UPDATE: FERC Finds No Manipulation In NY Power Market Loop Issue
July 16 2009 - 12:14PM
Dow Jones News
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission said Thursday that
irregularities in the routing of power in New York last year wasn't
the result of market manipulation.
But regulators after a year-long investigation found the "loop
flow" issue caused pricing problems for consumers in the New York
power market as well as in the Midwest and PJM market, which
includes the Mid-Atlantic states and parts of the Midwest and
Southeast. FERC ordered the markets' operators to develop a
long-term solution in the next six months.
"We did find there is a systematic pricing issue," FERC Chairman
Jon Wellinghoff said during a commission meeting Thursday.
FERC began investigating pricing after the New York Independent
System Operator, or NYISO, suspected that the use of circuitous
transmission paths were increasing the cost of electricity for
consumers. Concerns revolved around market participants scheduling
power to be delivered over circuitous routes, such as around Lake
Erie, instead of directly between New York and Pennsylvania or New
Jersey.
The power actually moved over more direct routes, but the
participants paid less by booking the less-congested transmission
routes. The distortion led to higher costs for consumers since
generators are compensated when transmission costs rise due to grid
congestion in certain locations.
The FERC investigation found market participants were reacting
to price signals in the market and weren't "artificially affecting
those signals or deliberately affecting congestion in order to
raise prices." The commission reviewed the trading activities of
several companies, including Constellation Energy Group Inc. (CEG)
and DTE Energy Inc. (DTE), according to the investigative report
released Thursday.
"Market participants are not well situated to try and predict
loop flow effects in real time, which are dependent on a complex
interaction of ever-changing system configurations and schedules,"
the report said.
Instead, the report found problems with the design of New York's
market, with FERC saying the pricing problem may affect consumers
both negatively and positively.
FERC last fall made temporary rule changes to prevent routing
irregularities. It opened its investigation amid calls by Sen.
Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., for a review, saying traders were
exploiting the market to make large profits at the expense of
consumers.
-By Mark Peters, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2457;
mark.peters@dowjones.com