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How Puerto Rico misses the mark in latest attempt to privatize broken power authority


In its version of a bill to privatize the Puerto Rico Electric Power Authority, the Puerto Rico legislature has improved some on Gov. Ricardo Rosselló’s original proposal, but lawmakers are ultimately failing the Puerto Rican people every bit as badly as Rosselló has.

We’ve criticized the governor’s original privatization proposal for essentially aiming to set up a process that would enable the implementation of politically driven contracts devoid of regulatory oversight.

{mosads}The amended legislation contains some improvements, but — crucially — it does not say how privatization would solve the two fundamental problems of Puerto Rico’s electrical system: its over-reliance on imported fossil fuels and its crippling debt.

 

Key improvements in the revised privatization bill:

Unfortunately, the bill retains many flaws from the governor’s original proposal:

Authors of the legislature’s privatization bill, to their credit, appear to recognize that privatization is a means to an end, not an end in itself. But while their bill requires that privatization transactions comply with a new public energy policy, which is mandated but not yet written, it is nevertheless backwards — and risky — to authorize privatization without good policy in place.

In their intent to hasten private investment in Puerto Rico, the governor and the legislature now are creating policy that fails to spell out what role the public sector will play in the financing of the these transactions. It also fails to explain where future ownership of electricity assets will lie; how development and management of those assets will proceed; whether labor-force decisions will be in the best interest of Puerto Ricans.

We fail to see how the proposed privatization of PREPA would result in a more affordable, resilient, or financially sustainable electrical system. The privatization plan that the legislature has produced has no clear policy vision, lacks a commitment to energy planning, and creates yet more opportunity for politics to interfere in the negotiation and enforcement of contracts.

Cathy Kunkel is an energy analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. Tom Sanzillo is director of finance.