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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:GAO-01-857</classification>
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 <subject>Comparative analysis</subject>
 <subject>Electric energy</subject>
 <subject>Electric utilities</subject>
 <subject>Energy costs</subject>
 <subject>Energy shortages</subject>
 <subject>Prices and pricing</subject>
 <subject>Statistical methods</subject>
 <subject>California</subject>
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 <title>Energy Markets: Results of Studies Assessing High Electricity Prices in California</title>
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<abstract>Wholesale electricity prices in California rose sharply in May
2000 and have remained high. In addition, there were disruptions 
in service--blackouts--this winter and spring. The California	 
Independent System Operator, the state agency in charge of	 
balancing electricity supply with demand, expects high prices and
service disruptions to continue and perhaps worsen this summer.  
In response to concerns about high prices and generator outages  
in California, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)	 
undertook a study, released in February 2001, to determine	 
whether outages were being used to withhold power and drive up	 
prices of electricity in California. Other studies of the	 
electricity market in California have been conducted by 	 
economists and industry experts. One study, conducted by three	 
economists from Stanford University, the University of California
at Berkeley, and the University of California Energy Institute	 
examined whether market prices of electricity in California in	 
1998 and 1999 were higher than competitive levels. A second,	 
similar study by two economists--one from the Massachusetts	 
Institute of Technology and one from a private consulting	 
firm--examined the California market during 2000. This report	 
reviews the FERC study, as well as the two studies on the	 
California electricity market to determine (1) how the		 
methodologies and results of the three studies compare and (2) if
FERC&apos;s study was thorough enough to support its conclusions that 
audited companies did not physically withhold electricity	 
supplies to influence prices. GAO found that FERC&apos;s study used a 
very different methodological approach from the approach used by 
the other two studies and reached different conclusions. FERC&apos;s  
study performed an audit of specific generating plants and	 
companies that experienced outages to determine if audited	 
companies were incurring outages in an effort to drive up prices,
while the other two studies compared market prices with estimates
of the costs of producing electricity. GAO further found that	 
FERC&apos;s study was not thorough enough to support its conclusion	 
that audited companies were not withholding electricity supply to
influence prices.</abstract>
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<subject>
 <topic>Comparative analysis</topic>
 <topic>Electric energy</topic>
 <topic>Electric utilities</topic>
 <topic>Energy costs</topic>
 <topic>Energy shortages</topic>
 <topic>Prices and pricing</topic>
 <topic>Statistical methods</topic>
 <topic>California</topic>
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