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Get the FACTS on energy deregulation.

We are a vendor for the utility companies in thirteen states and offer natural gas and electrical service at a discounted rate. The utility company will send you the bill, still read your meter and you still call them if you have a problem. There is NO cost to enroll for this new lower rate.

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Prime Opportunities Inc.
7828 Zenith Drive #8081 Citrus Heights, CA 95621




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1. Email for Submitting a contract.

 Attn All Brokers and Directors

The contract submition email is contracts@primeopportunitiesinc.us  PLEASE do not send them to .com Are server domain is a .US

many people are using the wrong address.

 

Please add this email to your contacts

Prime Opportunities Inc.

contracts@primeopportunitiesinc.us

Thank You.

Regards,

Jeffery William Long 
President
Prime Opportunities Inc. 
P.O.Box 8081
Citrus Heights, CA 95621 
(916) 626 2635
www.primeopportunitiesinc.us
http://www.energychoices.us/

2011-04-24 (2011-04-24)

2. DA NEWS

 

Direct Access—Electricity

The California Public Utilities Commission has revised the submission date for Six Month Notices to Transfer to Direct Access Service for 2012 load from the previous date of January 3, 2011 to January 31, 2011.

Please note that per Decision D.10-03-022, accounts that are accepted from the January 31, 2011 enrollment date may not switch to Direct Access until 2012. For information regarding the 2012 Direct Access Enrollment process please visit:Direct Access Enrollment for 2012

Overview

Direct Access (DA) is an option that allows eligible customers to purchase their electricity directly from competitive energy service providers (ESPs). The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) issued Decision D.10-03-022 on March 11, 2010, approving a limited reopening of DA for non-residential customers. PG&E will continue to transport and deliver electricity for all its customers taking service under DA.

Decision D.10-05-039, approved May 20, 2010, extended the initial Open Enrollment Window from April 16, 2010 to July 15, 2010, and changed the enrollment date for Direct Access Enrollment for 2011 to July 16, 2010.

Background

DA has not been available to new customers in California since the Legislature suspended the program during the energy crisis in September 2001. CPUC Decision D.10-03-022 implements Senate Bill 695, a new law signed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in October 2009, providing for a limited reopening of DA to non-residential customers starting in April 2010.

For more information on this, see frequently asked questions.

Details on DA Reopening

Under the reopening rules, customers may enroll in DA up to a maximum allowable annual limit (measured in gigawatt-hours). PG&E’s DA load will be permitted to increase over the next four years from the current (November 2009) 5,574 GWh of DA load to a new total cap of 9,520 GWh.

The approximate annual increases permitted under the new cap are:

  • First year (April - December 2010): Up to 35% of the room available under the cap (1,381 GWh)
  • Second year: Up to 70% of the room available under the cap (an additional 1,381 GWh)
  • Third year: Up to 90 % of the room available under the cap (an additional 789 GWh)
  • Fourth year: Up to 100% of the room available under the cap (an additional 395 GWh)

2011-01-18 (2011-01-18)

3. PG&E General Rate Case 4.2 BILLION RAISE

 

Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) General Rate Case

May 6, 2010: DRA Urges CPUC to Clamp Down on PG&E's Request to Raise Rates by $4.2 Billion

PG&E tendered its Notice of Intent (NOI) for a General Rate Case (GRC) on July 20, 2009.  PG&E filed its GRC Application 09-12-020 on December 21, 2009. 

PG&E is requesting authorization from the Commission for revenue increases associated with its Electric Distribution, Gas Distribution, and Electric Generation operations which fall within the Commission's ratemaking jurisdiction.  If the Commission were to grant PG&E's requests, the utility's GRC revenue requirement would increase from a currently projected level of $5.6 billion to $6.7 billion in Test Year (TY) 2011.

PG&E Proposes a 3-Year General Rate Case Cycle and Requests:

  • A $1.0 Billion (or 18.6%) Increase in its Test Year 2011 Revenue Requirement over Present Levels; and
  • Additional Annual Revenue Increases Averaging $309 Million (or 4.5%) in 2012 and 2013.

