INTRODUCTION
The nation is entering a major transition for electric utilities
from a monopoly market to a partially deregulated competitive market.
The change marks a shift in the national philosophy of utility regulation
and may require extensive restructuring of the industry into generating,
marketing, transmission and distribution companies. Decisions at
the federal level have set the stage for this transition and determinations
on the timing and form of competitive markets have initially been
left to the states.
In 1996, the Nebraska Legislature referred to the Natural Resources
Committee Legislative Resolution 455, a two-phase study to examine
issues related to competition and restructure of the electric utility
industry and the possible effects on the state. The Natural Resources
Committee established a Task Force made up of industry representatives
and engaged a project manager and a facilitator to direct research
and oversee a public process. The Natural Resources Committee also
established a 41 member Advisory Group made up of individuals representing
a wide range of interests in the state including consumer advocates,
environmentalists, labor and business representatives, electric
industry leaders, and legislators. The Task Force has met monthly
with the Advisory Group to share the progress and details of its
research and to solicit suggestions and comments. The Task Force
also conducted a survey of all Nebraska electric systems to gather
data and information on key issues.
Phase I of the study provides a comprehensive overview of the history,
structure, governance, operations, financing and comparative effectiveness
and efficiency of Nebraska’s consumer-owned systems. Phase
II of the study will be focused on the emerging issues of competition
and restructuring and the possible effects on consumers and consumer-owned
electric systems in the state. This report summarizes the Phase
I research. All data is based on reporting for 1995, unless noted
otherwise. The findings of the research are:
- Nebraska’s
electric industry evolved out of dual needs for power and irrigation
and popular support for local control. With federal support the
industry in Nebraska was transformed into a unique structure of
all consumer-owned electric systems;
- Consumers
are served by 171 entities-municipal electric systems, public
power districts, rural electric cooperatives, and others-one of
the highest numbers of individual electric systems in any state;
-
While day-to-day management of the systems occurs at the local
level, the legislature has played a vital oversight role to encourage
coordination of the diverse systems;
-
The state’s 835,905 metered customers paid more than $1.1
billion in electric bills in 1995;
- The
statewide average electric rate (5.4 cents/kWh) ranked 11th lowest
in the nation in 1995; average rates for individual systems range
from below 4 cents/kWh to more than 8 cents/kWh;
Reliability for Nebraska’s systems ranks high in a comparison
of limited statewide and national data available;
- The
state’s electric systems have a total investment in plant
and equipment of $6.2 billion, with major plants and facilities
owned by the Nebraska Public Power District, the Omaha Public
Power District, and Lincoln Electric System;
- Peak
demand for 1995 was estimated at 5,139 megawatts, with total Nebraska
owned generating capacity of 6,034 megawatts (excluding certain
purchases and sales);
- The
capacity of the fuel mix for 1995 was 54 percent coal, 14 percent
nuclear, 18 percent hydro and 14 percent gas/oil;
- Power
reserves are 17.7 percent, but future reserves depend upon generating
plant decisions and could reduce reserves to as low as 7.5 percent
by 2005;
-
The state has no non-attainment areas for air pollution related
to electric utility operations; new federal standards under consideration
could alter that status;
-
The state’s diverse electric systems undertake individual
forecasting of needs and supplies but engage in Integrated Resource
Planning that assists in coordinating their efforts;
- The
work force consists of 6,700 full and part-time employees: 31
percent in generation/production, 46 percent in transmission and
distribution, 18 percent in administrative functions with an annual
payroll totaling more than $269 million; deregulation and restructuring
could affect work force size, levels of safety and quality of
service;
-
Nebraska systems have a lower average debt service coverage than
other public power systems nationally, however the systems carrying
major debt have been ranked as having good competitive position
by financial analysts;
- The
electric systems transfer $51.2 million annually to state and
local governments through taxes, fees and lease payments; this
indicates a statewide tax equivalent rate of 4.7 percent, disaggregation
of the REA/RUS rural systems indicates a rate of 5.7 percent for
public power systems, roughly equivalent to the amount paid by
consumer-owned systems nationally (5.8 percent) and investor-owned
utilities (5.9 percent) in other states;
- Governance
and statutory requirements varies by type of system with some
systems enjoying broader latitude or more expansive powers than
others;
-
The state has had open transmission access (above 34.5 kV) and
competition at the wholesale level for more than 30 years;
-
Pressures to alter the industry and establish competitive markets
at the retail level could arise from federal actions and decisions,
regional activities, decisions by neighboring states and interests
for bundled or "multi-service" delivery within the state;
-
Deregulation and restructuring of the electric industry has the
potential to alter the current structure, governance, operations
and financing of the Nebraska systems.
Chapter One -- HISTORY
1.0 INTRODUCTION
Nebraska has long held a landmark position in the electric utility
industry. More than 50 years ago, economic conditions and local
interests combined to create an electric industry in which Nebraskans
would be served entirely by consumer-owned electric systems - public
power districts, municipal electric systems and rural electric cooperatives.
The first half of the industry’s evolution in Nebraska was
marked by a strong surge in the establishment of these systems combined
with development of irrigation. The latter half has been characterized
by efforts to achieve the benefits of statewide coordination of
these diverse systems and, at the same time, retain the advantages
of local control. Throughout this evolution, events at the federal
level have stimulated change within the state-such as we are now
witnessing.
This
chapter summarizes the history of Nebraska’s electric industry.
