NV Energy’s planned natural gas power plant sparks rate-hike fears
By Kyle
Roerink
LAS VEGAS SUN
Friday,
Sept. 11, 2015 | 2 a.m.
NV Energy
plans to build a 706-megawatt natural gas power plant that could cost
ratepayers up to $1 billion, according to a request it made in a 4,493-page
filing with the Public Utilities Commission.
A
spokesperson for NV Energy declined to comment on the proposal, which was made
as part of a study required every three years on supply costs. In the
documents, the company described the new power plant as its “preferred plan.”
The company asked the commission for authorization to spend $2.4 million to
study designs, air quality effects and transmission options should the plant be
built. The PUC will vote on the proposal before the end of the year.
Kevin
Geraghty, NV Energy vice president of generation, said in testimony that the
study would be “necessary to prepare and make a filing with the commission in
the future.”
The new
plant would be built by 2020 in North Las Vegas adjacent to an existing natural
gas plant that the utility plans to acquire from the Southern Nevada Water
Authority this year.
The company
currently operates or has long-term agreements to buy power from 16 fossil fuel
power plants, including coal and natural gas. The new plant would likely help
replace the output of the company’s coal facilities, which NV Energy, owned by
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, will phase out over the next four years.
The proposal
for the new plant has drawn criticism.
Some argue
the new facility is unnecessary based on current demand trends, including the
potential exit of three Nevada casino operators and the increase in rooftop
solar generation. “NV Energy has every right to make a profit,” said Randi
Thompson, state director for National Federation of Independent Business, which
represents 2,000 Nevada businesses. “But we have to look at the reasonable costs
to consumers.”
NV Energy
customers pay the highest rates in the Mountain West, according to the Energy
Information Administration. “The company’s efforts appear to be driven by a
desire to add to its rate base to increase earnings,” said Mark Garrett, an energy
consultant working with MGM Resorts on its efforts to cut ties with NV Energy.
“It should be looking for ways to lower rates, not raise them.” Garrett
estimated that construction of the new plant could increase ratepayer costs by
$70 million per year.
The Attorney
General’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, which acts as a watchdog for
ratepayers, declined to comment on the case, but said that it would be
testifying on the topic in October.
For Star
West Generation, the proposed power plant is bad news. The company supplies NV
Energy with natural gas power from its Arizona power plant from June through
September — the highest demand periods in the year. That agreement ends in
2017, and it seems likely that NV Energy will not renew it. Star West has offered
to sell the plant to NV Energy, saying that move could save ratepayers money,
but NV Energy has not indicated it would take Star West up on the offer.
Malcolm
Jacobson, president and CEO of Star West, said he is worried about the lack of
specifics in NV Energy’s three-year plan. “NV Energy has wheeled their Trojan
horse of a plan up to the gates of the PUC and on the inside is a
billion-dollar surprise for consumers,” he said.
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Friday, September 11, 2015
NEVADA NEWS & VIEWS 09/11/2015
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