Utilities Hunt Energy for the Future
Mar 28 - The Daily Oklahoman
Oklahoma's two largest electrical utilities are taking steps toward meeting
future power needs, but in different ways.
Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co. already announced it plans to join the Grand
River Dam Authority and the Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority in buying a
natural gas-fired, electricity generation plant near Luther for $852
million.
Public Service Co. of Oklahoma, meanwhile, is working with the Oklahoma
Corporation Commission and a consultant selected by the agency -- Boston
Pacific, in Washington, D.C. -- to help map out its future plans, PSO
officials say.
Different plans, same goal Jeff Cloud, chairman of Oklahoma's Corporation
Commission, said he is an interested onlooker at the plans both utilities
are following.
Cloud said both directions have merit.
"This is not a case where one utility is doing something right and another
one isn't," Cloud said. "Their plans are just different, and I look forward
to their processes playing out as both companies move toward meeting their
future energy needs."
Alan Decker, director of regulatory services for the utility, says PSO is
looking for a way to come up with an additional 450 megawatts of power to
add to its 4,100 of megawatts of base power available on its system.
It asked Oklahoma's Corporation Commission to help it evaluate how to meet
those needs and to solicit proposals from power generators or contractors
who build power generation plants because it wants a transparent process,
Decker said this week.
As for what type of power generation the utility is interested in, "it could
be anything," Decker said. "But the likelihood is there are just two types
of resources ... coal or gas."
Decker said this is the first time PSO, based in Tulsa and serving about
500,000 Oklahoman customers, has worked with the Corporation Commission on
this type of process.
He said the utility chose that path to steer clear of potential criticisms
of the company's power needs and ways to meet them. Critics of the plan to
build new coal-fired power generation plant at Red Rock questioned the
utilities' power needs and estimates for building the plant, officials
noted.
"By having the commission hire our consultant, that assures impartiality,"
Decker said. "Obviously, we want to make sure we have some regulatory
certainty about how we meet our customers' needs in the future. If this
process contributes to that certainty, then we are all for it."
As part of the process, the consultant and company are considering potential
sources of power from existing generation plants and possibly building a new
plant for the utility.
Decker said the company hopes it can complete its process by the end of
2008.
By then, PSO "will know what we are going to build and who is going to build
it," Decker said.
The right place at the right time Oklahoma City-based OG&E, meanwhile, is
pursuing necessary federal approval to buy the natural gas-fired plant
called Redbud.
It also has filed an application with the Corporation Commission asking to
add $2.82 a month to an average residential customer's bill to pay its $435
million share of the plant's sale price.
Company officials say the charge would be added to customers' bills once OG&E
is using power generated from the plant, which it would operate. They have
not said how long the fee would remain on customers' bills.
OG&E, which serves more than 762,000 retail customers across 30,000 square
miles in Oklahoma and western Arkansas, supplies a baseload of 6,200
megawatts of power to its customers today. It would own a 51 percent
majority interest in the plant, and be able to use about half the power it
produces. Redbud has a generation capacity of about 1,200 megawatts.
The Grand River Dam Authority would own 36 percent interest in the plant,
while the Oklahoma Municipal Power Authority would own the remaining 13
percent.
Kelson Holdings in Maryland is selling the plant.
"We are fortunate in that Redbud is in the neighborhood, and that shortly
after the Corporation Commission's decision on Red Rock, it was put up for
sale," OG&E spokesman Brian Alford said. "So, it was a matter of the right
asset and the right place at the right time."
Company officials said they like the plant because it is similar to another
OG&E already owns and operates near Newcastle.
Harnessing wind power It also already is connected into the utility's power
grid and is used to supply power to the utility when its needed during
periods of high electricity use by its customers.
Also, using a gas plant like Redbud to help meet OG&E's base load power
needs makes sense, officials said, because power produced by gas plants can
be increased and reduced quickly, for example, to adjust for power produced
by wind.
Pete Delaney, chairman, president and chief executive of OGE Energy Corp.,
said Redbud will help the utility meet the power needs it demonstrated
during the Red Rock pre-approval process.
OG&E officials also have announced a significant expansion of the system's
electrical capacity since the Red Rock decision. The utility plans to use
power generated by wind to add the capacity to the system, they said.
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