It provides context for national and regional comparisons and also
for examination of principles, operations, and emerging issues presented
in subsequent chapters. It also sets up a framework for examining
policy evolution in the state and provides insights into tensions
underlying policy development.
The
history of Nebraska’s consumer-owned electric systems may
be divided into five stages:
1.1
The first stage (1882-1910) - Formation of the first municipal
systems
Early electrical system inventors, such as Charles Brush, Elihu
Thomson and Thomas Edison, began marketing their equipment in the
early 1880s. In Nebraska, as in other states, it was common for
local entrepreneurs to form a company, gain a license for territorial
use of equipment from one of the electrical equipment marketers
and seek a local franchise from municipal government to provide
electric service.
As more municipalities began granting franchises, state governments
developed formal policies recognizing the local process and authority.
The Nebraska Legislature passed a law regarding local powers over
electric lighting and service in 1885. The law officially granted
the mayor and council of cities created under the act the power
to contract for and to regulate the operations of electric companies.1
Local government drew their authority from voters who could also
choose to grant the franchise for electric service to their municipal
government. The City of Crete formed a municipal electric department
in 1887, the first on record in the state. Crete was quickly followed
by the Village of Prague (1887) and the Village of Panama (1888).
As demand for electric service increased, eight more municipal electric
departments formed in Nebraska prior to 1900. In neighboring states
there was similar early activity.2
While this early municipal electric system formation was significant,
most of the development before the turn of the century was undertaken
by private companies. In 1902, Nebraska had 43 private power companies
in operation, compared to its 11 municipal plants.3
However, this contrast was about to change.
The scale of technology at the turn of the century was favorable
for municipal systems. The generating plants utilized at this time
were commonly small hydro plants or small coal or diesel generators.
The distribution systems were not extensive and existed largely
for street lighting, or for combined street lighting and electric
streetcar service. Nationwide, municipal systems multiplied at double
the rate of private electric companies during the period of 1897-1907.
Nationally, 60 to 120 new municipal systems were being formed every
year. Nebraska was part of this trend.
The municipal electric system formations in Nebraska surpassed Minnesota
and other states in the region during the 1900-1910 period. An additional
48 small towns and villages in Nebraska established municipal electric
systems during the first decade of the century for a total of 59.4
The reasons for this growth are commonly attributed to the economic
advantages of municipal electric systems - many of them provided
street lighting at half the cost of private electric companies.
But the sustained growth of municipal systems in Nebraska that began
in the early 1900s and proceeded for two decades was also due to
the broad base of popular support for local control.
Competition
for electric franchises at the local level became commonplace and
it was not unusual, as in the City of Lincoln, for both private
and municipal systems to provide service. In large cities more than
one private company might also provide service, each to a different
neighborhood. Tensions commonly arose over multiple or competing
franchise grants, or for proposals for municipalities to purchase
an existing street lighting system, especially as service began
to spread to commercial and residential customers.
While residents of cities, towns and villages debated and took opportunities
to create municipal electric systems, or receive electricity from
a private company, rural residents faced a very different situation.
Nearly all rural residents living on farms confronted a future without
the benefit of electricity for irrigation or power, unless they
purchased and ran their own small gasoline generator, or in fewer
cases, constructed a small dam or windmill with a DC battery system.
Less than five percent of Nebraska farms were electrified by 1920
and of these only about one half percent had central station service.5
Life on isolated farms was a round of constant heavy labor for men,
women and children. The long hours of toil in the fields were aggravated
by severe weather in a climate that could turn vast areas of the
state bone dry. Irrigation was a necessity for reliable crop production.
Competition for water rights and efforts to construct irrigation
ditches and canals had long histories in Nebraska’s counties
and would come to play a major role in the state’s power development.
In
1908 President Roosevelt organized a "Country Life Commission"
to study rural conditions. In transmitting the commission’s
report to Congress, he stated: "It is the obvious duty of Government
to call attention of farmers to the growing monopolization of water
power. The farmers, above all, should have that power, on reasonable
terms, for cheap transportation, for lighting their homes and for
innumerable uses in the daily tasks on the farm."6
Coincident with the sentiment of the Country Life Commission, expanded
formation of municipal electric systems and projects for rural electric
service would become firmly rooted in Nebraska in the next phase
of development.
1.2
The second stage of the industry’s evolution in Nebraska (1911-1933)
This
period was marked by strong expansion in the number of municipal
systems, the first efforts to establish rural cooperatives, a clash
between the holding companies and municipal systems in which one-third
of the municipal systems were sold and passage of Initiative 324
in 1930 and File 310 - "the Enabling Act" - in 1933.
With electric demand growing for commercial and residential customers,
the industry began to change rapidly and competitive tensions between
private companies competing for local franchises and new municipal
systems increased. Leaders of private power companies promoted exclusive
franchise territories and state regulation as an alternative to
local franchise competition and the trend toward municipalization
of electric systems that had begun. Wisconsin and New York formed
the first two state electric regulatory commissions in 1907 and
many states followed. However, Nebraska, along with other states
in the Midwest, did not follow the path of comprehensive state electric
utility regulation, but left franchise negotiation and rate-setting
to the local level.
With local control firmly in place in Nebraska, more than 150 new
municipal electric systems were formed between 1911 and 1920. By
1926 there were 282 municipal systems in operation in Nebraska cities
and towns and only 56 private electric companies. Nebraska had more
municipally-operated electric systems than any other state.7
In addition to the economic advantages of municipal systems, the
broad base of popular support from small towns in Nebraska was reinforced
by rural dwellers who hoped for extension of lines, especially in
areas bordering towns and villages.8
In the early 1920s, private power companies opposed early efforts
to form rural cooperatives.9 In the cities
and villages, competitive tensions with private utilities mounted
as well. This opposition became much more organized as new holding
companies merged many small private electric companies into a single
corporate structure.
