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EIA Rolls Out Long List of New Gas-Fired Power

Between 2000 and 2004, a total of 145,417 MW of nonutilitygeneration is expected to be added to the U.S. power grid and 83%of that total will be gas-fired power generation, according to anew survey by the Energy Information Administration.

December 4, 2000

EIA Rolls Out Long List of New Gas-Fired Power

Between 2000 and 2004, a total of 145,417 MW of nonutilitygeneration is expected to be added to the U.S. power grid and 83%of that total will be gas-fired power generation, according to anew survey by the Energy Information Administration.

November 30, 2000

Northeast Tops EIA List of Potential Pipe Trouble Spots

Natural gas pipeline capacity appears “adequate” to meet mostpeak-day demands as the nation heads into the 2000-2001 winterheating season, assuming the weather is average. But there are someareas where capacity constraints and bottlenecks could crop up —most notably in the Northeast region, according to a new report bythe Energy Information Administration (EIA).

October 30, 2000

Williams Energy Rises, Communications Still Lag in 3Q

Joining the rather large list of third quarter 2000 earningssuccess stories, Williams reported net income that was more thanquadruple the figure for the same period last year. Its profitsrose to $121.1 million ($0.27 per share) from $28.1 million ($0.06per share).

October 30, 2000

Northeast Tops EIA List of Potential Pipe Trouble Spots

Natural gas pipeline capacity appears “adequate” to meet mostpeak-day demands as the nation heads into the 2000-2001 winterheating season, assuming the weather is normal. But there are someareas where capacity constraints and bottleneck problems could cropup – most notably in the Northeast region, according to a newreport by the Energy Information Administration (EIA).

October 27, 2000

Williams Energy Rises, Communications Still Lag

Joining the list of third quarter 2000 earnings success stories,Williams reported its third quarter net income more than quadrupledover last year’s figure for the same time period, from $28.1million ($0.06 per share) to $121.1 million ($0.27 per share). Thecompany attributed the growth to its fourth successive quarter ofyear-over-year earnings improvement within its energy businesses.

October 27, 2000

Industry Brief

Top energy regulators from Canada, Mexico and the United Stateswill head the list of speakers at the Sixth Annual Meeting of theGas Industry Standards Board (GISB), to be held Sept. 25-26 in SanAntonio. Commissioner Linda Breathitt of the Federal EnergyRegulatory Commission, Commissioner Raul Monteforte of Mexico’sComision Reguladora de Energia, and Deborah Emes, member ofCanada’s National Energy Board will deliver key addresses at themeeting, whose theme is “Convergence: Making it Work.” Stan Horton,chairman of the GISB board of directors and CEO of Enron GasPipeline Group; and Jim Buccigross, chairman of GISB’s ExecutiveCommittee, will report on the state of the standards-settingorganization. Other speakers include representatives of the FederalTrade Commission, and public utility commissions in Texas,Kentucky, Illinois, and Ohio.

August 14, 2000

Avista Puts E-Commerce Sites to the Test

Avista Corp. subsidiary Avista Advantage completed a painstakingevaluation of 30 retail energy e-commerce sites and narrowed downthe list to three top power exchanges that can handle aggregatedcustomer loads: Usource via Enermetrix, Excelergy and AMDAX. Avistasaid it intends to conduct a pilot program to evaluate the benefitsof buying power online for end-users using three of its largecustomers with multiple sites.

August 4, 2000

Study: The Devil’s in the Bills

Billing system changes topped the list of the most costly backroom operations function for utilities and suppliers preparing forcompetitive energy markets, according to a study by XENERGY Inc.Utilities report spending from $1.22 to $22 per customer, with oneutility reportedly spending up to $82 million, to make billingsystem changes to accommodate retail access.

March 6, 2000

Clean Air, Reliability Top California’s Wish List

California’s regulatory process for adding merchant power plantsand repowering existing merchant sites is likely to get morecomplicated and time-consuming, based on discussions at a Jan. 25one-day energy roundtable on market and infrastructure issuessponsored by the California Public Utilities Commission in SanDiego.

January 31, 2000