DRA Motion to strike a portion of PG&E's Rebuttal Testimony

DRA Supplemental Testimony 

DRA Testimony

DRA Protest

 

 

PG&E General Rate Case Phase II

September 9, 2010:

 

 

PG&E filed Application 10-03-014 on March 22, 2010, proposing specific rate designs or structures for each customer class to reflect its increased revenue requirements from Phase 1 of the 2011 GRC (see information above). PG&E's proposal includes updates to electric marginal costs and the associated revenue allocation and rate design policies for the next three years.

On September 8, 2010, DRA submitted testimony recommending changes to PG&E's marginal cost methodologies: these marginal costs are inputs to DRA's revenue allocation, determining each customer classes' revenue responsibilities. DRA also opposes PG&E's rate design proposals to introduce a new customer charge and lower the baseline usage threshold, which would increase rates for smaller and low-income customers.

DRA Testimony

 

2010-09-25 (2010-09-25)

4. DA Service Loads in CALIF Second Try

Supplemental Direct Access Implementation Activities Report  
Statewide Summary  
August 15, 2010  
Table 2 - Direct Access Load and Customers as of:  July 31, 2010    
Activities Residential Commercial <20 kW Commercial 20 - 500 kW Industrial             > 500 kW Agricultural Unknown Total  
1)  Total Direct Access Customers 13,314 7,375 11,001 977 286 0 32,953  
2)  Total UDC Customers 10,017,164 1,098,746 260,347 5,696 115,789 0 11,497,742  
3)  Percent Direct Access Customers 0.1% 0.7% 4.2% 17.2% 0.2% 0.0% 0.3%  
4)  Total Direct Access Load (KWH)   111,762,990 91,033,784 6,860,179,557 10,618,737,267 97,939,814 0 17,779,653,412  
5)  Total Affiliate Direct Access Load (KWH)  Confidential Confidential Confidential Confidential Confidential Confidential Confidential  
6)  Total UDC Load (KWH)   67,398,129,945 15,018,812,670 55,046,535,336 41,800,519,262 8,556,013,096 0 187,820,010,309  
7)  Percent Direct Access Load (KWH) 0.2% 0.6% 12.5% 25.4% 1.1% 0.0% 9.47%  
D.10-03-022, Ordering Paragraph 1 reads, in part, "The Energy Division is authorized to post each utility’s monthly baseline amount of direct access load, as reported in their Direct Access Implementation Activities Reports, on the Commission’s public web 2010 Cap
PG&E             6,296,375,522        6,955,100,000
SCE             8,255,405,038        9,145,100,000
SDG&E             3,227,872,852        3,261,700,000
Total Direct Access Load (KWH)               17,779,653,412      19,361,900,000
                 
                 

Direct Access Service Requests 

 

 

 

           
2010-09-25 (2010-09-25)

5. PG&E to soak ratepayers for BILLIONS! Decision will be made Tomorrow, July 29th!

 

Please flood the Utilities Commission with Calls [again]!!!!!!!! (#'s below) Public Utilities Commission [CPUC] Commissioner Dian Grueneich stated “In the last five years PG&E rates have increased 28.3%, far above the rate of inflation... I take very seriously increasing rates. These appli...cations [for new fossil fueled plants] would literally add billions of dollars of new rates, lasting 20 years.”


Please call to oppose Billions our cumulative investment dollars in the form of rate-hikes to fund tired, dinosaur fossil-fueled power plants! 

Monday PG&E senior vice president of energy procurement Fong Wan actually made the argument that PG&E is trying to get both Oakley and Mirant power plants approved, licensed and dirt turned before July 1st of 2011 or they will be subject to new, [more strict] federal EPA permit regulations that intended to reduce GHGs [greenhouse gases]. That is what we are trying to race against to influence CPUC Commissioner Simon into voting for PG&E approval for PG&E to raise our rates to buy more fossil-fueled electric generation than the CEC presently has determined California needs. 

Please note that Commissioner Simon actually brought the argument squarely to whether long-term RFOs should be "carved in marble and come down from the mount or should they be living and breathing and be able to adjust to current and even projected economic conditions considering the fact that ratepayers fund this process?" 

Whereas Mirant's Marsh Landing generating station rep attempted to make the argument that it doesn't really matter whether the demand is there for the electricity, investors/developers should have a reasonable assurance that, even if circumstances change during the process, that's a risk the RATEPAYERS should assume, not so much for the investors. 

