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Howard Kaloogian: Now we know who created Calif. energy crisis
The Providence Journal ^ | July 3, 2008 | Howard Kaloogian

Posted on 07/05/2008 1:36:43 PM PDT by calcowgirl

Howard Kaloogian is a lawyer and a former member of the California State Assembly.

GITMO AND GUNS are getting all the press. But energy mavens are talking about another recent far-reaching — but little noted — U.S. Supreme Court decision on the California energy crisis: It took them seven years but they finally figured it out.

The revisionist part of the story is well known: Big bad oil traders like Enron gamed the market and drove up energy costs fifteen-fold. The blackouts, insolvent utilities and economic chaos are remembered as the worst energy crisis in American history.

But the Supreme Court turned this conventional wisdom on its ear and said there may have been misconduct by energy sellers, but no one ever showed that caused the crisis.

To paraphrase Bart Simpson, the court, in part, said: They didn’t do it.

This left the real villains hiding in plain sight: The regulators who enforced the worst law in the history of the Golden State: the California energy deregulation of 1996. The same regulators who now say that despite the Supreme Court ruling they intend to continue their expensive vendetta on energy producers.

The stakes are high and it is worth remembering how we got here. So let’s go back. Way back to 1996. I was a member of the California legislature then.

I voted for what I thought was deregulation. Soon after the “deregulation” became law, one thing became apparent: This was not deregulation, but re-regulation — complete with price controls and trading restrictions that did not produce one extra watt of power.

Once in the hands of the befuddled regulators, this bill went from a bad idea to a nightmarish reality.

Anticipating the Supreme Court and Bart Simpson, the energy economist Geoffrey Styles figured it out six years ago:

“California’s energy crisis grew out of years of neglect, over-regulation and a fatally flawed ‘deregulation’ scheme that, upon scrutiny, failed to meet any common-sense definition of that term.” As the architects of an electric-power deregulation process that grossly distorted the market, California’s elected officials and regulators deserve their own share of the blame.

The regulators established the price caps and scheduling system that Enron’s traders so effectively exploited with their bizarrely named strategies, and the legislature and governor froze retail electricity prices, while letting wholesale prices float (far above retail), deliberately opening up a gap that soon brought the state’s two largest utilities to their knees.

When prices returned to earth, utilities — locked into long-term deals they signed at the peak of the market — suffered what the Supreme Court is calling “buyer’s remorse.”

They demanded refunds from the energy companies. Some agreed. Others did not, saying the sales were fairly negotiated between sophisticated buyers and sellers. And a deal was a deal. So off they went to court.

After a lower court and the Federal Energy Commission found no evidence that dirty dealing caused the crisis, the most overturned court in America got into the act — the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. These judges said the federal government had a duty to rip up these contracts because of the high prices.

But the U.S. Supreme Court was having none of that.

In giving short shrift to claims that the reviled energy companies were behind the crisis, the court said legally what California voters knew intuitively when they voted the first time for Arnold Schwarzenegger. Absent massive mismanagement, there would have been no crisis.

The Supreme Court has sent a message. California citizens have the right to expect even better: Stop the war on energy producers. Declare victory and go home. Redeploy California’s private army of $700-an-hour lawyers who have frittered away tens of millions of dollars in pursuit of this now hopeless legal endeavor.

Roads and parks and even taxpayers could use the money for utility bills.

A real energy policy recognizes that markets and contracts produce power.

Regulators and rhetoric do not. The governor and his regulators should be able to figure this out. The Supreme Court sure did.

Howard Kaloogian is a lawyer and a former member of the California State Assembly.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: california; calpowercrisis; energy; federalenergy; judiciary; kaloogian; ninthcircuit; scotus; supremecourt

1 posted on 07/05/2008 1:36:43 PM PDT by calcowgirl
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To: NormsRevenge; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Carry_Okie; SierraWasp; tubebender

FYI Ping


2 posted on 07/05/2008 1:37:39 PM PDT by calcowgirl (Schwarzenegger and McCain are trying to castrate the elephant)
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To: calcowgirl

I would definitely like for him to run again for political office sometime in the future.