On one hand these holding companies offered advantages in the economies-of-
scale that had taken over the industry as the size of power plants
increased and transmission technology allowed power to be transmitted
to distant markets. However, these advantages were outweighed by
market practices that abused consumers and financing practices that
took advantage of unwitting stockholders.
The expansion of holding companies took place nationwide between
1906 and 1932 to an extent that 16 major holding companies came
to control more than 80 percent of the nation’s electrical
output. These same companies, often run by Wall Street firms, also
controlled coal companies, ice companies, water companies, streetcar
and railroad companies and a host of other operations. They actively
used their political and financial influence to stop the expansion
of municipal power systems, stifle early efforts at formation of
rural cooperatives and pressure buy-outs of existing public power
systems. They were also found to have run a highly effective national
propaganda campaign out of some 30 state bureaus, and financing
political candidates who favored them and opposing candidates and
groups that did not. The practices of these electric holding companies
alarmed leaders such as Theodore Roosevelt (and later Franklin Roosevelt)
and Senator George Norris of Nebraska.
The
first electric holding company entry into Nebraska came in 1917
with establishment of the Nebraska Power Company in Omaha, an affiliate
of the American Power and Light Company. By 1925 four other major
holding companies had entered the state, taking over smaller private
electric companies and municipal systems as well Stone and Webster,
the National Electric Group, United Power and Light and Samuel Insull’s
Middle West Utilities. These five holding companies consolidated
the 148 private companies operating in Nebraska in 1917 to 42 private
operations by 1927.10
The
trend for increasing municipalization and efforts to develop rural
cooperatives met head-on in the mid-1920s with the consolidation
and expansion of the private holding companies in Nebraska. Political
battles raged for five years as the holding companies pushed for
buy-outs of the small municipal systems. In some cases, municipal
systems lacked the capital to improve their facilities or needed
greater coordination with other systems that was not possible at
that time. In rural areas where the holding companies claimed service
territory but did not provide service, they constructed "spite
lines" to eliminate the most lucrative farms from cooperative
participation and mounted litigation against the early co-ops that
had been formed.
Similar to the trend that took shape elsewhere in the country, 112
(more than one-third) of Nebraska’s municipal electric systems
were sold to the holding companies between 1927 and 1930. As this
trend began, the League of Nebraska Municipalities and state political
leaders mounted an effort to develop revenue bond financing that
would allow the municipal electric systems to expand and improve
service without issuing general obligation bonds. The proposal was
opposed by the private power companies and bills in two legislative
sessions failed. In a bold political move supported by a statewide
campaign, the issue was taken directly to the voters in an initiative
petition in 1930. The initiative, known as "Initiative 324,"
passed by a margin of 151,353 votes and became law on December 3,
1930. Initiative 324 passed in every precinct, demonstrating the
ongoing popular support for public power and making Nebraska a national
leader in the area of revenue financing.
The
three-year drive for revenue bond financing was led by Attorney
General C.A. Sorensen, Senator George Norris and C.E. Beals (mayor
of Crete). Following passage of the law, they continued their efforts
and targeted rural electrification as an essential goal. Sorensen
recognized three obstacles to rural service: 1) lack of proper legislation
under which farmers could organize; 2) lack of low-cost wholesale
electric energy supply; and 3) lack of money available at low interest
rates.11 Sorensen drafted a bill for the
1933 legislative session that would remove the first two obstacles
to organization and low-cost power. The third obstacle of funding
would be overcome by the federal government under the Public Works
Administration programs and later the Rural Electrification Act.
The 1933 bill became known as Senate File 310, or the "Enabling
Act." It proposed a process in which 15 percent of eligible
voters in an area (a county, several counties or any number of voting
precincts) could petition to form a public power and/or irrigation
district and select a temporary board of directors.
There was much opposition to this bill. It passed the Senate by
a good margin, but was approved in the House by only one vote. Criticism
of House members who sided with the holding companies on this issue
gave support to long-standing efforts to establish a unicameral
legislature favored by Senator Norris and other political leaders.
1.3 The third stage of the industry’s evolution (1934-1946)
This
period began with implementation of the Enabling Act and extended
through the passage of the federal Rural Electrification Act and
the Public Utility Holding Company Act to the takeover of all private
electric company operations in the state.
Events at the federal level opened the way for local interests that
had become rooted in Nebraska. The first event at the federal level
was a shift in policy by the Roosevelt Administration to allow funding
through the Public Works Administration (PWA) for irrigation and
power projects. That was followed by passage of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act (1935) which forced dissolution and restructuring
of the holding companies after a four-year investigation into their
abusive practices and the financial collapse of several major companies.
Passage of the Rural Electrification Act the following year (1936)
provided secure funding for rural electric generation, transmission
and distribution projects. For Nebraska, the next decade would mark
a vigorous resurgence of public power and rural systems.
Efforts led by Senator Norris at the federal level were successful
in opening the way for financing and the federal Public Works Administration
approved the Loup River and Platte Valley projects in 1933 and the
Tri-County Project in 1935. In total, 16 public power districts
were organized between 1933 and 1943 for the purpose of generating
hydro power. Some of these districts were never completed and others
operated solely as irrigation projects.
Initially, Governor Charles W. Bryan had hoped that all of these
projects would form one large district, comprising 64 counties,
to be called the Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District.
