The Efficiency of Electricity Generation in the
US After Restructuring
Catherine Wolfram (UC Berkeley, UCEI, and NBER)
Over the past eleven years, US electric utilities have faced significant
changes to their competitive and regulatory environments. The Energy Policy
Act of 1992 opened access to transmission for nonutility generating plants.
Then, beginning with California in 1996, nearly half the states passed
and a smaller number enacted restructuring legislation that involved complete
retail access. The industry restructuring is designed to enhance economic
efficiency at all levels of operation, including distribution, transmission,
generation and retail services. The gains are likely to be largest in
electric generation because generation costs are the largest component
of end-use costs and restructuring has a larger impact on generation than
on other segments of the electricity industry, such as transmission and
distribution, which are likely to remain at least partially regulated.
This chapter will evaluate changes in the efficiency of electric generation
from restructuring. It both summarizes the current state of knowledge
on the topic and serves as a roadmap for future work.
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