(We presented the) $600 million plan for the benefit of our rate payers. We thought we had an agreement. The credit agencies, the rating agencies, those are key to us. The more damaging effects to us, the more costly it is to borrow money. |
At a time you have a situation where you're going to either legislate or regulate in the marketplace, that never has a good outcome. Certainly that would be the case here. |
Because of the merger and the benefits that it will accrue, we're able to come to the table with a $600 million proposal. It equates out to every single residential electric customer will see $450 thereabouts on their bill over 10 years. |
Before we talk about re-regulating, we should be looking at the fact that we've really not allowed the marketplace to take hold. |
Constellation Energy is very supportive of these new rules. |
He's not driven by a desire for enrichment, and clearly the merger would not change his lifestyle in any measurable way. |
Some customers are seeing increases up to 70 percent. |
The fact is that since the passage of the Maryland electric industry restructuring law in 1999, BGE residential customers have benefited from a substantially lower rate structure ... well below the market rates paid in other parts of the country. BGE has no choice but to procure power at prevailing market rates. Every dollar deferred is a dollar that might not be invested in infrastructure for the utility. |
We are not going to be doing this on the cheap. We want them to be very clear on what choices they're going to make. |
We're extremely troubled by the prospect that the legislature is attempting to hold our proposed merger hostage, and to that end we will be considering all options, including the legal route. |
We're just going to have to continue to attack it. |
What we want our customers to understand is that there is something broader than just Baltimore, Maryland that's driving all these costs. |