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Understanding the Response of Commercial and Institutional Organizations to the California Energy Crisis.


DE2004832751

Publication Date 2002
Page Count 70
Abstract Beginning in the summer of 2000, California experienced serious energy supply problems, sharp increases in wholesale (and retail) electricity and natural gas prices, and isolated blackouts. In response to the rapidly worsening electricity situation in California in late 2000, the state set, as an initial goal, the reduction of the state's peak demand for the summer of 2001 by 5,000 megawatts. To meet this goal, the governor and legislature took a variety of steps to enhance supply, encourage rapid voluntary reductions in demand, and provide incentives for actions that would result in load reductions. Three bills-Assembly Bill 970, Senate Bill X1 5 and Assembly Bill X1 29-allocated roughly $950 million for consumption and demand reduction programs. The governor also enacted a variety of additional measures, including the 'Flex Your Power' (media awareness and direct business involvement) campaign, requirements for retail sector outdoor lighting reductions, and toughening of energy efficiency building codes. There were, in fact, significant reductions in electricity demand in California during the summer of 2001 and the large number of expected supply disruptions was avoided. To understand the nature of these demand reductions and the motivations for consumer response, Washington State University (WSU) undertook a study for the California Energy Commission (CEC) focusing on conservation behavior in the residential, commercial, and agricultural sectors. The research presented in this report represents an exploration of the response of commercial and institutional organizations to the California energy situation and the unique set of influences that existed during this time.
Keywords
  • Energy crisis
  • California
  • Energy supplies
  • Commercial organizations
  • Institutional organizations
  • Availability
  • Focusing
  • Responses
  • Natural gas
  • Outages
  • Prices
  • Supply disruption
  • Buiding codes
  • Business
  • Electricity
  • Energy efficiency
  • Exploration
Source Agency
  • Technical Information Center Oak Ridge Tennessee
Corporate Authors Washington State Univ., Pullman. Dept. of Sociology.; Department of Energy, Washington, DC.
Supplemental Notes Sponsored by Department of Energy, Washington, DC.
Document Type Technical Report
NTIS Issue Number 200514
Understanding the Response of Commercial and Institutional Organizations to the California Energy Crisis.
Understanding the Response of Commercial and Institutional Organizations to the California Energy Crisis.
DE2004832751

  • Energy crisis
  • California
  • Energy supplies
  • Commercial organizations
  • Institutional organizations
  • Availability
  • Focusing
  • Responses
  • Natural gas
  • Outages
  • Prices
  • Supply disruption
  • Buiding codes
  • Business
  • Electricity
  • Energy efficiency
  • Exploration
  • Technical Information Center Oak Ridge Tennessee
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