Senator Norris also advocated this approach, calling it a "little
TVA" after the Tennessee Valley Authority project being undertaken
to provide extensive hydro power resources in the South.12
But territorialism and competition appeared inherent in the system.
Individual development and competing interests became the order
of the day. What the supporters of these projects had inherited
along with their hard-won opportunity was decades of tension over
development of their projects.
In addition to internal conflicts between the districts and tensions
with the PWA, the three hydro projects faced a more serious problem
in the ongoing opposition of the holding companies. In 1936, five
private utility subsidiaries of the holding companies serving Nebraska
brought suit against the Public Works Authority, questioning its
authority to provide funds for the hydro projects. These companies
provided 85 percent of the power generated in Nebraska. At the base
of their opposition was a recognition that the three hydro projects
could meet an estimated 80-85 percent of the state’s electric
needs at very low rates.
At
the time that they mounted their suit against the PWA, the holding
companies were also fighting the enactment of the Public Utility
Holding Company Act of 1935. The Holding Company Act provided mother
major impetus to consumer-owned systems in Nebraska, While the REA
and PWA provided the benefit of federal financing and support for
development of the cooperatives and public power districts, the
Holding Company Act broke the remaining influence of the private
utilities. In one of the hardest fought battles of the New Deal,
the Roosevelt Administration and Congress forced the national break-up
of the electric holding companies that dominated the state. The
electric holding companies filed suit against the law but it was
upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1938.13
For Nebraska this would mean dissolution and reorganization of American
Light and Power, Electric Bond and Share, Middlewest Utilities,
United Light and Power and Stone and Webster.
While the suit against the Holding Company Act was working its way
through the courts, new rural electric systems were actively forming.
Thirty-five rural electrification districts were formed between
1933 and 1943. Most of these electric systems were organized under
the provisions of the public power law (the Enabling Act) and enjoyed
the status of governmental subdivisions.
While the rural electric systems brought service to new customers,
the major hydro districts began efforts to purchase facilities of
the private companies. To overcome problems in financing these purchases,
the Nebraska Legislature amended the Enabling Act in 1939 to allow
formation of a new debt-free power district to act as a wholesaler
for the other power districts. On August 5, 1939 Consumers Public
Power District was established. Following the Supreme Court’s
decision supporting the break-up of the holding companies, 14 private
utility companies were purchased at a cost of $42,206,245.53 between
1940 and 1942.14
Along
with these purchases, there was an effort to provide greater coordination
for the hydro projects. At the urging of the PWA, a joint operating
agreement among the three hydros was put in place in 1940 to assure
interconnection of the projects, pooling of output and division
of revenues. To carry out these arrangements, the Nebraska Public
Power System (NPPS) was created to act as a wholesale marketing
and transmission agency. The Legislature recognized that greater
coordination and efficiencies achieved through NPPS would translate
to savings and expanded service for consumers and destructive competition
between the systems could be avoided.15
There was not uniform agreement on the formation of the NPPS. A
legislative committee that held hearings across the state in 1943
found the primary objection to this joint operation was that "...
it may result in too great a concentration of authority over the
public power program. Since the hydros produce nearly half of the
power generated in the state, the fear has been expressed that unified
management will tend to place users of electricity at the mercy
of ‘the system’ and possibly lead to the growth of a
‘political machine'."16
One
view held that the three hydro projects were destined to merge into
a single district. An opposing view challenged this vision, contending
that "the advantages of consolidation have already been gained
through the joint system [NPPS] and that the degree of local control
which is preserved through the retention of the three separate boards
is valuable, especially in dealing with problems of irrigation."17
Despite these internal debates over the future shape of consumer-owned
systems in the state, the formation of Consumers Public Power District
and the formation of the Nebraska Public Power System, coupled with
the U.S. Supreme Court upholding the break-up of the holding companies,
created conditions for the complete buyout of private power company
facilities. By 1942, Consumers had acquired all but a small portion
of the remaining private power facilities outside of Omaha.
Changes were in the wind for Omaha as well. The American Power and
Light holding company and Electric Bond and Share Company were ordered
to dissolve by the federal Securities and Exchange Commission on
August 22, 1942. Like the case against the Holding Company Act itself
and the suit against PWA financing of the hydros, the holding companies
took this order to the U.S. Supreme Court where it was ultimately
upheld. With this forced divestiture, the Omaha Public Power District
would acquire American Light and Power’s subsidiary, the Nebraska
Power Company, on December 2, 1946.
The
new consumer-owned electric utility organization in the eastern
two-thirds of the state held to functional lines. Central, Loup
and Platte hydro districts operated the generating plants. Transmission
and interconnection services were provided by the NPPS. Retail distribution
was carried out by the municipal systems, the rural cooperatives
and public power districts. In the western third of the state, Consumers
acted independently of NPPS and the hydro projects. Additionally,
some municipal systems provided their own generation.18
Despite the takeover of the private power companies and the formation
of NPPS, there were deep internal divisions between the consumer-owned
systems.
