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PNM AVANGRID MERGER

NOT IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST

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NEW ENERGY ECONOMY INTERVENED AT THE PRC TO OBJECT TO THE PNM AVANGRID MERGER AGREEMENT ON THE GROUNDS THAT IT IS NOT IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST

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THE PROPOSED MERGER

On November 23, 2020, Public Service Company of New Mexico (“PNM”) and Avangrid, Inc. (“Avangrid”) applied to “merge” their companies with the New Mexico Public Regulation Commission (“PRC”). Avangrid is a publicly traded worldwide energy conglomerate with approximately $36 billion in assets and operations in 24 U.S. states. Iberdrola, (located in Spain), owns 81.5% of Avangrid’s stock. New Energy Economy, along with most of the other intervenors, if not all, are opposing the merger because it is NOT in the public interest.

On October 20, 2020 PNM and Avangrid entered into an Agreement and Plan of Merger (the “Merger Agreement”). PNM and Avangrid, known as Joint Applicants, must prove in Case No. 20-00222-UT that their merger is “in the public interest.” In determining whether to approve a utility acquisition the PRC must consider: 

1. whether the acquisition is beneficial to utility customers;

2. whether the Commission’s jurisdiction will be preserved;
3. whether the quality of utility service will be diminished; and
4. whether the acquisition will result in the improper subsidization of non-utility activities. 

New Energy Economy contends that the merger is not in the public interest because:

WHY DO WE OPPOSE THE MERGER?

As part of the Merger Agreement Avangrid has required that PNM file for “abandonment” of its 13% share in the Four Corners Power Plant (FCPP) and securitize the remaining undepreciated investments. The purpose of the ETA is to transition New Mexico’s dependence on climate-altering coal to renewables, but PNM’s proposed abandonment and “sale” of its ownership interest in the FCPP to Navajo Energy Transitional Company (NTEC)  will not result in shut-down or closure of the FCPP and will allow NTEC and the other remaining owners of that plant to continue operating that plant until at least 2031, if not longer. The PNM “sale” to NTEC is contrary to both the letter and spirit of the ETA and cannot be in the public interest.

 

PNM’s decisions related to investment in the Four Corners Power Plant were imprudent and full cost recovery of $300 million would negate any and all possible benefits of the proposed acquisition. In 2013-2014, PNM’s decision to reinvest in their ownership share at FCPP extended the life of one of the largest polluting coal plants in the southwest. PNM invested approximately a billion dollars of OUR money, including the execution of a fifteen-year “take or pay” coal supply contract for 200 MW from the coal-generating power Plant, investment in pollution controls and “APS’ System Health Process” which kept the poorly performing plant functioning. Instead of conducting a contemporaneous financial analysis, PNM used a stale 18-month-old analysis to justify their investment. Hearing Examiners referred to the analysis as stale, and further, as “flawed” because it omitted the cost of (needed) expensive capital expenditures. 

 

The Hearing Examiners and the PRC initially found that PNM invested in and extended the life of the FCPP without a current financial analysis and comparison of FCPP with other energy alternatives and the investment was found to be imprudent. After “lobbying” (as described by PRC Commissioner Lyons) by PNM, PRC Commissioners Lyons and Jones joined Lovejoy and voted to scrub the previous Order of the “imprudence” finding and exacted further rate reductions. In that final order they kicked the can down the road, ruling: “The issue of PNM’s prudence in continuing its participation in FCPP shall be deferred until PNM’s next rate case.” Four years later, despite the Commission’s promise, ratepayers have not seen justice for the imprudence of PNM’s investment in FCPP. In the meantime, we continue to pay for high-cost polluting coal at FCPP. Despite the early imprudent finding and the promise to have a prudence review, PNM seeks, pursuant to the ETA, all $300M for PNM’s undepreciated investments in FCPP.

