Experts:
Deregulation Did Not Cut Industrial Rates
01/20/2006 Industrial customers of
electric utilities have not seen their rates lowered as a result
of deregulation and, in some cases, deregulation has created costs
that have raised rates, said three experts at the Carnegie
Mellon Electricity Industry Center in comments to a federal
task force examining deregulation, according to the Associated Press.
There is no evidence that the price or rate of change of the
price (for industrial customers) has been any different, whether
in restructured states or not, said Jay Apt, professor of
engineering and public policy at Carnegie
Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
The 23-page report, which reviewed the prices for industrial
consumers in the District of Columbia and 19 states that passed
deregulation laws, said that any future deregulation efforts should
stop for now.
Despite the rise in industrial rates in Montana, a spokesman for
the states industrial consumers said they support the change
and like buying on the unregulated market, according to the Associated
Press. They do feel they get better service and they get a
tailored product, said the spokesman.
The study did not examine the effect of deregulation on homeowners
because residential rates are almost always capped or reduced for
a certain period. Apt expects residential rates to increase dramatically
when the caps come off.
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