PG&E is caught in its own self created mess. When Australia deregulated they were paying $89.00 per megawatt hour, part of the selling off of assets, in the frame of the contract it was stipulated that they would be able to buy power back from the buyer at a fixed rate the was predictable, and per that agreement there power costs dropped to $16.00 and $17.00 per megawatt hour. PG&E on the other hand had that option and decided to forgo it and buy on the spot market same with Southern California Edison. A major miscalculation. Next but not least there is the power exchange where power can be purchased at a better rate than from PG&E. There is plenty of juice on the grid, just not enough competitive marketing alignment to make it greater public knowledge. Anyway I am pooped out and I need some sleep so I will stop here for now. Roeland Meyer wrote:
From: Nathan Stratton [mailto:nathan@robotics.net] Sent: Monday, January 22, 2001 7:27 PM
On 22 Jan 2001, Sean Donelan wrote:
Have any Internet providers or private data centers announced any voluntary "good neighbor" measures such as wider temperature and humdity limits, lights-out operation, off-peak use of heavy electrical demands for laser printers, etc.
Don't take this the wrong way, but frankly I would not be happy if my colo providers started implementing wider temperature and humdity limits. I pay large amounts of money for colo and I want what I am paying for. This mess was caused by California regulators and very very greedy PG&E who gambled on lower rates and lost. PG&E should be forces to liquidate other out of state assets and buy power at the market.
Unfortunately, you are wrong. PG&E is caught between a rock and the generators. Generator cost has been gouged up over 700% and PG&E is forced to maintain prices. There is plently of capacity if the generator companies want to bring it online. Obviously, they don't, because they have a pretty good blackmail hand right now.
-- Thank you; |--------------------------------| | Thinking is a learned process. | | ICANN member @large | | Gigabit over IP, ieee 802.17 | | working group | | Resilient Packet Transport | |--------------------------------| Henry R. Linneweh