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Related Articles > Deregulation Delayed in Southeast Texas

Deregulation Delayed in Southeast Texas
On October 31, the Public Utility Commission
accepted terms of a settlement stating that full electric
retail competition will begin no sooner than September 15,
2002 for customers in Southeast Texas within the revised Southeastern
Reliability Council (SERC) service area.
The ruling was made due to the fact that
the customers of Entergy, the primary investor-owned utility
in Southeast Texas, now have no choices in providers. "All
the evidence shows that Entergy customers cannot enjoy the
benefits of competition by January first," said PUC Chairman
Max Yzaguirre. "We must protect their interests and make
sure customer choice is available before opening the market."
The PUC’s approved settlement agreement includes a process
to help the Commission determine when the market can support
competition.
The PUC’s decision affects electric
customers across Southeast Texas including the ten counties
served by Sam Houston Electric Cooperative. In accordance
with the 1999 restructuring legislation, Sam Houston EC’s
Board of Directors opted to take a “wait and see”
approach in order to determine when or if the Cooperative
will participate in the competitive market.
Sam Houston Electric will maintain the “wait
and see” approach our Board of Directors adopted earlier
this year. We will continue to monitor the progress of electric
competition in other parts of Texas and will not participate
in a deregulated electricity market unless we determine that
it will be beneficial to our
member-owners.
Although the 1999 Electric Restructuring
Law directed retail electric competition to begin January
1, 2002 in areas of Texas served by investor-owned utilities,
legislation allows the PUC to delay full customer choice if
a power region is unable to offer fair competition.
The 13-state-area Southeastern Reliability
Council (SERC) is a regional electric grid serving Entergy
and a number of municipalities and electric cooperatives,
including Sam Houston Electric Cooperative. Texas law requires
the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to approve a regional
transmission organization (RTO) for the SERC to qualify as
a power region in order for retail competition to begin.
To date, an RTO has not been created and
there’s been no marketing by retail electric providers
in the Entergy area. Consequently, there has been no participation
in the electric deregulation pilot project that began last
June.
Other areas of Texas in which deregulation
has been delayed include the entire Texas Panhandle, Northeast
Texas, and the El Paso area.
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