IDACORP INC - Annual Report: 2014 (Form 10-K)
UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
(Mark One)
X | ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF |
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 | |
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 2014 |
OR
TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF | |
THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 |
For the transition period from ................... to .................................................................
Exact name of registrants as specified in | ||
Commission | their charters, address of principal executive | IRS Employer |
File Number | offices, zip code and telephone number | Identification Number |
1-14465 | IDACORP, Inc. | 82-0505802 |
1-3198 | Idaho Power Company | 82-0130980 |
1221 W. Idaho Street | ||
Boise, ID 83702-5627 | ||
(208) 388-2200 | ||
State of incorporation: Idaho | ||
Name of exchange on | ||
SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OF THE ACT: | which registered | |
IDACORP, Inc.: Common Stock, without par value | New York | |
Stock Exchange | ||
SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(g) OF THE ACT: | ||
Idaho Power Company: Preferred Stock |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrants are well-known seasoned issuers, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.
IDACORP, Inc. | Yes | (X) | No | ( ) | Idaho Power Company | Yes | ( ) | No | (X) |
Indicate by check mark if the registrants are not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act.
IDACORP, Inc. | Yes | ( ) | No | (X) | Idaho Power Company | Yes | ( ) | No | (X) |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrants (1) have filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrants were required to file such reports), and (2) have been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes (X) No ( )
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Indicate by check mark whether the registrants have submitted electronically and posted on their corporate Web sites, if any, every Interactive Data File required to be submitted and posted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrants were required to submit and post such files).
IDACORP, Inc. | Yes | (X) | No | ( ) | Idaho Power Company | Yes | (X) | No | ( ) |
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the best of registrants’ knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K. (X)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrants are large accelerated filers, accelerated filers, non-accelerated filers, or smaller reporting companies.
IDACORP, Inc.: | ||||||||
Large accelerated filer | (X) | Accelerated filer | ( ) | Non-accelerated filer | ( ) | Smaller reporting company | ( ) | |
Idaho Power Company: | ||||||||
Large accelerated filer | ( ) | Accelerated filer | ( ) | Non-accelerated filer | (X) | Smaller reporting company | ( ) |
Indicate by check mark whether the registrants are shell companies (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Act).
IDACORP, Inc. | Yes | ( ) | No | (X) | Idaho Power Company | Yes | ( ) | No | (X) |
Aggregate market value of voting and non-voting common stock held by non-affiliates (June 30, 2014):
IDACORP, Inc.: | $ | 2,875,967,074 | Idaho Power Company: | None |
Number of shares of common stock outstanding as of February 13, 2015: | |
IDACORP, Inc.: | 50,259,292 |
Idaho Power Company: | 39,150,812, all held by IDACORP, Inc. |
Documents Incorporated by Reference: | |
Part III, Items 10 - 14 | Portions of IDACORP, Inc.’s definitive proxy statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders. |
This combined Form 10-K represents separate filings by IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company. Information contained herein relating to an individual registrant is filed by that registrant on its own behalf. Idaho Power Company makes no representation as to the information relating to IDACORP, Inc.’s other operations.
Idaho Power Company meets the conditions set forth in General Instruction (I)(1)(a) and (b) of Form 10-K and is therefore filing this Form with the reduced disclosure format.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS | ||
Page | ||
Commonly Used Terms | ||
Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements | ||
Part I | ||
Item 1 | Business | |
Executive Officers of the Registrants | ||
Item 1A | Risk Factors | |
Item 1B | Unresolved Staff Comments | |
Item 2 | Properties | |
Item 3 | Legal Proceedings | |
Item 4 | Mine Safety Disclosures | |
Part II | ||
Item 5 | Market for Registrant's Common Equity, Related Stockholder Matters, and Issuer Purchases of Equity Securities | |
Item 6 | Selected Financial Data | |
Item 7 | Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations | |
Item 7A | Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk | |
Item 8 | Financial Statements and Supplementary Data | |
Item 9 | Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure | |
Item 9A | Controls and Procedures | |
Item 9B | Other Information | |
Part III | ||
Item 10 | Directors, Executive Officers and Corporate Governance* | |
Item 11 | Executive Compensation* | |
Item 12 | Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management and Related Stockholder Matters* | |
Item 13 | Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence* | |
Item 14 | Principal Accountant Fees and Services* | |
Part IV | ||
Item 15 | Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules | |
Signatures | ||
* Except as indicated in Items 10, 12, and 14, IDACORP, Inc. information is incorporated by reference to IDACORP, Inc.'s definitive proxy statement for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders. |
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COMMONLY USED TERMS | ||||||
The following select abbreviations, terms, or acronyms are commonly used or found in multiple locations in this report: | ||||||
ADITC | - | Accumulated Deferred Investment Tax Credits | IFS | - | IDACORP Financial Services, Inc., a subsidiary of IDACORP, Inc. | |
AFUDC | - | Allowance for Funds Used During Construction | IPUC | - | Idaho Public Utilities Commission | |
APCU | - | Annual Power Cost Update | IRP | - | Integrated Resource Plan | |
BACT | - | Best Available Control Technology | IRS | - | U.S. Internal Revenue Service | |
BCC | - | Bridger Coal Company, a joint venture of IERCo | kW | - | Kilowatt | |
BLM | - | U.S. Bureau of Land Management | MATS | - | Mercury and Air Toxics Standards | |
BPA | - | Bonneville Power Administration | MD&A | - | Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations | |
CAA | - | Clean Air Act | MW | - | Megawatt | |
CAMP | - | Comprehensive Aquifer Management Plan | MWh | - | Megawatt-hour | |
CO2 | - | Carbon Dioxide | NAAQS | - | National Ambient Air Quality Standards | |
CWA | - | Clean Water Act | NMFS | - | National Marine Fisheries Service | |
EGUs | - | Electric Utility Generating Units | NOx | - | Nitrogen Oxide | |
EIS | - | Environmental Impact Statement | NSPS | - | New Source Performance Standards | |
EPA | - | U.S. Environmental Protection Agency | NSR/PSD | - | New Source Review / Prevention of Significant Deterioration | |
EPS | - | Earnings Per Share | O&M | - | Operations and Maintenance | |
ESA | - | Endangered Species Act | OATT | - | Open Access Transmission Tariff | |
FCA | - | Fixed Cost Adjustment | OPUC | - | Public Utility Commission of Oregon | |
FERC | - | Federal Energy Regulatory Commission | PCA | - | Power Cost Adjustment | |
FPA | - | Federal Power Act | PCAM | - | Oregon Power Cost Adjustment Mechanism | |
GAAP | - | Generally Accepted Accounting Principles | PURPA | - | Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 | |
GHG | - | Greenhouse Gas | REC | - | Renewable Energy Certificate | |
HAPS | - | Hazardous Air Pollutants | RPS | - | Renewable Portfolio Standard | |
HCC | - | Hells Canyon Complex | SEC | - | U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission | |
Ida-West | - | Ida-West Energy, a subsidiary of IDACORP, Inc. | SMSP | - | Security Plan for Senior Management Employees | |
Idaho ROE | - | Idaho-jurisdiction return on year-end equity | SO2 | - | Sulfur Dioxide | |
IERCo | - | Idaho Energy Resources Co., a subsidiary of Idaho Power Company | USFWS | - | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service | |
IESCo | - | IDACORP Energy Services Co., a subsidiary of IDACORP, Inc. | VIEs | - | Variable Interest Entities |
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CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS |
In addition to the historical information contained in this report, this report contains (and oral communications made by IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company may contain) statements that relate to future events and expectations, such as statements regarding projected or future financial performance, cash flows, capital expenditures, dividends, capital structure or ratios, strategic goals, challenges, objectives, and plans for future operations. Such statements constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Any statements that express, or involve discussions as to, expectations, beliefs, plans, objectives, assumptions, or future events or performance, often, but not always, through the use of words or phrases such as "anticipates," "believes," "estimates," "expects," "intends," "plans," "predicts," "projects," "may result," "may continue," or similar expressions, are not statements of historical facts and may be forward-looking. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve estimates, assumptions, risks, and uncertainties. Actual results, performance, or outcomes may differ materially from the results discussed in the statements. In addition to any assumptions and other factors and matters referred to specifically in connection with such forward-looking statements, factors that could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those contained in forward-looking statements include those factors set forth in Part I, Item 1A - “Risk Factors” and Part II, Item 7 - “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" of this report, as well as in subsequent reports filed by IDACORP and Idaho Power with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the following important factors:
• | the effect of decisions by the Idaho and Oregon public utilities commissions, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and other regulators that impact Idaho Power's ability to recover costs and earn a return; |
• | changes in residential, commercial, and industrial growth and demographic patterns within Idaho Power's service area, the loss or change in the business of significant customers, and the availability and use of demand-side management programs, and their associated impacts on loads and load growth; |
• | the impacts of changes in economic conditions, including the potential for changes in customer demand for electricity, revenue from sales of excess power, financial soundness of counterparties and suppliers, and collections of receivables; |
• | unseasonable or severe weather conditions, wildfires, drought, and other natural phenomena and natural disasters, which affect customer demand, hydroelectric generation levels, repair costs, and the availability and cost of fuel for generation plants or purchased power to serve customers; |
• | advancement of technologies that reduce loads or reduce the need for Idaho Power's generation of electric power; |
• | adoption of, changes in, and costs of compliance with, laws, regulations, and policies relating to the environment, natural resources, and endangered species, and the ability to recover those costs through rates; |
• | the ability to obtain debt and equity financing or refinance existing debt when necessary or advisable and on favorable terms, which can be affected by factors such as credit ratings, volatility in the financial markets, interest rate fluctuations, decisions by the Idaho or Oregon public utility commissions, and the companies' past or projected financial performance; |
• | reductions in credit ratings, which could adversely impact access to capital markets and would require the posting of additional collateral to counterparties pursuant to credit and contractual arrangements; |
• | variable hydrological conditions and over-appropriation of surface and groundwater in the Snake River basin, which may impact the amount of generation from Idaho Power's hydroelectric facilities; |
• | the ability to purchase fuel and power on favorable payment terms and prices, particularly in the event of unanticipated power demands, lack of physical availability, transportation constraints, or a credit downgrade; |
• | accidents, fires, explosions, and mechanical breakdowns that may occur while operating and maintaining an electric system, which can cause unplanned outages, reduce generating output, damage the companies’ assets, operations, or reputation, subject the companies to third-party claims for property damage, personal injury, or loss of life, or result in the imposition of civil, criminal, or regulatory fines or penalties; |
• | the ability to buy and sell power, transmission capacity, and fuel in the markets; |
• | the ability to enter into financial and physical commodity hedges with creditworthy counterparties to manage price and commodity risk, and the failure of any such risk management and hedging strategies to work as intended; |
• | administration of Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and other mandatory reliability, security, and other requirements for system infrastructure, which could result in penalties and increase costs; |
• | disruptions or outages of Idaho Power's generation or transmission systems or of any interconnected transmission system; |
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• | the increased costs and operational challenges associated with purchasing and integrating intermittent renewable energy sources, including mandated power purchases under federal law, into Idaho Power's resource portfolio; |
• | changes in actuarial assumptions, changes in interest rates, and the return on plan assets for pension and other post-retirement plans, which can affect future pension and other postretirement plan funding obligations, costs, and liabilities; |
• | the ability to continue to pay dividends based on financial performance, and in light of contractual covenants and restrictions and regulatory limitations; |
• | changes in tax laws or related regulations or new interpretations of applicable laws by federal, state, or local taxing jurisdictions, the availability of tax credits, and the tax rates payable by IDACORP shareholders on common stock dividends; |
• | employee workforce factors, including the operational and financial costs of unionization or the attempt to unionize all or part of the companies' workforce, the impact of an aging workforce and retirements, the cost and ability to retain skilled workers, and the ability to adjust the labor cost structure when necessary; |
• | failure to comply with state and federal laws, policies, and regulations, including new interpretations and enforcement initiatives by regulatory and oversight bodies, which may result in penalties and fines and increase the cost of compliance, the nature and extent of investigations and audits, and the cost of remediation; |
• | unusual or unanticipated changes in normal business operations, including unusual maintenance or repairs, or the failure to successfully implement new technology solutions; |
• | the inability to obtain or cost of obtaining and complying with required governmental permits and approvals, licenses, rights-of-way, and siting for transmission and generation projects and hydroelectric facilities; |
• | the cost and outcome of litigation, dispute resolution, and regulatory proceedings, and the ability to recover those costs or the costs of operational changes through insurance or rates, or from third parties; |
• | the failure of information systems or the failure to secure information system data, failure to comply with privacy laws, security breaches, or the direct or indirect effect on the companies' business or operations resulting from cyber attacks, terrorist incidents or the threat of terrorist incidents, and acts of war; and |
• | adoption of or changes in accounting policies and principles, changes in accounting estimates, and new Securities and Exchange Commission or New York Stock Exchange requirements, or new interpretations of existing requirements. |
Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which such statement is made. New factors emerge from time to time and it is not possible for management to predict all such factors, nor can it assess the impact of any such factor on the business or the extent to which any factor, or combination of factors, may cause results to differ materially from those contained in any forward-looking statement. IDACORP and Idaho Power disclaim any obligation to update publicly any forward-looking information, whether in response to new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by applicable law.