The corporations thereafter avoided the fact that reasonable and very-real calculable changes in demand, based on the most recent data are always present. But that in making those decisions will chase investors and "Wall Street" away. 

It should be further argued that if PG&E's investments of our Billions were clean, renewable energy... not fossil fueled "cleaner" projects, that the opponents would not have intervened. 

Please call Commissioner Simon and let him know that you don't want to be charged to build these dinosaurs of ingenuity. Stand for clean Energy NOW! He still needs to hear from us. 

CPUC Commissioners 
Dian Grueneich: 415-703-2444 
Nancy Ryan 415-703-3700 
John Bohn: 415-703-2440 
Timothy Simon: 415-703-1407 
President Michael Peevey: 415-703-2782 
Thank you for reading this

 

2010-09-04 (2010-09-04)

6. More Competition equals better prices for your business

 More Competition equals better prices for your business

In the recent past, one utility company provided all three components of your energy service: generation, transmission and distribution. States have created competition for both electricity and natural gas supply. This allows consumers to choose their energy supplier. This does NOT MEAN your electricity will be delivered by a different utility company. Delivery of the energy is still regulated and is the responsibility of your local utility company.

Read more about Energy Deregulation on Wikipedia

Unregulated Supplier

With Electricity and natural gas deregulation, you can choose the company that produces energy.

Regulated Delivery

Regardless of your Energy Provider, your local utility company is responsible for maintaining the poles and wires, or pipelines, and responding to emergencies and power outages. Therefore changing your Electricity Supplier will have NO EFFECT on the quality of services you will get. It will be exactly the same service.

What does Energy Deregulation mean for your Business?

  • Competitive market among energy suppliers
  • Custom solutions to create an energy plan that suits your individual needs
  • Freedom to select suppliers, products, prices and terms
  • Reliability-transmission and distribution regulated and guaranteed
  • Price protection from market volatility and rising costs-budget certainty
  • Potential savings, including tax savings in some markets

U.S. States embrace Energy Deregulation

Deregulating the suppliers of electricity allows small businesses and consumers to choose power --- this is similar how consumers can select their cable tv, auto insurance, or long-distance phone company). Utility distributors can stay exactly the same and continue to deliver the same service and fees.

What Energy Options does your business have?

  • Option 1) Stay with the utility/default supplier
  • Higher Electric Bills and Natural Gas
  • Option 2) Find your own third-party supplier
  • Time-consuming process
  • Limited market knowledge
  • Recommended Option 3: Use an intermediary

  • Unbiased selection of your energy providers
  • Lowest prices possible
  • Custom solutions for each facility in each market
  • Responsive to changes in the energy market leading to savings

 

2010-09-04 (2010-09-04)

7. Deregulation, Re-Regulation and California's Energy Future

 Lessons learned, moving forward

Historically, three investor-owned utilities accounted for three-quarters of the electricity sales in California--Southern California Edison (SCE), San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E), and Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E). Some 38 smaller publicly owned utilities and co-ops accounted for the remaining quarter. The investor-owned utilities were regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), as well as other state, federal, and local agencies. Over the last 20 or so years, a series of federal actions began opening up the market to independent power producers to generate electricity and transmit it on the grid owned by the traditional utilities. Following the deregulation of the airline, telephone, and trucking industries, it was probably inevitable that political leaders would be encouraged to deregulate the vertically integrated power monopolies next.

ASSEMBLY BILL 1890

1996's AB 1890 energy-deregulation measure was based on the theory that the regulated monopolies lacked market incentives to control costs and innovate, and that it was necessary to break them up and create competitive markets. It did a number of things:

 

  • Incentivized the divestment of generation facilities to merchant generation firms, power companies that generate electricity for sale in the open wholesale power market
  • Established the non-profit Independent System Operator (ISO) to manage the transmission grid
  • Established a Power Exchange (PX) to auction power on a daily and hourly basis
  • Allowed new independent unregulated electricity service providers (ESPs) to sign up customers and sell power, which they bought on the open market
  • Relinquished responsibility for controlling the cost of power generation to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), which would be responsible for regulating the PX and ISO
  • Limited the role of the CPUC to regulating retail rates
  • Issued the State bonds to guarantee that the traditional utilities would recover their "stranded costs"--investments they had made under the old regulatory system that were perceived to be above market prices
  • Enacted an immediate 10% retail rate reduction, and froze retail rate until the utilities had paid off their s
    tranded costs

 

WHAT HAPPENED?


