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News > Electric Deregulation >
Frequently Asked Questions > How Deregulation Affects Members

1. What is ERCOT?
2. What is the status of deregulation in East
Texas?
3. What's happened to prices in the deregulated part of Texas
4. Why has the price of natural gas increased?
5. What is Sam Houston EC doing to combat the
rising cost of fossil fuels?
6. What can I do to reduce my bill?
7. How are electric cooperatives different from
investor-owned utilities (IOUs)?
8. What do Sam Houston Electric Cooperative member-owners
say about deregulation?
9. Will Sam Houston Electric member-owners become
part of the deregulated market?
10. How long can Sam Houston Electric Cooperative
“wait and see?”
Q. What is ERCOT?
A. ERCOT,
or the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, is the body
that oversees the electric grid that covers the majority of
the state. ERCOT facilitates the selling of power on the wholesale
level, manages the flow of electricity on transmission lines
and ensures that customers switching service providers are
processed appropriately. Less than 2 percent (near Diboll
and Huntington) of Sam Houston EC's service territory is in
ERCOT. An outline of the territory is below.

Courtesy of ERCOT
Q. What is the status of
deregulation in East Texas
A. During
the 2007 Texas Legislative session, Sam Houston EC worked
with state lawmakers to induduce House Bill 2818, which would
stop Entergy Texas' proposed move into EROCT. It passed in
the Texas House and died before it got a Senate committee
hearing.
Entergy's proposed move before the Public Utility Commission
of Texas in the summer. On Oct. 2, 2007, the PUCT ruled in
favor of Sam Houston Electric Cooperative, the cities served
by Entergy Texas and various other consumer groups.
This decision saved Sam Houston EC and nine other neighbooring
East Texas cooperatives more than $15 milllion per year in
increased rates. It also save Texas ratepayers $1 billion
in infrastructure costs.
The PUCT urged Entergy to consider joining the Southwest Power
Pool, which would allow Sam Houston EC to still access low
cost generation in neighboring states while still providing
for needed infrastructure costs.
While this issue seems to be settled for the moment, Sam Houston
EC will continue to look out for its members best intrests
at upcomming PUCT hearings and the 2009 Legislative session.
Q. What has happened to
prices in the deregulated parts of Texas?
A. From
January 1, 2002, when the restructured electric market was
implemented in ERCOT, to January 1, 2006, retail electric
rates have increased by as much as 80 percent.
According to
Power To Choose, the PUC's Web site that allows consumers
to compare retail electric rates, the average cost for 1,000
kWh in the ERCOT region ranges from $118 in Dallas and Lufkin
to $123 in the Greater Houston Area as of Nov.1, 2007. That's
a tremendous increase over the $85 per 1000 kWh that those
same customers were paying before deregulation began in 2002
and higher than the price the state's five regulated investor
owned utility's consumers pay in East Texas, the Panhandle
and El Paso.
While consumers of cooperative and municipal utilies in the
ERCOT region have seen price increases, they continue to pay
less than ratepayers that must chose among 40 different service
offers.
The main cause for the high prices
has been the increase in the price of natural gas, which has
more than tripled in the same period, and that the majority
of electric generation in ERCOT relies on natural gas as its
primary or only fuel source. For these reasons, should deregulation
ever come to our part of Texas, Sam Houston EC's Board of
Directors will continue to take a "wait and see"
approach.
Q. Why has the price of
natual gas increased?
A. Increased
demand, high summer temperatures, robust economic both at
home and abroad along with natural disasters such as Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita have put tremendous pressure on an already
tight natural gas market. According the Energy Information
Administration, domestic production of natural gas has decreased
slightly since 2002. While imports have increased, there are
only four terminals in the United States capable of receiving
liquefied natural gas, or LNG. Until new LNG terminals are
built, in addition to proposed pipelines connecting gas field
in Alaska to the contiguous United States open up, supply
and demand will continue to perform a delicate dance at the
expense of the consumer.
While Sam Houston Electric Cooperative
can't control the price of natural gas, we do combine purchasing
power with other cooperatives to buy in bulk and diversify
fuel sources. This helps to minimize the effects of rising
fossil fuel prices.
Q. What is the Cooperative
doing to combat the rising costs of fossil fuels?
