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Page added on February 23, 2009

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Cuts at power companies raise red flags about reliability

Utilities are aggressively cutting spending on new power plants and wires, raising concerns about higher prices or electricity shortages when demand rebounds in a year or two.


Utilities and independent power suppliers plan to shave capital budgets 10% in 2009 and 2010, according to Edison Electric Institute, the industry trade group. The 2009 cuts could total 20% by year’s end, says Larry Makovich of Cambridge Energy Research Associates.


“When the economy rebounds, electric power is likely to rebound at the same time and quite strongly,” he says. “We have a legitimate concern there’s going to be a price to pay.”


At the extreme, Makovich says, power shortages could trigger brownouts or blackouts in some areas in three to five years, though utilities downplay such concerns.


Before the recession, utilities were poised for a big construction wave to meet rising demand. Beset by lower revenue, particularly from large industrial customers, utilities now have less cash and limited access to capital and face high interest rates.


“This is just not the time to be plowing big capital investments on your system,” says Mike Morris, CEO of American Electric Power (AEP) , one of the largest utilities.


USA Today



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