|
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday April 11, 2001
Contacts:
University of California - Charles McFadden (510) 987-9193
charles.mcfadden@ucop.edu
California State University - Colleen Bentley-Adler
(562) 951-4801
cbentley-adler@calstate.edu
UC, CSU, ATTORNEY GENERAL WIN PRELIMINARY
INJUNCTION AGAINST ENRON ENERGY SERVICES
The University of California and the California
State University today (Wednesday, April 11) won a preliminary injunction
preventing Enron Energy Services from unilaterally jettisoning the
two university systems as direct access electricity customers.
U.S. District Court Judge Phyllis Hamilton,
ruling from the bench in San Francisco, issued the preliminary injunction
effective immediately.
The ruling directs Houston-based Enron to
return the California State University (CSU) and University of California
(UC) to direct access service from Enron and reverses, pending a
trial, Enron's attempt to switch the universities to bundled electric
service as provided by the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. and Southern
California Edison.
California Attorney General Bill Lockyer
filed a friend of the court brief on behalf of the two university
systems and appeared in court to argue for issuance of the preliminary
injunction.
The CSU, UC and the attorney general argued
that Enron could not legally breach its contract merely because
the changing economic picture for power in California made it less
financially attractive for Enron to continue to honor the contract.
CSU and UC also argued that removing them
as direct access customers lessened their ability to manage their
power use in the most sophisticated manner possible to lighten the
load on the state's electricity grid. They also said Enron's attempt
to abrogate the contract had the potential of costing California
taxpayers millions of additional dollars.
Enron signed the four-year contract to provide
electricity at predetermined rates in 1998; it is due to expire
on March 31, 2002.
In issuing the preliminary injunction, Judge
Hamilton said there is a "strong possibility" that UC
and CSU would prevail if the matter comes to trial.
CSU and UC are two of the largest energy
users in the state.
UC generates approximately 21 percent of
its power needs through its own cogeneration plants and has a systemwide
peak load of 332 megawatts. A megawatt powers approximately 1,000
homes.
CSU generates approximately 10 percent of
its total power needs and its systemwide peak load is about 117
megawatts.
CSU's annual electric bill is approximately
$40 million and its natural gas bill is about $20 million.
UC's annual electric
bill is approximately $87 million and its natural gas bill is approximately
$26 million.
|