Law & Lawyers

Singing Electricity

David Bowie, Boz Scaggs, Ray Charles, Laurie Anderson, Dolly Parton, Damian Marley, Jimi Hendrix

Music itself is going to become like running water or electricity. So it's like, just take advantage of these last few years because none of this is ever going to happen again. You'd better be prepared for doing a lot of touring because that's really the only unique situation that's going to be left. 
- David Bowie 

PUF 20 Years Ago

Illinois Commissioner Ruth Kretschmer Wanted Answers About Restructuring.

Twenty years ago, in February 1996, the cover of Public Utilities Fortnightly was emblazoned with the words: Competitive Generation: Are We There Yet? The lead article was authored by Ruth Kretschmer, a highly respected commissioner on the Illinois Commerce Commission. 

Kretschmer served as a regulator there for twenty years, July 1983 - December 2002. She also chaired the Commission for a time, as well as the NARUC Gas Committee. 

Upcoming April 2016 issue contents

76 pages, 16 features & columns, 19 authors, ducks, baseball, virtual reality, 3 cartoons, and a crossword puzzle.

With features by Bill Spence, with Steve Mitnick; Nancy Ryan and Lucy McKenzie; Brendan Collins; Larry Kellerman; Charles Cicchetti; Nicholas Giannasca; Colin Fraser; Roy Palk; and Sam Flaim and Loren Toole.

Amid Solar Storm, EIA Defends Itself

Energy Dept.’s EIA shines light on accusations its numbers are anti-solar.

This storm has been brewing for awhile. The Energy Department's Energy Information Administration, EIA, is supposedly anti-solar. Indeed, it's anti-renewables. 

Even though EIA is chartered to be - and has been - consistently unbiased, as the energy policy debates of the day have swirled around. Even though EIA is an agency of the Obama administration, not known to be anti-renewables. 

Cost of Electricity in the Roaring 20s: Wichita

Lighting a lamp in Wichita was a pricey proposition.

Have a five-room house in Wichita, Kansas? In 1923?

A small interconnection with the grid allowed you to take up to four hundred watts at a time. Not a lot of electricity. 

You paid your utility a dollar if you used ten kilowatt-hours over the course of a month. That's a dime per kilowatt-hour. 

Now that's a little less than what you pay today for a kilowatt-hour in Wichita, about twelve cents. Though a dime was worth a whole lot more back then. 

A dime in 1923 was like $1.39 today. So the cost for a Wichita kilowatt-hour in 1923 was effectively $1.39.

Public Service Commission from Where?

Before even utility business model 1.0

The Public Service Commission's chief engineer authored the report. It's:

"an analysis of the theories and principles of electric light and power rates... to devise a rate which will cause each individual consumer to pay in direct proportion to the cost of rendering him his required service."

A filing in a proceeding about utility business models? You might say that.

Except that the author was chief engineer of the Saint Louis Public Service Commission. Say what?

Except that the report was authored on August 25, 1910. A hundred and six years ago!

CPI Spread Measures Electricity Price Fall

CPI-Electricity fell 1.3% while overall CPI rose 1%

The Consumer Price Index was published last Thursday for May 2016. Electricity? The CPI for electricity has fallen 1.3 percent over the twelve months ending May.

During the same period, the overall CPI has risen 1 percent. So electricity is significantly less expensive than it was a year ago.

The spread between the overall CPI and the CPI-Electricity is a measure of electricity becoming less expensive. The spread for May was 2.3 percent.

The spread is computed by subtracting the overall CPI, at 1 percent, less the CPI-Electricity, at minus 1.3 percent.

Second Winner of PUF Cross-Examination Award

We have our second winner of the PUF Cross-Examination Award. The award goes to media and other statements that are so misleading they compel us to cross-examine.

Readers may recall the first winner. It was a July 5th article of the New York Times. The article, "Piles of Dirty Secrets Behind a Model 'Clean Coal' Project," implied a utility project in Mississippi has driven electric rates to unbearable levels.

PPI for Generation, Transmission, Distribution Lowest in 3 Years

Electricity’s Producer Price Index up just 3.7% from August 2004, while overall Consumer Price Index up 9.9%

Late last week, the feds dumped a wealth of August electric price data on our desk. This week, we’re filling you in, on what it all means for utility policy and regulation.

There’s too much to fit in a single column. See yesterday’s column for Consumer Price Index trends in residential electric rates, by region. Here today is another taste. To get the full story, catch all the columns this week.

You Must Read 'Last Days of Night'

Foundation story for our industry, with intrigues of Edison, Westinghouse, Tesla, Morgan and Bell

“Last Days of Night” is a historical novel about the war of currents between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse, along with Nikola Tesla, J.P. Morgan and Alexander Graham Bell.