Restructuring

Oversight and Regulation in Competitive Electricity Markets Protect Customers and the Economy

Multiple layers of regulatory oversight protect our nation’s competitive electricity markets from systemic risks such as those that led to the recent financial market crisis. Much of the nation’s electric industry has undergone restructuring to promote competition and consumer benefits, but regulation and oversight at the federal and state levels are as strong as, or stronger, than they have ever been.
 

Texas Tribune: Electric Competition Works in Texas

Competition in Texas has created economic and environmental benefits for consumers, the Texas Tribune reports in an article examining the results of the state’s competitive retail market. The COMPETE Coalition applauds the Tribune for correctly identifying many successes of Texas’ competitive electricity market.
 
COMPETE closely follows electricity developments across the country and agrees with many observers that the Texas market is without question one of restructuring’s biggest success stories, providing consumers a robust choice of competitive power suppliers. “From 2002 to mid-2009, 86 percent of customers made at least one observable switch, whether between providers or to a different plan offered by the same provider,” the Texas Tribune reported.
 

Competition Supported at Pennsylvania State Senate Hearing

Retail competition in Pennsylvania is benefitting consumers, said several members of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission this week at a public hearing. Chairman Jim Cawley, Commissioner Wayne Gardner, and Commissioner Robert Powelson made their supportive comments before the PA Senate Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure Committee.

 

Commissioner Powelson dispelled tired arguments made by critics that consumers can’t make informed decisions and won’t respond to market signals, by submitting the PJM independent market monitor’s 2009 State of the Market Report into the hearing record. The report found PJM electricity markets competitive for the ninth year in a row, with wholesale electricity prices dropping over 40 percent from 2008.