 

Our Supreme Court has held that failure to conduct an alternative analysis is a “fundamental flaw” because “[t]he goal of the consideration of alternatives is, of course, to reasonably protect ratepayers from wasteful expenditure. Pub. Serv. Co. of New Mexico v. New Mexico Pub. Regulation Comm'n, 2019-NMSC-012, 444 P.3d 460, ¶32, 40, The Court concluded that ratepayers should be held harmless from the impacts of a utility’s imprudent decisions. A merger that requires securitization of $300M in undepreciated investments at FCPP infringes on that right.

 

No meaningful economic benefits for ratepayers. The Joint Applicants have proposed trickling down $24.6 million of “rate credits” to PNM’s customers over 36 months, which equals, according to Joint Applicants, approximately. $0.59 per month for 3 years, for a maximum of $21 per average residential customer. Compare this to four very important metrics:

  1. PNM Resources stockholders will receive in excess of $200 million just for holding PNMR stock certificates. Avangrid has agreed to pay PNM Resources stockholders $50.30 per share upon closing of the merger deal set for January 2022. PNM Resources is the parent company of PNM (and is the entity which is actually traded on the New York Stock Exchange). That windfall produces no customer benefit whatsoever, but merely enriches those shareholders.

  2. PNM’s senior management will receive a combined $38 million in executive compensation if shareholders approve the company’s proposed merger with energy giant Avangrid. About $12.5 million of that would go to three departing execs as a “golden parachute.” The rest is earnings and benefits the six managers are entitled to under their employment contracts because of goals they have achieved, and is compensation they would receive regardless of the merger. (About 480,000 of PNM’s 530,000 ratepayers are residential ratepayers. 480,000 residential ratepayers will receive in total $24.6 million and six PNM Executives will receive $38 million – a distribution that is hardly fair, just and reasonable, or in the public interest!

  3. No agreement to a rate freeze. Often when there is a merger in the context of regulated monopoly, the applicants agree in advance to a rate freeze for a certain period of time. Not only have Joint Applicants refused to agree to a rate freeze, they have refused to state when they will file their next rate case and in what amount. It is incomprehensible that they haven’t penciled this out as part of their due diligence when evaluating the acquisition. Given their refusal to answer the question about future rate impacts, their $24.6M “rate credit” is not only de minimis to begin but without knowing what rate increases are planned for the near future this alleged “benefit” is entirely unquantifiable.

  4. The $24.6M “rate credit” is completely arbitrary and is not commensurate with other recent decisions. PNM Resources owns a much smaller utility in Texas. Just this month, in March 2021, the Texas Public Utility Commission found that the “rate credit” that Joint Applicants offered was not in the public interest and suggested an increase. That amount, deemed inadequate in Texas, is three times the amount Joint applicants are offering to ratepayers in New Mexico. 

 

No improved service for ratepayers. Potentially diminished quality of service for ratepayers. At first blush, we were excited that the “Exxon of Renewables” would come to NM and replace PNM slow walk on climate change, but then we learned of their terrible electric utility record: worst reliability, worst forced outage rate, among the highest residential rate charges, violations for “corruption and fraud.” After Avangrid/Iberdrola purchased Central Maine Power it has been at the very bottom of customer satisfaction surveys among all utilities in the U.S. for three years in a row, 2018, 2019, 2020!

 

During the legal process New Energy Economy asked Avangrid/Iberdrola for documentation of their violations, penalties and fines from their owned companies in other states and internationally. Avangrid/Iberdrola responded superficially, with an incomplete list of complaints, but it was enough to cause alarm, (digging too close to an electric line, thousand dollar penalties). On May 11th the Hearing Examiner issued a scathing order suspending all hearings and requiring Avangrid/Iberdrola to provide a list of penalties, violations and enforcement actions by state and federal regulatory agencies. The Hearing Examiner wrote:

 

“The Joint Applicants have failed to disclose any of the penalties and disallowances in the current proceeding, despite their relevance to this case, i.e., the risk that the adequacy of PNM’s service may deteriorate under the direct or indirect control of Avangrid, Inc. The failure is also significant, given that Avangrid, Inc. has considered the issues to be sufficiently important to include them in its reports filed with the Securities & Exchange Commission.” pg. 3

