Monday, September 13, 2010

Iatan 2 - Another MJMEUC/MoPEP investment with double cost overruns

The Kansas City Star reported on September 8, 2010, that another MJMEUC investment, Iatan 2, in Weston Kansas, has joined the now infamous Prairie State power plant in having doubled their construction cost estimate. These unpleasant and newly disclosed facts about the billions in Prairie State and Iatan 2 cost overruns have not been reported in MoPEP meetings by Vern Kincheloe, MJMWUC/MoPEP CEO Duncan Kincheloe’s relative, who for years has been in charge of construction oversight of their power plant investments.

If Kincheloe and the MJMEUC/MoPEP board won’t tell their MoPEP “joint venture” members the truth about incompetence in the construction and management of the over $2 Billion in power plant investments MJMEUC has made behind the backs of their member cities who are locked into this “joint venture,” the MoPEP cities will have to subscribe to the major metro newspapers to keep up with this grim tale about their escalating liability.

Since the Chicago Tribune broke the story about the bloated costs of the Prairie State power plant in Illinois, other metro papers have ceased their uncritical praise for these projects for the few jobs they will produce and are beginning to dig out the rest of the story - the one all electric consumers are going to have to pay for.

Who will wind up paying for all these bloated plants? The only answer is - the investors in the plant which includes the MJMEUC/MoPEP "joint venture" investors. That’s what “joint venture” means, all partners in the venture are equally liable for EVERYTHING that goes wrong. That’s why the MJMEUC/MoPEP contracts contain a blanket requirement that all MoPEP members pay without question and without exception for any and all of MoPEP’s “direct costs” that are passed through to them along with their power bills.

MoPEP Mayors will try to deny their local electric rates will be impacted by these cost overruns but that’s patently false. Investors and consumers always pay and the MoPEP towns are equity investors – owners – of these plants, they have not just contracted to buy overpriced power from them. The MW price for Prairie State power was $35 MW but it's now quoted at $64.40 per MW and it will go higher because that plant is less than 50% complete. One way or another they will pass these mismanagement costs down the kilowatt billing pipeline even if they have to sell MW at a loss to others with investor-client municipalities and their captive ratepayers making up the losses.

But, if you look down the road – something the city council signatories of the deceptive MoPEP contracts didn’t attempt to do - there are some unavoidable market forces at work here that will eventually kill the MoPEP scam no matter how loyal the municipal Bubba’s are to Kincheloe’s club. As these vastly overpriced plants go on line, MJMEUC and the other municipalities in Midwest states that were foolish enough to become equity investors to finance these plants and also consumers of their overpriced power, will try to absorb the cost overruns but they can’t eat them all by passing along the bloat to non-owner customers because they’ll price themselves out of the market. Charging a .15¢ per kWh rate when 10 miles away a smarter town is buying direct from a cheaper PSC rate-regulated commercial utility and paying less than 7¢, is no way to run a shoe store.

How long can the MoPEP towns charge double the commercial kWh rates to their local customers and not run all business and most residential customers out of town either to nearby towns that were smart enough not to join MoPEP or to unincorporated areas where they can get cheaper co-op rates? Long term, Duncan Kincheloe’s “joint venture” investment club not only won’t “stabilize” your rates as Kincheloe and his minions claim but they will strangle the delicate economic balance of dozens of Midwest small towns until they are boarded up ghost towns. You could call that “stabilized.”

KCP&L faulted for mismanagement in power plant project

By STEVE EVERLY
The Kansas City Star (Posted Wed, Sep. 08, 2010 11:41 PM)

The Iatan 2 power plant near Weston (in this 2009 photo) has taken more than four years to build and is scheduled to begin operation later this year. The plant is now estimated to cost almost $2 billion — about double original estimates.
Kansas City Power & Light mismanaged much of the early construction of its new coal-fired power plant near Weston, causing cost overruns that it wants its customers to cover, according to a report to Kansas regulators.

The utility ignored expert advice, delayed important decisions and had a “dysfunctional” relationship with the contractors on the Iatan 2 project, according to Walter Drabinski, president of Vantage Consulting Inc., who was retained by the staff of the Kansas Corporation Commission.
His report said those problems added costs and caused delays for the coal-fired power plant, now estimated to cost almost $2 billion — about double original estimates. More...