Daily GPI

Nation’s Gas Choice Found Marginally Beneficial

Have natural gas choice programs taken hold and producedsavings, or is the five-year old concept of offering people achoice of gas suppliers missing its mark?

November 30, 2000

Drive to Succeed: Enron Prefers Toyota to GM

To prosper in the new energy economy, Enron COO Jeffrey K.Skilling says oil and gas companies need to trash their traditionalbusiness models and instead reshape themselves to resemble Toyotawhen it captured the imagination and pocketbook of U.S. consumers30 years ago.

November 30, 2000

Want Value? Stick to Basics, say E&P Execs

Both large and small exploration and production companies shoulduse the same philosophy to create value for their shareholders:manage the present to enable the future, advised Conoco Inc.Executive Vice President Robert McKee III at Arthur Andersen’sEnergy Symposium in Houston yesterday.

November 30, 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

NERC Predicts Smooth Sailing This Winter

With 5,900 MW of new mostly gas-fired generation capacity comingonline this winter across the United States, the North AmericanElectric Reliability Council concluded in its latest WinterAssessment that “electric resources will be adequate” to meetprojected electricity demand.

November 30, 2000

EIA Breaks Down the Winter Price Hike

The Energy Information Administration (EIA) released a handy newbrochure yesterday for residential customers who are wondering whytheir natural gas bills are expected to soar by 44% this wintercompared to last winter. Gas supply will be adequate to meet demandthis winter, according to EIA, but prices and gas usage are goingto increase substantially.

November 30, 2000

CA Group Pushes to Re-Regulate Electricity

In a take-it-or-leave-it gesture, California consumer advocatesTuesday handed the governor and state legislature an ultimatum torollback electric industry restructuring and insert the state in anexpanded role over the development and operation of power plants.If the elected officials fail to act, the consumer activists planto put another measure on the statewide ballot in 2002.

November 30, 2000

Industry Briefs

The staff of the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) Bureau ofEconomics and of Policy Planning said it generally supports theshort-term and long-term remedies that FERC has identified for theCalifornia power market but believes FERC should provide moreconcrete advice on how best to configure the organization that willoperate and control the transmission grid in the state. In commentsfiled with FERC this week, the FTC said FERC should considercreating a benchmark or a baseline of characteristics andoperations for regional transmission organizations that can be usedas a starting point as part of its revisions to California’swholesale electric power market rules and institutions. Inaddition, the comments suggest refinements to FERC’s proposedremedies to ensure that market power is not exercised in wholesaleelectric power markets, to the detriment of consumers. FERC OrderProposing Remedies for California Wholesale Electric Markets wasreleased Nov. 1 (see Daily GPI, Nov. 2). The order was intended toremedy deficiencies in market rules and institutions that havecontributed to recent reliability difficulties and high prices forelectric power in California.

November 30, 2000

Power Proposals Fly as CA Awaits FERC Action

With various energy players attempting to seize the moment ofintense political and regulatory focus during the first two weeksof December, California electricity proposals are flowing freerthan movie scripts and dot.com start-up business plans are allanticipating the impending state plan from Gov. Gray Davis onFriday and the subsequent final decision by the Federal EnergyRegulatory Commission Dec. 13 for stabilizing California’s powermarkets.

November 29, 2000

Industry Brief

Canadian 88 Energy Corp. said it has opened data rooms to allowpotential acquirers access to confidential information. TheCanadian exploration and production company put itself up for salein October after Duke Energy rescued it by buying a controllingstake. On Oct. 10, the company announced that its board hadestablished a special committee to review strategic alternativesand identify opportunities to enhance shareholder value. The boardsaid strong fundamentals for high quality natural gas assets andprospects are not reflected in current stock price valuations andare more likely to be realized through such a strategic reviewprocess. Canadian 88 stated several reasons for initiating thereview process, including high gas prices, large working interestsin significant company-operated gas fields, an inventory ofexcellent gas exploration prospects, the world class potential ofthe company’s East Coast holdings, imminent expiration of currentgas hedges and tax pools in excess of $400 million.

November 29, 2000