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5.1. ERMUSR 06-14-2016
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5.1. ERMUSR 06-14-2016
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6/15/2016 2:27:30 PM
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City Government
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ERMUSR
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6/14/2016
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The Electric Utility Industry Generally <br /> The electric utility industry has been, and in the future will be, affected by a number of factors which <br /> could impact the financial condition and competitiveness of electric utilities, such as the Utility. Such <br /> factors include, among others: (i) effects of compliance with changing environmental, safety, licensing, <br /> regulatory and legislative requirements; (ii) changes resulting from conservation and demand-side <br /> management programs on the timing and use of electric energy; (iii) other federal and state legislative <br /> changes; (iv) effects of competition from other electric utilities (including increased competition resulting <br /> from mergers, acquisitions, and "strategic alliances" of competing electric (and gas) utilities and from <br /> competitors offering less expensive electricity from much greater distances transmitted over an <br /> interconnected system, and new methods of producing low cost electricity; (v) increased competition <br /> from independent power producers,marketers and brokers; (vi)"self-generation"by certain industrial and <br /> commercial customers; (vii) issues relating to the ability to issue tax-exempt obligations; (viii) severe <br /> restrictions on the ability to sell to nongovernmental entities electricity from generation projects financed <br /> with outstanding tax-exempt obligations; (ix) changes from projected future load requirements; (x) <br /> increases in costs; (xi) shifts in the availability and relative costs of different fuels; and (xii) global <br /> warming and the future legislation and regulations that target contributions made by coal-fired and other <br /> fossil-fueled generating units. Any of these factors and the factors discussed herein (as well as other <br /> factors)could have an effect on the financial condition of the Utility. <br /> The Utility and other electric utilities are subject to various federal and state laws requiring compliance <br /> with environmental rules and regulations. In addition, the Utility is also subject to various federal and <br /> state laws relating to its facilities as well as various federal and state laws which affect the construction <br /> and operation of its facilities. <br /> Energy Policy Act of 1992 <br /> The Energy Policy Act of 1992 (the "Energy Policy Act of 1992") made fundamental changes in the <br /> federal regulation of the electric utility industry, particularly in the area of transmission access under <br /> Sections 211, 212, and 213 of the Federal Power Act. The purpose of these changes, in part,was to bring <br /> about increased competition. While the Utility could contest before the Federal Energy Regulatory <br /> Commission("FERC") or in federal court any application under Sections 211,212 and 213 of the Federal <br /> Power Act on jurisdictional, procedural or substantive grounds, those Sections of the Federal Power Act <br /> provided the FERC with the authority, upon application by an electric utility, federal power marketing <br /> agency, or any person generating electricity for sale or resale, to require a transmitting utility such as the <br /> Utility to provide transmission services to the applicant at rates, charges, terms and conditions set by <br /> FERC based on standards and provisions in the Federal Power Act. However, the Energy Policy Act of <br /> 1992 specifically denied the FERC the authority to mandate "retail wheeling," under which a retail <br /> customer of one utility could obtain power from another utility or non-utility power generator. <br /> On April 24, 1996, the FERC issued two final rules. The final rules effected significant changes in the <br /> regulation of transmission services provided by public utilities (as defined in the Federal Power Act) that <br /> own, operate or control interstate transmission facilities and which are subject to the FERC jurisdiction <br /> over wholesale contracts, rates and services ("jurisdictional utilities"). The Utility is not a public utility, <br /> as defined by the Federal Power Act, and is not a jurisdictional utility under the Federal Power Act for its <br /> sales or generation of power. <br /> One of the final rules, Order No. 888, (i)requires the provision of open access transmission services on a <br /> nondiscriminatory basis by all jurisdictional utilities by requiring all such utilities to file tariffs that offer <br /> other entities seeking to effect wholesale power transactions the same transmission services they provide <br /> themselves,under comparable terms and conditions, and(ii)may require a non jurisdictional utility, such <br /> as the Utility, that purchases transmission services from a jurisdictional utility under an open access tariff <br /> and that owns or controls transmission facilities to, in turn, provide open access service to the <br /> jurisdictional utility under terms that are comparable to the service that the non jurisdictional utility <br /> provides itself This is referred to as the reciprocity requirement. Order No. 888 also includes provisions <br /> -6 - <br /> 124 <br />
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