Idaho Public Utilities Commission
Case No. IPC-E-11-08, Notice of
Public Workshops
September 13, 2011
Contact: Gene Fadness (208)
334-0339, 890-2712
Website: www.puc.idaho.gov
Workshops scheduled in
Idaho Power rate case
The Idaho
Public Utilities Commission will conduct three workshops throughout southern
Idaho next week regarding Idaho Power Company’s request for an average 10
percent rate increase. The utility applied for the increase on June 1 and is
hoping to have it become effective by Jan. 1.
Members of
the commission staff will give a brief presentation on the company’s
application and how the commission evaluates the company’s request. After the
presentation, customers will be able to ask questions of commission staff.
Representatives of the company may also be present to answer questions.
The
workshops are set for the following times and places:
·
Tuesday, Sept. 20, 7 p.m., in
Pocatello at the Newberry Building, 160 North Main St.
·
Wednesday, Sept. 21, 7 p.m. in Twin
Falls at the City Council Chambers, 305 3rd Avenue East.
·
Thursday, Sept. 22, 7 p.m. in Boise
at the commission hearing room, 472 W. Washington St.
Proposed
increases for customer classes vary according to the cost the company incurs to
serve each customer class. The company’s proposed increase for residential
customers is 8.8 percent. That includes a proposed increase in the monthly
service charge from $4 to $5 per month. The proposed increase for
small-commercial, industrial and irrigation customers is 14.8 percent and 7.3
percent for large-commercial customers.
The
commission suspended for up to six months the company’s application to allow
time for the commission’s staff of auditors, engineers and attorneys to
thoroughly review the company’s application. The commission cannot, by state
law, arbitrarily refuse to consider utility rate increase requests without
first considering the evidence presented by the utility, intervening parties and
customers. The burden of proof is on the utility to justify the expenses it seeks
to recover through rates as 1) necessary to serve customers and 2) prudently
incurred. The commission may accept,
reject or modify the company’s request. All
commission decisions can be appealed to the state Supreme Court by the utility,
intervenors or customers.
Idaho Power
claims the revenue requirement needed to serve Idaho is $917.6 million, which
is about $82.6 million more than what the company currently collects from
customers.
Continued
growth in demand for electricity, aging infrastructure and higher compliance
and reliability requirements are the driving factors behind the rate increase
request, according to the company’s application.
Idaho Power
claims it has made significant investment in pollution control equipment in four
units and upgraded a turbine in one unit of the Jim Bridger power plant, a
coal-fired facility in southwest Wyoming.
The company plans additional investment at its Valmy coal plant in
Nevada this year. Idaho Power also completed construction of a new 500-kilovolt
Hemingway transmission station and the associated Hemingway to Bowmont 230-kV
transmission line at a total cost of $54 million. The company also completed construction of
the Long Valley Operations Center in Lake Ford to replace the existing McCall
Operations Center.
The
company’s application further states that the cost of building materials has
increased dramatically since the last time the company was granted a general
rate increase in 2009. In that two-year
period, the company claims aluminum costs have increased 59 percent; copper,
104 percent and standard plate steel, 83 percent.
To mitigate
the size of the increase, Idaho Power says it is not including nearly $32
million in power supply expenses and also is not asking for construction
expenses related to the Hells Canyon relicensing project. While not collecting the expenses now will
impact cash flow, it will not affect the company’s earnings or perception of
the company’s financial health in the markets, according to Greg Said, vice
president for regulatory affairs.
Idaho Power
seeks to have the Fixed Cost Adjustment, now a pilot program, to be made
permanent. It also wants to shift the incentives it pays to those who
participate in demand reduction programs from the Energy Efficiency Rider, now
at 4.7 percent, to base rates.
Customers
can track the case on the commission’s Web site where the company’s application,
including testimony from company officials and customer comments are posted. As
the case progresses, testimony from commission staff and intervenors will be
added. The Web site is www.puc.idaho.gov.
Click on the electric icon, then on “Open Electric Cases,” and scroll down to
Case No. IPC-E-11-08.
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