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PART I
ITEM 1. BUSINESS
OVERVIEW
Background
IDACORP, Inc. (IDACORP) is a holding company incorporated in 1998 under the laws of the state of Idaho. Its principal operating subsidiary is Idaho Power Company (Idaho Power). IDACORP is subject to the provisions of the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 2005, which provides the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and state utility regulatory commissions with access to books and records and imposes record retention and reporting requirements on IDACORP.
Idaho Power was incorporated under the laws of the state of Idaho in 1989 as the successor to a Maine corporation that was organized in 1915 and began operations in 1916. Idaho Power is an electric utility engaged in the generation, transmission, distribution, sale, and purchase of electric energy and capacity and is regulated by the state regulatory commissions of Idaho and Oregon and by the FERC. Idaho Power is the parent of Idaho Energy Resources Co. (IERCo), a joint venturer in Bridger Coal Company (BCC), which mines and supplies coal to the Jim Bridger generating plant owned in part by Idaho Power. Idaho Power's utility operations constitute nearly all of IDACORP's current business operations and are IDACORP’s only reportable business segment. Segment financial information is presented in Note 17 – "Segment Information" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. As of December 31, 2014, IDACORP had 2,021 full-time employees, 2,011 of whom were employed by Idaho Power, and 22 part-time employees, 20 of whom were employed by Idaho Power.
IDACORP’s other subsidiaries include IDACORP Financial Services, Inc. (IFS), an investor in affordable housing and other real estate investments; Ida-West Energy Company (Ida-West), an operator of small hydroelectric generation projects that satisfy the requirements of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA); and IDACORP Energy Services Co. (IESCo), the successor to IDACORP Energy L.P., a marketer of energy commodities that wound down operations in 2003.
IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s principal executive offices are located at 1221 W. Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho 83702, and the telephone number is (208) 388-2200.
Available Information
IDACORP and Idaho Power make available free of charge on their websites their Annual Report on Form 10-K, Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q, Current Reports on Form 8-K, and all amendments to these reports filed or furnished pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as soon as reasonably practicable after the reports are electronically filed with or furnished to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). IDACORP's website is www.idacorpinc.com and Idaho Power's website is www.idahopower.com. The contents of these websites are not part of this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Reports, proxy and information statements, and other information regarding IDACORP and Idaho Power may also be obtained directly from the SEC’s website, www.sec.gov, or from the SEC’s Public Reference Room at 100 F Street, NE, Washington, D.C. 20549.
UTILITY OPERATIONS
Background
Idaho Power provided electric utility service to approximately 516,000 general business customers in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon as of December 31, 2014. Over 428,000 of these customers are residential. Idaho Power’s principal commercial and industrial customers are involved in food processing and refining, electronics and general manufacturing, agriculture, health care, and winter recreation. Idaho Power holds franchises, typically in the form of right-of-way arrangements, in 71 cities in Idaho and nine cities in Oregon and holds certificates from the respective public utility regulatory authorities to serve all or a portion of 25 counties in Idaho and three counties in Oregon. Idaho Power's service area is shaded in the illustration on the following page and covers approximately 24,000 square miles with an estimated population of one million.
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Electric utilities have historically been recognized as natural monopolies and operate in a highly regulated environment - one in which they have an obligation to provide electric service to their customers and in return receive an exclusive franchise within their service territory - with an opportunity to earn a regulated rate of return. Idaho Power is under the jurisdiction (as to rates, service, accounting, and other general matters of utility operation) of the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (IPUC), the Public Utility Commission of Oregon (OPUC), and the FERC. The IPUC and OPUC determine the rates that Idaho Power is authorized to charge to its general business customers. Idaho Power is also under the regulatory jurisdiction of the IPUC, the OPUC, and the Public Service Commission of Wyoming as to the issuance of debt and equity securities. As a public utility under the Federal Power Act, Idaho Power has authority to charge market-based rates for wholesale energy sales under its FERC tariff and to provide transmission services under its open access transmission tariff (OATT). Additionally, the FERC has jurisdiction over Idaho Power's sales of transmission capacity and wholesale electricity, hydroelectric project relicensing, and system reliability, among other items.
Regulatory Accounting
Idaho Power is subject to accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, with the impacts of rate regulation reflected in its financial statements. These principles provide for the deferral as regulatory assets of certain costs that would otherwise be charged to expense, based on expected recovery from customers in future prices. Likewise, certain credits that would otherwise reduce expense or increase revenues can be deferred as regulatory liabilities, based on expected future credits or refunds to customers. Idaho Power records regulatory assets or liabilities if it is probable that they will be reflected in future prices, based on regulatory orders or other available evidence.
Business Strategy
IDACORP’s business strategy emphasizes Idaho Power as IDACORP’s core business, as Idaho Power's utility operations are the primary driver of IDACORP's operating results. Idaho Power's three-part strategy can be summarized as follows:
• | Responsible Planning: Idaho Power’s planning process is intended to ensure adequate generation, transmission, and distribution resources to meet anticipated population growth and increasing electricity demand. This planning process integrates Idaho Power’s regulatory strategy and financial planning, including the consideration of regional economic development in the communities Idaho Power serves. |
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• | Responsible Development and Protection of Resources: Idaho Power’s business strategy includes the development and protection of generation, transmission, distribution, and associated infrastructure, and stewardship of the natural resources upon which Idaho Power and the communities it serves depend. Additionally, the strategy considers workforce planning and employee development and retention related to these strategic elements. |
• | Responsible Energy Use: Idaho Power's business strategy includes energy efficiency and demand response programs and preparation for potential carbon and renewable portfolio standards legislation. The strategy also includes targeted reductions relating to carbon emission intensity and public reporting of these reductions, as well as operating Idaho Power's system in a manner that extracts additional value through changes in fuel mix and generation. |
Idaho Power regularly evaluates and refines its business strategy to ensure coordination among and integration of all functional areas of the company. Idaho Power’s business strategy seeks to balance the interests of owners, customers, employees, and other stakeholders while maintaining the company’s financial stability and flexibility.
Rates and Revenues
Idaho Power generates revenue primarily through the sale of electricity to retail and wholesale customers and the provision of transmission service. The prices that the IPUC, the OPUC, and the FERC authorize Idaho Power to charge for the electric power and services Idaho Power sells are a critical factor in determining IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. In addition to the discussion below, for more information on Idaho Power's regulatory framework and rate regulation, see the “Regulatory Matters” section of Part II, Item 7 – “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” (MD&A) and Note 3 – “Regulatory Matters” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
Retail Rates: Idaho Power periodically evaluates the need to seek changes to its retail electricity price structure to cover its operating costs and provide an opportunity for a reasonable rate of return on its investments. Idaho Power uses general rate cases, power cost adjustment (PCA) mechanisms, a fixed cost adjustment (FCA) mechanism, balancing accounts and tariff riders, and subject-specific filings to recover its costs of providing service and to earn a return on investment. Retail prices are generally determined through formal ratemaking proceedings that are conducted under established procedures and schedules before the issuance of a final order. Participants in these proceedings include Idaho Power, the staffs of the IPUC or OPUC, and other interested parties. The IPUC and OPUC are charged with ensuring that the prices and terms of service are fair, are non-discriminatory, and provide Idaho Power an opportunity to recover its prudently incurred or allowable costs and expenditures and earn a reasonable return on investment. The ability to request rate changes does not, however, ensure that Idaho Power will recover all of its costs or earn a specified rate of return.
In addition to general rate case filings, ratemaking proceedings can involve charges or credits related to specific costs, programs, or activities, as well as the recovery or refund of deferred amounts recorded pursuant to specific authorization from the IPUC or OPUC. Deferred amounts are generally collected from or refunded to retail customers through the use of base rates or supplemental tariffs. Outside of base rates, three of the most significant mechanisms for recovery of costs are the PCA mechanisms, FCA mechanism, and energy efficiency rider. The Idaho and Oregon PCA mechanisms are intended to address the volatility of power supply costs and provide for annual adjustments to the rates charged to retail customers by allowing partial recovery of the difference between net power supply costs included in base rates and actual net power supply costs incurred by Idaho Power. The FCA mechanism is designed to remove Idaho Power’s financial disincentive to invest in energy efficiency programs by separating (or decoupling) the recovery of fixed costs from the variable kilowatt-hour charge for certain Idaho customer classes and linking it instead to a set amount per customer. Separately, Idaho Power collects some of its energy efficiency program costs through an energy efficiency rider on customer bills.
Wholesale Markets: As a public utility subject to the provisions of Part II of the Federal Power Act (FPA), Idaho Power has authority to charge market-based rates for wholesale energy sales under its FERC tariff and to provide transmission services under its OATT. Idaho Power’s OATT transmission rate is revised each year based primarily on financial and operational data Idaho Power files annually with the FERC in its Form 1. The Energy Policy Act of 2005 granted the FERC increased statutory authority to implement mandatory transmission and network reliability standards, as well as enhanced oversight of power and transmission markets, including protection against market manipulation. These mandatory transmission and reliability standards were developed by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC) and the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC), which have responsibility for compliance and enforcement of transmission and reliability standards.
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Idaho Power participates in the wholesale energy markets by purchasing power to help meet load demands and selling power that is in excess of load demands. Idaho Power's market activities are guided by a risk management policy and frequently updated operating plans. These operating plans are impacted by factors such as customer demand for power, market prices, generating costs, transmission constraints, and availability of generating resources. Some of Idaho Power's 17 hydroelectric generation facilities are operated to optimize the water that is available by choosing when to run hydroelectric generation units and when to store water in reservoirs. Idaho Power at times operates these and its other generation facilities to take advantage of market opportunities. These decisions affect the timing and volumes of market purchases and market sales. Even in below-normal water years, there are opportunities to vary water usage to capture wholesale marketplace economic benefits, maximize generation unit efficiency and meet peak loads. Compliance factors such as allowable river stage elevation changes and flood control requirements also influence these generation dispatch decisions. Idaho Power's off-system sales revenues depend largely on the availability of generation resources above the amount necessary to serve customer loads as well as adequate market power prices at the time when those resources are available. When either factor is low, off-system sales revenue is reduced.
Energy Sales: Weather, seasonal customer demand, and economic conditions all impact the amount of electricity that Idaho Power sells as well as the costs it incurs to provide that electricity. Idaho Power's utility revenues are not earned and associated expenses are not incurred evenly during the year. Idaho Power’s retail energy sales typically peak during the summer irrigation and cooling season, with a lower peak in the winter. Extreme temperatures increase sales to customers who use electricity for cooling and heating, and moderate temperatures decrease sales. Increased precipitation levels during the agricultural growing season reduce electricity sales to customers who use electricity to operate irrigation pumps. The table that follows presents Idaho Power’s revenues and sales volumes for the last three years, classified by customer type. Approximately 95 percent of Idaho Power’s general business revenue originates from customers located in Idaho, with the remainder originating from customers located in Oregon. Idaho Power’s operations, including information on energy sales, are discussed further in Part II, Item 7 - MD&A - "Results of Operations - Utility Operations.”
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
General business revenues (thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Residential | $ | 500,195 | $ | 513,914 | $ | 431,555 | ||||||
Commercial | 299,462 | 281,009 | 241,519 | |||||||||
Industrial | 182,675 | 165,941 | 145,054 | |||||||||
Irrigation | 158,654 | 159,242 | 137,424 | |||||||||
Provision for rate refund for sharing mechanism | (7,999 | ) | (7,602 | ) | (7,151 | ) | ||||||
Deferred revenue related to Hells Canyon Complex relicensing AFUDC | (10,706 | ) | (10,776 | ) | (10,636 | ) | ||||||
Total general business revenues | 1,122,281 | 1,101,728 | 937,765 | |||||||||
Off-system sales | 77,165 | 54,473 | 61,534 | |||||||||
Other | 79,205 | 86,897 | 77,426 | |||||||||
Total revenues | $ | 1,278,651 | $ | 1,243,098 | $ | 1,076,725 | ||||||
Energy sales (thousands of MWh) | ||||||||||||
Residential | 4,965 | 5,365 | 5,039 | |||||||||
Commercial | 3,944 | 3,975 | 3,865 | |||||||||
Industrial | 3,217 | 3,182 | 3,133 | |||||||||
Irrigation | 1,966 | 2,097 | 2,048 | |||||||||
Total general business | 14,092 | 14,619 | 14,085 | |||||||||
Off-system sales | 2,220 | 1,683 | 2,183 | |||||||||
Total | 16,312 | 16,302 | 16,268 |
Competition: Idaho Power's electric utility business has historically been recognized as a natural monopoly. Idaho Power's rates for retail electric services are generally determined on a “cost of service” basis. Rates are designed to provide, after recovery of allowable operating expenses including depreciation on capital investments, an opportunity for Idaho Power to earn a reasonable return on investment as authorized by regulators. Alternative methods of generation, including customer-owned solar and other forms of distributed generation, compete with Idaho Power for sales to existing customers. Also, non-utility businesses are developing new technologies and services to help energy consumers manage energy in new ways that could alter demand for Idaho Power's electric energy. Idaho Power also competes with natural gas distribution companies in serving the energy needs of customers for space heating, water heating, and appliances, and with fuel oil providers for space heating.
