Title :
Power/finance cash crunch dims power prospects: Money doesn´t buy what it used to, an inflationary fact that´s set back the utilities´ expansion programs by years
Author :
Rubinstein, Ellis ; Friedlander, Gordon D.
fDate :
3/1/1975 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Hard times have hit the power industry ¿ and the electric utilities are having a difficult time hitting back. Evidence of this is everywhere. Consumer rates are soaring as most utilities and the public service commissions that regulate them engage in a frantic game of leapfrog ¿ new rate-hike requests following hard on the heels of rate-increase approvals ¿ sometimes even before the approvals are handed down. Utility issues, once among the bluest of the blue-chip, are today often less attractive than Federal and municipal bonds. And most worrisome of all, a flood of recent utility reports detail massive curtailments of planned capital expansion: according to the most recent data gathered by the National Electric Reliability Council, Princeton, N.J., 72 000 MW have been trimmed from a total of 510 000 MW of new capacity planned in early 1974 by the U.S. utilities for the decade running through 1983.
Keywords :
Cities and towns; Coal; Companies; Electricity; Investments; Power industry;
Journal_Title :
Spectrum, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MSPEC.1975.6366652