Appliance Efficiency Standards
The DOE is in the process of approving new standards for refrigerators and air conditioners under the 1987 National Appliance Energy Conservation Act.
The potential to reduce electricity demand in this area is especially high under the Bush Plan. Air conditioners are the principal cause of the summer peak in electricity demand and the need to construct additional generating capacity. The highest potential impact of more efficient air conditioning standards is a saving of up to 24,000 megawatts during the summer peak demand period by 2010. This projection is based upon a 30 percent improvement in energy efficiency for residential air conditioning units and a 20 percent improvement in the efficiency of commercial units.
The WEFA Reference Case assumes that the National Appliance Energy Conservation Act continues to be implemented, albeit at a slower pace. The Bush Plan calls for an extension of this Act over the longer term.
Combined Heat and Power
The potential for energy savings with Combined Heat and Power (CHP) generation is estimated at 50 gigawatts under the most favorable circumstances for implementation. Since most CHP installations are under the control of municipal governments which do not pay taxes, the use of tax credits and accelerated depreciation have not been effective in stimulating the adoption of this technology. Moreover, strict environmental regulations regarding permits for new boilers in urban areas has also limited interest in CHP. The Bush Energy Plan would provide tax credits and relaxed environmental restrictions in permitting for CHP to encourage its adoption in other markets. If this program could attract private investment, a substantial amount of the potential for CHP could be realized. Because CHP uses significantly less fuel than traditional power generation, associated emissions of greenhouse gases and air pollutants are lower. In a model that substituted the targeted 50 giga-watts of CHP capacity for conventional capacity, projections show that annual greenhouse emissions would be reduced by 30 MMTCE and annual NOx emissions by hundreds of thousands of tons.
The development of a large CHP sector would have a major effect on commercial energy markets. First, CHP could provide a significant share of the generation of new energy. Second, the commercial demand for space heating would be met in part by CHP. The heat production of 10 gigawatts of additional CHP would displace about 100 trillion Btus of other heating fuel, assuming a 2000 Btu/kWh heat credit for 5,000 hours of operation during the heating season.
Review Tightening Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Standards
Although there has been a lot of political pressure in the past few years to raise the CAFE standards, they have been stymied by consumers’ unwillingness to choose efficiency over other attributes. However, recent technological advances are such that engine efficiency should be increasing over the long-term allowing for substantial advances. A recent National Academy of Sciences (NAS) study and review by the DOT may suggest some increase in the standards over the long-term.
More important is the issue of extending the existing CAFE to minivans, SUVs and light-duty trucks. This would have a significant impact on U.S. transportation fuel demand. In fact, it is highly probable that the existing CAFE standards will be applied to all passenger vehicles. Manufacturers have already begun to make verbal commitments in attempt to forestall the establishment of standards that carry financial penalties for failure to comply. The Bush Energy Plan specifically directs the DOT to look at market-based mechanisms that may be substituted for some of the onerous penalties in place today to produce compliance.
Tax Credit for Fuel-Efficient Vehicles
Given recent concerns about the size of the medium-term budget surplus, any tax credit is likely to be relatively small. Either it must apply to a small portion of the vehicles or each vehicle would get a fairly small credit. If just 10 percent of the cars sold in a given year got a credit equal to 5 percent of their purchase price, this could easily be equal to $1 billion, not an insignificant amount in today’s budgetary climate.
If implemented, a tax credit could raise the average efficiency of new automobiles, which would raise the efficiency of the fleet at large. But since the fleet at large expands by about 5 percent per year, raising total fleet efficiency by 0.5 percent per year would mean raising new car efficiency by about 10 percent per year (depending on a variety of other factors, including vehicle retirement, miles traveled, etc.). This is feasible, but difficult if gasoline prices are low and consumers prefer larger, more luxurious vehicles rather than smaller more economical cars such as VW Beetles. Such a program could lower the growth of gasoline demand, which was about 2 percent per year in the 1990s, to 1.5 percent per year, other things being equal. This would ease the strain on the refining sector and reduce margins slightly for gasoline. Since the primary impact on a global level would be slightly less demand for OPEC resources, and the response of these countries would likely be to enact slightly slower capacity expansion, the overall market impact would be very small.
