of them regarding the amount of depreciation showing in the rate template under "Overhead conductors and devices" (for a line that's not been constructed?).  Milo told him it was just a small amount that didn't really matter, however Steve countered that $8,500 bucks isn't chump change to him.

Debbie Royalty quizzed them about PATH's A&G expenses in 2012.  They're showing $2.4 million in expenses for a project that's sitting on a shelf.  Randy said that the $2.4M consisted of, "this call, the ongoing financial review process and 'those types of things.'"  Considering that Chorus Call cut the meeting off after the allotted, obligatory hour, maybe someone should ask Randy just how much they're paying him to put on his game face and pretend that PATH is following the Formula Rate Protocols, or that they give a crap at all anymore, $2,399,910.05?

In order to get any real answers to their questions, they were instructed to submit discovery questions (pssst... you don't get real answers that way either, but it's good for a giggle).

PATH also verified again that the piddling amount of land they have already purchased, some $30M of the rate base, would have NEVER depreciated.  That $30M only represents a handful of the thousands of properties PATH would have had to pay for, one way or another, if their project had been built.  The un-depreciating land just sits in the rate base, year after year, earning (now) 12.4% return (profit) for the PATH Companies.  This means you would have been stuck paying for PATH... for eternity.  So, thanks, victorious PATH opponents, for kicking this hole in everyone's wallet to the curb. 

Now, can't we just get to the flippin' abandonment already and quit torturing each other?  How about it, PATH?

Pictures from the PATH Breakfast Meeting Party -- more coming later, we're currently experiencing an "abeyance" of technical cohesion:
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Join Today's PATH Squirmapalooza!

10/18/2011

3 Comments

 
I hope lots of you will be joining us this morning for the semi-annual PATH Squirmapalooza.

Beginning at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time, PATH will be presenting their 2012 Projected Transmission Revenue Requirement and answering questions from interested parties over the telephone.

If you'd like to ask PATH about the $14.7M profit they expect to earn in 2012 while their project is suspended and providing no benefit to you, join the call by dialing 800-860-2442.  No password or secret handshake is required to join the club.

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Send in the Clowns

10/18/2011

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A friend sent me a message today alerting me that our old pal Pinky has won an award for his campaign to sacrifice more West Virginia citizens' land, health and future for out-of-state corporate profits.  Wow!  Congratulations, Pinky, we are so proud of you!  Keep it up and maybe someday someone will create a Pinky fan club on facebook just for you!

See what Pinky won here.  Be sure to congratulate Vice-President Pinky while you're there... and also satisfy your sweet tooth on the over-the-top, cutsie-poo, imbecile fest that is CRA.

The message I received also commented on Pinky's legendary fashion sense.  It was noted that he's still got that ultra-chic look that screams, "a trailer park yard sale threw up on me!" 

Let's hope Pinky milks plenty of cash out of IOGA while the Marcellus gas craze lasts because you just never know who's going to end up holding the bag the next time CRA gets fingered in a major screw-up that makes their client less than pleased.

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PJM's Kormos Spins Windy Op-Ed

10/17/2011

4 Comments

 
Contradictions.  That's the trouble with doublespeak; inconvenient and pesky contradictions keep popping up, such as this glaring faux pas in a Richmond Times Dispatch op-ed by PJM blowhard Michael Kormos.

"In the case of offshore wind projects, located miles off the coast, lines will be needed to move the electricity from the generators to the onshore grid."

But then:

"New transmission lines will be needed to move electricity from renewable sources — many in remote locations, far from existing transmission lines — across multiple states to the urban areas where the power is needed."

Whoa, there, buddy.  Why would new transmission lines crossing multiple states be needed to move offshore renewables to the onshore grid?  Last time I checked, there weren't any states located in the Atlantic Ocean.

Can't quite decide if that 800-pound industry lobbyist gorilla that lurks in the corner at PJM Interconnection is going to insist that East Coast population centers be forced to have their "public policy" goals met by Midwest wind located a thousand miles away?  Or will the big East Coast energy companies prevail and get rich on the offshore wind right on their doorstep?

"The FERC, which provides regulatory oversight for regional transmission organizations (RTOs), recognizes the problem and recently issued an order related to what can be done to ease building transmission lines that aren't strictly for reliability and providing for those who benefit from those lines to help pay for them."

Oversight?  You mean like that really cool babysitter you had back in elementary school that let you jump on the bed and make prank phone calls to the local pharmacy to ask them if they had Prince Albert in a can?    So, the overly permissive FERC babysitter is going to make it easier to build unneeded transmission lines for other reasons, which are going to end up so muddled that it will be impossible to properly allocate costs or challenge a subjective planning process.  Also, those who benefit from them will help pay for them... with the rest of us who don't benefit from them picking up the bulk of the tab, right?  That's awfully nice of PJM and FERC, don't you think?  I'm sure I'm not the only one who sees a trip to the judicial fun house in the making.  You know, sometimes when you insist on having too much of a good thing, you end up with nothing at all.

And not to change the subject, but that Governor's Conference on Energy isn't about renewables, is it?  Check out the "sponsors" here, and then check out the prices for sponsorship.  For the cost of all those "receptions" and "meals," check out the price list for how much those "sponsorships" cost here.  Yeah, Virginia is for lovers, and lobbyists, and coal companies, and coal burners, and gas companies, and oil companies, and public relations propaganda, and front groups.  What?  Front groups?  How shocking!  I'm certain the Governor's office didn't knowingly endorse industry front groups Faces of Coal and Virginians for Reliable Energy by permitting them to "sponsor" his conference!  Of course not!  The muck is getting pretty deep, I hope the conference participants brought their hip-waders...

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    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
    StopPATH Blog

    StopPATH Blog began as a forum for information and opinion about the PATH transmission project.  The PATH project was abandoned in 2012, however, this blog was not.

    StopPATH Blog continues to bring you energy policy news and opinion from a consumer's point of view.  If it's sometimes snarky and oftentimes irreverent, just remember that the truth isn't pretty.  People come here because they want the truth, instead of the usual dreadful lies this industry continues to tell itself.  If you keep reading, I'll keep writing.


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