The year 2000 has been described as a perfect energy storm. The combination of a drought in the Pacific Northwest, record low gas storage that created shortages of this critical fuel for power plants, and a faulty deregulation scheme led to unprecedented wholesale power prices by the winter of 2000. On top of that, predicted investments in new power plants following deregulation failed to take place while cutbacks in funding for utility energy efficiency programs reduced the surplus of power supplies that existed in the mid 1990s.

 


THE UNCERTAINTY OF DEREGULATION

 

Reliance on the spot market for last-minute wholesale power purchases was a further discouragement to investment and created huge opportunities to manipulate power prices. And as has become clear, with only five unregulated generating companies, there was ample opportunity for conscious withholding of power supplies by the ESPs to further drive up prices.

The CPUC required that all wholesale power purchases be made through the spot market, rather than through long-term contracts, which worked as long as prices were low. However, retail competition never took off; only two percent of residential customers ever switched providers. The legislated 10% rate decrease and protection from rising retail rates encouraged customers to stay with the traditional utilities, and also discouraged conservation. 

 

The utilities had lost their incentives to control power demand at the same time retail rates were frozen and they were required to purchase huge amounts of power on the spot market from suppliers who were able to withhold supplies just when they were needed most. This caused wholesale prices to spiral out of control with no possibility for the utilities to recoup their costs.

 

 

The difference between what they had to pay to purchase power and what they were allowed to sell it at caused SCE to run up $6 billion in debt and PG&E $13 billion. The State spent $17 billion on power purchases in 2001 and has commitments to buy another $42 billion of power over the next ten years. The PX went bankrupt and shut down. The ISO is under fire. The State became the primary power purchaser, locked into long-term power purchases at rates above the current wholesale market price.

 

Although a falling economy and conservation-inducing price incentives have pushed California's 2001 energy crisis into the background at least for the moment, several unresolved issues from those dark days remain:

 

  • Responsibility for planning for adequate power resources is fragmented between various state agencies, the investor-owned utilities, the ISO and merchant power plant developers
  • Opportunities to develop renewable energy supplies is limited by the lack of creditworthy power purchasers
  • Uncertainty remains as to whether direct access to the power supplies will be allowed or not

  In April 2001, PG&E, supplier of electricity to 4.5 million customers in northern California, declared bankruptcy. PG&E listed an astonishing $13 billion in debts, the largest utility bankruptcy in the country.

 

 

PG&E proposed a plan that would transfer its power plants and transmission lines to new companies that would be regulated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) rather than the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). Those properties would have been used as collateral against loans to repay debts. The CPUC countered with a legal challenge and its own competing reorganization plan, including continued State regulation.

 

THE PROPOSED PG&E SETTLEMENT

  On June 19th, 2003, after nearly two years of rancorous politics and three months of closed-door negotiations, the CPUC staff and PG&E reached agreement on how the utility can exit bankruptcy. The PUC commissioners, five individuals appointed by the governor, will publicly review this settlement. If they agree with it, a vote of the board of directors of PG&E (among others) will follow, and it will finally be possible for PG&E to emerge from bankruptcy.

While the agreement in its entirety contains provisions for ratepayer protections, regulatory stability, environmental protections, and dismissals of pending litigation, some of the major points include:

 

  • Retail electricity rates should begin dropping beginning January 1, 2004
  • The CPUC would retain the ability to set electricity rates for PG&E customers
  • PG&E will withdraw its proposed settlement plan to disaggregate their historic businesses and will remain a vertically-integrated utility subject to CPUC jurisdiction
  • PG&E will emerge from Chapter 11 as soon as possible with an investment-grade credit rating
  • PG&E will release claims against the CPUC
  • PG&E's shareholders will receive value over nine years, including amortization of facilities
  • PG&E will recover its prudently incurred costs and a return on investment in facilities, and on costs to be incurred for demand reduction and energy conservation under this agreement

 

The proposed PG&E agreement satisfies no one completely, but offers something for everyone, and is probably the best option for balancing the interests of power users, who want the lowest rates possible, with PG&E and debtors, who need to see many billions of dollars of debt paid. PG&E is unhappy that their transmission and remaining power-generation businesses will remain regulated by the CPUC, rather than by the federal government, which is considered more accommodating. The CPUC and some consumer groups are unhappy that PG&E won't swallow a larger piece of the debt, instead paying much of it down through customers' bills. 