Income Tax Credit for Purchase of New Hybrid or Fuel Cell Vehicles for 2002-2007
Of the alternative fueled vehicles that might be candidates for tax credits, hybrid electric vehicles and fuel cell vehicles are the ones proposed by the NEP. Because latter still faces enormous technical obstacles, any reasonable tax credit is unlikely to have a significant impact on their utilization, particularly within a short time period.


However, tax credits should improve the market share of hybrid electric vehicles, depending on the size of the credits. At this point, hybrid electric vehicles remain relatively uneconomical but the technology is currently moving into the stage of commercialization. The WEFA base case assumes that this technology will see a growing market share in the long-term future (next three decades), and the tax credit will affect that. However, as the technology improves and the use of hybrids expands, Congress will almost certainly cut back on the use of the tax credit because it will be deemed less necessary and because it will put an increasing burden on the budget.
Summary

Energy for a New Century: Increasing Domestic Energy Supplies
NEP Recommends the President:
1. Direct the Secretaries of Energy and the Interior to promote enhanced oil and gas recovery from existing wells through new technology.
2. Direct the Secretary of Energy to improve oil and gas exploration technology through continued partnership with public and private entities.
3. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to examine land status and lease stipulation impediments to federal oil and gas leasing, and review and modify those where opportunities exist (consistent with the law, good environmental practice, and balanced use of other resources).
• Expedite the ongoing study of impediments to federal oil and gas exploration and development, that have resulted from the Energy Policy and Conservation Act.
• Review public lands withdrawals and lease stipulations, with full public consultation, especially with the residents of the affected region, to consider modifications where appropriate.
4. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to consider economic incentives for environmentally sound offshore oil and gas development, where warranted by specific circumstances; explore opportunities for royalty reductions, consistent with ensuring a fair return to the public warranted for enhanced oil and gas recovery; and provide incentives for reducing the risk associated with production in frontier areas or deep gas formations and for development of small fields that would otherwise be uneconomic.
5. Direct the Secretaries of Commerce and Interior to re-examine the current federal legal and policy regime (statutes, regulations, and Executive Orders) to determine if changes are needed regarding proposed energy-related activities and locating of energy facilities in the coastal zone and on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS).
6. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to continue OCS oil and gas leasing and to facilitate the approval of exploration and development plans on predictable schedules. 7. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to consider additional environmentally responsible oil and gas development, based on sound science and the best available technology, through further lease sales in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska. Such consideration should include areas not currently leased within the Northeast corner of the Reserve.
8. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to work with Congress to authorize the exploration and, if resources are discovered, the development of the 1002 Area of ANWR. Congress should require the use of the best available technology and should require that activities will result in no significant adverse impact to the surrounding environment.
9. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to work with Congress and the State of Alaska to put in place the most expeditious process for renewal of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System rights-of-way to ensure that Alaskan oil continues to flow uninterrupted to the West Coast of the United States.
10. Direct the Secretary of Energy to propose comprehensive electricity legislation that promotes competition, protects consumers, enhances reliability, promotes renewable energy, improves energy efficiency, repeals the Public Utility Holding Company Act, and reforms the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act.
11. Encourage Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to use its existing statutory authority to promote competition and encourage investment in transmission facilities.
12. Direct the Department of Energy to continue to develop advanced clean coal technology by:
• Investing $2 billion over 10 years to fund research in clean coal technologies.
• Supporting a permanent extension of the existing research and development tax credit
• Directing federal agencies to explore regulatory approaches that will encourage advancements in environmental technol- ogy.
13. Direct federal agencies to provide greater regulatory certainty relating to coal electricity generation through clear policies whose impact can be readily understood when business decisions are made.

17. Encourage the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and direct federal resource agencies to make the licensing process for hydropower more clear and efficient, while preserving environmental goals. This includes:
• Supporting administrative and legislative reform of the hydropower licensing process.
• Directing federal resource agencies to reach interagency agreement on conflicting mandatory conditions for licensing before they submit their conditions to FERC for inclusion in licensing requirements.
• Encourage FERC to adopt appropriate deadlines for its own actions during the licensing process.