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Idaho Power also participates in the wholesale energy markets and in the electric transmission markets. Generally, these wholesale markets are regulated by the FERC, which requires electric utilities to transmit power to or for wholesale purchasers and sellers and make available, on a non-discriminatory basis, transmission capacity for the purpose of providing these services.
Power Supply
Overview: Idaho Power primarily relies on company-owned hydroelectric, coal-fired, and gas-fired generation facilities and long-term power purchase agreements to supply the energy needed to serve customers. Market purchases and sales are used to supplement Idaho Power's generation and balance supply and demand throughout the year. Idaho Power’s generating plants and their capacities are listed in Part I, Item 2 - “Properties.”
Weather, load demand, economic conditions, and availability of generation resources impact power supply costs. Idaho Power’s annual hydroelectric generation varies depending on water conditions in the Snake River basin. Drought conditions and increased peak load demand cause a greater reliance on potentially more expensive energy sources to meet load requirements. Conversely, favorable hydroelectric generation conditions increase production at Idaho Power’s hydroelectric generating facilities and reduce the need for thermal generation and wholesale market purchased power. Economic conditions and governmental regulations can affect the market price of natural gas and coal, which may impact fuel expense and market prices for purchased power. Idaho Power has PCA mechanisms in Idaho and Oregon that mitigate in large part the potentially adverse financial statement impacts of volatile fuel and power costs.
Idaho Power’s system is dual peaking, with the larger peak demand occurring in the summer. The all-time system peak demand was 3,407 Megawatts (MW), set on July 2, 2013, and the all-time winter peak demand was 2,527 MW, set on December 10, 2009. During these and other similarly heavy load periods Idaho Power’s system is fully committed to serve load and meet required operating reserves. The table below presents Idaho Power’s total power supply for the last three years:
MWh | Percent of Total Generation | |||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||
(thousands of MWh) | ||||||||||||||||||
Hydroelectric plants | 6,170 | 5,656 | 7,956 | 47 | % | 42 | % | 57 | % | |||||||||
Coal-fired plants | 5,851 | 6,327 | 5,227 | 44 | % | 47 | % | 38 | % | |||||||||
Natural gas fired plants | 1,175 | 1,576 | 676 | 9 | % | 11 | % | 5 | % | |||||||||
Total system generation | 13,196 | 13,559 | 13,859 | 100 | % | 100 | % | 100 | % | |||||||||
Purchased power - cogeneration and small power production | 2,286 | 2,127 | 1,961 | |||||||||||||||
Purchased power - other | 1,867 | 1,775 | 1,709 | |||||||||||||||
Total purchased power | 4,153 | 3,902 | 3,670 | |||||||||||||||
Total power supply | 17,349 | 17,461 | 17,529 |
Hydroelectric Generation: Idaho Power operates 17 hydroelectric projects located on the Snake River and its tributaries. Together, these hydroelectric facilities provide a total nameplate capacity of 1,709 MW and annual generation of approximately 8.5 million Megawatt-hours (MWh) under median water conditions. The amount of hydroelectric power generated depends on several factors—the amount of snow pack in the mountains upstream of Idaho Power’s hydroelectric facilities, reservoir storage, springtime snow pack run-off, river base flows, spring flows, rainfall, the amount and timing of water leases, and other weather and stream flow considerations. Generation at the plants located on the Snake River also depends on the state water rights held by Idaho Power and the long-term sustainability of the Snake River, tributary spring flows, and the Eastern Snake Plain Aquifer that is connected to the Snake River. Idaho Power participates in work groups related to water management issues in Idaho that may affect those water rights and resources with the goal to preserve, to the fullest extent possible, the long-term availability of water for use at Idaho Power’s hydroelectric projects on the Snake River.
During low water years, when stream flows into Idaho Power’s hydroelectric projects are reduced, Idaho Power’s hydroelectric generation is reduced, resulting in a reliance on other generation resources and power purchases. In 2013, below average snow accumulation in the Snake River basin resulted in hydroelectric generation below the 8.5 million MWh historical median. For 2014, significantly low upstream carryover storage hindered the impact of the runoff of near-normal 2014 snow accumulation, resulting in 2014 generation below the historical median. Generation from Idaho Power’s hydroelectric facilities was 6.2
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million MWh in 2014. The Northwest River Forecast Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported that Brownlee Reservoir (part of Idaho Power's Hells Canyon Complex) inflow for April through July 2014 was 3.4 million acre-feet (maf). By comparison, April through July Brownlee Reservoir inflow was 2.6 maf in 2013 and 5.5 maf in 2012. For 2015, Idaho Power estimates generation from its hydroelectric facilities of between 7.0 million MWh and 9.0 million MWh.
Idaho Power obtains licenses for its hydroelectric projects from the FERC, similar to other utilities that operate nonfederal hydroelectric projects on qualified waterways. The licensing process includes an extensive public review process and involves numerous natural resource and environmental issues. The licenses last from 30 to 50 years depending on the size, complexity, and cost of the project. Idaho Power is actively pursuing the relicensing of the Hells Canyon Complex project, its largest hydroelectric generation source. Idaho Power also has three Oregon licenses under the Oregon Hydroelectric Act, which applies to Idaho Power’s Brownlee, Oxbow, and Hells Canyon facilities. For further information on relicensing activities see Part II, Item 7 – MD&A – "Regulatory Matters – Relicensing of Hydroelectric Projects.”
Idaho Power is subject to the provisions of the FPA as a “public utility” and as a “licensee” by virtue of its hydroelectric operations. As a licensee under Part I of the FPA, Idaho Power and its licensed hydroelectric projects are subject to conditions described in the FPA and related FERC regulations. These conditions and regulations include, among other items, provisions relating to condemnation of a project upon payment of just compensation, amortization of project investment from excess project earnings, and possible takeover of a project after expiration of its license upon payment of net investment and severance damages.
Coal-Fired Generation: Idaho Power co-owns the following coal-fired power plants:
• | Jim Bridger located in Wyoming, in which Idaho Power has a one-third interest; |
• | North Valmy located in Nevada, in which Idaho Power has a 50 percent interest; and |
• | Boardman located in Oregon, in which Idaho Power has a 10 percent interest. |
PacifiCorp is the operator of the Jim Bridger power plant. Idaho Power owns a one-third interest in BCC, which owns the mine that supplies coal to the Jim Bridger power plant. The mine, which is operated by PacifiCorp and located near the Jim Bridger plant, operates under a long-term sales agreement that provides for delivery of coal over a 51-year period ending in 2024 from surface and underground sources. Idaho Power believes that BCC has sufficient reserves to provide coal deliveries for at least the term of the sales agreement. Idaho Power also has a coal supply contract providing for annual deliveries of coal through 2017 from the Black Butte Coal Company’s Black Butte mine located near the Jim Bridger plant. This contract supplements the BCC deliveries and provides another coal supply to operate the Jim Bridger plant. The Jim Bridger plant’s rail load-in facility and unit coal train, while limited, provides the opportunity to access other fuel supplies for tonnage requirements above established contract minimums.
NV Energy is the operator of the North Valmy power plant. NV Energy and Idaho Power have contracts with a coal supplier through 2015. Idaho Power's share of these contracts along with existing coal inventory at the plant are expected to meet Idaho Power's projected coal supply needs for 2015 and approximately 60 percent of its supply needs for 2016.
Portland General Electric Company is the operator of the Boardman power plant. Ninety percent of the Boardman plant’s projected coal requirement is under contract for 2015. The Boardman generating plant receives coal through annual contracts with suppliers from the Powder River Basin in northeast Wyoming. In December 2010, the Oregon Environmental Quality Commission approved a plan to cease coal-fired operations at the Boardman power plant no later than December 31, 2020.
Natural Gas-fired Generation: Idaho Power owns and operates the Langley Gulch natural gas-fired combined cycle power plant and the Danskin and Bennett Mountain natural gas-fired simple cycle combustion turbine power plants. All three plants are located in Idaho. The Langley Gulch power plant was placed into service in June 2012.
Idaho Power operates the Langley Gulch plant as a baseload unit and the Danskin and Bennett Mountain plants to meet peak supply needs. The plants are also used to take advantage of wholesale market opportunities. Natural gas for all facilities is purchased based on system requirements and dispatch efficiency. The natural gas is transported through the Williams-Northwest Pipeline under Idaho Power's 55,584 million British thermal units (MMBtu) per day long-term gas transportation service agreements. These transportation agreements vary in contract length, with the latest termination date of May 2042, but with extensions at Idaho Power’s discretion. In addition to the long-term gas transportation service agreements, Idaho Power has entered into a long-term storage service agreement with Northwest Pipeline for 131,453 MMBtu of total storage capacity at the Jackson Prairie Storage Project. This firm storage contract expires in 2043. Idaho Power purchases and stores natural gas with the intent of fulfilling needs as identified for seasonal peaks or to meet system requirements.
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As of December 31, 2014, approximately 5.35 million MMBtu's of natural gas was financially hedged for physical delivery for the operational dispatch of the Langley Gulch plant through July 2015. Idaho Power plans to manage the procurement of additional natural gas for the peaking units on the daily spot market or from storage inventory as necessary to meet system requirements and fueling strategies.
Purchased Power: As described below, Idaho Power purchases power in the wholesale market as well as power pursuant to long-term power purchase contracts and exchange agreements.
Wholesale Market Transactions: To supplement its self-generated power and long-term purchase arrangements, Idaho Power purchases power in the wholesale market based on economics, operating reserve margins, risk management policy limitations, and unit availability. Depending on availability of excess power or generation capacity, pricing, and opportunities in the markets, Idaho Power also sells power in the wholesale markets.
During 2014 and 2013, Idaho Power purchased 1.9 million MWh and 1.8 million MWh of power through wholesale market purchases at an average cost of $49.31 per MWh and $47.91 per MWh, respectively. During 2014 and 2013, Idaho Power sold 2.2 million MWh and 1.7 million MWh of power in wholesale market sales, with an average price of $34.76 per MWh and $32.37 per MWh, respectively.
Long-term Power Purchase and Exchange Arrangements: In addition to its wholesale market purchases, Idaho Power has the following notable firm long-term power purchase contracts and energy exchange agreements:
• | Raft River Energy I, LLC - for up to 13 MW (nameplate generation) from its Raft River Geothermal Power Plant Unit #1 located in southern Idaho. The contract term is through 2033. |
• | Telocaset Wind Power Partners, LLC - for 101 MW (nameplate generation) from its Elkhorn Valley wind project located in eastern Oregon. The contract term is through 2027. |
• | USG Oregon LLC - for 22 MW (estimated average annual output) from the Neal Hot Springs #1 geothermal power plant located near Vale, Oregon. The contract term is through 2037. |
• | Clatskanie People's Utility - for the exchange of up to 18 MW of energy from the Arrowrock hydroelectric project in southern Idaho in exchange for energy from Idaho Power's system or power purchased at the Mid-Columbia trading hub. The initial term of the agreement is through December 31, 2015. Idaho Power has the right to renew the agreement for two additional five-year terms. |
PURPA Power Purchase Contracts: Idaho Power purchases power from PURPA projects as mandated by federal law. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had contracts with on-line PURPA-related projects with a total of 781 MW nameplate generation capacity, with an additional 521 MW nameplate capacity of projects projected to be on-line by June 1, 2017. The power purchase contracts for these projects have original contract terms ranging from one to 35 years. The expense and volume of PURPA project power purchases during the last three years is included in the table below:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
PURPA contract expense (in thousands) | $ | 144,617 | $ | 131,338 | $ | 117,618 | ||||||
MWh purchased under PURPA contracts (in thousands) | 2,286 | 2,127 | 1,961 | |||||||||
Average cost per MWh from PURPA contracts | $ | 63.26 | $ | 61.75 | $ | 59.98 |
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 210 of PURPA, the state regulatory commissions having jurisdiction over Idaho Power have each issued orders and rules regulating Idaho Power’s purchase of power from "qualifying facilities" that meet the requirements of PURPA. A key component of the PURPA contracts is the energy price contained within the agreements. PURPA regulations specify that a utility must pay energy prices based on the utility’s avoided costs. The IPUC and OPUC have established specific rules and regulations to calculate the avoided cost that Idaho Power is required to include in PURPA contracts. For PURPA power purchase agreements:
• | Idaho Power is required to purchase all of the output from the facilities located inside its service territory, subject to some exceptions such as adverse impacts on system reliability. |
• | Idaho Power is required to purchase the output of projects located outside its service territory if it has the ability to receive power at the facility’s requested point of delivery on Idaho Power's system. |
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• | The IPUC jurisdictional portion of the costs associated with PURPA contracts is fully recovered through base rates and the PCA, and the OPUC jurisdictional portion is recovered through general rate case filings and an Oregon PCA mechanism. |
• | IPUC and OPUC jurisdictional regulations have generally provided for PURPA standard contract terms of up to 20 years, though a current docket exists at the IPUC to review contract terms for future agreements. |
• | The IPUC requires Idaho Power to pay "published avoided cost" rates for all wind and solar projects that are smaller than 100 kilowatts (kW) and all other types of projects that are smaller than 10 average MWs. For PURPA qualifying facilities that exceed these size limitations, Idaho Power is required to negotiate an applicable price (premised on avoided costs) based upon IPUC regulations. |
• | The OPUC requires that Idaho Power pay the published avoided costs for all PURPA qualifying facilities with a nameplate rating of 10 MW or less and that Idaho Power negotiate an applicable price (premised on avoided costs) for all other qualifying facilities based upon OPUC regulations. |
Idaho Power, as well as other affected electric utilities, have engaged in proceedings at the IPUC and OPUC relating to PURPA contracts. These proceedings have related to, among other things, appropriate contract term lengths and the prices paid for energy purchased from PURPA projects. Refer to Part II - Item 7 - MD&A - "Regulatory Matters - Renewable Energy Standards and Contracts" for a summary of those proceedings.
