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CITY OF COLTON <br />AGENDAREPORT <br />For the Council Meeting of October 21, 1997 <br />TO: Honorable Mayor and City Council <br />APPROVAL: Len Wood, Interim City Manager <br />FROM: Thomas K. Clarke, Utility Director <br />SUBJECT: Public Hearing, Recommendation to the City Council to Adopt A Competition <br />Transition Charge In Response to Electric Utility Restructuring <br />DATE: September 22, 1997 <br />BACKGROUND <br />California State Assembly Bill No. 1890 was approved by Governor Wilson on September 23, <br />1996, and became effective immediately on that date.. The bill provides for the restructuring of <br />the electric utility industry in the State of California. The primary feature of the bill is that <br />electricity customers will have a choice as to their energy provider that is not based solely on <br />their geographic, location. <br />Such a dramatic change in electric utility law by the Federal and State governments has placed <br />electric utilities in a difficult position with respect to their long-term investments in electric <br />generating capacity. Prior to the restructuring laws, Federal and State policies were oriented <br />toward the conservation of natural gas and the development of more expensive, small-scale <br />generating technologies such as wind, geothermal, and solar power. Nuclear and coal-fired <br />generating plants were also encouraged to increase the "energy independence" of the United <br />States. Such policy, therefore, was not exclusively designed to secure the lowest -cost energy <br />possible. <br />AB1890 and recent federal legislation respond to the new realities of global competition, the <br />end of the Cold War, the development of substantial oil and gas reserves throughout the world, <br />the computerization of commodity markets and electric transmission networks, and the <br />advancement of natural gas turbine generating technologies. The result in the United States <br />appears to be a migration from large coal and nuclear power facilities to more medium scale <br />natural gas fired facilities, with cost savings of up to 7 cents per kilowatt-hour in the case of <br />nuclear replacement, and from 0 to 2 cents per kilowatt-hour in the case of coal replacement. <br />The new policy focus is on providing American business with low-cost energy with far less <br />emphasis on non -monetary strategic issues. <br />The Competition Transition Charge (CTC) is a bridge between the old and new policy. Utilities <br />that committed themselves, under prudency review by their regulatory bodies, to long-term <br />investments in generating plants under the old policy have the opportunity to continue to collect <br />revenue to pay off those debts or "stranded costs" by charging the CTC. Investor owned <br />utilities must complete the bulk of this recovery by December 31, 2001. Municipalities were not <br />given any deadline to pay off their stranded investment, but they must consider how competitive <br />\\Server\utim\Council\ctccalcssep97counciloct97.rtf <br />