Electricity: Innovation and Competition : Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Energy and Power of the Committee on Commerce, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifth Congress, First Session, September 5, 1997, Volume 4 |
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Page 3
... increasing options for residential consumers is central to the subcommittee's consideration of legislation , because barriers to innovation imposed by State or Federal regulation will determine whether cost - saving technologies enter ...
... increasing options for residential consumers is central to the subcommittee's consideration of legislation , because barriers to innovation imposed by State or Federal regulation will determine whether cost - saving technologies enter ...
Page 4
... increasing op- tions for residential consumers is central to the Subcommittee's consideration of leg- islation , because , barriers or incentives to innovation imposed by State or Federal regulation will determine whether cost saving ...
... increasing op- tions for residential consumers is central to the Subcommittee's consideration of leg- islation , because , barriers or incentives to innovation imposed by State or Federal regulation will determine whether cost saving ...
Page 13
... increased ability to control usage , promise to open new markets for energy service providers while creating new opportunities and expectations for consumers . Historically , the electric utility industry has supplied capacity through ...
... increased ability to control usage , promise to open new markets for energy service providers while creating new opportunities and expectations for consumers . Historically , the electric utility industry has supplied capacity through ...
Page 14
... increased ability to control and regulate power for customer satisfaction . This is accomplished through increased reliability and lower total cost of service . As open access and a competitive wholesale electricity market lowers the ...
... increased ability to control and regulate power for customer satisfaction . This is accomplished through increased reliability and lower total cost of service . As open access and a competitive wholesale electricity market lowers the ...
Page 15
... increases in economic and reliable power transmission and delivery with relatively modest investments in new substation equipment . Information relating to the power system must be carefully checked and verified to insure its accuracy ...
... increases in economic and reliable power transmission and delivery with relatively modest investments in new substation equipment . Information relating to the power system must be carefully checked and verified to insure its accuracy ...
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Common terms and phrases
affiliate AlliedSignal AT&T benefits bill BURR California Chair thanks Chairman choice coal competitors CONGRES CONGRESS THE LIBRARY consumers cost CRAPO cross-subsidization deregulation devices distributed power elec electric cooperatives electric power electric utility electric utility industry electricity market electronic energy market energy service provider energy services environment environmental equipment FACTS technology Federal fuel FURSE going Green Mountain Energy grid GUDGER hearing HOLT innovation investment issue LARGENT legislation LIBRA LIBRARY OF CONGRESS marketplace MASIELLO monopoly Mountain Energy Resources natural gas non-utility O'NEILL outage percent plants power flow power quality power system PPM customers PREPARED STATEMENT problems products and services PROPHET purchase RARY regulation reliability renewable residential RESS retail REYNOLDS SCHAEFER SCHAINKER sector SHIMKUS smart smart meter sources substation suppliers things Thomas Edison tion tomers transmission and distribution transmission lines tricity TurboGenerator United
Popular passages
Page 78 - The Merit Shop philosophy of awarding construction contracts to the lowest responsible bidder, regardless of labor affiliation, through open and competitive bidding, assures taxpayers and consumers the most value for their construction dollar.
Page 4 - telephone" has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us.
Page 9 - PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. FRANK PALLONE, JR., A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY Thank you, Mr.
Page 79 - ... competition, as a rule. The deregulation of the utility industry in this country may be accorded a similar response if it is accompanied by steps designed to ensure that resulting competition is other than imperfect, unbalanced, and generally unfair, discriminatory and, ultimately, anti-competitive. (b) Cross-subsidization Of all the abuses which can accompany deregulation, the potential for cross-subsidization is the most substantial and significant. Cross-subsidization, usually impermissible...
Page 39 - EPRI's work covers a wide range of technologies related to the generation, delivery, and use of electricity, with special attention paid to cost-effectiveness and environmental concerns.
Page 82 - Separation of utility and non-utility functions and operations. As utilities are restructured in a competitive environment, there will be a need to configure them in such a way as to assure that those functions, and only those functions, which are inherent to the utility monopoly franchise are not co-mingled with competitive operations. This be especially true at the distribution level (DISCO) which will lie partly within utility and partly within competitive, private sector markets.
Page 78 - ... utility industry in this country can be accorded a similar response if it is accompanied by steps designed to ensure that resulting competition is in fact free, fair, and open. Absent this, deregulation will be imperfect, unbalanced, and generally unfair, discriminatory and, ultimately, anti-competitive. The primary obstacle to free, fair and open competition in existing markets, as well as emerging ones, is the ability of the utility to leverage its entry into, and penetration of, traditional...
Page 40 - ... power transactions has already increased four-fold in the last decade, so that about one-half of the electricity now generated in the United States is sold on the wholesale market before it is delivered to customers. This figure may rise to two-thirds as deregulation progresses. Such growth, however, comes at a time when many parts of the North American transmission system are already operating close to their stability limits, as illustrated by recent widespread outages in the Western states....
Page 30 - US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE, SUBCOMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND POWER, Washington, DC.
Page 22 - Chairman and Members of the Committee. I appreciate the opportunity to participate in today's hearing and thank you for your invitation. I am Tony Prophet, President of AlliedSignal Power Systems.