Emerging Energy Imbalance Markets: Utilities in the western United States outside the California Independent System Operator (California ISO) have traditionally relied upon a combination of automated and manual dispatch within the hour to balance generation and load to maintain reliable supply. These utilities have limited capability to transact within the hour outside their own borders. In contrast, energy imbalance markets use automated intra-hour economic dispatch of generation from committed resources to serve loads. The California ISO, PacifiCorp, and other parties implemented a new energy imbalance market in the fourth quarter of 2014 (California ISO-PAC EIM) under which the parties enabled their systems to interact for dispatch purposes. Similarly, the Northwest Power Pool (NWPP) Members Market Assessment and Coordination Committee has stated that it intends to implement the Security Constrained Economic Dispatch (NWPP SCED), an intra-hour energy balancing market, in 2016. The California ISO-PAC EIM and the NWPP SCED are similar but not identical approaches to balancing services and each are intended to reduce the costs to serve customers through more efficient dispatch of a larger and more diverse pool of resources, to integrate intermittent power from renewable generation sources more effectively, and to enhance reliability. Participation in both the California ISO-PAC EIM and the NWPP SCED are voluntary and available to all balancing authorities in the western United States. Idaho Power is an active participant in the development stage of the NWPP SCED project and is also evaluating the potential opportunities and challenges associated with the NWPP SCED and the California ISO-PAC EIM.
Transmission Services and Federal Tariff
Electric transmission systems deliver energy from electric generation facilities to distribution systems for final delivery to customers. Transmission systems are designed to move electricity over long distances because generation facilities can be located anywhere from a few miles to hundreds of miles from customers. Idaho Power’s generating facilities are interconnected through its integrated transmission system and are operated on a coordinated basis to achieve maximum capability and reliability. Idaho Power’s transmission system is directly interconnected with the transmission systems of the Bonneville Power Administration, Avista Corporation, PacifiCorp, NorthWestern Energy, and NV Energy. These interconnections, coupled with transmission line capacity made available under agreements with some of those entities, permit the interchange, purchase, and sale of power among entities in the Western Interconnection. Idaho Power provides wholesale transmission service for eligible transmission customers on a non-discriminatory basis. Idaho Power is a member of the WECC, the NWPP, the Northern Tier Transmission Group, and the North American Energy Standards Board. These groups have been formed to more efficiently coordinate transmission reliability and planning throughout the Western Interconnection.
Transmission to serve Idaho Power's retail customers is subject to the jurisdiction of the IPUC and OPUC for retail rate making purposes. Idaho Power provides cost-based wholesale and retail access transmission services under the terms of a FERC approved OATT. Services under the OATT are offered on a nondiscriminatory basis such that all potential customers, including Idaho Power, have an equal opportunity to access the transmission system. As required by FERC standards of conduct, Idaho Power's transmission function is operated independently from Idaho Power's energy marketing function.
Idaho Power is jointly working on the permitting of two significant transmission projects. The Boardman-to-Hemingway line is a proposed 300-mile, 500-kV transmission project between a station near Boardman, Oregon and the Hemingway station near Boise, Idaho. The Gateway West line is a proposed 500-kV transmission project between a station located near Douglas,
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Wyoming and the Hemingway station. Both projects are intended to meet future anticipated resource needs and are discussed in Part II, Item 7 – MD&A - "Liquidity and Capital Resources - Capital Requirements" in this report.
Resource Planning
Integrated Resource Planning: The IPUC and OPUC require that Idaho Power prepare biennially an Integrated Resource Plan (IRP). Idaho Power filed its most recent IRP in June 2013. The IRP seeks to forecast Idaho Power's loads and resources for a 20-year period, analyzes potential supply-side and demand-side resource options, and identifies potential near-term and long-term actions. The four primary goals of the IRP are to:
• | identify sufficient resources to reliably serve the growing demand for energy within Idaho Power's service area throughout the 20-year planning period; |
• | ensure the selected resource portfolio balances cost, risk, and environmental concerns; |
• | give equal and balanced treatment to both supply-side resources and demand-side measures; and |
• | involve the public in the planning process in a meaningful way. |
In February 2014, the IPUC accepted the 2013 IRP for filing and requested that Idaho Power continue monitoring environmental requirements at a national level and account for their impact in resource planning, continue to collaborate with stakeholders on how best to use energy efficiency as a resource, and continue to be actively involved in matters relating to the North Valmy coal-fired power plant and promptly apprise the IPUC of developments that could impact the company's continued reliance on that coal-fired resource. In July 2014, the OPUC acknowledged Idaho Power's short-term action items in the 2013 IRP. However, in its order the OPUC did not acknowledge Idaho Power's investments in selective catalytic reduction emissions technology being installed at the Jim Bridger plant. The OPUC stated that it would undertake a fair and thorough investigation of the prudence of the emissions technology investments at the Jim Bridger plant when Idaho Power seeks rate recovery for the investments.
During the time between IRP filings, the public and regulatory oversight of the activities identified in the IRP allows for discussion and adjustment of the IRP as warranted. Idaho Power makes periodic adjustments and corrections to the resource plan to reflect economic conditions, anticipated resource development, changes in technology, and regulatory requirements.
Idaho Power expects to file the 2015 IRP in June 2015. Idaho Power has begun its 2015 IRP process, initiating the public involvement process and analyzing future anticipated loads. The load forecast Idaho Power expects to use for purposes of the 2015 IRP predicts an average annual growth rate of 1.2 percent for average loads and 1.5 percent for summer peak loads over the 20-year planning horizon from 2015 to 2034. The rate of load growth can impact the timing and extent of development of resources, such as new generation plants or transmission infrastructure, to serve those loads. The load forecast Idaho Power used in the 2013 IRP predicted an average annual growth rate of 1.1 percent for average loads and 1.4 percent for summer peak loads over the 20-year planning horizon from 2013 to 2032.
Recent studies outside of the IRP process that incorporate the potential for additional mandatory PURPA-related power purchases suggest that no peak-hour load deficit exists through 2021 under some circumstances. Thus, Idaho Power expects there may be available near term capacity to accommodate growth from economic development or increases in customers and loads. Idaho Power expects to be able to manage near-term summer peak capacity deficits until completion of the Boardman-to-Hemingway transmission line, which is expected to be in service in 2021 or beyond. If the Boardman-to-Hemingway line is not constructed by the time necessary to meet load demand, Idaho Power will need to identify alternatives to meet future load requirements. Should estimates of higher growth rates materialize, or were there to be a significant increase in loads due to new, unanticipated large-load customers, Idaho Power could be required to adjust its infrastructure development timing and plans accordingly.
Integration of Intermittent Resources: In response to the operational challenges associated with integrating intermittent wind and solar generation that Idaho Power must purchase pursuant to PURPA, and in recognition that the costs and challenges associated with integrating these resources will become even more pronounced as the volume of intermittent resources in Idaho Power's portfolio increases, Idaho Power continues efforts to better understand the effects of wind and solar generation on power system operation. As part of these efforts, Idaho Power has performed wind and solar integration studies aimed at providing insight into the maximum amounts of intermittent generation Idaho Power's system can accommodate without significantly impacting reliability. In further response to the integration challenges, Idaho Power has implemented an internally developed wind forecasting system, in recognition that cost-intensive modifications to operations intended to integrate wind are reduced, though not eliminated, with improved wind production forecasting. Due to the large volumes of solar generation projects being proposed under PURPA, the IPUC recently directed Idaho Power to update the solar integration study, taking
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into account the higher solar penetration levels. Idaho Power expects to complete and file the updated study during 2015. Also due to the large volumes of proposed solar projects, in January 2015 Idaho Power initiated a proceeding at the IPUC regarding the length of contract terms under PURPA contracts, described in Part II - Item 7 - MD&A - "Regulatory Matters."
Energy Efficiency and Demand Response Programs: Idaho Power has 19 energy efficiency and demand response programs targeting energy savings across the entire year and summer system demand reduction. These programs are offered to all customer segments and emphasize the wise use of energy, especially during periods of high demand. This energy and demand reduction can minimize or delay the need for new infrastructure. Idaho Power’s programs include:
• | financial incentives for irrigation customers for either improving the energy efficiency of an irrigation system or installing new energy efficient systems; |
• | energy efficiency for new and existing homes, including efficient appliances and HVAC equipment, energy efficient building techniques, insulation improvement, air duct sealing, and energy efficient lighting; |
• | incentives to industrial and commercial customers for acquiring energy efficient equipment, and using energy efficiency techniques for operational and management processes; |
• | demand response programs to reduce peak summer demand through the voluntary interruption of central air conditioners for residential customers, interruption of irrigation pumps, and reduction of commercial and industrial demand through a third-party demand response aggregator; and |
• | membership in the Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance, which supports market transformation efforts across the region. |
In 2014, Idaho Power’s energy efficiency programs reduced energy usage by approximately 125,000 MWh. For 2014, Idaho Power had a demand response capacity of approximately 390 MW. In 2014 and 2013, Idaho Power expended approximately $37 million and $27 million, respectively, on energy efficiency and demand response programs. Funding for these programs is provided through a combination of the Idaho and Oregon energy efficiency tariff riders, base rates, and the Idaho PCA mechanism.
Environmental Regulation and Costs
Idaho Power's activities are subject to a broad range of federal, state, regional, and local laws and regulations designed to protect, restore, and enhance the quality of the environment. Environmental regulation continues to impact Idaho Power’s operations due to the cost of installation and operation of equipment and facilities required for compliance with environmental regulations, and the modification of system operations to accommodate environmental regulations. In addition to generally applicable regulations, the FERC licenses issued for Idaho Power’s hydroelectric generating plants have numerous environmental requirements, such as the aeration of turbine water to meet dissolved gas and temperature standards in the waters downstream from the plants. Idaho Power monitors these issues and reports the results to the appropriate regulatory agencies. Idaho Power's three coal-fired power plants and three natural gas combustion turbine power plants are also subject to a broad range of environmental requirements, including air quality regulation. For a more detailed discussion of these and other environmental issues, refer to Item 7 – MD&A – "Environmental Matters" in this report.
Environmental Expenditures: Idaho Power’s environmental compliance expenditures will remain significant for the foreseeable future, especially given the additional regulation proposed and under discussion at the federal level. Idaho Power estimates its environmental expenditures, based upon present environmental laws and regulations, will be as follows for the periods indicated, excluding allowance for funds used during construction (AFUDC) (in millions of dollars):
2015 | 2016 - 2017 | |||||||
Capital expenditures: | ||||||||
Studies and measures at hydroelectric facilities | $ | 13 | $ | 28 | ||||
Investments in equipment and facilities at thermal plants | 60 | 27 | ||||||
Total capital expenditures | $ | 73 | $ | 55 | ||||
Operating expenses: | ||||||||
Operating costs for environmental facilities - hydroelectric | $ | 19 | $ | 39 | ||||
Operating costs for environmental facilities - thermal | 12 | 26 | ||||||
Total operations and maintenance | $ | 31 | $ | 65 |
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Idaho Power anticipates that finalization of a number of federal and state rulemakings and other proceedings addressing, among other things, greenhouse gas and particulate emissions, hazardous materials, and endangered species could result in substantially increased operating and compliance costs in addition to the amounts set forth above, but Idaho Power is unable to estimate those costs given the uncertainty associated with potential future regulations.
Environmental Controls Cost Study: In connection with its IRP process, in February 2013 Idaho Power filed with the IPUC and OPUC the results of cost studies and scenario analyses conducted to assess the potential future investments necessary for the continued operation of the Jim Bridger and North Valmy coal-fired generation facilities. The Boardman plant was not included in the study because of the existing schedule to cease coal-fired operations at that plant by the end of 2020. The analysis compared the cost of future compliance with regulations to the cost of replacement generation capacity provided by combined-cycle combustion turbine technology and conversion of the units to natural gas. Because of the speculative nature of many of the future requirements, the analysis was performed under a range of fuel pricing assumptions, carbon cost assumptions, plant upgrade and retirement costs, environmental regulation assumptions, and replacement costs. Idaho Power concluded in its study that the Jim Bridger and North Valmy plants should be retained in its resource portfolio as coal-fired plants, and supports planned investments in environmental controls at those plants. However, Idaho Power will continue to monitor environmental requirements to assess whether environmental control upgrades at the coal-fired plants remain economically appropriate. Continued review of the economic appropriateness of further investment was included in a February 2014 order of the IPUC, in which the IPUC requested that Idaho Power continue monitoring environmental requirements at a national level and account for their impact in resource planning and promptly apprise the IPUC of developments that could impact the company's continued reliance on the North Valmy plant as a coal-fired resource. Idaho Power will continue to work with the plant's co-owner to monitor environmental requirements and costs associated with the plant, and to develop alignment on potential retirement dates for the plant.