Analysis
Clean Coal Technology Program Extension and Enhancement
The Clean Coal Technology Program is on the verge of bringing to market exciting new capacity with the potential for significant increases in fuel efficiency. The reference case includes a very aggressive outlook for New Coal efficiency _ projecting an improvement of approximately 30 percent from current capacity. (The current average heat rate of 10,500, while new coal has an assumed heat rate of 8,500.) The Bush Energy Plan's support of Clean Coal Technology is critical for meeting the country's efficiency and emission goals.
Oil and Gas
These recommendations are intended to increase the nation's available oil and gas supply. They include:
• Promoting enhanced oil and gas recovery from existing wells,
• Providing for increased and /or lower cost access to lands,
• Economic incentives and oil and gas exploration in certain areas,
• Promoting enhanced oil and gas recovery from existing wells.
The NEP recommendation is that "The president [should] direct the Secretaries of Energy and the Interior to promote enhanced oil and gas recovery from existing wells through new technology." This could result in re-directing resources from non-energy producing areas to enhanced oil and gas recovery research. Thus, over time, there would be a gradual improvement in oil and gas recovery technology.


Regarding the lands of the remaining unrecovered natural gas resource base of approximately 1500 Tcf, about 15 percent is either subject to a development moratorium until 2012 or subject to significant limitations on drilling and development. Approximately 2 percent of the unrecovered resource base is located in highly sensitive areas and is therefore not likely to be developed in the foreseeable future. The areas subject to a moratorium on development are largely offshore. These include the areas offshore from the U.S. East Coast (21 Tcf), West Coast (31 Tcf), and portions of the Eastern Gulf Coast (24 Tcf).
WEFA estimates total reserves in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico at approximately 50 Tcf, of which about 24 Tcf are off limits. In addition, other areas offshore account for about 300 Tcf, making the total Gulf of Mexico resources 350 Tcf. The issue of access to this total area, therefore, is about producing just 15 percent of that amount over the next 25 years.
Currently, the only area in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico producing natural gas is the Western Norphlet or Mobile Bay. Federal and state concerns currently preclude the development of the Eastern Norphlet (Destin Dome). However, a development plan has been filed for the Destin Dome and, upon approval, this area could be in production in one to three years. However, the reference case assumes that Destin Dome is not developed. In its projections there is also an area south of the Norphlet area known as Section 181, of which the Administration and the State of Florida recently agreed to make 1.9 million acres available for lease/sale in 2001.
The Rocky Mountain area accounts for approximately 25 percent of the remaining U.S. resource base. About 7 percent of the Rocky Mountain area is inaccessible and 25 percent of Rocky Mountain area resources are subject to delayed development activity that will raise the cost of drilling. WEFA estimates total reserves in the Rocky Mountains at 382 Tcf. The issue of access in this area is about producing just 10 percent of that amount over the next 25 years.
In evaluating the impact of the NEP recommendations regarding the U.S. resource base in the Rocky Mountain area, the Eastern Gulf, Atlantic and Pacific Offshore areas, WEFA has projected access to these areas under the Bush Plan contingent upon agreements between the Administration and the affected state(s). WEFA is not aware of any efforts by the Administration of pursuing any such agreements.


The WEFA analysis, however, is premised on access agreements between the Administration and the states. Accordingly, we have assumed that the Eastern Gulf, Atlantic, and Pacific Offshore areas will be available for lease sale in 2005. We have also assumed that the 25 percent of the Rocky Mountain area subject to high cost will be treated in a manner similar to other areas. This is assumed to reduce the development cost of wells by approximately 5 percent. The table presenting the model implementation below summarizes the three cases. In the by-the-book case, we have reduced access to the Rocky Mountain area to reflect recent efforts of the EIA that would make areas that are off-limits or have restricted access much larger than in the reference case.
Economic Incentives of Oil and Gas Exploration:
The NEP recommends that the President direct the Secretary of the Interior to consider economic incentives for environmentally sound offshore oil and gas development where warranted by specific circumstances. This would include exploring opportunities for royalty reductions, consistent with ensuring a fair return to the public, where warranted for enhanced oil and gas recovery. In addition economic incentives would be given to reduce the risks associated with production in frontier areas or deep gas formations, and for the development of small fields that would otherwise not be economical.