Increased competitive friction between Consumers and the municipal
systems surfaced in 1942 and 1943. The law under which the Consumers
District was organized explicitly recognized the right of municipalities
to acquire from Consumers the electric distribution system (though
not the generating plants) located within the municipalities. If
a satisfactory price could not be reached through negotiation, the
price was to be determined by a condemnation proceeding if the city
elected to purchase.19
Some municipalities believed local control was preferable, that
the prices paid by Consumers to buy out the private utilities were
too high and/or the municipality could finance at a lower interest
rate. The promise Consumers made was to give each city its distribution
system when Consumers’ bonds were retired. In what was probably
the first case of concern for "stranded investment" in
Nebraska, Consumers’ officials feared that if the municipalities
acquired the distribution systems through condemnation at a lower
price than Consumers had paid, "The remaining cities served
by the district will have to pay in rates a portion of the bonded
indebtedness which will be escaped by the cities which condemn."20
The
Legislature’s Subcommittee on Public Power concluded in 1944
that ". . . it will be a benefit to the State if the district
is permitted to operate in substantially its present form, at least
until the bulk of its bonds have been paid. The subcommittee recognizes
that cities have a legal right to acquire their own distribution
systems by negotiation, or by condemnation, and it appreciates the
natural desire of cities to do this. It hopes, however, that cities
will be made to feel their interests are fully protected while remaining
in the Consumers’ system and that resort to condemnation will
not be encouraged." The subcommittee believed that the interests
of the State of Nebraska will be best served by a program of friendly
cooperation between all public agencies concerned, namely, the hydros,
Consumers, the municipalities, the rural electrification districts
and the Legislature.21
The
subcommittee recognized that "Under the circumstances, some
degree of competition and rivalry between them is inevitable."
The subcommittee also recognized that the NPPS "has done much
to prevent rivalry and competition between the three hydro districts,"
and noted the difference of opinion over whether they should be
merged. "Any suggestion of consolidation of the hydros and
Consumers necessarily raises the question as to which one will absorb
the other and who will manage the resulting entity." The subcommittee
chose not to engage in administrative supervision. "Further
experience will no doubt determine whether or not such supervision
is necessary," they concluded.22
Following the committee’s recommendations, the legislature
did not support a statewide plan for reorganization, but proceeded
with what would become a long-term policy to encourage "friendly
cooperation" among the consumer-owned systems.23
It
has often been noted that with the establishment of the Omaha Public
Power District in 1946, Nebraska became an all-public power state.
However, one small area of private service by Northwestern Public
Service Company remained in Niobrara and Santee until 1949. On December
12, 1949 this was transferred to service by North Central Public
Power District.24 Nebraska’s achievement
was recognized nationwide. In 1949-50, South Dakota attempted to
follow Nebraska’s example, but efforts to pass legislation
similar to the Enabling Act met staunch opposition from the private
utilities and failed in the legislature.25
1.4
The fourth stage (1947-1973)
The achievements of the consumer-owned systems in Nebraska were
readily evident. Between its establishment in 1939 and 1943, Consumers
instituted rate reductions totaling $1.5 million in gross revenues.26
NPPS was able to reduce system reserve requirements from 25 percent
to 12.21 percent through interconnection of electric systems inside
and outside the state. With 31 public power districts and five rural
cooperatives in place, the demand for electricity in the state doubled
twice between 1947 and 1957.27 The physical
expansion of the system was marked by the fact that 95 percent of
rural dwellers received electricity by 1957, up from 25 percent
in 1944. But along with obvious benefits, this burgeoning growth
added to the stress and tensions between the systems. Much of the
activity during the late 1950s through the early 1970s centered
on efforts to refine and reorganize statewide operations and create
more public oversight of the industry.
The year 1944 began a new era in Nebraska. The problems the consumer-owned
systems faced were the problems of success. Following the war, power
demand expanded rapidly as new public power districts and rural
cooperatives formed. Cornhusker Public Power District had formed
in 1943, Custer Public Power District (1944), Twin Valleys Public
Power District (1944), North Central Public Power District (1945),
South Central Public Power District (1945), Southwest Public Power
District (1945), Loup Valley Rural Public Power District (1946),
Omaha Public Power District (1946) and Wheat Belt Public Power District
(1947) followed. The prospect of a power shortage from the rapidly
growing demand from these and other systems forced consideration
of new construction, new contract negotiations and a new alignment
of complicated relationships.
The principle underlying the entire system was service to consumers
at the lowest possible cost. This principle was supported by two
primary understandings: 1) that NPPS would be the agency to coordinate
transmission and generation services; and 2) that Consumers would
provide retail marketing until 1972, when upon expiration of its
bonded debt, it would turn over the distribution systems to the
municipalities. All three elements would meet strong competitive
tests in the coming decade.
By 1951, the state’s demand had doubled over 1945 needs. Tensions
between the systems mounted over contested service areas and who
would construct new generation at the lowest cost. The tensions
and divisions were heightened by the availability of power from
the federal dams being constructed by the Bureau of Reclamation
along the Missouri River in the Dakotas. Public power systems, rural
cooperatives and private utilities positioned for access to this
power and initiated efforts to gain control over proposed transmission
lines. Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association formed
in 1952 to assure access to these supplies by its members in Colorado,
Wyoming and western Nebraska. Eleven of the rural districts formed
the Northeast Nebraska Generation and Transmission Cooperative in
1954 to plan for their own generation and transmission. Two years
later, 22 of the rural systems created the Nebraska Generation and
Transmission Co-op to replace the Northeast G&T.28
In
August 1955, Governor Anderson brought the managers of the public
power and rural cooperative systems together in an attempt to resolve
their differences. Consumers proposed a merger of all the facilities
of Platte, Loup, NPPS and Consumers into a state-wide organization
controlled by a single board of directors. NPPS had a similar merger
plan that omitted Consumers. Litigation over Consumers’ proposal
resulted in the state Supreme Court determining that Consumers was
not bound by its contract with NPPS and that it could generate and
transmit power under its own charter. In the meantime, demand was
about to double again over 1951 levels.