Voluntary CO2 Intensity Reduction Goal: Idaho Power continues to prepare for potential legislative and/or regulatory restrictions on emissions in order to help reduce the costs of complying with such restrictions on its customers. To that end, Idaho Power is engaged in voluntary greenhouse gas emissions intensity reduction efforts. In September 2009, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's boards of directors approved guidelines that established a goal to reduce Idaho Power's resource portfolio's average carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions intensity for the 2010 through 2013 time period to a level of 10 to 15 percent below Idaho Power's 2005 CO2 emissions intensity of 1,194 lbs CO2/MWh. Idaho Power's estimated CO2 emissions intensity from its generation facilities, as submitted to the Carbon Disclosure Project, was as follows:
2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | |||||
Emission Intensity (lbs CO2/MWh) | 1,060 | 677 | 871 | 1,129 |
As of the date of this report, emission intensity information for 2014 was not yet available. The combination of effective utilization of hydroelectric projects, above average stream flows in some years, reduced usage of coal-fired facilities, and addition of the Langley Gulch natural gas-fired power plant positioned Idaho Power to extend its CO2 emissions intensity reduction goal period for an additional two years, targeting an average reduction of 10 to 15 percent below its 2005 levels for the entire 2010 through 2015 time period.
IFS
IFS invests in affordable housing developments, which provide a return principally by reducing federal and state income taxes through tax credits and accelerated tax depreciation benefits. IFS has focused on a diversified approach to its investment strategy in order to limit both geographic and operational risk with most of IFS’s investments having been made through syndicated funds. IFS is no longer actively pursuing further investment opportunities, but will continue to maintain and manage its current portfolio of investments. At December 31, 2014, the gross amount of IFS’s portfolio equaled $192 million in tax credit investments. IFS generated tax credits of $5.2 million, $5.5 million, and $5.5 million in 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively.
IDA-WEST
Ida-West operates and has a 50 percent ownership interest in nine hydroelectric projects that have a total generating capacity of 45 MW. Four of the projects are located in Idaho and five are in northern California. All nine projects are “qualifying facilities” under PURPA. Idaho Power purchased all of the power generated by Ida-West’s four Idaho hydroelectric projects at a cost of $9 million each year from 2012 to 2014.
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EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANTS
The names, ages, and positions of the executive officers of IDACORP and Idaho Power are listed below, along with their business experience during at least the past five years. Mr. J. LaMont Keen, a member of IDACORP's and Idaho Power's boards of directors and former President and Chief Executive Officer of IDACORP and Idaho Power, and Mr. Steven R. Keen, are brothers. There are no other family relationships among these officers, nor is there any arrangement or understanding between any officer and any other person pursuant to which the officer was appointed.
Senior Executive Officers (in alphabetical order)
DARREL T. ANDERSON, 56
• | President and Chief Executive Officer of IDACORP, May 1, 2014 - present. |
• | President and Chief Executive Officer of Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2014 - present. |
• | President and Chief Financial Officer of Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2012 - December 31, 2013. |
• | Executive Vice President, Administrative Services and Chief Financial Officer of IDACORP, Inc., October 1, 2009 - April 30, 2014. |
• | Executive Vice President, Administrative Services and Chief Financial Officer of Idaho Power Company, October 1, 2009 - December 31, 2011. |
• | Member of the Boards of Directors of both IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company since September 2013. |
REX BLACKBURN, 59
• | Senior Vice President and General Counsel, IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, April 1, 2009 - present. |
LISA A. GROW, 49
• | Senior Vice President - Power Supply of Idaho Power Company, October 1, 2009 - present. |
STEVEN R. KEEN, 54
• | Senior Vice President - Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer of IDACORP, May 1, 2014 - present. |
• | Senior Vice President - Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer of Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2014 - present. |
• | Vice President - Finance and Treasurer of IDACORP, Inc., June 1, 2010 - April 30, 2014. |
• | Senior Vice President - Finance and Treasurer of Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2012 - December 31, 2013. |
• | Vice President - Finance and Treasurer of Idaho Power Company, June 1, 2010 - December 31, 2011. |
• | Vice President and Treasurer of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, June 1, 2006 - May 31, 2010. |
WARREN KLINE, 59
• | Senior Vice President - Customer Operations of Idaho Power Company, June 1, 2014 - present. |
• | Vice President - Customer Operations of Idaho Power Company, May 20, 2010 - May 31, 2014. |
• | Vice President - Customer Service and Regional Operations of Idaho Power Company, July 20, 2005 - May 19, 2010. |
DANIEL B. MINOR, 57
•Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2012 - present.
•Executive Vice President of IDACORP, Inc., May 20, 2010 - present.
•Executive Vice President - Operations of Idaho Power Company, October 1, 2009 - December 31, 2011.
Other Executive Officers (in alphabetical order)
PATRICK A. HARRINGTON, 54
• | Corporate Secretary of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, March 15, 2007 - present. |
LONNIE KRAWL, 51
• | Vice President and Chief Information Officer of Idaho Power Company, October 1, 2013 - present. |
• | Director of Human Resources of Idaho Power Company, July 25, 2009 - September 30, 2013. |
LUCI K. MCDONALD, 57
• | Vice President - Human Resources and Corporate Services of Idaho Power Company, May 20, 2010 - present. |
• | Vice President - Human Resources and Corporate Services of IDACORP, Inc., May 20, 2010 - December 31, 2011. |
• | Vice President - Human Resources of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, December 6, 2004 - May 19, 2010. |
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KEN W. PETERSEN, 51
• | Vice President, Controller and Chief Accounting Officer of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2014 - present. |
• | Corporate Controller and Chief Accounting Officer of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, May 20, 2010 - December 31, 2013. |
• | Corporate Controller of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, December 29, 2007 - May 19, 2010. |
N. VERN PORTER, 55
• | Vice President - Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2014 - present. |
• | Vice President - Delivery Engineering and Construction of Idaho Power Company, May 17, 2012 - December 31, 2013. |
• | Vice President - Delivery Engineering and Operations of Idaho Power Company, October 1, 2009 - May 16, 2012. |
GREGORY W. SAID, 60
• | Vice President - Regulatory Affairs of Idaho Power Company, January 20, 2011 - present. |
• | General Manager of Regulatory Affairs of Idaho Power Company, April 3, 2010 - January 19, 2011. |
• | Director, State Regulation of Idaho Power Company, August 23, 2008 - April 2, 2010. |
LORI D. SMITH, 54
• | Vice President and Chief Risk Officer of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, May 20, 2010 - present. |
• | Vice President - Corporate Planning and Chief Risk Officer of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, January 1, 2008 - May 19, 2010. |
ITEM 1A. RISK FACTORS
IDACORP and Idaho Power operate in an industry and business environment that involves significant risks, many of which are beyond the companies' control. The circumstances and factors set forth below may have a material impact on the business, financial condition, or results of operations of IDACORP and Idaho Power and could cause actual results or outcomes to differ materially from those discussed in any forward-looking statements. These risk factors, as well as other information in this report and in other reports the companies file with the SEC, should be considered carefully when evaluating IDACORP and Idaho Power.
If the Idaho Public Utilities Commission, the Public Utility Commission of Oregon, or the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission grant less recovery through rates than Idaho Power needs to cover costs and earn a reasonable rate of return, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations may be adversely affected. The prices that the Idaho Public Utilities Commission and Public Utility Commission of Oregon authorize Idaho Power to charge for its retail services, and the tariff rate that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission permits Idaho Power to charge for its transmission services, are generally the most significant factors influencing IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s business, results of operations, and financial condition. The rates ultimately approved by regulators may not match prior or anticipated future expenses, and recovery of expenses may lag behind the occurrence of those expenses. The ratemaking process typically involves multiple intervening parties, including governmental bodies, consumer advocacy groups, and customers, generally with the common objective of limiting rate increases or even reducing rates.
Further, while rate regulation is premised on the assumption that rates will be established that are fair, just, and reasonable, regulators have considerable discretion in applying this standard. The Idaho Public Utilities Commission and the Public Utility Commission of Oregon have the authority to disallow recovery of any costs that they consider unreasonable or imprudently incurred. Collection of costs and capital expenditures through rates often occurs subsequent to the time those costs and expenditures are incurred, resulting in a lag in collection. Idaho Power's regulators may also disagree with Idaho Power's rate calculations under various tracking and decoupling mechanisms, like the power cost adjustment and fixed cost adjustment mechanisms. Regulators may also decide to modify or eliminate these mechanisms, which may make it more difficult for Idaho Power to recover its costs in the rates it charges to customers. Thus, the regulatory process does not assure that Idaho Power will be able to fully recover its costs or achieve the rate of return authorized or contemplated in connection with the ratemaking process. In a number of proceedings in recent years, Idaho Power has been denied recovery, or required to defer recovery pending the next general rate case, including denials or deferrals related to compensation expenses and construction expenditures. In some instances, denial of recovery may cause IDACORP and Idaho Power to record an impairment of those assets. If Idaho Power's costs are not fully and timely recovered through the rates ultimately approved by regulators, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations, and its ability to earn a return on investment and meet financial obligations, could be adversely affected.
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For additional information relating to Idaho Power's regulatory framework and recent regulatory matters, see Part I - Item 1 - "Business - Utility Operations," Note 3 - "Regulatory Matters" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report, and Part II - Item 7 - "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Regulatory Matters" in this report.
Idaho Power's cost recovery deferral mechanisms and methods may not function as intended, which may adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. Idaho Power has power cost adjustment mechanisms in its Idaho and Oregon jurisdictions and a fixed cost adjustment mechanism in Idaho that provide for periodic adjustments to the rates charged to its retail customers. The power cost adjustment mechanisms track Idaho Power’s actual net power supply costs (primarily fuel and purchased power less off-system sales) and compare these amounts to net power supply costs being recovered in retail rates. A majority, but not all, of the variance between these two amounts is deferred for future recovery from, or refund to, customers through rates. Consequently, the power cost adjustment mechanisms only partially offset the potentially adverse financial impacts of forced generating plant outages, severe weather, reduced hydroelectric generation, and volatile wholesale energy prices. When costs rise above the level recovered in current retail rates, it adversely affects Idaho Power’s operating cash flow and liquidity until those costs are recovered from customers. Further, during 2014 the Idaho Public Utilities Commission opened dockets to review the operation of the Idaho power cost adjustment mechanism and the fixed cost adjustment mechanism. Any future modification or elimination of the mechanisms based on these or subsequent proceedings may increase Idaho Power's financial exposure to changes in power costs and collection of fixed costs.
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's business, financial condition, and results of operations may be negatively affected by changes in customer growth or customer usage. Customer growth and customer usage are affected by a number of factors outside of the control of IDACORP and Idaho Power, such as implementation of energy efficiency measures, customer-generated power such as from rooftop solar panels, demand side management requirements, and economic and demographic conditions, such as population changes, job and income growth, housing starts, new business formation or migration, and the overall level of economic activity. The regional economy in which Idaho Power operates is influenced by conditions in the agriculture, recreation, technology, medical, and other industries, and as these conditions change, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's revenues will be impacted. Weak economic conditions may reduce the amount of energy Idaho Power’s customers consume, result in a loss of customers (including large-load industrial and commercial customers) or further decrease the customer growth rate, and increase the likelihood and prevalence of late payments and uncollectible accounts. The adoption of technology by customers can also have both positive and negative impacts on sales. Some new technologies and modern equipment utilize less energy than in the past, while new electric technologies like electric vehicles can create additional demand.
In light of the need to predict future electric power demands and how Idaho Power can meet those demands, Idaho Power prepares and periodically updates a load forecast as part of its integrated resource planning process. In doing so, Idaho Power makes load estimates that are based on a number of factors that are uncertain and difficult to estimate, including those described above. Any unanticipated increase in the demand for energy could result in increased reliance on higher-cost purchased power to meet peak system demand, the need to initiate new demand response and energy efficiency programs, or the need to accelerate investment in additional generation or transmission resources. If the incremental costs associated with the unanticipated changes in loads exceed the incremental revenue received from those sales, and Idaho Power is unable to secure timely and full rate relief to recover those costs, the resulting imbalance could have an adverse effect on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. Decreases in loads also have the potential to adversely affect IDACORP and Idaho Power. A resulting decrease in overall customer usage or collections and slower or negative load growth may delay or decrease capital spending, which can adversely affect Idaho Power's rate base used for establishing customer rates and may reduce revenues, earnings, and cash flows.
