Opinion: An electric utility for the 21st century
Voting yes on Ballot Issues 2B and 2C will allow Boulder
to take the necessary steps to determine if it should become Colorado’s 30th
municipal electric utility. 2C authorizes the City to form the utility, but
only if stringent financial, reliability and environmental safeguards are met.
2B, which only costs the average household about $1/month, provides funds to
complete engineering plans and obtain the legal decisions necessary to finalize
costs.
If an independent third party expert determines that
rates at start-up will not exceed Xcel’s, and all other conditions are met,
Boulder could form a municipal utility, with local control, competitive rates,
long term price stability, increased renewable energy, and a 50 percent or
higher reduction in CO2 output. Profits that now go to Xcel become savings to
Boulder ratepayers. Our energy dollars stay at home. We can remove the
restrictive rules on solar installations, promote local innovation, and attract
hi-tech businesses. Or Xcel might finally come to the table with a
comprehensive clean energy plan (not some wind deal where Xcel determines the
numbers and Boulder takes the risks.)
Circumstances are very favorable now. Interest rates are
low, so bonds to buy the distribution system will be cheaper than paying Xcel’s
high cost of capital to “rent” it. Gas prices are down and surplus gas
generation exists, so energy costs will be low. Xcel is rebuilding and
repowering many of its power plants, so it can accommodate Boulder’s departure
with minimal financial impact.
Sticking with Xcel’s coal plants would be a huge
mistake. Coal prices are increasing, and coal plants can’t be easily turned up
and down. So when the amount of wind power plus coal power exceeds demand, the
wind gets shut down. As Xcel tries to add more wind, these costs will increase
dramatically, even at Xcel’s relatively low level of renewable energy. In spite
of all the hype about Xcel’s meeting Colorado’s 2020 30 percent Renewable
Energy Standard (the real number is actually more than 26 percent because most
in-state renewables are counted 1.25 times) we need to achieve multiple times
this level if we are to have any impact on global warming.
Xcel can’t seem to manage innovative projects. Xcel’s
SmartGridCity project has not provided any obvious value to us customers, and
the PUC failed to provide the needed oversight. But in a fit of undeserved
generosity with our money, the PUC awarded Xcel two-thirds of its $44-plus
million investment, about three times Xcel’s original estimate.
Cities can run electric utilities. There are 29
municipal electric utilities in Colorado — Fort Collins, Colorado Springs,
Longmont, Aspen, etc. Nationwide there are over 2,000 munis, including Los
Angeles, Sacramento, Austin, Cleveland, etc. Winter Park, Fla. became a muni just
a few years ago. Nebraska doesn’t even allow for-profit investor owned
utilities.
Boulder, like most Colorado cities, runs its own water
utility, and so has related experience. But we don’t have to run a “muni”
ourselves; there are real expert professionals lining up to help us run it and
deliver cleaner power to us. Boulder also has experience been visionary in its
utility management. We looked at the impacts of global warming far in advance
of any other city (that I know of anyway) with the 1987 Raw Water Master Plan,
which led to the purchase of Barker Reservoir and the Boulder Canyon hydro to
help insulate us from the politics of the Colorado River Basin.
2C provides excellent safeguards. Its non-discrimination
rate rules, financial restrictions, and the limits on transfers to the General
Fund, along with our ability to communicate with council members or vote them
out, provide far more protection than with Xcel, where the only option is being
frustrated by (or being tossed out of) the PUC “old boys club.”
All utilities, whether public or private, face the same
restrictions on bonds — underwriters have to be willing to sell them and
investors have to be willing to buy them. These market forces automatically
limit how much can be issued. In addition, the Charter language in 2C language
requires Boulder to maintain a 125 percent bond coverage ratio. This means that
whatever the cost to pay the bonds off, Boulder needs 25 percent extra. And
Boulder’s AAA bond rating keeps our interest rates low.
Xcel and its surrogates are spending enormous sums of
money trying to convince Boulder voters that creating a municipal utility is
risky and uncertain. But the real risk is sticking with Xcel and the status
quo. Decisions about our future are being made in corporate boardrooms based on
what makes Xcel money, rather than on what serves us best. We would be better
off keeping those profits at home, making our own decisions, and doing our part
for the planet’s future.