 

and

“The Joint Applicants’ failure to disclose this information to the Commission in this proceeding is troubling and is also relevant to the credibility of their witnesses’ testimony and the transparency by which Avangrid and PNM would conduct their business in New Mexico if the merger is approved.” pg. 4

 

Avangrid then produced upward of 2500 pages of documentation detailing more than 200 violations at eight subsidiaries. Further research uncovered details about ethical and legal violations by Iberdrola SA in Europe, Mexico and South America. A comparison of Avangrid responses to New Energy Economy interrogatories and the Hearing Examiner’s order calls into question the integrity of the company, and as we wrote in reply to Avangrid’s excuses: 

 

“Joint Applicants’ Response reads as an antiseptic and cold-hearted document; if one didn’t know better, one might think that Avangrid was being penalized for failure to accurately account for products on a shelf, not human lives left without access to what is now considered a basic human right: electricity to keep one’s dialysis machine operating or death due to electricity disconnection, or because RG&E failed to abide by the Commission’s Order regarding pole attachments which violated requirements to ensure worker safety and structures during installation, operation, and maintenance, for communication lines attaching to utility poles, and or that electricity took far too long to restore due to inadequate manpower (resulting in certain instances to no access to warm food or heat, disruptions in communications, or caused food spoilage and water contamination).” pg 3-4.

 

The conduct of utility companies has real and significant implications for the well-being and safety of customers. The merger agreement must now be evaluated not only on the financial implications of the deal, but also its potential impact on quality of service in New Mexico and the human cost if that quality is diminished.

 

Avangrid’s political playbook may be even more nefarious than PNM’s. Avangrid via Central Maine Power used its money and political influence to kill a pro-rooftop solar bill. Central Maine Power worked behind the scenes in 2017 to rig the debate over rooftop solar and net metering in its favor, including contributing to the Governor’s PAC. 

 

PNM’s PACs contribute heavily to our PRC, Legislature, and our Governor, and to the PAC that worked to sway voters to take away their vote for the PRC. Central Maine Power’s bid to kill the pro-solar bill was backed by “We Stand for Energy”, a front group run by the Washington, DC-based Edison Electric Institute (EEI), the industry association that represents the nation’s investor-owned electric utilities. Just like Avangrid created and used front groups in Maine to undermine rooftop and community solar, PNM (and Avangrid?) used a group called “Committee to Protect New Mexico Consumers” advocating for a constitutional amendment to undermine voting rights of NM citizens to vote for PRC Commissioners; PNM paid more than a quarter of a million dollars to produce and distribute mailers supporting a ballot question that would change the composition of the Public Regulation Commission. 

PNM’s current CEO used to be the head of Edison Electric Institute.

[1] Bill Brancard, General Counsel, Energy, Minerals and Natural Resource Department, 9/3/2020, presentation before the Water & Natural Resources Committee, NM Leg
[2] https://nmpoliticalreport.com/2020/02/03/wastewater-wastewater-everywhere-in-the-permian-basin-a-new-kind-of-boom/
[3] https://westernpriorities.org/2018-new-mexico-oil-and-gas-toxic-release-tracker/
[4] As of August 2020 produced water spills Excel spreadsheet downloaded from http://www.emnrd.state.nm.us/OCD/statistics.html
[5] New Mexico Oil and Gas Waste Report, The failure to safely manage oil and gas waste, September 2020.

[6] HB 546, “Fluid Oil & Gas Waste Act,” sponsored by Representatives Nathan P. Small, Brian Egolf, and Rod Montoya, §11 P, which was in the 2019 bill.

The last thing our state needs is an energy system controlled by an international energy giant with unlimited resources and zero accountability to the New Mexican people or our beautiful land. There were many conditions that were raised by more than a dozen parties that are important to protect consumer interests and the environment. Unless these conditions are met we will jointly oppose the merger. 

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