Royalty reductions have been granted for some time with new leases in the deepwater areas of the central and western Gulf. This recommendation suggests applying this policy to other areas as well. The impact of these recommendations could range from zero (continuation of existing policies) to being very significant, depending on how they are implemented. During the next three or four years, royalty relief is unlikely to have any impact because gas prices are likely to be well above the level needed to stimulate exploration and production, and because of the limited availability of rigs, crews, and experienced geologists.
Measures to Increase Drilling in the United States
Outside of the politically sensitive areas of ANWR and offshore California, the primary obstacles to new oil production in the United States are economic and geological. Many of the NEP proposals will help slightly, but they will not alleviate the high cost of oil production in the United States, nor the shortages of personnel and equipment.

For example, improving oil and gas exploration technology will make only a minimal difference from the reference case. The effort to improve exploration technology is a continuation (and perhaps an enhancement) of an effort that was begun in the 1990's under President George H. W. Bush. The intent has been to help smaller, independent companies gain access to newer technologies that lower costs and improve recovery. Although it is difficult to quantify the effects of this effort, it is worth noting that oil production in the lower 48 states stopped declining in 1994 and plateaued thereafter, until the oil price collapse.
Measures such as royalty relief would certainly have an impact, depending on the size of the tax relief. However, it is difficult to estimate the precise impact they may have, and the impact would be minimal. On a global scale, it would be minor, but the slightly higher U.S. oil production would reduce the trade deficit by a few percentage points over the long run.
Impact of Drilling in ANWR and Offshore California
These are the geographic areas where political opposition to drilling is strongest. In the most optimistic case, implementation of the Bush Plan would allow for increased drilling in 2002. As a result, production might be as much as 400 tb/d higher by 2010 (of which 250 tb/d would come from California, conditioned on an agreement between the Administration and the state, and 150 tb/d from ANWR), and 1,500 tb/d higher by 2020 (of which 500 tb/d from California, pursuant to an agreement between the Administration and the state, and 1,000 tb/d would come from ANWR). WEFA is not aware of any efforts by the Administration to pursue drilling in offshore California. The impact on the world oil market would be fairly small. In terms of global production, the increase would be less than 1.25 percent. However, this would be 6 percent of U.S. oil imports in 2010 and 18 percent in 2020, under the most optimistic assumptions, so there would be a moderate macroeconomic impact from the improved trade balance. However, it is unlikely that the necessary political compromise will be reached that will allow drilling to begin so quickly in these sensitive regions. This affects the estimate for 2010 in particular, as the production growth projected for the early years is quite strong. If drilling begins in 2005, then production in 2010 will still be in the early part of the S-curve representing production, and so could be much lower than anticipated. Such a delay would not affect production projected for 2020, though, since this is a period in which production is expected to plateau.
Nuclear
One of the most substantive recommendations of the NEP is that the Price-Anderson Act be extended. The NEP also recommends supporting the expansion of nuclear safety in the United States through safety precautions and expediting applications for licensing new advanced-technology nuclear reactors which have more safety features. The recommendation to improve public education on nuclear safety would support the re-licensing of nuclear power plants.
The reference case assumes that most nuclear power plant licenses will be extended five years. In the Bush Plan it is assumed that these licenses will be extended 10 years. In the by-the-book scenario, nuclear units would not be re-licensed.
Reform Hydro Re-licensing
The reference case assumes all hydro capacity would be relicensed. The Bush Plan would improve the timeliness and reduce the cost of relicensing.



Nature's Power: Increasing America's Use of Renewable and Alternative Energy
NEP Recommends the President:
1. Direct the Secretaries of the Interior and Energy to re-evaluate access limitations to federal lands in order to increase energy production through renewable resources, such as biomass, wind, geothermal, and solar.
2. Include an increase of $39.2 million in the FY 2002 budget amendment for the Department of Energy's Energy Supply account that would provide increased support for research and development of renewable energy resources.
3. Direct the Secretary of Energy to conduct a review of current funding and historic performance of renewable energy and alternative energy research and the development of programs in light of the recommendations of this report. Based on this review, the Secretary of Energy should then be directed to propose appropriate funding for research and development programs that are performance-based and are modeled as public-private partnerships.
