Sentinel Editorial Will state officials promise your money to Kinder Morgan?
Posted: Thursday, March 3, 2016 12:00 pm
Anyone in business
knows one of the riskiest things you can do is to commit to an expensive
project without actually having the money to pay for it. It’s why banks
offer loans, why governments issue bonds, and why wannabe entrepreneurs
go on “Shark Tank.”
If you have enough political juice, however, it seems you can plan and carry out projects costing billions of dollars, and never risk a dime. That’s because the government will, in some cases, force your customers to take the risk for you.
If you have enough political juice, however, it seems you can plan and carry out projects costing billions of dollars, and never risk a dime. That’s because the government will, in some cases, force your customers to take the risk for you.
What a deal!
That’s the situation at the
center of the proposed Northeast Energy Direct natural gas pipeline.
Kinder Morgan, the energy giant behind the project, has been lobbying
for quite some time, with the help of New England electricity suppliers,
to have the region’s state utilities regulators agree to force electric
ratepayers to foot the bill for the $5 billion plan.
The argument goes like this: The
region’s electric rates are too high because there’s not enough energy
coming into the grid, which is a particular issue during peak demand
because then electric companies have to buy energy on the spot market at
inflated prices, so ultimately the pipeline will secure our region’s
energy future, thus lowering rates for all, so why not let the customers
pay for it to begin with?
We could have made that easier to
comprehend with a little more judicious use of punctuation. But really,
the way it reads now more accurately reflects the argument, in which
several somewhat-related issues are combined to make a specious case.
It’s been a largely successful
argument thus far. The state legislatures in Connecticut, Rhode Island
and Maine have passed laws saying the utilities commissions in those
states can force the project down ratepayers’ throats, while those in
Massachusetts and New Hampshire say their regulators already have that
power.
That puts the issue, here in New
Hampshire, in the hands of the Public Utilities Commission. That body
can put ratepayers on the hook, or it can say, no, Kinder Morgan should
foot the bill and pass along its costs to utilities later, which would
then pass those costs along to ratepayers.
Either way, one might conclude,
the customers will eventually pay. So what’s the difference? There are
two and they’re important.
First, the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, which will ultimately decide whether the pipeline
gets built, is now vetting Kinder Morgan’s proposal. As part of that,
the company must show there is actually enough demand for its gas in the
region to warrant building the pipeline. Pipeline critics contend the
project isn’t needed in New England, but is attractive to the company as
a way to get its natural gas from shale fields in Pennsylvania to the
coast, where it would be shipped overseas or piped on to Canada. But
Kinder Morgan has to make the case the gas is needed here.
Except, it doesn’t really have
enough gas customers in New England to show that. But if state utilities
regulators agree to pass the costs along to electric customers, it
essentially makes all the ratepayers in those states de facto customers,
thereby proving the demand is here.
So, the move is meant to gain
FERC approval in a case where it might not otherwise be granted.
According to lawyers at the Conservation Law Foundation, which is
fighting to stop the project, FERC has never approved a pipeline in
which the demonstrated demand for the power — by way of signed contracts
— was as low as in this case. Historically, projects gaining FERC
approval have had three-quarters or more of their capacity under
contract. Without the New England ratepayers as a “customer,” Kinder
Morgan has, according to the CLF, less than half its capacity under
contract. Thus, the states are stepping in to help guarantee the
project’s success before FERC.
Which brings us to the second
issue with this scheme. It’s important that Kinder Morgan doesn’t have
the pipeline’s gas accounted for, because it points to the risk involved
in building it. What if actual demand never materializes? Then
ratepayers will be on the hook for an ill-conceived project many didn’t
want to begin with.
Further, the company, whose
recent financial problems have been widely documented, might not have
the ability to borrow the funds for a $5 billion project without a
guaranteed return. Generally, that’s how lending works. If you want to
borrow money, you have to prove you can repay it. The burden should fall
solely on Kinder Morgan to show it can pay its own way.
If not, the pipeline shouldn’t move ahead on money lifted from the pockets of ratepayers by their state officials.
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