Tag: tva
Trump Wants To Sell Off Public Power Agencies To Wall Street

Trump Wants To Sell Off Public Power Agencies To Wall Street

Reprinted with permission from DCReport.

People and businesses would pay much higher electricity prices under revived Trump administration plans to sell nonprofit electricity grids owned by taxpayers, killing one of the most enduring and beneficial policies of the New Deal.

Last year the Trump administration said it had abandoned plans to sell these taxpayer assets, built up during the Great Depression and fostering economic growth ever since.

But now the mercurial president is itching to sell Bonneville Power Administration in the Pacific Northwest, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Southwestern Power Administration and Western Area Power Administration. The plan is at Page 38 of the latest Trump budget.

These valuable taxpayer-owned assets would be sold at deep discounts to their net worth, essentially another Trump scheme to transfer wealth from millions of taxpayers to a relatively few and already rich Wall Street investors.

BPA transmission charges after a sale would rise by at least 24 percent, utility economist Robert McCullough calculated for DCReport.

TVA would experience a whopping 41.3 percent increase in transmission costs. Its annual rate of return on assets would more than triple under private ownership to almost 11 percent.

McCullough is a cheerful Oregon utility economist. He has a long track record of exposing utility industry cost estimates as low-ball fantasies designed to trick regulators and customers. He was formerly the chief economist for Portland General Electric, a for-profit Oregon monopoly.

BPA’s rate of return is 3.71 percent annually, while a Warren Buffet-controlled electric utility in Oregon, PacifiCorp, requires a return twice that high at 7.41 percent annually.

“A privatized BPA transmission system would be above 10 percent” on its required rate of return once corporate income taxes are factored in, McCullough calculated.

TVA reports reveal its rate of return is 3.63 percent, McCullough noted.

“Georgia Power, a comparable private entity in the area, has a rate explicitly set at 10.95 percent,” McCullough said. That is three times the TVA rate of return.

Raising electricity prices has been a consistent Trump administration policy, although it contradicts his campaign promises to champion the average American. Higher electricity prices would squeeze family budgets.

Trump ran for office promising to take care of “the forgotten men and women” and by going after Wall Street. Instead, he has stocked his administration with voracious Wall Street predators, including Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

Paying more for juice also would hurt industries that are big users of electricity and mom-and-pop stores that bear the costs of lighting and refrigeration. It would make some American manufactured goods less competitive on global markets at a time when Trump claims he is trying to expand exports of manufactured goods.

Businesses would suffer reduced profit margins because of higher electricity prices unless they enjoy what economists call market power. Businesses with this economic muscle can pass the higher electricity costs on to customers by raising prices even in hard times, which means consumers would bear the ultimate burden.

In any event, the new electricity grid owners would get richer.

One of the first stories we broke at DCReport revealed action by Trump that signaled Wall Street to resume manipulation of electricity prices.

Just a week later we broke the news that Trump had hamstrung the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), which lacked the quorum needed to rule on energy issues.

Trump has since reduced pollution controls on electric power plants, which will mean more asthma, cancer and heart attacks in the decades ahead. He also eased safeguards against toxic coal ash spilling into rivers where it contaminates drinking water and kills fish and wildlife. The administration has also favored Trump donors with coal interests over voters.

I’ve documented how electricity-markets rules in half the states raise prices. That’s by design. You can read some of my reporting on this going back a dozen years hereherehere and here and in my book Free Lunch.

Privatizing the four public power grids Franklin Roosevelt bequeathed to us would increase costs for a host of reasons. A recent Congressional Research Service report provides solid background on these issues.

Costs would rise because investors buying the systems would need to pay back with interest the loans they took out and pay dividends to investors who put capital into the deals. Heavily leveraged deals would put pressure on the new owners to cut back on maintenance of the grid, which we have seen in recent decades with disastrous results for the reliability of electricity supplies along with wildfires.

For-profit owners need to earn significant returns to justify their investment, unlike the nonprofit BPA and TVA.

The new owners would collect corporate income taxes from customers, too. Utilities embed their corporate income tax in monthly bills. In fact, they collect more than the statutory tax rate because of the “gross-up” tax they can levy. When the corporate tax rate was 35% investor-owned electricity companies legally charged customers 54%, for example.

Because of tax rules set by Congress, however, utilities that collect monthly from customers can hold onto the money for years and sometimes decades before handing it over to the government. In essence, customers are forced to loan their money to electric utilities at zero interest unless prices are adjusted to account for the value of the interest-free loan.

The Trump budget ignores this and instead paints a rosy picture of monopolists whose ownership would somehow benefit customers more than themselves. It also ignores the fact that publicly owned power systems pay their top managers far less than those owned by Wall Street investors.

Trump’s A Budget for a Better America asserts that “Reducing or eliminating the Federal Government’s role in electricity transmission infrastructure ownership, thereby increasing the private sector’s role, and introducing more market-based incentives, including rates, for power sales from Federal dams would encourage a more efficient allocation of economic resources and mitigate risk to taxpayers.”

The budget provides zero factual support for these claims.

McCullough applied standard economic tools used by business to evaluate costs should the four power marketing agencies be sold. The amount of revenue needed to fund a monopoly utility is its cost of operations reduced by depreciation and then calculated as an annual rate of return, aka profit, needed to sustain the operation.

Public power agencies do not pay dividends to owners and require only enough surplus to maintain and upgrade equipment.

If these plans proceed Trump will have enriched Wall Street, which will siphon money out of your pockets and those of your descendants. He will have killed part of the New Deal that paid huge economic, social, and technological rewards. And Trump will have done so for no good reason except to further his schemes to take from the many and enrich the few he railed against on the campaign trail, but now serves.

Time for lights out on these costly no good Trump plans.

IMAGE: Bonneville Power Administration dam.

 

TVA Will Close Coal Plant Despite Political Pressure

TVA Will Close Coal Plant Despite Political Pressure

On Thursday, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the longtime federal corporation that handles electricity in seven states, voted to shut down the Paradise coal-fired power plant in Muhlenberg County, Kentucky.

The decision is a humiliation for President Donald Trump, who took a personal interest in the vote and put pressure on TVA to save the plant:

Donald J. Trump

@realDonaldTrump
Coal is an important part of our electricity generation mix and @TVAnews should give serious consideration to all factors before voting to close viable power plants, like Paradise #3 in Kentucky!

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Trump, who has made saving coal a key plank of his presidency, may have also been interested in the Paradise plant because it buys from a mining company owned by one of his friends and political donors, Robert Murray. But he wasn’t alone. Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, and Sens. Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul, all urged TVA not to close the plant as well.

The Paradise plant was the largest coal-fired power plant of its kind when it was completed in 1970, but it has gradually had its burners shut down and replaced with natural gas as it has experienced breakdowns and become less economical — it is currently generating power only 10 percent of the time. Another plant in Bull Run will also be shut down. It is estimated the closure of both will save TVA $1 billion.

It is worth noting that the closure of these two plants will only reduce the total proportion of energy that TVA generates from coal by 1 percent. Furthermore, the closure will eliminate 131 jobs, and there should be a plan in place for helping those workers.

But it is clear that Trump does not have the pull to reverse the clock on energy trends. Aside from being terrible for the environment, coal is gradually getting less economical, and what is left of the industry is increasingly automated, employing fewer workers. The president will not be able to tweet away that reality.

IMAGE: Delegates from West Virginia hold signs supporting coal on the second day of the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, July 19, 2016. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein/File Photo