Depending on changes in load and infrastructure project timing, Idaho Power may seek to accelerate, scale back, modify, or eliminate projects, or seek alternative projects, to accommodate anticipated resource needs and to help ensure its ability to provide reliable electric service and meet load and transmission capacity obligations. Scaling back or eliminating a project due to regulatory challenges or other factors influencing the feasibility of a project may result in Idaho Power pursuing one or more separate, more costly projects. For instance, if Idaho Power were unable to secure permits or joint funding commitments to develop its 500-kV transmission projects, it may terminate those projects and seek other resources to serve loads. Termination of a project carries with it the potential for a write-off of all or a portion of the costs associated with the project if regulators deem the costs incurred imprudent.
Extreme weather events and their associated impacts can adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. Extreme weather events and their associated impacts (such as fires and high winds) can
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damage generation facilities and disrupt transmission and distribution systems, causing service interruptions and extended outages, increasing supply chain costs, and limiting Idaho Power's ability to meet customer energy demand. The effect of the failure of Idaho Power's facilities to operate as planned under extreme weather conditions is particularly burdensome during peak demand periods, such as hot summer days. Disruption in generation, transmission, and distribution systems due to weather-related factors also increases operations and maintenance expenses and could negatively affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. Economic losses incurred as a result of such events might not be recoverable through customer rates or covered in full by insurance.
New advances in power generation, energy efficiency, or other technologies that impact the power utility industry could decrease revenues. Idaho Power primarily generates power at large central facilities, which results in economies of scale and lower costs than many newer generation technologies. However, the increasing costs of energy have incentivized the development of new technologies for power generation, power storage, and energy efficiency, and further investment in research and development to make those technologies more efficient and cost-effective. For instance, while solar technology remains a relatively high-cost means of power generation, in recent years there have been numerous advancements in the design of solar generation facilities and the materials used in panels that may further increase the efficiency and power output of solar generation sources in a more cost-effective manner. As the cost of the technology has decreased, there has been an increase in adoption of rooftop solar systems by both residential and commercial customers, particularly in areas where electric rates are high and the weather is suitable for solar power systems. There is potential that these alternative power generation systems, particularly if coupled with power storage devices, could become sufficiently cost-effective and efficient that an increasing number of Idaho Power's customers choose to install such systems on their homes or businesses. Additionally, considerable emphasis has been placed on energy efficiency, such as LED lighting. Energy efficiency programs, including programs sponsored by Idaho Power under a directive from state regulatory commissions, are designed to reduce energy demand. If Idaho Power is unable to maintain adequate regulatory mechanisms or develop new mechanisms or rate structures allowing for timely and adequate cost recovery, declining usage would result in under-recovery of fixed costs. Further, widespread adoption of distributed generation and declining usage may decrease the need for electric power supplied by Idaho Power, which would reduce Idaho Power's revenue, potentially result in the impairment of assets that produce and deliver energy, and have a negative impact on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition.
Capital expenditures for infrastructure, risks associated with construction of that infrastructure, and the timing and availability of cost recovery for the expenditures, can significantly affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. Idaho Power’s business is capital intensive and requires significant investments in energy generation, transmission, and distribution infrastructure. A significant portion of Idaho Power’s facilities were constructed many years ago, and thus require periodic upgrades and frequent maintenance. Also, long-term anticipated increases in both the number of customers and the demand for energy require expansion and reinforcement of that infrastructure. For instance, Idaho Power is in the permitting process for two 500-kV transmission line projects, which are intended to help meet future customer energy demands. Construction projects are subject to usual permitting and construction risks that can adversely affect project costs and the completion time. These risks include, as examples:
• | the ability to timely obtain labor or materials at reasonable costs, and defaults by contractors; |
• | equipment, engineering, and design failures; |
• | the effects of adverse weather conditions; |
• | availability of financing; |
• | the ability to obtain and comply with permits and land use rights, and environmental constraints; |
• | delays and costs associated with disputes and litigation with third parties; and |
• | changes in applicable laws or regulations. |
If Idaho Power is unable to complete the construction of a project, or incurs costs that regulators do not deem prudent, it may be unable to recover its costs in full through rates or on a timely basis. In many instances, review by regulators of the prudence of investments will not occur until expenditures have been made. Even if Idaho Power completes a construction project, the total costs may be higher than estimated and/or higher than amounts approved for recovery by regulators. Further, if Idaho Power is unable to secure permits or joint funding commitments to develop transmission infrastructure necessary to serve loads, it may terminate those projects and, as an alternative, seek to develop additional generation facilities within areas where Idaho Power has available transmission capacity or pursue other more costly options to serve loads. To limit the timing-related risks of these projects, Idaho Power may enter into purchase orders and construction contracts and incur engineering and design service costs in advance of receiving necessary regulatory approvals or siting or environmental permits. If any of the projects are canceled for any reason, including Idaho Power's failure to receive necessary regulatory approvals or permits or because the project is no longer economical, Idaho Power could incur significant cancellation penalties under the purchase order or construction contracts. Additionally, termination of a project carries with it the potential for impairment of the associated asset if regulators
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deny full recovery of project costs. Thus, termination of a project could negatively affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations.
IDACORP's and Idaho Power’s businesses are subject to an extensive set of environmental laws, rules, and regulations, which could impact their operations and increase costs of operations, potentially rendering some generating units uneconomical to maintain or operate, and could increase the costs and alter the timing of major projects. A number of federal, state, and local environmental statutes, rules, and regulations relating to air and water quality, natural resources, and health and safety are applicable to IDACORP's and Idaho Power's operations. Many of these laws, including the Environmental Protection Agency's proposed rules under Section 111(d) under the Clean Air Act, are described in Part II - Item 7 - "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations - Environmental Matters" in this report. These laws and regulations generally require IDACORP and Idaho Power to obtain and comply with a wide variety of environmental licenses, permits, and other approvals, including through substantial investment in pollution controls, and may be enforced by both public officials and private individuals. Some of these regulations are pending, changing, or subject to interpretation, and failure to comply may result in penalties, mandatory operational changes, and other adverse consequences, including costs associated with defending against claims by governmental authorities or private parties and complying with new operating requirements.
Environmental regulations have created the need for Idaho Power to install new pollution control equipment at, and may cause Idaho Power to perform environmental remediation on, its owned and co-owned power generation facilities, often at a substantial cost. For instance, Idaho Power is in the process of installing environmental control apparatus in two units of its co-owned Jim Bridger power plant at an estimated cost of $113 million, and may install a second set of control apparatus at two other units at that plant in or around 2021 and 2022. IDACORP and Idaho Power will incur other costs associated with existing environmental regulations, and the companies expect to incur additional costs associated with pending and future environmental regulations, and those costs are likely to be substantial. If the costs of compliance with those new regulations renders the generating facilities uneconomical to maintain or operate, Idaho Power would need to identify alternative resources for power, potentially in the form of new generation and transmission facilities, market power purchases, demand-side management programs, or a combination of these and other methods.
Idaho Power is not guaranteed timely or full recovery of those costs, and regulators may not grant prior approval of cost recovery. For example, in 2013 the Idaho Public Utilities Commission declined to approve Idaho Power's application requesting a binding commitment to provide rate base treatment for Idaho Power's estimated share of the capital investment in environmental control upgrades at the Jim Bridger power plant, instead reserving the prudence determination (and thus ratemaking treatment) for subsequent proceedings. Furthermore, Idaho Power may not be able to obtain or maintain all environmental regulatory approvals necessary for operation of its existing infrastructure or construction of new infrastructure. If there is a delay in obtaining any required environmental regulatory approval or if Idaho Power fails to obtain, maintain, or comply with any such approval, construction and/or operation of Idaho Power's generation or transmission facilities could be delayed, halted, or subjected to additional costs. At the same time, consumer preference for renewable or low greenhouse gas-emitting sources of energy could impact the desirability of generation from existing sources and require significant investment in new generation and transmission resources. If Idaho Power is unable to recover in full these increased costs through the ratemaking process, such under-recovery would negatively impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations.
Relicensing of the Hells Canyon hydroelectric project and construction of the proposed Gateway West and Boardman-to-Hemingway 500-kV transmission lines requires consultation under the Endangered Species Act to determine the effects of these projects on any listed species within the project areas. The presence of sage grouse, which is being considered for listing as an endangered species, in the vicinity of the Gateway West and Boardman-to-Hemingway transmission projects has required more extensive, costly, and time consuming evaluation and engineering. These and other requirements of the Endangered Species Act, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and similar environmental laws may increase costs, adversely affect the timing or ability to complete major projects, and may have an adverse effect on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition.
Factors contributing to lower hydroelectric generation can increase costs and negatively impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. Idaho Power derives a significant portion of its power supply from its hydroelectric facilities. During 2014, 47 percent of Idaho Power's electric power generation was from hydroelectric facilities. Because of Idaho Power’s heavy reliance on hydroelectric generation, snow pack, the timing of run-off, drought conditions, and the availability of water in the Snake River basin can significantly affect its operations. The combination of a long-term trend of declining Snake River base flows, over-appropriation of water, and periods of drought have led to water rights disputes and proceedings among surface water and ground water irrigators and the State of Idaho. Recharging the Eastern Snake Plain
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aquifer by diverting surface water to porous locations and permitting it to sink into the aquifer is one proposed approach to the over-appropriation dispute. Diversions from the Snake River for aquifer recharge or the loss of water rights may further reduce Snake River flows available for hydroelectric generation. When hydroelectric generation is reduced, Idaho Power must increase its use of more expensive thermal generating resources and purchased power; therefore, costs increase and opportunities for off-system sales are reduced, reducing earnings. Through its power cost adjustment mechanisms, Idaho Power expects to recover most of the increase in net power supply costs caused by lower hydroelectric generation. Recovery of the increased costs, however, may not occur until the subsequent power cost adjustment year, negatively affecting cash flows and liquidity.
Conditions imposed in connection with hydroelectric license renewals may require large capital expenditures, increase operating costs, reduce hydroelectric generation, and negatively affect IDACORP's or Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. For the last several years, Idaho Power has been engaged in an effort to renew its federal license for its largest hydroelectric generation source, the Hells Canyon Complex. Relicensing includes an extensive public review process that involves numerous natural resource issues and environmental conditions. The existence of endangered and threatened species in the watershed may result in major operational changes to the region’s hydroelectric projects, which may be reflected in hydroelectric licenses. In addition, new interpretations of existing laws and regulations could be adopted or become applicable to hydroelectric facilities, which could further increase required expenditures for marine life recovery and endangered species protection and reduce the amount of hydroelectric generation available to meet Idaho Power’s energy requirements. One particularly significant issue identified in connection with the Hells Canyon Complex relicensing effort involves water temperature gradients in the Snake River below the Hells Canyon dam. Certain parties in the relicensing proceedings have advocated for the installation of water temperature management apparatus which, if required to be installed, would require substantial capital expenditures to construct and maintain. Idaho Power may be unable to recover in full the costs of such an apparatus through rates, particularly given the magnitude of any potential impact on customer rates. Idaho Power also cannot predict the requirements that might be imposed during the relicensing process, the financial impact of those requirements, or whether a new multi-year license will ultimately be issued. Imposition of onerous conditions in the relicensing process could result in Idaho Power incurring significant capital expenditures, increase operating costs (including power purchase costs), and reduce hydroelectric generation, which could negatively affect results of operations and financial condition.
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's operating results are subject to seasonal fluctuations, and unusually mild or extreme temperatures and weather can impact their results of operations and financial condition. Idaho Power's electric power sales are seasonal, with demand in Idaho Power's service area peaking during the hot summer months, with a secondary peak during the cold winter months. Electric power demands by irrigation customers in Idaho Power's service area, which are impacted by temperatures and the timing and amount of precipitation, among other factors, can also create significant seasonal changes in usage. Seasonality of revenues may be enhanced by Idaho Power's tiered rate structure, under which rates charged to customers are often higher during higher-load periods. Market prices for power also often increase significantly during these peak periods, at times when Idaho Power is required to purchase power in the wholesale markets to meet customer demand. By contrast, when temperatures are relatively mild or where precipitation supplants irrigation systems, loads are often lower as customers are not using electricity for heating and air conditioning or irrigation purposes. Thus, unusually mild weather or the timing and extent of precipitation can cause IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition to fluctuate seasonally and from year to year.
Complying with renewable portfolio standards could increase capital expenditures and operating costs and adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. Renewable portfolio standards require that electricity providers obtain a minimum percentage of their power from renewable energy sources by a specified date. Idaho Power’s operations in Oregon will be required to comply with a 10 percent renewable portfolio standard beginning in 2025, and it is possible that other states, including Idaho, could adopt renewable portfolio standards. The cost of purchasing or generating power from renewable energy sources is often greater than fossil fuel and hydroelectric generation sources, and construction of renewable energy facilities involves significant capital expenditures. As a result, new state or federal renewable portfolio standards could increase capital expenditures and operating costs and negatively affect results of operations and financial condition. In accordance with a renewable energy certificate management plan on file with the Idaho Public Utilities Commission, Idaho Power currently sells the renewable energy certificates it receives in connection with its power purchases from some renewable energy generation resources, using the proceeds to benefit customers. Enactment of a renewable portfolio standard in Idaho would cause Idaho Power to retain and retire some or all of those renewable energy certificates rather than sell them for the benefit of customers, and could thus result in increased rates.
