
The Commissioners then introduced Jim Oakley from Energy Northwest who wanted to clear up a fact he’d read in The Eagle’s last coverage of the PUD.
The article said Energy Northwest, a public power consortium based in Richland recently upgraded their Columbia nuclear power plant near Richland, and the downtime had increased the company’s generating costs by $20 million a day.
Energy Northwest sells its power to the BPA. “What the BPA said,” said Oakley, “was that the upgrade has added about $1 million a day to their operating costs.” Oakley agreed the total down time costs to buy replacement power while the nuclear facility was being refurbished had probably added about $20 million to the BPA’s budget.
PUD manager David Tramblie also reported to Commissioners that a shift was occurring in an investment the PUD had made back in the 1950’s relating to the Packwood Lake Hydroelectric Project, southeast of Mount Rainier. The projects’ shareholders, Wahkiakum PUD being one, were granted a 50-year license in 1960 and the generation facility went into commercial power generation operation four years later.
Tramblie said he had attended a meeting recently to try and determine who would purchase the excess power generated by Packwood once the BPA Tier-2 rate system takes effect in 2011. “This will leave some of the smaller utilities, such as ourselves in an interesting quandary,’ said Tramblie.
The Wahkiakum PUD owns one percent of the Packwood generation and Tramblie told commissioners he wondered what would happen to the PUD’s share in Packwood. He said most likely the larger utilities, with more shares in Packwood would take the majority of the power, “Which poses the question: At what price do we sell our power to these participants?” Tramblie asked.
Commissioner Bob Jungers said it seemed reasonable to him to sell any excess power to the other members at market rates. “That would give us equitable compensation for the costs we’re exposed to,” said Jungers, “and I think we should either renegotiate our contract, or divest ourselves from the project.”
Commissioners also reviewed the PUD’s resolution on Net Metering presented by PUD attorney Tim Hanigan. The resolution describes the legal rights of the PUD in relation to customers who generate their own electrical power, and then sell any excess power back to the PUD.
Jungers said he had read the resolution and asked Hanigan to reword some parts and clarify other sections. “I know the intent of the language but my concern is that some of the language might be misinterpreted,” said Jungers.
Commissioners also decided to do personnel reviews by the end of the year.