A. The
Cooperative's rates are set to cover the expenses of wholesale
cost of power generation, transmission of power over the electric
grid and the distribution services we provide.
Currently, 60 percent of the power supplied
by Sam Houston EC is produced from coal, 35 percent from natural
gas and hydroelectric and other renewable energy sources accounting
for the remainder.
We make it our focus every day to keep
costs down. Sam Houston EC is working in conjunction with
nine other East Texas co-ops to secure additional sources
of generation that will mitigate high costs on the open market.
Two 160-MW peaking facilities to be located near Kountze and
Shepherd will help the Cooperative stabilize costs during
periods of high demand. Sam Houston and the other nine ETEC
co-op are also developing a 24-MW hydroelectric generating
facility at Lake Livingston, which will be capable of supplying
power to 12,000 homes.
Q. What can I do to reduce
my bill?
A. Temperature
extremes during winter and summer can tax even the most efficient
heating and cooling system. By enrolling in Sam Houston Electric's
Even Monthly Payment plan, your electric costs are spread
evenly throughout the year, allowing you to budget your energy
needs accurately for the next 12 months.
For more information, click
here or call a Member Services Representative at (936)
327-5711 in Livingston, (936) 653-5400 in Coldspring, (409)
283-8251 in Woodville or toll free at (800) 458-0381.
Additionally, home improvement projects
not only add value to your home, but also keep your heating
and cooling dollars inside. To learn more, please review our
Conservation and Efficiency
Tips.
Q. How are electric cooperatives
different from investor-owned utilities (IOUs)?
A. Locally
based and democratically managed, cooperatives have, for decades,
provided their members the lowest cost power and dependable
local service. Operating as non-profit entities, cooperatives
return unused capital to their members. This is in stark contrast
to the IOU business model, whose bottom line goal is profitability.
Understanding the fundamental differences between IOU and
cooperative businesses, Texas lawmakers granted cooperatives
and municipalities the choice to opt-in or opt-out of the
deregulated market.
For 65 years, Sam Houston Electric has been
looking after the best interests of our members. Under the
member-owned cooperative business model, our incentive is
not to gain a profit; it is to find the best deals possible
and pass the savings on to our members. Unlike IOU customers,
our members can rely on us to do the shopping for them. Furthermore,
we leverage our expertise to negotiate prices and team up
with other cooperatives to purchase power in bulk –
another benefit only enjoyed by Co-op members. Being part
of a member-owned cooperative is the best way to ensure you
get the lowest price – and best service.
Q. What do Sam Houston Electric
Cooperative member-owners say about deregulation?
A. In
collaboration with nine other East Texas cooperatives, we
commissioned a survey to determine how our member-owners prefer
us to approach deregulation. Via hundreds of interviews and
scores of group discussions with residents throughout all
service areas, the ten cooperatives (representing nearly 277,000
members) learned the following:
64 percent of members surveyed believe that
letting their co-op “do the bargaining” in the
new market will ultimately give them more negotiating power
and lower prices.
Only 16 percent of those surveyed expressed
a desire for their cooperative to opt-in to the
competitive marketplace.
The potential drawback to participating
in a deregulated market that most concerned 36 percent of
members was that consumers in rural areas could be abandoned
or forced to pay higher rates.
Q. Will Sam Houston Electric
member-owners become part of the deregulated market?
A. Because
our members recognize that being part of a cooperative means
that membership gives them a bargaining power that most Texans
do not have, Sam Houston Electric’s Board of Directors
has decided to continue doing business the way we always have
– by pursuing our goal of finding the best deals on
power available and supplying it to our members. Like 130
other Texas cooperatives and municipalities, Sam Houston EC
will maintain our “wait and see” position with
respect to deregulation.
Q. How long can Sam Houston
Electric Cooperative “wait and see?”
A. Currently,
there is no set date at which the decision must be made regarding
whether or not to opt-in. Careful consideration must be taken
before making a decision to opt-in, however, as the decision
cannot be reversed. Because we take our members’ best
interests very seriously, the Co-op’s management and
Board of Directors will continue to monitor the progress of
electric competition in other parts of the state and will
not participate in a deregulated electricity market until
or unless we determine it to be beneficial to our members.
History
of Deregulation in Texas
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