-Caveat Lector-

         Published on Sunday, July 1, 2001 in the Observer of London

         Why the Lights Went Out All Over California

         by Gregory Palast

         Napoleon called England a nation of shopkeepers, but the Little
         Corporal never tried to purchase dietary staples (organic milk,
         Red Bull) from a Tesco Express. I tackled the manager as to why
         they were out of stock AGAIN. 'It's Friday,' he said, as if that
         were an unforeseen occurrence, like a rogue tidal wave that had
         engulfed Upper Street and prevented deliveries. I began to explain
         that 'Friday' is what accountants call a 'recurring event' and
         HAVEN'T YOU BRITONS EVER HEARD OF COMPUTERS YOU KNOW THOSE THINGS
         THAT LOOK LIKE TELEVISIONS WITH TYPEWRITERS ATTACHED... but, by
         then, everyone was looking around at that despised figure, the
         Complaining American.

         So I hustled back to the land of plenty in time to hear the
         Governor of California declare an end to the New World Order. Keep
         in mind that George Bush's entire excuse for his polluters'
         wet-dream of an energy plan - kick out the Kyoto treaty, drill the
         Arctic for oil, bring nuclear power back from the crypt - hinged
         on the premise that California had run out of energy.

         Or had it? It's true that in December, lights went out all over
         California. Power plants there run on natural gas and the price of
         the stuff had mysteriously risen by 1,000 per cent in a single
         week. This is odd given that over the state border at a pipeline
         switching center called the Henry Hub, there was natural gas
         aplenty at a fragment of the price.

         The Golden State's Democratic Governor, Gray Davis, has an
         explanation in the form of an internal document from the files of
         the El Paso Pipeline company. It seems that when California
         'deregulated' the gas pipeline market, an El Paso executive
         speculated that if the company sold the pipeline capacity to its
         own subsidiary, it could squeeze California by the light bulbs
         anytime it reduced throughput. One corporate buyer calculates the
         scheme cost California $3.7 billion.

         Last week, three power plant engineers accused their employer,
         Duke Energy, of virtually sabotaging one of their own plants by
         'running it up and down like a yo-yo', shutting the plant on and
         off. A state government consultant, Eugene Coyle, explained: 'It
         wrecks the plants; it shortens their life enormously.'

         Why would a company do that? The answer, say their accusers, is
         that if it suddenly withholds power from the market, prices soar.
         And if the plant breaks down, it's Christmas for the power
         merchants, who can charge virtually any price for electricity from
         their remaining plants.

         Wholesale power prices have averaged $400 per MW hour, up from
         less than $40 per MW hour in 1998, before California
         'deregulated'.

         A report by economist Dr Anjali Schreffin for the California grid
         operator calculated that power merchants, through what are
         politely called 'strategic bidding' methods, including 'physical
         and economic withholding' of power supplies, have extracted $8.9bn
         from California consumers in 'monopoly rents'. Now Governor Gray
         wants them to pay it all back.

         But listen to the gas and power sellers' side: El Paso Gas says it
         opened and closed the pipe at times and prices set by the market.
         Duke Power says the grid operator, its accuser, ordered them to
         'yo-yo' their plants - because that's just how the bidding went.
         So the core problem is not monopoly abuse of markets, but markets
         themselves.

         And Gray gets it. Besides demanding the $8.9bn, his regulators
         have let one giant power company go bankrupt. Gray is
         deprivatizing power lines across the state. And he is demanding
         that Bush's watchdogs end their love affair with markets and
         reregulate, telling gas and electricity merchants when, where and
         at what price they sell.

         For a decade the US has been selling the wonder of free markets to
         the rest of the world. But it always exempted itself: 78 per cent
         of the US is served by government water systems. Electricity
         generation, even if in private hands, is strictly regulated.

         In California, power companies and traders thought they could
         bring home to the US the free-market methods they used to huge
         profit in Brazil, Pakistan, Britain and other backwaters. If Gray
         succeeds (he may be our next President) he will have pushed the
         neo-liberal New World Order back into the sea.

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