4. Direct the Secretary of the Treasury to work with Congress to design legislation to expand the Section 29 tax credit to make it available for new landfill projects for methane. The credit could be tiered, depending on whether or not a landfill is already required by federal law to collect and flare its methane emissions.
5. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to determine ways to reduce the delays in geothermal lease processing as part of the permitting review process.
6. Direct the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to develop a new renewable energy partnership program to help companies more easily buy renewable energy, and receive recognition for the environmental benefits of their purchase, and promote consumer choice programs that increase consumers' knowledge about the environmental benefits of purchasing renewable energy.
7. Direct the Secretary of the Treasury to work with Congress to develop legislation to extend and expand tax credits for electricity produced using wind and biomass. (In addition, the NEP urges the acceptance of the budget request to extend the present 1.7 cents per-kilowatt-hour tax credit for electricity produced from wind and biomass; expand eligible biomass sources to include forest-related sources, agricultural sources, and certain urban sources; and allows a credit for electricity produced from biomass co-fired with coal.)
8. Direct the Secretary of the Treasury to work with Congress to develop legislation to provide a new 15 percent tax credit for residential solar energy property, up to a maximum credit of $2,000.
9. Direct the Secretaries of the Interior and Energy to work with Congress to develop legislation to use an estimated $1.2 billion of bid bonuses from the environmentally responsible leasing of ANWR to fund research or alternative and renewable energy resources, including wind, solar, geothermal, and biomass.
10. Direct the Secretary of the Treasury to work with Congress to continue the ethanol excise tax exemption.
11. Direct the Secretary of Energy to develop next-generation technology—including hydrogen and fusion, and to
• Develop a public information campaign that communicates the benefits of alternative forms of energy, including hydrogen and fusion.
• Focus research and development efforts on integrating current programs regarding hydrogen, fuel cells, and distributed energy.
• Support legislation reauthorizing the Hydrogen Energy Act.
12. Direct the Secretary of the Treasury to work with Congress to develop legislation to provide for a temporary income tax credit that would be available for the purchase of new hybrid or fuel-cell vehicles between 2002 and 2007.
13. Direct the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency to issue guidance to encourage the development of well-designed CHP units that are both highly efficient and have low emissions, and to shorten the time needed to obtain each permit, provide certainty to industry by ensuring consistent implementation across the country, and encourage the use of these cleaner, more efficient technologies. Analysis
Expanding Section 29 Tax Credit To Make It Available for New Landfill Methane Projects
In 1999 approximately 2.1 million tons of methane were recovered from landfills and used as energy compared to just 0.7 million in 1990.
The Federal Section 29 (of the Internal Revenue Code) tax credit for alternative energy sources, including landfill gas, was added to the tax code as part of the Crude Oil Windfall Profits Act of 1980 and provides an inflation-adjusted credit that currently is equivalent to $6.00 per barrel of oil equivalent of qualified fuels. However, the tax credit for new facilities expired on June 30, 1998, and, absent a similar subsidy, the number of additional landfill gas-to-energy projects that are commercially viable is limited. The extension of these tax credits could result in approximately 0.15 million metric tons of additional methane recovered that could be used for energy from landfills. While subsidies would be helpful, a significant part of this recovery would occur as a result of the EPA's New Source Review Standards and Emission Guidelines, which require all landfills with more than 2.5 million metric tons of waste in place and annual emissions of non-methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOCs) exceeding 50 metric tons to collect and burn their landfill gas, either by flaring or as an energy resource.
Use of Bid Bonuses from ANWR for Research and Development on Renewable Energy Sources
This is clearly an attempt to improve the acceptability of drilling in ANWR by offering a trade off to environmentalists, who are the primary opponents. However, given the virulence of the opposition, the proposal to increase research and development spending for alternative and renewable energies is not likely to lessen the environmentalists opposition to opening up the ANWR for drilling.
The NEP estimates that $1.2 billion would be available in tax credits . Assuming this amount would be spent over a number of years, probably a decade or so, this proposal adds an additional
$100 million to $150 million per year in tax credits that would be available. Such an amount is less than has been spent throughout the past two decades, having at most only a marginal impact on the supply of those fuels. This being the case, it is unlikely that the extension of tax credits would have a significant effect.
