EDITORS: Please do not use
"Pacific Gas and Electric" or "PG&E" when
referring to PG&E Corporation or its National Energy Group.
The PG&E National Energy Group is not the same company as Pacific
Gas and Electric Company, the utility, and is not regulated by the
California Public Utilities Commission. Customers of Pacific Gas
and Electric Company do not have to buy products or services from
the National Energy Group in order to continue to receive quality
regulated services from Pacific Gas and Electric Company.
PG&E NATIONAL
ENERGY GROUP SEEKS APPROVAL FOR NEW OREGON PLANT
The 550-megawatt plant would
be the company's second Oregon generating station
PORTLAND, OR - PG&E Corporation's
National Energy Group (NYSE: PCG) has filed an application with
the Oregon Office of Energy to build a new generating station in
Eastern Oregon's Umatilla County, adjacent to the company's operating
power plant in Hermiston. The company said the new facility, slated
to begin operation in 2003, will help meet the Northwest's growing
energy needs.
"The PG&E National Energy
Group has long had a strong business presence in the Pacific Northwest,
including our natural gas transmission system and the Hermiston
Generating Plant," said Thomas B. King, president and COO of the
PG&E National Energy Group (NEG). "We hope to build on our experience
in the region to become a major contributor in the effort to meet
the region's growing energy demand. The Umatilla Generating Project
is a key component of that strategy."
King noted that forecasts
by the Northwest Power Planning Council show that the region has
a one-in-four chance of experiencing an energy shortfall during
winter months if new resources are not developed. To reduce that
probability to a one-in-twenty chance, 3,000 megawatts of new electric
generating capacity will need to be built before 2003. The proposed
550-megawatt Umatilla Generating Project would generate enough power
for 550,000 homes.
The NEG has filed an application
with the Oregon Office of Energy for a site certificate for the
plant. The application was in the form of an amendment to a previous
certificate filing made five years earlier. Roger Garratt, lead
developer for the project, said the permitting process should take
about a year. The company hopes to begin construction on the plant
in early 2002.
"Based on our experience
in siting and building the Hermiston Generating Plant five years
ago, we are very familiar with the Oregon siting process and its
focus on building consensus among the stakeholder groups," Garratt
said. "We have already begun meeting with a number of interested
parties, including representatives of the local community, and we
look forward to continuing the effort."
The Umatilla Generating
Project will be a highly efficient combined cycle combustion turbine,
built adjacent to the 474-megawatt Hermiston Generating Plant, which
the NEG co-owns with PacifiCorp. The two plants will share much
of the same infrastructure, maximizing efficiencies. The Umatilla
plant will burn natural gas, with its fuel supply transported via
the NEG's Pacific Northwest natural gas pipeline system.
PG&E Corporation, with 1999
revenues of nearly $21 billion and operations in 21 states, markets
energy services and products throughout North America through its
National Energy Group. The Corporation has ownership and management
interests in more than 30 power plants and has one of the largest
energy trading and risk management programs in North America.
This news release discusses
certain matters that may be considered "forward-looking" statements
within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933,
as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
as amended, including statements regarding the intent, belief or
current expectations of PG&E Corporation ("the Company") and its
management or those of the PG&E National Energy Group and its management.
Prospective investors are cautioned that any such forward-looking
statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve
a number of risks and uncertainties that could materially affect
actual results such as, but not limited to, (i) changes in government
regulations and anticipated deregulation of the electric energy
industry; (ii) commercial operations of new plants that may be delayed
or prevented because of various development and construction risks,
such as a failure to obtain financing and the necessary permits
or equipment to operate or the failure of third-party contractors
to perform their contractual obligations, (iii) a competitor's development
of a lower-cost generating gas-fired power plant, (iv) fluctuations
in natural gas and electricity prices and the ability to successfully
manage such price fluctuations or (v) the risks associated with
marketing and selling power from power plants in the newly competitive
energy market. Prospective investors are also referred to the other
risks identified from time to time in the Company's reports and
registration statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
|