3 posted on 07/05/2008 2:08:31 PM PDT by johnthebaptistmoore (Vote for conservatives AT ALL POLITICAL LEVELS! Encourage all others to do the same on November 4!)
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To: johnthebaptistmoore

“I voted for what I thought was deregulation.” Howie is shifting the blame. He is responsible because he voted for it. He knew or should have known what he was voting for. It’s called fiduciary responsibility. He screwed up so why do you want to vote for him for political office?


4 posted on 07/05/2008 2:29:10 PM PDT by RKV (He who has the guns makes the rules)
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To: calcowgirl

The left is trying the same tactic nationally. Find the scapegoat for a problem caused by government policies. The scapegoat (Bush, big oil, evil speculators, OPEC, conservatives, ...) are blamed for problems caused by rat interference in energy markets. The new energy economy is a fraud, green labels are a fraud, and rats are frauds.


5 posted on 07/05/2008 2:30:30 PM PDT by businessprofessor
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To: calcowgirl

Gee, no names of who pushed that deregulation down the throats of the unwitting masses.

I can think of a few names. ;-)
Thanks for posting.


6 posted on 07/05/2008 2:48:12 PM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... Godspeed ... ICE toll-free tip hotline 1-866-DHS-2-ICE ... 9/11 .. Never FoRget!!!)
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To: calcowgirl

It was a situation ripe for the harvest.

A commodity (energy, specificly electric energy) was artificially restricted by laws that prevent the expansion of generation capacity within California.

The demand continues to grow, at a known and even anticipated rate, all the while that the source of energy continues to grow more scarce. California has to import energy from neighboring states where there are far fewer restrictions on how electric energy is produced.

The energy supply through the grid can only come IN from outside at a limited level. Maximum is maximum, and any breakdown of the grid is magnified in its effects. There are competing demands for this same energy in other states, where it is being generated. Still, California does nothing to assure a greater in-state capability of producing energy.

Opportunity for the futures trading organizations. Happily they trade the futures in energy delivery back and forth, and as it looks like all the other peak sources are drying up, the prices continue to bid higher and higher.

Does all this have an oddly familiar sound to it? Substitute petroleum for electrical energy, and the United States for California.

Production of petroleum is artificially restricted here in the United States, when the demand is known and expected to increase over time. The United States is forced to import petroleum from regions where there are far fewer restrictions on extraction and refining the crude petroleum.

The crude can only come IN through a limited number of port facilities. Once here it is doled out to the various distribution lines, and because the refinery facilities are limited in how much they can expand, a greater and greater partion of the petroleum stock is imported as already refined. But other areas of the world also have a growing need for petroleum and refined products. Still, the United States does NOTHING to assure greater domestic production of crude oil.

Opportunity for the futures trading organizations. Happily they trade the futures in energy delivery back and forth, and as it looks like all the other peak sources are drying up, the prices continue to bid higher and higher.

Only, it’s not Enron doing this trading this time. Enron is out of the picture. All the principals are either in prison, or hopelessly locked out of ever being any kind of player again.

There ARE some big dogs out there still running, most notably the Soros International machine. Their structure of shell companies and wholly owned subidiaries make what Enron once was look like a kid’s lemonade stand. These people go in and do stock manipulations, currency trading and just plain cutthroat business practices, that bring the economies of whole countries down. It is not by accident that one of their biggest “wholly owned subsidaries” is the US Democrat National Committee. What Soros International is doing, is taking advantage of the artificial scarcity of petroleum worldwide, and bidding up the prices, trading between several of the different dummy corporations they have set up, for future delivery of oil contracts, oil that is not even out of the ground yet. They can run these prices up an down like running a yo-yo on a string, just by movement of a relatively few of these contracts. Crowd panic in the various trading floors around the world does the rest.

Eventually, like it did with Enron, when they tried to “corner the market” on energy flowing to California, this house of cards will collapse. When it does, anybody holding a contract for which they paid premium price to get, will see its real value drop to a half or a quarter of what they bought it for. A lot of smaller investors, and entities like institutional funds, will be left holding the bag. The big player here, Soros International, will just collapse a bunch of the dummy corporations, declaring them “bankrupt”, and whatever losses result, they can absorb them, where the smaller investors suckered into the trading scheme cannot.

