Berlin, NH Biomass Incinerator Operational, But At What Cost To Ratepayers?

- by Chris Jensen, August 21, 2014, New Hamp­shire Pub­lic Radio

A new bio­mass plant in Berlin is final­ly pro­duc­ing elec­tric­i­ty for Pub­lic Ser­vice of New Hamp­shire under a con­tro­ver­sial 20-year con­tract that a report says will cost PSNH ratepay­ers $125 mil­lion more than if the elec­tric­i­ty was pur­chased on the open market…

That esti­mate came from the con­sult­ing firm of La Capra Asso­ciates which did the report for the state’s Pub­lic Util­i­ties Com­mis­sion as part of a wide-rang­ing review of PSNH’s operations.

In a state­ment PSNH said the La Capra report isn’t a sure thing because its con­clu­sions are “high­ly depen­dent on a num­ber of issues that are uncer­tain and dif­fi­cult to pre­dict — the future price of gas, the retire­ment of oth­er pow­er plants, and new infra­struc­ture devel­op­ment, among oth­er things.” 

But La Capra’s con­clu­sions are not unfa­mil­iar to PSNH. The La Capra report echoes warn­ings the Pub­lic Util­i­ties Com­mis­sion staff and the state’s Office of Con­sumer Advo­cate made back in 2011. That’s when the three PUC com­mis­sion­ers con­sid­ered tes­ti­mo­ny and dozens of doc­u­ments as they were con­sid­er­ing whether to approve the contract.

The PUC staff esti­mat­ed over 20 years the con­tract would cost ratepay­ers at least $140 mil­lion more than if PSNH bought elec­tric­i­ty at mar­ket prices. In return, the PUC staff said, there would be “what amounts to a mod­est boost in the econ­o­my of the North Country.”

“It looks like there is a real­ly sig­nif­i­cant risk that cus­tomers would be locked into mak­ing those over-mar­ket pay­ments,” Mered­ith Hat­field, who head­ed up the state’s Office of Con­sumer Advo­cate, said at the time.

It’s not easy to cal­cu­late what this might mean to the aver­age ratepay­er in the short term. It could be a few cents every month or a few dol­lars or – if ener­gy prices increase con­sid­er­ably – nothing.

But what­ev­er the amount PSNH cus­tomer David Van Houten of Beth­le­hem objects because he had no choice.

“Well, I actu­al­ly resent hav­ing to pay more with­out being asked to pay any more,” he said.

Pub­lic Ser­vice of New Hamp­shire argued strong­ly for the con­tract. Com­pa­ny offi­cials said the PUC staffers didn’t have a crys­tal ball. They said ener­gy prices could go up enough so that the deal would save ratepay­ers money.

And, they said the plant would pro­duce renew­able ener­gy which isn’t cheap.

But the PUC staff was aware of the state require­ment for renew­able ener­gy — and — it still argued that the con­tract amount­ed to gam­bling with con­sumer dollars.

PSNH also promised to keep track of any extra mon­ey that was paid. Gary Long, pres­i­dent of PSNH at the time, explained what would happen.

 “Then, we would return that either through some sort of a pay­ment back to cus­tomers or we would pur­chase the plant at a dis­count cost and then the dis­count­ed cost would go back to customers.”

Long – who died ear­li­er this month — was refer­ring to what some crit­ics thought was a key part of the deal: that PSNH could use the extra mon­ey its cus­tomers paid to help it pur­chase the Berlin plant, although that would require a change in state law.

But while the PUC staff and the con­sumer advo­cate object­ed, many politi­cians favored the contract.

It seemed lucra­tive enough that it would make it eas­i­er for the devel­op­er to get the financ­ing need­ed to build the bio­mass plant and help the strug­gling econ­o­my of the North Country.

There would be mil­lions of dol­lars in tax­es along with con­struc­tion work, and the promise of about 40 per­ma­nent jobs.

Pro­vid­ing the wood chips would help about 200 forestry jobs.

The region’s big tim­ber own­ers would get a new cus­tomer want­i­ng 750,000 tons of wood chips every year.

Amid a flur­ry of lob­by­ing, in 2011 the three PUC com­mis­sion­ers, Thomas Getz, Amy Ignatius and Clifton Below approved the 20-year con­tract between PSNH and Laid­law Berlin BioPow­er. The plant has since been pur­chased by Cate Street Cap­i­tal of Portsmouth.

It was a prover­bial  win, win, win, accord­ing to then Gov­er­nor John Lynch.

“And this is a great day for Berlin. It is a great day for the North Coun­try and it is a great day for all of New Hamp­shire,” Lynch said at the plan­t’s ground­break­ing in 2011.

But not every­one is happy.

As PSNH cus­tomer Jim Dan­nis of Dal­ton sees it the state forced ratepay­ers to con­tribute to a pub­lic works project to boost the econ­o­my of the North Country.

“The Pub­lic Util­i­ties Com­mis­sion is sup­posed to defend ratepay­ers’ inter­est. Ratepay­ers aren’t sup­posed to be used as pock­et books,” he said.

Susan Cham­ber­lin leads the state’s Office of Con­sumer Advo­cate and she doesn’t like the idea of con­sumers pay­ing more than is necessary.

“I tend to look at things from a more direct cost/benefit analy­sis as a ratepay­er,” she said. “I don’t like to see cus­tomers pay any­thing above mar­ket. If we have a dereg­u­lat­ed elec­tric mar­ket then we should be using the mar­ket to set the prices.”

But not being tied to the mar­ket can cut both ways.

Last win­ter there were times when elec­tric­i­ty on the open mar­ket was about twice as expen­sive as the Burgess deal, said Tom Frantz, the direc­tor of the PUC’s elec­tric division.

So, for a lit­tle while it was a good thing for ratepayers.

But that doesn’t  mean there is any­thing wrong with La Capra’s pre­dic­tion that ratepay­ers will — over the long run — pay $125 mil­lion more than they should, said Jim Dan­nis, of Dal­ton, a pri­vate investor who used to man­age a hedge fund.

“I draw a sharp dis­tinc­tion between a seri­ous val­u­a­tion effort and stick­ing your fin­ger in the air at a giv­en point in time and say­ing, gee right now, at this sec­ond, it works. That is not val­u­a­tion,” Dan­nis said.

From an envi­ron­men­tal per­spec­tive Bethlehem’s Van Houten also says using wood to gen­er­ate elec­tric­i­ty alone is not the best use of the renew­able resource. “They are gen­er­at­ing a lot of waste heat and they are not cap­tur­ing that at all,” he said. And, while wood is abun­dant there is not an end­less amount.

Of the three PUC com­mis­sion­ers who approved the deal only Amy Ignatius remains on the commission.

A PUC offi­cial said the three com­mis­sion­ers are not allowed to dis­cuss pre­vi­ous decisions.

But for­mer com­mis­sion­er Thomas Getz – who now works for a law firm — wrote in an e‑mail that he approached the Burgess BioPow­er case the same as any oth­er, and made  “the very best deci­sion I could based on all the avail­able evidence.”

Whether that was the very best deci­sion for PSNH ratepay­ers prob­a­bly won’t be clear for years.


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