PUBLIC BENEFITS

The agreement has several sweeteners for California energy users and taxpayers which are worth noting:

 

  • Power rates will fall more than 3% in 2004 and continue to fall through 2008
  • The cost of purchasing power will come down as PG&E is again able to enter into long-term purchasing agreements financed with high-rated (hence cheaper) credit
  • The future of over 140,000 acres of largely pristine watershed lands in the Sierra Nevada will be protected through new conservation easements--representing one of the largest conservation donations in the history of the state
  • Millions of dollars will be contributed to support research and investments in clean energy technology
  • PG&E shareholders will contribute nearly $2 billion towards paying off the remaining debt
  • Money received through ongoing litigation or negotiations with out-of-state generators who overcharged during the energy crisis will go towards reducing rates for consumers

Probably the most important aspect of the agreement is that the fiery rhetoric between the CPUC and PG&E can end. With policy experts already warning of a new energy shortfall on the horizon, a respite in the war is desperately needed so we can focus on the challenges that still remain. The CPUC should see its way clear to accept this agreement and move forward.

2010-09-04 (2010-09-04)

8. California In The News

 California is rich in conventional and renewable energy resources. It has large crude oil and substantial natural gas deposits in six geological basins, located in the Central Valley and along the Pacific coast. Most of those reserves are concentrated in the southern San Joaquin Basin. More than a dozen of the Nation's 100 largest oil fields are located in California, including the Belridge South oil field, the second largest oil field in the contiguous United States. In addition, Federal assessments indicate that large undiscovered deposits of recoverable oil and gas lie offshore in the federally administered Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), although Federal law currently prohibits oil and gas leasing in that area. California's renewable energy potential is extensive. The State's hydroelectric power potential ranks second in the Nation (behind Washington State), and substantial geothermal and wind power resources are found along the coastal mountain ranges and the eastern border with Nevada. High solar energy potential is found in southeastern California's sunny deserts. California is the most populous State in the Nation and its total energy demand is second only to Texas. Although California is a leader in the energy-intensive chemical, forest products, glass, and petroleum industries, the State has one of the lowest per capita energy consumption rates in the country. The California government's energy-efficiency programs have contributed to low per capita energy consumption. Driven by high demand from California's many motorists, major airports, and military bases, the transportation sector is the State's largest energy-consumer. More motor vehicles are registered in California than any other State, and worker commute times are among the longest in the country. 

2010-09-04 (2010-09-04)

9. Three month low of $3.74/MMBtu compared to $4.97/MMBtu last year.

 Natural Gas

The 12 month gas strip is trading at a 3 month low of $3.74/MMBtu compared to $4.97/MMBtu last year.  The low price of natural gas has created a short term spike in industrial demand which will likely cause long-term price increases in natural gas.  Below are graphs representing the 12 month gas strip and the industrial demand curves of natural gas within the domestic market.

 

2010-09-03 (2010-09-03)

10. DIRECT ACCESS PHASE 2 UPDATE!

 

 The Open Enrollment Window (OEW) for Year 2 of the Direct Access (DA) Program has now closed. PG&E, SCE, and SDG&E are no longer accepting notices. The OEW for Year 3 will open in January 2011; we will continue to accept our customers' forms but will be unable to submit them to the utilitiesuntil that time.

If you have any questions regarding the DA Program 

Please Call

Jeffery William Long 
President
Prime Opportunities Inc. 
P.O.Box 8081
Citrus Heights, CA 95621 
(916) 626 2635
www.primeopportunitiesinc.us
http://energychoicesus.blogspot.com/

 

 

2010-08-31 (2010-08-31)