DocumentCode
3446726
Title
Independent transmission companies: the key to capital formation for electric transmission in North America
Author
Buckman, F.W.
Author_Institution
Michigan Univ., Portland, OR, USA
Volume
3
fYear
2003
fDate
7-12 Sept. 2003
Firstpage
1042
Abstract
The electric transmission infrastructure in North America is a key component of both our economic well-being and our quality of life. Independent transmission companies (ITC´s) are companies that own or control neither electric generation or electric distribution assets. There are several factors that favor ITC´s as investment vehicles for new transmission construction. Federal regulation and federal regulatory incentives, financial and operating structure flexibility, and both cost of capital and return on equity considerations provide the ITC with an advantage over vertically integrated utilities. ITC´s also have access to capital markets with investment grade credit, and a capital markets that is friendly to asset backed investing and lending. The companies do not suffer internal competition for capital with other lines of business, and they stand to reward both customers and investors by participating in the building of our electric transmission infrastructure.
Keywords
investment; power markets; power transmission economics; power transmission planning; ITC; North America; capital cost; capital market; electric transmission infrastructure; federal regulation; federal regulatory incentive; independent transmission companies; operating structure flexibility; Continents; Costs; Explosions; Helium; Industrial economics; Investments; North America; Power generation; Power generation economics; Productivity;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Transmission and Distribution Conference and Exposition, 2003 IEEE PES
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8110-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/TDC.2003.1335088
Filename
1335088
Link To Document