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Power Surge <br />Short-Lived Chaos <br /> In Electricity Market <br /> Generates a Windfall <br /> <br />Utilities Rush to Exorcise <br /> Bad Memories of June <br /> By Ordering New Plants <br /> <br />Pent-Up Demand Is Freed <br /> <br /> By WILLIAM M. CARLEY <br /> StaffReporteJ' of THE WALL STREET <br /> Robert Nardelli, presiden! of General <br />Electric Co.'s power-turbine unit in Sch- <br />enectady, N.Y., was home watching TV on <br />a recent Sunday night when the phone <br />rang. The caller was the chief operating of- <br />fleer of a major UiS. utility. <br /> The utility had been negotiating with <br />GE to buy new turbines'that produce elec- <br />tricity, and the deal was scheduled to close <br />in the next few days. But the utility execu- <br />twe was so worr4ed that a fleeter purchaser <br />might snatch his place in line for delivery <br />of the units that he called Mr. Nardelli that <br />Sunday night. "I promised the delivery <br />slots," says Mr. Nardelti, who declines to <br />identify the executive. "Within days, we <br />sold him the turbines." <br /> The anecdote illustrates one of the <br />sharpest turnabouts in the history of the <br />power industry. For years, Mr. Nardelli's <br />phones, and those of other big power- <br />equipment makers, such as Siemens AG of <br />Germany and the Swedish-Swiss company <br />ABB Asea Brown Boveri Ltd., seldom rang <br />with calls from U.S. buyers. The result was <br />manufacturing overcapacity, a global <br />power-equipment price war, heavy losses <br />for some turbine makers and consolidation <br />in the industry. Siemens, for example, in <br />August completed the purchase of the <br />Westinghouse Electric power-generation <br />business from CBS Corp. for $1.5 billion. <br />Straining Capacity <br /> But in recent months, electric utilities <br />and independent power producers have <br />been showering orders on turbine builders. <br />"There's been an enormous surge" in or- <br />ders, says Randy Zwim, chief of Siemens's <br />power operations in the U.S. The sudden- <br />ness and strength of the turnaround, says <br />GE's Mr. Nardelli, is "unprecedented." <br /> Indeed, the capacity of some of the <br />power-equipment makers is even being <br />strained. GE and Siemens say delivery <br />dates for their gas turbines are nearly sold <br />out into the summer of 2001. <br /> <br /> OnaOle to get quicker clelivemes, so,ne <br /> :lesperate utilities are buying deliver3 <br /> slots from other customers whose need is <br /> less urgent. "Hundreds of thousands of dol- <br /> lars are changing hands" to buy delivery <br /> dates, says John Reed, president of Reed <br /> Consulting Group Inc., Burlington, Mass. <br /> Industry executives say the practice is con- <br /> ducted as quietly as possible, with pay- <br /> merits often hidden in other transactions. <br /> That's because utility customers fear <br /> antagonizing power-equipment makers <br /> who would prefer to reap the windfall for <br /> themselves. Asked about the practice of <br /> selling delivery slots, GE's Mr. Nardelli <br /> says, "I've heard of it," and warns that <br /> GE's warranty coverage might not be good <br /> for such secondary buyers. <br /> Rebound in Prices <br /> Price-cutting on power equipment. <br /> meanwhile, has come to a screeching halt. <br /> Prices for power turbines, which had plum- <br /> meted nearly 50% since 1993, have re- <br /> bounded 10'7~ to 15~ inxrecent months, GE <br /> says. Today, a popular turnkey plant-two <br /> F-class gas turbines linked to a steam tur- <br /> bine and three generators-sells for about <br /> S180 million. <br /> The ordering binge, bypassing nuclear <br /> and coal-fired plants because of safety and <br /> environmental concerns, is focusing instead <br /> on gas turbines. In these machines, natural <br /> gas is ignited and the hot gas expands, spin- <br /> ning hundreds of blades on a turbine linked <br /> to a generator that tums out electricity. <br /> The turnabout was triggered, at least in <br /> part. by the chaos in the Midwest in June. <br /> when utilities literally ran out of electric- <br /> it.,,,. The impact was enormous, ranging <br /> from tens of thousands of residential cus- <br /> tomers going without full air conditioning <br /> on a sweltering day to the shutdown of <br /> huge mines and factories across the re- <br /> gion. "It was devastating," says Mark Mil- <br /> let, vice president of Steel Dynamics Inc., <br /> which shut down its electric furnaces near <br /> Butler, Ind., and lost more than 12.000 tons <br /> of steel production that month. <br /> <br /> Trouble in the Making <br /> The crisis didn't develop overnight. For <br /> years, U.S. utilities, concerned about over- <br /> capacity and the uncertainties of deregula- <br /> tion, put off buying power plants even as <br /> the economy grew. Their reserve margin- <br /> the difference between total capacity and <br /> projected peak electricity demand-fell <br /> from 25% of capacity in 1985 to 16~ this <br /> year, and in the Midwest to only 13~. <br /> Utilities also became cautious about <br />buying power plants because manufactur- <br />ers, racing to design more-efficient tur- <br />bines, ran into spectacular technical sna- <br />fus. At utilities in the U.S. and around the <br />world, many of GE's new F-class turbines <br />cracked in 19~5, resulting in one of the <br />biggest product recalls in industry history. <br />GE flew_huge turbine rotors in ~hartered <br />jets from as far away as South Korea and <br />England to be repaired at its Greenville. <br />S.C., gas-turbine plant. New ABB and <br />Siemens turbines also cracked and broke <br />down, making utility executives anxious <br />about buying any more of the new units. <br /> By summer 1997, power was running <br />short, and a few big industrial plants were <br />briefly shut down. By May of this year. ex- <br />perts were warning power supplibs might <br /> Please Turn to Page ,46, Column I <br /> <br /> <br />