SIDE SUBHEAD
Everyone talks about them. But what do power marketers really look like?Power marketers do not just want to belong to the electric industry; they want to change it forever. Their future depends upon it.
Over 80 entities applied to become power marketers last year, and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has acted on approximately half those applications so far. Yet only a handful of companies currently are actively engaged in buying and selling electricity. Many are merely positioning themselves for the day when competition inevitably pushes beyond the $70 billion wholesale power market into the $200 billion retail market.
This sudden interest in power marketing can be directly attributed to the landmark Energy Policy Act of 1992, which amended Section 211 of the Federal Power Act and gave FERC authority to order wholesale wheeling if certain criteria are met. (For key FERC cases affecting power marketers, see Inside Washington, page 35.)
Most applications come from gas marketers, who see power generation as a lucrative market. But the applicants include brokers and financial firms, utility affiliates, independent entrepreneurs, commodity traders and manufacturers, and independent power producers.Enron Corp. - From Gas to Energy
Last fall, Enron Corp. changed the name of affiliate Enron Gas Services Group to Enron Capital & Trade Resources (ECTR). The change is more than a formality, said Jeff Skilling, ECTR managing director.The old name became "too confining" for the evolving energy business. ECTR reflects the company's goal "to facilitate capital and trade in the underlying commodity," whether it be natural gas, electricity, or some other fuel.