The big plan right now is to keep the bubble in the price of crude expanding until AFTER the Democrats have swept into a majority in both the House and Senate, and Barack Obama is assured of the Oval Office. The tight squeeze will be, has been, blamed on the Republicans, but that is in itself an absurdity, as the initiatives to expand the energy supplies here in the US offered by George Bush have been stymied at every turn by a recalcitrant DEMOCRAT House and Senate, a co-ordinated effort to score a one-two punch on the Bush Administration. George Soros still has a totally deranged view of the entire Bush family, for reasons not apparent to most of the world, but probably well known in the circles at the top.


7 posted on 07/05/2008 2:58:24 PM PDT by alloysteel (A taxpayer voting for Obama - is like a chicken voting for Colonel Sanders.)
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To: businessprofessor

Bingo!

A nice retired couple in our neighborhood had a “No Coal Plant” sign in their front yard. This winter was bad, and it was nearly obscured by a big snow drift. They are on a fixed income and any price spikes in fuel or food is going to hurt them. I didn’t try to explain how coal is responsible for 50 per cent of the electricity generated in this country, there is no arguing with the hypnotized.

But, I am eager to see what/where their ire is going to be directed when their utility bill spikes to some unbelievable figure in the not too distant future.


8 posted on 07/05/2008 3:07:02 PM PDT by Freedom4US
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To: Freedom4US
“No Coal Plant” sign in their front yard

Wait until a nice cold day and cut the electric wires leading into their house. Put a notice on their door that says the power company is honoring their ideology and therefore their power has been cut due to them not being able to find any electricity made by non-coal plants. State that it might be several days more until they can find some non-coal energy for them. In the mean time, stay warm.

9 posted on 07/05/2008 5:27:06 PM PDT by Right Wing Assault ("..this administration is planning a 'Right Wing Assault' on values and ideals.." - John Kerry)
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To: NormsRevenge; Carry_Okie; Grampa Dave; ElkGroveDan; calcowgirl; WilliamofCarmichael; tubebender; ...
Howie is still playing CYA! He voted for it blindly without even reading it and realizing that Steve Peace, of "Attack of the Killer Tomatoes" infamy turned the legislation into a POS at the last minute trying to satisfy all the "CONsumerist Attorneys" and CONsurmerism activists!!!

The free market supply side never fit with the CONsumerist price controls and price fixing!!! A formula to make the POS legislation blow right up in EVERYBODY's faces and they're all still trying to pass the damned buck!!!

I certainly disagree with his Schwartzenegger swooning!!! What a farce!!!

10 posted on 07/05/2008 10:06:16 PM PDT by SierraWasp (My tagline has been aborted without mercy! They said it had no redeeming social value!!!)
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To: SierraWasp
Kaloogian is nearly as clueless about this today as he was when he voted for the deregulation.
11 posted on 07/05/2008 11:01:38 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (We have people in power with desire for evil.)
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To: Carry_Okie
>>Kaloogian is nearly as clueless about this today
>>as he was when he voted for the deregulation.
 
Clueless?  Why, Howie's one of "The Smartest Guys in the Room" /s
 
Howie says
 
"The revisionist part of the story is well known: Big bad oil traders like Enron gamed the market and drove up energy costs fifteen-fold."
 
Revisionist?  Apparently Howie hasn't listened to the recorded telephone conversations between Enron traders/traitors and CA power station operators;  The calls where Enron trader/traitors colluded with those CA power station operators to shut down. 

12 posted on 07/26/2008 3:23:14 AM PDT by LomanBill (A bird flies because the right wing opposes the left.)
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To: calcowgirl

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=Howard+Kaloogian+Enron+Frank+Luntz&btnG=Search


13 posted on 07/26/2008 3:27:57 AM PDT by LomanBill (A bird flies because the right wing opposes the left.)
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To: LomanBill
Apparently Howie hasn't listened to the recorded telephone conversations between Enron traders/traitors and CA power station operators; The calls where Enron trader/traitors colluded with those CA power station operators to shut down.

It's only icing on the cake.

14 posted on 07/26/2008 6:42:21 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (There are people in power with desire for evil.)
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