Continuation of the Ethanol Excise Tax Exemption is assumed in the WEFA's Analysis.
Summary

America's Energy Infrastructure: A Comprehensive Delivery System
NEP Recommends the President:
1. Direct the Secretary of Energy to work with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to improve the reliability of the interstate transmission system and to develop legislation providing for enforcement by a self-regulatory organization subject to FERC oversight.
2. Direct the Secretary of Energy to expand the department's research and development on transmission reliability and superconductivity.
3. Direct the Secretary of Energy to authorize the Western Area Power Administration to explore relieving the "Path 15" bottleneck through transmission expansion financed by nonfederal contributions.
4. Direct the appropriate federal agencies to take actions to remove constraints on the interstate transmission grid to allow our nation's electricity supply to meet the growing needs of our economy. To this end, he should
• Direct the Secretary of Energy, by December 31, 2001, to examine the benefits of establishing a national grid, identify transmission bottlenecks, and identify measures to remove transmission bottlenecks.
• Direct the Secretary of Energy to work with FERC to relieve transmission constraints by encouraging the use of the incentive of rate making proposals.
• Direct the federal utilities to determine whether transmission expansions are necessary to remove constraints. The Administration should review the Bonneville Power Administration's (BPA's) capital and financing requirements in regard to its membership in a Regional Transmission Operator (RTO), and to ascertain whether additional Treasury financing appears warranted or necessary in the future, the Administration should seek an increase in BPA's borrowing authority.
• Direct the Secretary of Energy, in consultation with appropriate federal agencies and state and local government officials, to develop legislation to grant the federal government authority to obtain rights-of-way for electricity transmission lines, with the goal of creating a reliable national transmission grid. Similar authority already exists for natural gas pipelines in recognition of their role in interstate commerce.
5. Direct the Secretary of the Interior to work with Congress and the State of Alaska to put in place the most expeditious process for renewal of the Trans-Alaskan Pipeline System lease to ensure that Alaskan oil continues to flow uninterrupted to the West Coast of the United States.
6. Direct the Secretaries of Energy and State, in coordination with the Secretary of the Interior and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, to work closely with Canada, the State of Alaska, and all other interested parties to expedite the construction of a pipeline to deliver natural gas to the lower-48 states. This should include proposing to Congress any changes or waivers of law pursuant to the Alaska Natural Gas Transportation Act of 1976 that may be required.
7. Support legislation to improve the safety of natural gas pipelines, protect the environment, strengthen emergency preparedness and inspections, and bolster enforcement.
8. Direct relevant agencies to continue their interagency efforts to improve pipeline safety and expedite pipeline permitting in an environmentally sound manner and encourage FERC to consider improvements in the regulatory process that governs the approval of interstate natural gas pipeline projects.
9. Direct the Administrator of the EPA to study opportunities to maintain or improve the environmental benefits of state and local "boutique" clean fuel programs, and to explore ways to increase the flexibility of the fuels distribution infrastructure, improve fungibility, and provide added gasoline market liquidity. In conducting this study, the Administrator shall consult with the Departments of Energy and Agriculture, and other agencies as needed.
10. Direct the Administrator of the EPA and the Secretary of Energy to take steps to ensure that America has adequate refining capacity to meet the needs of consumers. To that end he should
• Provide more regulatory certainty to refinery owners and streamline the permitting process where possible to ensure that regulatory overlap is limited. • Adopt comprehensive regulations (covering more than one pollutant and requirement) and consider the rules' cumulative impacts and benefits.
11. Direct the Administrator of the EPA, in consultation with the Secretary of Energy and other relevant agencies, to review New Source Review regulations, including administrative interpretation and implementation, and report to the President within 90 days on the impact of the regulations on investment in new utility and refinery generation capacity, energy efficiency, and environmental protection.
12. Direct the Attorney General to review existing enforcement actions regarding New Source Review to ensure that they are consistent with the Clean Air Act and its regulations.
13. Acquire support for his budget proposal to provide $8 million to maintain the two-million-barrel Northeast Heating Oil Reserve. Operated by the private sector, the reserve helps to ensure that adequate supplies of heating oil in the event that colder than normal winters occur in the Northeast United States.
