From:
New York Building Congress, Inc.
44 West 28th Street, 12th Floor
New York, NY 10001
Contact: Cathy DelliCarpini-Kruse (212) 481-9230
Rubenstein Associates, Inc.
Public Relations
Contact: Bud Perrone (212) 843-8068
For Immediate Release
NEW YORK BUILDING CONGRESS WARNS THAT LACK
OF POWER PLANT CONSTRUCTION WILL LEAD TO FUTURE POWER OUTAGES AND
LARGE PRICE SPIKES IN NEW YORK CITY
NEW YORK, April 7, 2003 – The New York Building Congress
today warned that New York City’s urgent long-term electricity
needs are not being met, despite clear and persistent signs that
growing overall electric demand is outstripping electricity supply.
“We approach this summer with the slimmest of margins. In
fact, traditional New York City electricity supply is currently
67 megawatts (MW) below mandated requirements. Only capacity saved
through demand response programs and other conservation measures
will allow us to meet supply requirements,” said William A.
Harkins, an energy consultant who co-chairs the Building Congress
Energy Committee. “We expect that the City will make it through
this summer, but that is provided we do not experience a combination
of extended heat and temporary disruptions in our generation and
transmission systems.”
The New York State Independent System Operator (ISO) reported in
late February that while New York City is expected to meet its supply
requirement this summer, the forecasted demand of 11,020 MW is well
above the record-setting 10,650 MW during the very hot summer of
2001. According to the New York State ISO report:
| Forecast Demand in New York City |
11,020 MW |
| In-City Requirements (80 percent |
8,816 MW |
| Available Traditional Supply |
8,749 MW |
| Demand Response Programs |
78 MW |
|
| Difference |
11 MW |
Rudin Management COO John J. Gilbert III, who co-chairs the Energy
Committee with Harkins, added, “The ISO’s forecast should
set off alarm bells because demand for electricity continues to
grow despite a steep recession and significant job losses. At present,
however, the supply of new generating capacity is not increasing
to meet the current pace of rising demand, much less the future
electricity needs of a more robust economy.”
Gilbert noted that although many of New York’s largest businesses
have enrolled in demand management programs, which will help reduce
electricity demand when usage is highest and possibly prevent power
outage in the summer of 2003, such programs cannot bridge the City’s
long-term electric supply gap. “Without expedited construction
of new electricity generating plants, in the next several years
New York City residents and businesses will face large price spikes
and the increasing potential for widespread power outages.”
The Building Congress, in cooperation with the Association for
a Better New York, the Building and Construction Trades Council
of Greater New York, the New York City Partnership, the Real Estate
Board of New York and the National Resources Defense Council, released
two consecutive Electricity Outlook
reports on the state of the City’s electricity supply in 2001
and 2002. Both cited a need for 2000 to 3000 MW of new electric
generating capacity over the next five years to meet growth in demand,
to replace aging power plants, and to provide enough capacity to
assure market and price stability. But despite continually increasing
demand, no additional generating capacity has been constructed or
will be available for the summer of 2003.
At present, just three New York City generating projects are in
construction: Keyspan’s Ravenswood co-generation plant, which
will provide 250 MW, is expected to be completed in December 2003;
and, two projects slated for the fall of 2004, the New York Power
Authority’s 500 MW Poletti plant, and Con Edison’s East
River Repowering Project, which will provide a net additional 125
MW in summer periods.
Conditions for financing and constructing new electric generating
facilities have only deteriorated since the first Electricity
Outlook report. According to Harkins, “Due to
financial uncertainties exacerbated by the collapse of the Enron
Corporation and the 2002 expiration of New York State’s Article
X legislation, which guided the plant approval process, proposals
for new power plants now lack both the mechanisms for timely regulatory
approval and access to critical private sector capital.”
The Building Congress and the members of its Energy Committee (roster
attached) are calling on City, State and Federal officials, as well
as power plant builders and investors, to immediately come together
in an effort to find solutions to the City’s urgent power
needs. Actions must include State passage of legislation to replace
Article X, expediting the plant siting and approval process, and
the introduction of incentives designed to spur capital investment
in power generation projects.
“New York City’s 21st Century economy and its eight
million residents are vitally dependent on reliable electricity
supply,” concluded Marilyn Jordan Taylor, Building Congress
Chairman and Chairman of Skidmore Owings & Merrill LLP. “As
we begin the reconstruction of Lower Manhattan and prepare for a
strong economic recovery, we must also be ready to meet the electricity
demands of new jobs, businesses, residents and tourists.”
The previous Building Congress reports on New York City’s
electricity supply, Electricity Outlook:
A Matter of Urgency and Electricity
Outlook: A Call to Action, are available at http://www.buildingcongress.com.
***
The New York Building Congress is a non-partisan, public policy
coalition of business, labor, professional and governmental organizations
serving the design, construction and real estate industry of New
York City for more than 82 years.
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