New Rules home
Agriculture
Electricity
Environment
Equity
Finance
Governance
Information
Retail
Taxation

Power Surge: How We're Adding Energy From Below - The Washington Post, August 27, 2001

Looking Locally: A Bottom-Up Energy Solution - commentary on TomPaine.com, August 2, 2001 (Listen Here in Real Audio)

Power Trips of the Past - Washington Post, July 29, 2001

Birth Throes of a New Electricity System: The US Experience - Cogeneration and On-Site Power Production, May-June 2001

Solutions to Electricity Crisis - Oakland Tribune, June 5, 2001

Local Innovation Can Fix National Energy Shortages - Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, June 3, 2001

A Bottom Up Energy Policy - Column by David Morris, May 16, 2001

Bush Energy Policy: A Flashback to 1974 - Press Release, May 8, 2001

Interview of David Morris on KPFK Radio in Los Angeles - Real Audio recorded from KPFK Radio, May 2, 2001

Senate, FERC Decisions Contradict Efforts to Build Local Electricity Systems - Press Release, April 27, 2001

When it Comes to Power, Smaller is Better - Rocky Mountain News, March 19, 2001


Democratic Energy: Communities and Government Supporting our Energy Future

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 27, 2001

FEDERAL POLICIES FAVOR
CONCENTRATION OF UTILITY OWNERSHIP

Senate, FERC Decisions Contradict Efforts to Build Local Electricity Systems

 

Order Seeing the Light Now!
Seeing the Light
by David Morris
ISBN: 0-917582-88-6
Paperback, 2001. $15.00

Minneapolis - Two federal bodies endorsed policies this week that undermine burgeoning efforts to build a more democratic electricity system.

"These two decisions reflect an unfortunate bipartisan effort to move electricity decisionmaking even further away from electricity consumers," observes Dr. David Morris, vice president of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance and author of the recently published book, Seeing the Light: Regaining Control of Our Electricity System.

On April 24, the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee voted 19-1 to repeal the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 (PUHCA). PUHCA was designed to reverse concentration of ownership in the utility industry. "Apparently, the Senate believes that when it comes to electricity, fewer is better," says Morris. "The vote in the Committee was almost as lopsided as the vote in favor of electricity deregulation in California. And we see what that bipartisan effort has wrought."

On April 25, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, also established in 1935, made a decision that echoed the centralizing philosophy of the Senate. FERC agreed to impose modest wholesale price caps on electricity sold in California this summer, but only if California submitted a proposal by June 1 to join a new 8-state regional transmission operator (RTO). FERC has repeatedly expressed its desire to give transmission construction and pricing authority to regional enterprises owned or controlled by large utilities and large power producers.

"It is instructive that FERC is demanding that California subordinate itself to a regional, privately owned transmission authority just when Governor Davis is trying to buy out privately owned transmission lines so that California can have more authority to design its electricity future," says Morris.

While the Senate and FERC make decisions that favor concentration, communities and entrepreneurs are busily constructing a more decentralized and democratic electricity system. Thousands of small power plants are being installed in households, office buildings, factories and shops. Cities are beginning to design their own energy policies, which favor increased conservation and local generation. Seeing the Light reports on these developments.

The Institute for Local Self-Reliance is a national nonprofit organization providing research, analysis and innovative policy solutions to build strong, sustainable communities. For more information contact ILSR at 612-379-3815 or visit ILSR's New Rules Project web site at http://www.newrules.org/

####

More Information:

Institute for Local Self-Reliance
1313 Fifth Street SE
Minneapolis, MN 55414
Tel: 612-379-3815
Fax: 612-379-3920
http://www.ilsr.org/

Click to Order Seeing the Light
(for secure online Visa and MasterCard orders)

Or to order by telephone, call (612) 379-3815. Call for disounts on 10 or more books.

maile-Mail this page to a Friend!

The New Rules Project - http://www.newrules.org/

Search News Archive

Resources
Local Rules
State Rules
Regional Rules
Federal Rules