Takes

CPUC’s Bilas: Capacity ‘Hoarding’ Takes Toll on Retail Competition

Retail gas unbundling in California is “currently beingundermined” by Dynegy Marketing and Trade’s withholding of asignificant portion of firm transportation capacity on El PasoNatural Gas from the market, the head of the California PublicUtilities Commission (CPUC) said last week. As a remedy, CPUCPresident Richard A. Bilas called on FERC to implement regulationsprohibiting the “hoarding” of pipeline capacity and to investigateallegations of anticompetitive conduct, which he contends wasevident in the Dynegy-El Paso arrangement.

March 1, 1999

El Paso Takes Another Stab at Expanding Bondad

Believing in the saying that “if at first you don’t succeed, tryagain,” El Paso began a new open season Friday to solicit interestin firm service agreements to move gas on an expansion of theBondad Line in the San Juan Basin. A previous attempt at a Bondadexpansion ultimately broke down after FERC rejected some of thetariff provisions last year, leading the primary expansion shipperto withdraw from the project and FERC to vacate its projectcertification (see Daily GPI, Jan. 7, 1998; Oct. 19, 1998; Dec. 11,1998; and Jan. 18, 1999).

February 16, 1999

Oil Dominance Wanes; Clean Gas Takes the Lead

The energy industry has begun the “last days of the age of oil,”with a cast of cleaner fuels waiting to take center stage,according to ARCO CEO Mike R. Bowlin.

February 16, 1999

Oil Dominance Wanes as Clean Gas Takes the Lead

The energy industry has begun the “last days of the age of oil,”with a cast of cleaner fuels waiting to take center stage,according to ARCO CEO Mike R. Bowlin.

February 15, 1999

AGL CEO Takes Blame for Billing Fiasco, Warns of Exiting Sonat

Walter Higgins, CEO of AGL Resources Inc., stood and faced themusic recently at the annual shareholders meeting in Atlanta asstock owners voiced their opinions concerning AGL Resources’subsidiary Atlanta Gas Light’s (AGL) over-billing controversy. Thecompany’s earnings did nothing to ease shareholders’ pain. AGLResources’ revenues for this quarter were down $75.2 million from1997 to $323.9 million. Operating margins fell from $145.1 millionin the year-ago quarter to $136.9 million for the quarter endedDec. 31. Weather and poor results stemming from the company’spartnership with Sonat caused the poor performance.

February 15, 1999

New Mexico Takes ‘First Step’ Toward Customer Choice

A measure introduced in the New Mexico senate recently was a”good first step” towards opening up the state’s electricityindustry to competition, says the state’s largest utility, althoughit cited certain concerns.

February 15, 1999

El Paso Takes Another Stab at Expanding Bondad Line

Believing in the saying that “if at first you don’t succeed, tryagain,” El Paso began a new open season Friday to solicit interestin firm service agreements to move gas on an expansion of theBondad Line in San Juan Basin. A previous attempt at a Bondadexpansion ultimately broke down after FERC rejected some of thetariff provisions last year, leading the primary expansion shipperto withdraw from the project and FERC to vacate its projectcertification (see NGI, Sept. 7, 1998; Oct. 19, 1998; Dec. 14,1998; and Jan. 18, 1999).

February 15, 1999

AGL CEO Takes Blame for Billing Fiasco

Walter Higgins, CEO of AGL Resources Inc., stood and faced themusic recently at the annual shareholders meeting in Atlanta asstock owners voiced their opinions concerning AGL Resources’subsidiary Atlanta Gas Light’s (AGL) over-billing controversy. TheGeorgia Public Service Commission and AGL settled the issue earlierthis month, with AGL agreeing to alter its billing methods andrefund $14.5 million to customers. The incident enraged manypeople, including one shareholder who demanded Higgins’resignation.

February 12, 1999

NM Takes ‘First Step’ Towards Customer Choice

A measure introduced in the New Mexico senate last week was a”good first step” towards opening up the state’s electricityindustry to competition, says the state’s largest utility, althoughit cited certain concerns.

February 9, 1999

Gas R&D Funding Takes Cut in DOE Budget

The Department of Energy (DOE) proposed a $10 million cut infunding for natural gas research and development (R&ampD) as partof a $17.8 billion budget for fiscal year 2000 that it forwarded toCongress last week.

February 8, 1999