Analysis
Electricity Restructuring Proposals
An essential component of the NEP recommendations involves the improvement of the nation's electricity infrastructure. With the increasing deregulation of electricity markets, growing emphasis is being placed on the nation's transmission system. In the new scenario, electric power can be generated in virtually any location and then transported to the points of demand. For this process to work, it is essential that the transmission system be reliable.
There are a number of key issues associated with transmission system reliability. One such issue is congestion management. Congestion management must be addressed with regard to the transmission grid. This refers to the management of electricity flow so that the lowest priced electricity can be moved to the markets that need it. Path 15 in California is a case in point. During this past winter, transmission bottlenecks prevented a sufficient electricity flow from Southern California to the northern part of the state where power was desperately needed. It is feared that this situation will be repeated in reverse this summer, as additional power supplies will be required in the future. Congestion management can be improved in two ways. One way is to improve the flow of electricity within the existing transmission system. This can be accomplished by removing restrictions on the interstate flow of electricity along existing transmission lines. Power suppliers should be granted access to transmission lines at fair and reasonable rates. In addition, regulatory authorities must give utilities an incentive to invest in the maintenance of their transmission systems. Rate structures should make investing in transmission systems as profitable as other utility investments are. Improvement of existing transmission facilities can lead to significant reductions in line losses. Current estimates of line losses are in the 6 percent range. Transmission system upgrades can reduce line losses to the 3 percent range.
The nation's flow of electricity can also be improved by expanding its transmission system. The Secretary of Energy should advocate a national policy of increased rights of way for transmission lines. The process of transmission line siting should be streamlined and the national interest should be the criterion for approval. Tax incentives should be offered to encourage electric utilities to collaborate with telecommunications firms to share transmission facilities. Shared fiber optic cabling will not only improve the reliability of the transmission system but will reduce line losses as well.
Improvement of the nation's transmission system through both better maintenance of the existing system and expansion should be a very high priority of national energy policy. The result will be both increased reliability and lower electricity prices.
WEFA'S electric utility model projects additional capacity requirements in each utility planning region based upon the region's expected generation requirements for the year and the optimal capacity for the region. Optimal capacity is defined as that which would assure a desired reserve margin, while "expected generation" is calculated based upon projected electricity demand, transmission losses, and inter-regional transfers of power. If the optimal capacity calculation implies an increase in generating capacity that is greater than a specified magnitude, then capacity is added to the region.
If the policies advocated above are adopted, transmission losses will be reduced and inter-regional transfers of power will increase. As a result, there will be a reduced need for additional generation, and retail electricity prices will be lower. This will have a pronounced effect in California and the Northeast states that rely upon significant amounts of imported power.
To Augment Refining, the NEP Recommends the Following:
Expedite permitting, develop a multi-pollutant strategy, review New Source Review regulations, and improve fungibility of new clean products
The availability of clean fuels, particularly new petroleum product formulas, has certainly been constrained by the lack of adequate refinery upgrading capacity. The impact has been to increase margins for reformulated gasoline, but this has been done only for brief periods at the local level. During the past year the overall impact has been to add about $4/barrel to the cost of reformulated gasoline, as compared to crude oil.
Obstacles to the construction of new refineries are not the primary problem, however. A combination of refiners' desire to avoid overbuilding their upgrading capacity and the limited availability of qualified engineers and equipment is depressing capacity expansion and upgrading. Uncertainty about regulations regarding upgrading and expansion is another, though smaller, factor in preventing augmented upgrading capacity. More than concerns about New Source Review regulations the higher costs of fuel and labor in the United States have discouraged the construction of new refineries. (OPEC countries typically charge a refinery $.50/Mcf for natural gas.)
The recent petroleum product volatility was due in part to the poorly designed regulations for the use of new petroleum products. The large number of different required formulas (which varied by region and season) has increased regulatory uncertainty and logistical difficulties. The implication behind the NEP recommendation is that these regulations would be redesigned in such a way as to reduce price volatility. If successful, this would prevent the kinds of spikes in margins that have occurred recently. This proposal will improve the situation slightly, and could lower gasoline margins as much as $2 a barrel in the most extreme case.