Along
with these disputes over who would construct and operate generating
plants, there were also disputes over construction and control of
transmission lines and a looming background issue over which regional
power pool to participate in. One group that would become the Mid-Continent
Area Power Pool was viewed by some as a planning organization controlled
by private utilities. Another group, centered around the Mid-West
Electric Consumers Association, sought to create a public power
pool. Despite these disputes, a new maturation began to emerge by
1960.
Planning for generation and transmission was very compartmentalized,
with each system or entity undertaking its own studies and proposing
construction of its own facilities. Recognizing the need for increased
cooperation and coordination, leaders of Nebraska’s consumer-owned
system attempted to set their differences aside. Consumers and NPPS
attempted to formulate an "Integration Contract" in 1958
and 1959. This was intended to consolidate the facilities of the
two organizations without an actual merger. It would have combined
all transmission, substations and generating facilities then in
operation, including the hydros, into a single system. However,
the contract was regarded as too complicated by many who believed
an actual merger of the agencies would be best.
Out
of the general recognition that there was a duplication of facilities
and functions as well as a need to resolve service area disputes,
the state legislature came forward with two legislative bills and
a resolution in 1961. It was acknowledged that the regime of the
1940s and early 1950s was focused on serving undeveloped markets.
This relied on permissive local control and flexibility in contractual
arrangements. The market was now largely developed and required
more refined management and oversight. This management need indicated
some form of mandatory state level control might be beneficial.29
The study and discussion generated by these bills accomplished three
things: 1) merger or consolidation of consumer-owned system was
formally placed on the table; 2) the Power Review Board was created;
and 3) an industry group - the Nebraska Power Industry Committee
- was brought together forming the basis for the Nebraska Power
Association and opportunities for greater voluntary coordination
and cooperation.
The first step was formation of the Power Review Board (PRB) through
LB 220, passed in 1963, The primary responsibilities of the PRB
were to: 1) resolve disputes over service territory in a voluntary
process if possible, but with a mandatory order if necessary; 2)
to review and approve proposed generation and transmission facilities;
and 3) to provide advisory opinions for resolution of rate disputes.
Passage of the bill indicated a deliberate shift from the policy
of the legislature’s 1944 policy of "friendly cooperation"
and letting competition and occasional friction proceed in order
to expand service.30
After
establishing the Power Review Board, the legislature pursued statewide
consolidation of generation and transmission. In 1965, the legislature
passed LB 764 - known as the "Grid Bill" - which mandated
the merger of Loup, Platte, Consumers and NPPS. At the same time
Eastern Nebraska Public Power District voluntarily merged with OPPD.
The following year, however, the Nebraska Supreme Court declared
the Consumers, NPPS and Loup merger to be unconstitutional.31
A referendum vote was mounted in 1968 to gain public support for
an amendment to the state’s constitution to allow the legislature
to form a wholesale-only G&T grid, but it was rejected by voters.32
The legislature had passed L.B. 297 in the previous year to allow
use of transmission lines for wheeling competitive wholesale power
supplies. With the failure of the referendum, the legislature refined
the competitive use of transmission for wholesale power supplies
in 1969. At
the same time, faced with ongoing pressures, the major public power
entities began to work out a mutually agreeable method to combine
their operations. The result was the voluntary formation of the
Nebraska Public Power District (NPPD) in 1969.
Through
NPPD, both Consumers and NPPS continued their functions. NPPD consolidated
most of the state’s generating and transmission facilities
into a single G&T entity serving 87 of the state’s 93
counties. It was not the consolidation originally envisioned by
Governor Bryan and Senator Norris in 1933, but it was a major step
toward statewide coordination. NPPD served more than 200 municipalities
that had finally received their distribution systems from Consumers
and leased them back to NPPD. NPPD also controlled much of the state’s
transmission. Tri-State continued to serve rural cooperatives and
districts in western Nebraska. The Omaha Public Power District served
the more heavily populated southeast region of the state. The Nebraska
G&T served 24 rural electric systems. And independent municipals
provided their own generation and contracts.
None
of this restructuring put a decisive end to the tensions between
the systems, but it did serve to create greater coordination and
establish the basis for addressing complex problems about to emerge
in the 1970s.
1.5 The fifth stage (1973 - present)
The pressures on the consumer-owned systems continued to evolve.
During the 1940s and 1950s, it had been the pressure of growth that
was doubling every six years and the friction between new systems
operating independently and without clear service territories. In
the 1960s, it was the pressure to create greater statewide coordination,
clarify service territories and consolidate industry operations.
In the 1970s, it became the pressures of changing economics, a shift
from economies of scale, a drop in expected demand growth and the
emergence of conservation, new technologies and social and environmental
concerns. It was a new and more complicated world with new rules.
Following years of mounting concern over steadily degrading conditions
of the nation’s water and air, the federal government passed
a series of new environmental laws. The Clean Water Act of 1968
was followed by the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and
the Clean Air Act of 1970. These laws would begin to alter the process
for development of power plants and transmission lines. Just as
the effect of these laws began to take hold, the electric utility
industry worldwide witnessed unprecedented cost increases from the
oil embargo of 1973 and its ensuing price shocks.
Even
before the oil embargo, inflation had been rising, construction
costs had been escalating and the historic trend for a steady decrease
in electric prices due to economies-of-scale had reversed and prices
had started climbing. The oil embargo gave a dramatic surge to prices
that sparked a drop in the traditional seven percent per year growth
in demand for electricity.
