REUTERS: The Texas power regulator on Friday voted to remove about US$1 billion in service fees levied on grid users but took no action on petitions asking it to cut sharply higher power prices during a mid-February cold snap.
The state's grid operator hiked power prices by about 400 times the usual rate to US$9,000 per megawatt for five days last month, pushing two power companies into bankruptcy and prompting others to default on bills. State officials this week called on the Public Utility Commission of Texas to reprice 32 hours worth of power for the period after the grid emergency passed.
"We need to get back to a more deliberative mode in this agency," D'Andrea said at the outset of Friday's meeting."That means trying to stop doing everything on an emergency basis." The fees that were cut involved payments to power generators for standby power and other services not provided during the mid-February cold snap, according to the state's market adviser.
D'Andrea, the last remaining member of the commission after two resignations, also ordered the state's grid operator to extend its deadline for accepting freeze-related grid payment disputes to six months from 10 days.
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