Idaho Power’s use of coal and natural gas to fuel power generation facilities exposes it to commodity availability and price risk, which can adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. As part of its
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normal business operations, Idaho Power purchases coal and natural gas in the open market or under short-term or long-term contracts, often with variable-pricing terms. Market prices for coal and natural gas are influenced by factors impacting supply and demand such as weather conditions, fuel transportation availability, economic conditions, and changes in technology. Following the completion of the Langley Gulch natural gas-fired power plant, Idaho Power has become more dependent on natural gas for a portion of its electric generating capacity. Natural gas transportation to Idaho Power's natural gas plants is limited to one primary pipeline, presenting a heightened possibility of supply constraint and disruptions separate from the risk of counterparty default. Most of Idaho Power's coal supply arrangements are under long-term contracts for coal originating in Wyoming, and thus Idaho Power is exposed to risk of disruption of coal production in, or transportation from, that region. Idaho Power may from time to time enter into new, or renegotiate, these long-term contracts, but can provide no assurance that such contracts will be negotiated or renegotiated, as the case may be, on satisfactory terms, or at all. There also can be no assurance that counterparties to the coal supply agreements will fulfill their obligations to supply coal, and they may experience financial or technical problems that inhibit their ability to deliver coal. The coal supply agreements also contain terms that allow the coal suppliers to curtail the delivery of coal in certain circumstances, such as in the event of a natural disaster.
Defaults by coal and natural gas suppliers may cause Idaho Power to seek alternative, and potentially more costly, sources of fuel or rely on other generation sources or wholesale market power purchases. Idaho Power may not be able to fully recover these increased costs through rates or its power cost adjustment mechanisms, which may adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations.
Historically, natural gas prices have tended to be more volatile than prices for other fuel sources. Recently, however, the availability of natural gas from shale production has lessened both natural gas prices and price volatility. Market power prices are impacted in part by the availability and cost of natural gas -- as the price of natural gas falls, other market participants that utilize natural gas-fired generation will be able to generate and sell into the wholesale markets electricity at increasingly competitive prices, which could decrease Idaho Power's off-system sales revenues.
Idaho Power’s generation, transmission, and distribution facilities are subject to numerous operational risks unique to it and its industry. Operating risks associated with Idaho Power's generation, transmission, and distribution facilities include equipment failures, volatility in fuel and transportation pricing, interruptions in fuel supplies, increased regulatory compliance costs, labor disputes, accidents and workforce safety matters, release of hazardous or toxic substances into the air, water, or ground, acts of terrorism or sabotage, the loss of cost-effective disposal options for solid waste such as coal ash, operator error, and the occurrence of catastrophic events at the facilities. Diminished availability or performance of those facilities could result in reduced customer satisfaction, reputational harm, and regulatory inquiries and fines. Operation of Idaho Power's owned and co-owned generating stations below expected capacity levels, or unplanned outages at these stations, could cause reduced energy output and lower efficiency levels and result in lost revenues and increased expenses for alternative fuels or wholesale market power purchases. Accidents, electrical contacts, fires, explosions, catastrophic failures, general system damage or dysfunction, and other unplanned events related to Idaho Power's infrastructure would increase repair costs and may expose Idaho Power to claims for personal injury or property damage. Further, the transmission system in Idaho Power's service territory is constrained, limiting the ability to transmit electric energy within the service territory and access electric energy from outside the service territory during high-load periods. Idaho Power's transmission facilities are also interconnected with those of third parties, and thus operation of Idaho Power's and third parties' facilities could be adversely affected by unexpected or uncontrollable events. These transmission constraints and events could result in failure to provide reliable service to customers and the inability to deliver energy from generating facilities to the power grid, or not being able to access lower cost sources of electric energy, which could have a negative effect on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations.
As discussed in Item 1 - "Business" in this report, in the fourth quarter of 2014 new energy imbalance markets began to emerge in the western United States. The energy imbalance markets are intended to allow for automated near real-time dispatch of generation resources. Idaho Power has not yet joined the energy imbalance markets and cannot predict the ultimate impact, whether positive or negative, that the energy imbalance markets will have on its ability to make economic off-system sales and purchase power in the market. There is potential that, whether Idaho Power joins an energy imbalance market or not, Idaho Power's off-system sales will decrease or purchased power costs will increase, which could adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition.
Volatility in the financial markets, or denial of regulatory authority to issue debt or equity securities, may negatively affect IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s ability to access capital and/or increase their cost of borrowing, or result in losses on investments. IDACORP and Idaho Power use short-term and long-term debt as a significant source of liquidity and funding for capital requirements not satisfied by operating cash flow. In a volatile credit environment IDACORP and Idaho Power may be unable to issue short-term or long-term debt at reasonable interest rates or at all, one or more of the participating banks in IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s credit facilities may default on their obligations to make loans under, or may withdraw from,
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the credit facilities, or IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s access to capital may otherwise be inhibited. In addition, at times Idaho Power has a relatively large balance of short-term investments. Volatility in the financial markets may result in a lack of liquidity for short-term investments and declines in value of some investments. The occurrence of any of these events could affect Idaho Power's ability to execute its business plan and adversely affect IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s results of operations and financial condition.
Idaho Power is required to obtain regulatory approval in Idaho, Oregon, and Wyoming in order to borrow money or to issue securities and is therefore dependent on the public utility commissions of those states to issue favorable orders in a timely manner to permit them to finance their operations and capital expenditures. Notably, without additional approval from those commissions, the aggregate amount of short-term borrowings by Idaho Power at any one time outstanding may not exceed $450 million. IDACORP's and Idaho Power's credit facilities include financial covenants that limit the amount of debt that can be outstanding as a percentage of total capital. Idaho Power's long-term debt has also been issued under an indenture that contains a number of financial covenants. Failure to maintain these covenants could preclude IDACORP and Idaho Power from issuing commercial paper, borrowing under their credit facilities, or issuing long-term debt, and could trigger a default and repayment obligation under debt instruments, which could adversely impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and liquidity.
A downgrade in IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s credit ratings could affect the companies’ ability to access capital, increase their cost of borrowing, and require the companies to post collateral with transaction counterparties. Access to capital markets is important to IDACORP's and Idaho Power's ability to operate and to complete capital projects. Credit rating agencies periodically review the corporate credit ratings and long-term ratings of IDACORP and Idaho Power. These ratings are premised on financial ratios and performance, the regulatory environment and mechanisms, management and their effectiveness, resource risks and power supply costs, and other factors. These ratings impact access to, and the cost of, borrowing. IDACORP and Idaho Power also have borrowing arrangements that rely on the ability of the banks to fund loans or support commercial paper, a principal source of short-term financing. Downgrades of IDACORP’s or Idaho Power’s credit ratings, or those affecting relationship banks, could limit the companies’ ability to access short- and long-term capital under reasonable terms or at all, require the companies to pay a higher interest rate on their debt, and require the companies to post additional performance assurance collateral with transaction counterparties.
Idaho Power’s risk management policy and programs relating to economically hedging commodity exposures and credit risk may not always perform as intended, and as a result IDACORP and Idaho Power may suffer economic losses. Idaho Power enters into transactions to hedge its positions in coal, natural gas, power, and other commodities, and enters into financial hedges to mitigate in part exposure to variable commodity prices. IDACORP and Idaho Power could recognize financial losses as a result of volatility in the market value of these contracts or if a counterparty fails to perform. The derivative instruments might not offset the underlying exposure being mitigated as intended, due to pricing inefficiencies or other terms of the derivative instruments, and any such failure to mitigate exposure could result in financial losses. Further, forecasts of future fuel needs and loads and available resources to meet those loads are inherently uncertain and may cause Idaho Power to over- or under-hedge actual resource needs, exposing the company to market risk on the over- or under-hedged position. To the extent that commodity markets are illiquid, Idaho Power may not be able to execute its risk management strategies, which could result in undesired over-exposure to unhedged positions. As a result, risk management actions, or the failure or inability to manage commodity price and counterparty risk, may adversely affect IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s financial condition and results of operations.
Idaho Power could be subject to penalties and operational changes if it violates mandatory reliability and security requirements, which could adversely impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. As an owner and operator of a bulk power transmission system, Idaho Power is subject to mandatory reliability standards issued by the North American Electric Reliability Corporation and enforced by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. The standards are based on the functions that need to be performed to ensure the bulk power system operates reliably and are guided by reliability and market interface principles. Compliance with reliability standards subjects Idaho Power to higher operating costs and increased capital expenditures. Idaho Power has received in recent years notices of violations from, and regularly self-reports reliability standard compliance issues to, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, and the Western Electricity Coordinating Council, as applicable. Potential monetary and non-monetary penalties for a violation of Federal Energy Regulatory Commission regulations may be substantial, and in some circumstances monetary penalties may be as high as $1 million per day per violation. The imposition of penalties on Idaho Power for its actual or alleged failure to comply with reliability and security requirements could have a negative effect on its and IDACORP’s results of operations and financial condition.
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Federally mandated purchases of power from renewable energy projects, and integration of power generated from those projects into Idaho Power's system, may increase costs and decrease system reliability, and adversely affect Idaho Power's and IDACORP's results of operations and financial condition. An abundance of intermittent, non-dispatchable generation from renewable energy projects interconnected with Idaho Power's system during times when Idaho Power has available lower-cost resources to meet load demands has an impact on the operation of Idaho Power's hydroelectric generation plants, system reliability, power supply costs, and the wholesale power markets in the Pacific Northwest. Idaho Power's purchases of power from certain renewable energy projects, which Idaho Power is generally obligated to purchase under federal law regardless of the then-current load demand, availability of lower cost generation resources, or wholesale energy market prices, increase the likelihood and frequency that Idaho Power will be required to reduce output from its lower-cost hydroelectric and fossil fuel-fired generation resources, increasing power purchase costs and customer rates. Further, balancing load and generation from Idaho Power's power generation portfolio is challenging, and Idaho Power expects that its operational costs will continue to increase as a result of its efforts to integrate intermittent, non-dispatchable generation from a large number of renewable energy projects. Idaho Power anticipates that costs will escalate as the volume of intermittent wind and solar generation on its system increases, which may negatively affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition.
The performance of pension and postretirement benefit plan investments and other factors impacting plan costs and funding obligations could adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations - primarily cash flows and liquidity. Idaho Power provides a noncontributory defined benefit pension plan covering most employees, as well as a defined benefit postretirement benefit plan (consisting of health care and death benefits) that covers eligible retirees. Costs of providing these benefits are based in part on the value of the plans' assets and, therefore, adverse investment performance for these assets could increase Idaho Power’s plan costs and funding requirements related to the plans. The key actuarial assumptions that affect funding obligations are the expected long-term return on plan assets and the discount rate used in determining future benefit obligations. Idaho Power evaluates the actuarial assumptions on an annual basis, taking into account changes in market conditions, trends, and future expectations. Estimates of future equity and debt market performance, changes in interest rates, and other factors Idaho Power and its actuary firms use to develop the actuarial assumptions are inherently uncertain, and actual results could vary significantly from the estimates. Changes in demographics, including timing of retirements or changes in life expectancy assumptions, may also increase Idaho Power's plan costs and funding requirements. Future pension funding requirements and the timing of funding payments are also subject to the impacts of changes in legislation. Depending on the timing of contributions to the plans and Idaho Power's ability to recover costs through rates, cash contributions to the plans could reduce the cash available for the companies' businesses and payment of dividends. For additional information regarding Idaho Power's funding obligations under its benefit plans, see Note 11 - "Benefit Plans" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
As a holding company, IDACORP does not have its own operating income and must rely on the cash flows from its subsidiaries to pay dividends and make debt payments. IDACORP is a holding company with no significant operations of its own, and its primary assets are shares or other ownership interests of its subsidiaries, primarily Idaho Power. IDACORP’s subsidiaries are separate and distinct legal entities and have no obligation to pay any amounts to IDACORP, whether through dividends, loans, or other payments. The ability of IDACORP’s subsidiaries to pay dividends or make distributions to IDACORP depends on several factors, including each subsidiary's actual and projected earnings and cash flow, capital requirements and general financial condition, regulatory restrictions, covenants contained in credit facilities to which they are parties, and the prior rights of holders of their existing and future first mortgage bonds and other debt or equity securities. Further, the amount and payment of dividends is at the discretion of the board of directors, which may reduce or cease payment of dividends at any time. See Note 6 - "Common Stock" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report for a further description of restrictions on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's payment of dividends.