Although little oil-fired generation was used in Nebraska, the impact
of the market changes came through. The federal government passed
the Energy Supply and Environmental Coordination Act in 1974 which
placed prohibitions on electric utilities burning natural gas or
petroleum products, creating constraints for some of the smaller
systems that had generation fueled by natural gas.33
Rising costs of generation convinced many small municipal systems
to sign with NPPD as their wholesale supplier, others worked through
the League of Municipalities to form a new organization, the Nebraska
Municipal Power Pool (NMPP) to acquire new power supplies. NMPP
was officially established in October 1975 as a joint action agency.
Its purpose was to provide the 19 member municipal systems with
a vehicle to participate in ownership of large generating plants
being constructed and to acquire wholesale power supplies. The emergence
of NMPP placed it in competition with NPPD.
Every system mounted efforts to keep costs down. In addition to
investing directly in new plants or negotiating competitive contracts,
some systems sought to expand their service territories to increase
sales and reduce costs. Others sought to change the requirements
of providing service to high cost customers. The legislature undertook
three studies during the 1970s to address this new wave of problems.
In the first study, published in February 1976, the legislature’s
Public Works Committee reviewed rates and operations of NPPD and
OPPD in recognition of the fact that these utilities were trend-setters
for the state. The study also examined the general trends and constraints
of the operating and economic conditions of the many interlocking
electric systems in Nebraska when viewed as a state-wide public
power industry. While OPPD and NPPD were judged to be well-managed,
the principal conclusion was that "the public power community
of Nebraska, viewed as the statewide electric power industry, appears
to lack a mechanism for unified direction for achieving industry-wide
coordination and for introducing public purpose into formulating
future policies. Such unified control is not practical within the
industry’s present structure without additional direction
by the Nebraska State Legislature."34
Although
no immediate changes in law resulted from the studies, they drew
attention to specific planning and coordination issues. In response,
the Nebraska Power Association and its members developed a Joint
Planning Committee to examine optimum plans for new power resources.
Public pressure also began to mount. Five consumer-oriented bills
were introduced in 1978 under L.R. 161: 1) to establish a public
counsel for electric utility customers; 2) to require a notice and
two public hearings for electric rate increases; 3) authorization
of lifeline rates; 4) a requirement for the Power Review Board to
analyze rate structures for effect on conservation and submission
of detailed cost estimates on facilities subject to PRB approval;
and 5) a requirement for rates to reflect actual costs. None of
these bills became law.35 However, legislation
enacted in 1979 gave the Power Review Board the authority to review
additions to municipal generating capacity under a three-part test.36
The planning element of this law was expanded in 1981 with new legislation
that required the Power Review Board to produce and publish power
supply planning information or to work with the industry to produce
it.37 The Nebraska Power Association took
up this task to develop a statewide plan and forecast.
These efforts in Nebraska mirrored the drive for power supply planning
and energy efficiency taking place at the federal level.38
Passage of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) by
Congress in 1978 began a new era of planning and construction of
power plants. PURPA encouraged programs for energy efficiency and
conservation as well as independent power production and wholesale
competition. With deregulation of natural gas being initiated and
talk of deregulation for electricity in the wings, PURPA would take
on far-reaching implications, ultimately posing as much impact as
the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935.
As the Nebraska Power Association and the Power Review Board initiated
the state’s planning efforts in the early 1980s, the recession
cut deeply into national and farm-state economies. Over the next
decade, the growth in demand for electricity continued to drop in
Nebraska as in other states.39 What utilities
in Nebraska and all across the nation faced was the possibility
of mounting supplies of surplus power and unneeded high-cost contracts.
This trend gave support to national proposals to deregulate some
segments of the industry. One answer private utilities formulated
to sluggish growth and rising costs was a proposal to repeal the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 to allow them to restructure
into holding companies and diversify their operations. This would
allow them to set up "independent" subsidiaries to compete
with emerging PURPA-qualified power producers and to engage in other
businesses. Although the Holding Company Act was not repealed, its
oversight was loosened which set off a wave of new electric holding
company formations. By the late 1980s nearly three-quarters of the
private electric companies had adopted a new holding company form.
Public power systems and rural cooperatives also examined ways in
which they might restructure to address market pressures and slow
growth.
In
1987, at the direction of the legislature and requests from the
Power Review Board, the Nebraska Power Association began work on
a review of the consumer-owned industry structure in Nebraska, The
report, issued in November 1988, outlined five options for restructure:
1) continue the status quo - case-by-case basis which would allow
the industry to consider individual system reorganizations as issues
arose; 2) generation and transmission reorganization - consolidating
transmission and generation functions, perhaps into a single entity;
3) distribution system reorganization - consolidating distribution
systems into 10 to 20 geographically contiguous and equally-sized
distribution systems; 4) a single Nebraska electric utility bringing
all generation, transmission and distribution under a single entity;
and 5) enhanced inter-utility cooperation - allowing the industry
to evaluate opportunities for joint action and cooperation with
mechanisms such as joint planning, resource sharing and joint facility
development.40
Options one and five were the preferred industry choices - maintaining
the traditional policy of "friendly cooperation." The
NPA responded very firmly to pressures to consolidate operations.
The conclusion stated:
"This study leads us to a number of conclusions regarding
industry-wide reorganization. Consolidating and increasing the
size of a utility can result in economic savings and performance
enhancements. Those must be offset against adverse impact on local
area interests or other possible adverse impacts on local interests.