Summary

Strengthening Global Alliances: Enhancing National Energy Security and International Relationships
NEP Recommends the President:
1. Make energy security a priority of U.S. trade and foreign policy.
2. Support initiatives by Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Algeria, Qatar, the UAE, and other suppliers to open up areas of their energy sectors to foreign investment.
3. Direct the Secretaries of State, Energy, and Commerce work to improve dialogue among energy producing and energy consuming nations.
4. Direct the Secretaries of State, Commerce, and Energy to continue supporting American energy firms competing in markets abroad and use our membership in multilateral organizations, such as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the World Trade Organization (WTO) Energy Services Negotiations, the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), and our bilateral international relationships to design and implement a system of clear, open, and transparent rules and procedures governing foreign investment to level the playing field for U.S. companies overseas and to reduce barriers to trade and investment.
5. Direct the Secretaries of Commerce and Energy, and the U.S. Trade Representative, to support a sectoral trade initiative to expand investment and trade in energy-related goods and services that will enhance exploration, production, and refining, and the development of new technologies.
6. Direct the Secretaries of State, Treasury, and Commerce to initiate a comprehensive review of sanctions. Energy security should be one of the factors considered in such a review.
7. Direct the Secretaries of State, Commerce, and Energy to engage in a dialogue through the North American Energy Working Group to develop coordinated energy integration among Canada, Mexico, and the United States and to identify areas of cooperation, that are fully consistent with the countries' respective sovereignties.
8. Direct the Secretaries of Energy and State, in consultation with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, to review their respective oil, natural gas, and electricity cross-boundary "presidential permitting" authorities, and to propose reforms, as necessary, in order to make their own regulatory regimes more compatible for cross-border trade.
9. Direct the Secretaries of Energy and State, coordinating with the Secretary of the Interior and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, to work closely with Canada, the State of Alaska, and all other interested parties to expedite the construction of a pipeline to deliver natural gas to the lower-48 states. This should include proposing to Congress any changes or waivers of law that may be required with regard to the Alaska Natural Gas Transportation Act of 1976.
10. Direct the Secretaries of State and Commerce to conclude negotiations with Venezuela on a Bilateral Investment Treaty and propose formal energy consultations with Brazil to improve the climate for a growing level of energy investment flow between the United States and each of these countries.
11. Direct the Secretaries of Energy, Commerce, and State to work through the Summit of the Americas' Hemispheric Energy Initiative to develop effective and stable regulatory frameworks and foster reliable supply sources of all fuels within the region.
12. Direct the Secretaries of State, Energy, and Commerce to reinvigorate the U.S.-Africa Trade and Economic Cooperation Forum and the U.S.-African Energy Ministerial process; deepen bilateral and multilateral engagement to promote a more receptive environment for U.S. oil and gas trade, investment, and operations; and promote geographic diversification of energy supplies, addressing such issues as transparency, sanctity of contracts, and security.
13. Direct the Secretaries of State, Commerce, and Energy to support more transparent, accountable, and responsible use of oil resources in African producer countries to enhance the stability and security of trade and investment environments.
14. Direct the Secretaries of State, Commerce, and Energy to support the BTC oil pipeline as it demonstrates its commercial viability.
15. Direct the Secretaries of Commerce, State, and Energy to continue working with relevant companies and countries to establish the commercial conditions that will allow oil companies operating in Kazakhstan the option of exporting their oil via the BTC pipeline.
16. Direct the Secretaries of State, Commerce, and Energy to support the efforts of private investors and regional governments to develop the Shah Deniz gas pipeline as a way to help Turkey and Georgia diversify their natural gas supplies and help Azerbaijan export its gas via a pipeline that will continue to diversify secure energy supply routes.
17. Direct appropriate federal agencies to complete the current cycle of oil spill response readiness workshops and to consider further appropriate steps to ensure the implementation of the workshops' recommendations.
18. Direct the Secretary of State to encourage Greece and Turkey to link their gas pipeline systems to allow European consumers to diversify their gas supplies by purchasing Caspian gas.
19. Direct the Secretaries of Commerce, Energy, and State to continue and expand their commercial dialogue with Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and other Caspian states to provide a strong, transparent, and stable business climate for the energy commerce and related infrastructure projects.
20. Direct the Sec