Enhanced inter-utility cooperation through joint ventures or other
means is already resulting in service improvements, utility efficiencies
and improvements in costs without structural reorganization of
the industry.
"The most effective reorganization activities involve two
or more willing parties . . . Legislatively-mandated industry-wide
reorganization will be met with considerable opposition because
there is no existing data to support the need for such an undertaking.
This is further emphasized by the fact that Nebraska’s electric
industry has a proven track record with the present public power
industry structure as it has evolved and continues to evolve."41
Events
may have followed a status-quo course if external market pressures
had not continued to intrude on state decision-making. Although
Nebraska’s average electric rates remained relatively low,
elsewhere the surpluses of the 1980s and the emergence of independent
power producers created a national drive to open transmission access
and create and expand competitive wholesale markets. Coupled with
this drive, large industrial consumers also pressed for competitive
contracting at the retail level.
In
1992, following three years of discussion and debate, Congress passed
the National Energy Policy Act. The act gave the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission increased authority to open transmission access
and encouraged greater competition in wholesale markets. Although
the act did not authorize retail competition, the forces of deregulation
had been unleashed and both power marketers and major industrial
consumers began pushing states to allow the formation of competitive
retail markets.
States with high cost electricity were the first to begin deliberations.
By early 1995, nearly half the states had some proposal under consideration.
In April 1996, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued its
landmark Order 888 and Order 889, mandating all jurisdictional transmission
owners to open access to all current and potential users under common
transmission tariffs, provided rules on stranded investment and
set guidelines for "real time" competitive wholesale markets.
By the end of 1996, all states but Tennessee had taken up consideration
of electric industry deregulation. Four states had passed legislation
to allow retail competition and several bills had been introduced
in Congress that would require wholesale and retail competition
in every state.
Deregulation pressures had already begun to surface in Nebraska.
The Municipal Energy Agency of Nebraska and the Nebraska Municipal
Gas Agency formed "Energy America" in 1995, an agency
whose purpose was to engage in competitive marketing of natural
gas and electric supplies both inside and outside Nebraska. The
Omaha Public Power District voluntarily filed a transmission tariff
with FERC, signaling its intent to enter the competitive market
and the deregulation of gas and telecommunications raised consideration
of "bundled" or multi-service competition from a host
of companies.
In the midst of this activity in 1996, the Nebraska Legislature
passed resolution L.R. 455 to establish a study of the issues related
to competition and restructuring of the electric industry and its
potential impacts on a range of issues.
1.6 Summary and Emerging Issues
The fundamental principles for electric service in Nebraska among
all systems have been: 1) highest quality; 2) best reliability;
and 3) lowest cost. For more than 50 years, state policy has been
to apply these principles through locally controlled non-profit
electric systems. The fundamental tension during this time has been
between the interest in maintaining local control and efforts to
achieve efficiencies through coordination between the diverse local
electric systems. Added to this has been a growing pressure to make
environmental concerns an ongoing part of decision-making. The legislature
has long maintained a policy to urge voluntary coordination and
cooperation among the systems. Currently this voluntary cooperation
is being achieved to a great extent through the Nebraska Power Association.
Competitive pressures could undermine this voluntary cooperation
between the systems, or force alterations of the industry structure,
its governance, its operations and financing.
Federal actions, regional actions and forces within the state are
likely to increase the pressure for competitive retail electric
service. To address competitive pressures, the Nebraska Legislature
will need to consider whether or not to urge the industry to restructure
on a voluntary basis, to formulate legislative action to require
restructuring or to take no action at this time. The legislature
may also need to determine whether to take a segmented or comprehensive
approach to address possible market overlap from telecommunications,
natural gas, cable television and other "wires" or energy
services. Decisions made by the state concerning competition in
one industry may affect the options for bundling services from other
industries.
A longer term issue is how formation of large market systems and
structures will affect policy development. If technology continues
to trend toward small scale local generation in the long term, this
could be of great benefit for Nebraska’s diverse locally controlled
systems. However, the large market systems formed in the meantime
could diminish local control and alter the structure of the diverse
systems and options for small scale technology usage.
Several
fundamental questions emerge from historical and policy considerations
regarding possible competition for retail electric service:
-
What policy options or competitive market models would be available
to the state?
-
How would the basic principles of quality of service, reliability
and low cost be affected by any given market option or model?
-
Under any given option, would consumers lose their opportunity
as voters to participate in policy and rate setting? And how would
local control be affected?
-
How would transitional issues under any given option affect the
long-term structure being established?
- How
would economic and non-economic benefits for consumers be assured?
How would reliability be assured? Would costs shift from large
to small consumers? Would competition have varying impacts for
urban and rural consumers?
-
What role would consumers play in determinations about a competitive
market system? What role would cities and towns play in determinations?
What role would the legislature play? What role would the electric
systems play?
-
Would the legislature take a segmented or comprehensive approach
to competition in retail electricity and other "wires"
or energy services?
In order to provide a basis for further study of the implications
of competitive retail markets for electricity, the following chapters
describe the structure and governance, statutory and regulatory
oversight, planning and operations and financing of the Nebraska
systems as they currently exist.
Chapter Two - STRUCTURE AND GOVERNANCE
Chapter Three - STATUTORY AND REGULATORY
OVERSIGHT
Chapter Four - PLANNING AND OPERATIONS
Chapter Five - FINANCE AND TAX
Chapter Six - DEREGULATION AND
RESTRUCTURING
Chapter Notes
Glossary |