Employee workforce factors, including the impacts of an aging workforce with specialized utility-specific functions, could increase costs and adversely affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. Idaho Power is subject to workforce factors, including loss or retirement of key personnel, availability of qualified personnel, an aging workforce, and impacts of efforts to organize the workforce. Idaho Power’s operations require a skilled workforce to perform specialized utility functions. Many of these positions, such as linemen, grid operators, and generation plant operators, require extensive, specialized training. Idaho Power expects that a significant portion of its skilled workforce will be retiring within the current decade, which will require Idaho Power to attract, train, and retain new employees to help prevent a loss of institutional knowledge and avoid a skills gap. Without a skilled workforce, Idaho Power’s ability to provide reliable service to its customers and meet regulatory requirements will be challenging, which could negatively affect earnings. The costs associated with attracting and retaining appropriately qualified employees to replace an aging and skilled workforce could also have a negative effect on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations.
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IDACORP and Idaho Power are subject to costs and other effects of legal and regulatory proceedings, disputes, and claims. From time to time in the normal course of business IDACORP and Idaho Power are subject to various lawsuits, regulatory proceedings, disputes, and claims that could result in adverse judgments or settlements, fines, penalties, injunctions, or other adverse consequences. These matters are subject to a number of uncertainties, and as a result management is often unable to predict the outcome of a matter. As an example, over the past decade Idaho Power has been a party to proceedings relating to high prices for electricity, energy shortages, and blackouts in California and in western wholesale markets during 2000 and 2001, which caused numerous purchasers of electricity in those markets to initiate proceedings seeking refunds or other forms of relief and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to initiate its own investigations. While Idaho Power has largely disposed of direct claims in those proceedings, the settlements and associated Federal Energy Regulatory Commission orders did not eliminate the potential for speculative "ripple claims," which involve potential claims for refunds from an upstream seller of power based on a finding that its downstream buyer was liable for refunds as a seller of power during the relevant period. Idaho Power's settlement payments in those proceedings have been relatively small to date, but the legal costs of defending the claims over the past decade have been substantial. In recent years, Idaho Power has also been a party to legal proceedings advanced by private parties relating to alleged violations of environmental statutes and regulations at its co-owned coal-fired plants. The legal costs and final resolution of matters in which IDACORP or Idaho Power are involved could have a negative effect on their financial condition and results of operations. Similarly, the terms of resolution could require the companies to change their business practices and procedures, including the nature and extent of operation of generation facilities, which could also have a negative effect on their financial positions and results of operations.
Acts or threats of terrorism, cyber attacks, security breaches, and other acts of individuals or groups seeking to disrupt Idaho Power's operations or the electric power grid could negatively impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. Idaho Power operates in an industry that requires the continuous use and operation of sophisticated information technology systems and network infrastructure. Idaho Power's generation and transmission facilities and its grid operations are potential targets for terrorist acts and threats, as well as cyber attacks and other disruptive activities of individuals or groups. Some of Idaho Power's facilities are deemed "critical infrastructure," in that incapacity or destruction of the facilities could have a debilitating impact on security, reliability or operability of the bulk electric power system, national economic security, national public health or safety, or any combination of those matters. The possibility that infrastructure facilities, such as generation facilities and electric transmission facilities, would be direct targets of, or indirect casualties of, an act of terror or cyber attack (whether originating internally or externally) may affect Idaho Power's operations by limiting the ability to generate, purchase, or transmit power. These events, and governmental actions in response, could result in a material decrease in revenues and significant additional costs to protect, repair, and insure Idaho Power's assets, and could further adversely affect Idaho Power's operations by contributing to disruption of supplies and markets for natural gas or coal used to fuel gas- or coal-fired power plants.
In the normal course of business, Idaho Power collects, processes, and retains sensitive and confidential customer and employee information and the proprietary information of both Idaho Power and third parties. Cyber attacks have evolved to become increasingly sophisticated and difficult to detect in recent years. Despite the cyber security measures in place, Idaho Power's networks and infrastructure could be vulnerable to security breaches, data leakage, or other similar events that could interrupt operations, expose Idaho Power to liability, and require that Idaho Power remedy the security breaches. Those breaches and events may result from acts of Idaho Power employees, contractors, or third parties. Separate from liability to third parties and information owners, if Idaho Power's information technology and security systems were to fail or be breached and Idaho Power were unable to recover the systems and/or data in a timely manner, Idaho Power may be unable to fulfill critical business functions.
Changes in tax laws and regulations, or differing interpretation or enforcement of applicable laws by the Internal Revenue Service or other taxing jurisdictions, could have a material adverse impact on IDACORP’s or Idaho Power’s financial condition and results of operations. IDACORP and Idaho Power must make judgments and interpretations about the application of the law when determining the provision for taxes. Amounts of tax-related assets and liabilities involve judgments and estimates of the timing and probability of recognition of income, deductions, and tax credits, which are subject to challenge by taxing authorities. The companies’ tax obligations include income, real estate, public utility, municipal, sales and use, business and occupation, employment-related taxes, and Canadian goods and services and provincial taxes, and ongoing issues related to these taxes. In recent years, tax settlements, as well as state regulatory mechanisms with tax-related provisions (such as Idaho Power's 2011 regulatory settlement stipulation with the Idaho Public Utilities Commission, which has been extended, with modifications, for future periods), have significantly impacted IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations. The outcome of ongoing and future income tax proceedings, or the state public utility commissions' treatment of those tax outcomes, could differ materially from the amounts IDACORP and Idaho Power record prior to conclusion of those proceedings, and the difference could negatively affect IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s earnings and cash flows. Further, in some instances the treatment from a ratemaking perspective of any tax benefits could be different than IDACORP or Idaho
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Power anticipate or request from applicable state regulatory commissions, which could have a negative effect on their financial condition and results of operations.
Changes in accounting standards or rules may impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial results and disclosures. The Financial Accounting Standards Board and the Securities and Exchange Commission may make changes to accounting standards that impact presentation and disclosures of financial condition and results of operations. Further, new accounting orders issued by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission could significantly impact IDACORP's and Idaho Power's reported financial condition. Idaho Power meets conditions under generally accepted accounting principles to reflect the impact of regulatory decisions in its financial statements and to defer certain costs as regulatory assets until those costs are collected in rates, and to defer some items as regulatory liabilities. If recovery of these amounts ceases to be probable, if Idaho Power determines that it no longer meets the criteria for applying regulatory accounting, or if accounting rules change to no longer provide for regulatory assets and liabilities, Idaho Power could be required to eliminate some or all of those regulatory assets or liabilities. Any of these circumstances could result in write-offs and have a material effect on IDACORP's and Idaho Power’s financial condition and results of operations.
ITEM 1B. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS
None.
ITEM 2. PROPERTIES
Idaho Power's properties consist of the physical assets necessary to support its utility operations, which include generation, transmission, and distribution facilities, as well as coal assets that support one of its coal-fired generation plants. In addition to these physical assets, Idaho Power has rights-of-way and water rights that enable it to use its facilities. Idaho Power’s system is comprised of 17 hydroelectric generating plants located in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon, three natural gas-fired plants in southern Idaho, and interests in three coal-fired steam electric generating plants located in Wyoming, Nevada, and Oregon. As of December 31, 2014, the system also includes approximately 4,858 pole-miles of high-voltage transmission lines, 24 step-up transmission substations located at power plants, 24 transmission substations, 10 switching stations, 222 energized distribution substations (excluding mobile substations and dispatch centers), and approximately 27,072 pole-miles of distribution lines.
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Idaho Power holds FERC licenses for all of its hydroelectric projects that are subject to federal licensing. Relicensing of Idaho Power’s hydroelectric projects is discussed in Item 7 - MD&A – "Regulatory Matters – Relicensing of Hydroelectric Projects.” Idaho Power's hydroelectric projects and other owned and co-owned generating facilities and their nameplate capacities are listed below:
Project | Nameplate Capacity (kW)(1) | License Expiration | ||||
Hydroelectric Projects: | ||||||
Properties Subject to Federal Licenses: | ||||||
Lower Salmon | 60,000 | 2034 | ||||
Bliss | 75,000 | 2034 | ||||
Upper Salmon | 34,500 | 2034 | ||||
Shoshone Falls | 12,500 | 2034 | ||||
CJ Strike | 82,800 | 2034 | ||||
Upper Malad - Lower Malad | 21,770 | 2035 | ||||
Brownlee - Oxbow - Hells Canyon (Hells Canyon Complex) | 1,166,900 | 2005 | (2) | |||
Swan Falls | 27,170 | 2042 | ||||
American Falls | 92,340 | 2025 | ||||
Cascade | 12,420 | 2031 | ||||
Milner | 59,448 | 2038 | ||||
Twin Falls | 52,897 | 2040 | ||||
Other Hydroelectric: | ||||||
Clear Lakes - Thousand Springs | 11,300 | |||||
Total Hydroelectric | 1,709,045 | |||||
Steam and Other Generating Plants: | ||||||
Jim Bridger (coal-fired)(3) | 770,501 | |||||
North Valmy (coal-fired)(3) | 283,500 | |||||
Boardman (coal-fired)(3)(4) | 64,200 | |||||
Danskin (gas-fired) | 270,900 | |||||
Langley Gulch (gas-fired) | 318,452 | |||||
Bennett Mountain (gas-fired) | 172,800 | |||||
Salmon (diesel-internal combustion) | 5,000 | |||||
Total Steam and Other | 1,885,353 | |||||
Total Generation | 3,594,398 | |||||
(1) Actual generation capacity from a facility may be greater or less than the rated nameplate generation capacity. | ||||||
(2) Licensed on an annual basis while the application for a new multi-year license is pending. | ||||||
(3) Idaho Power’s ownership interests are 33 percent for Jim Bridger, 50 percent for Valmy, and 10 percent for Boardman. Amounts shown represent Idaho Power’s share. | ||||||
(4) Pursuant to an Oregon Environmental Quality Commission plan and associated rules, the Boardman power plant is scheduled for cessation of coal-fired operations by December 31, 2020. |
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's headquarters are located in Boise, Idaho. The corporate headquarters campus is comprised of approximately 306,000 square feet of owned office space and approximately 51,000 square feet of leased office space. Excluding Idaho Power's power generation facilities and substations, Idaho Power owns an additional 605,000 square feet of office, warehouse, and industrial space to support its operations in Idaho and Oregon.
Idaho Power owns all of its interests in principal plants and other important units of real property, except for portions of certain projects licensed under the FPA and reservoirs and other easements. Substantially all of Idaho Power’s property is subject to the lien of its Mortgage and Deed of Trust and the provisions of its project licenses. Idaho Power’s property is subject to minor defects common to properties of such size and character that it believes do not materially impair the value to, or the use by, Idaho Power of such properties. Idaho Power considers its properties to be well-maintained and in good operating condition.
Idaho Energy Resources Co. owns a one-third interest in BCC and coal leases near the Jim Bridger generating plant in Wyoming from which coal is mined and supplied to the plant. Ida-West holds 50-percent interests in nine hydroelectric plants that have a total generating capacity of 45 MW. These plants are located in Idaho and California.
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ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Refer to Note 10 – “Contingencies” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
ITEM 4. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURES
Information concerning mine safety violations or other regulatory matters required by Section 1503(a) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and Item 104 of Regulation S-K (17 CFR 229.104) is included in Exhibit 95.1 of this report.
PART II
ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT’S COMMON EQUITY, RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS, AND ISSUER PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES
IDACORP’s common stock, without par value, is traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). On February 13, 2015, there were 10,872 holders of record of IDACORP common stock and the closing stock price was $61.55 per share. The outstanding shares of Idaho Power’s common stock, $2.50 par value, are held by IDACORP and are not traded. IDACORP became the holding company of Idaho Power on October 1, 1998.
IDACORP and Idaho Power paid dividends of $89 million, $79 million, and $69 million in 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively.
The amount and timing of dividends paid on IDACORP’s common stock are within the discretion of IDACORP’s board of directors, subject to other restrictions. The board of directors reviews the dividend rate quarterly to determine its appropriateness in light of IDACORP’s current and long-term financial position and results of operations, capital requirements, rating agency requirements, contractual and regulatory restrictions, legislative and regulatory developments affecting the electric utility industry in general and Idaho Power in particular, competitive conditions, and any other factors the board of directors deems relevant. The ability of IDACORP to pay dividends on its common stock is dependent upon dividends paid to it by its subsidiaries, primarily Idaho Power. At its November 2011 meeting, the IDACORP board of directors adopted a dividend policy for IDACORP that provides for a target long-term dividend payout ratio of between 50 and 60 percent of sustainable IDACORP earnings, with the flexibility to achieve that payout ratio over time and to adjust the payout ratio or to deviate from the target payout ratio from time to time based on the various factors that drive the board of director's dividend decisions. Notwithstanding the dividend policy adopted by IDACORP's board of directors, the dividends IDACORP pays remain in the discretion of the board of directors who, when evaluating the dividend amount, will take into account the foregoing factors, among others.
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's payment of dividends is subject to a number of restrictions. For information relating to those restrictions, see Note 6 - “Common Stock” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
The following table shows the reported high and low sales price of IDACORP’s common stock and dividends paid for 2014 and 2013 as reported by the NYSE:
2014 | 2013 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Quarter | High | Low | Dividends paid per share | High | Low | Dividends paid per share | ||||||||||||||||||
1st | $ | 56.65 | $ | 50.21 | $ | 0.43 | $ | 48.53 | $ | 43.13 | $ | 0.38 | ||||||||||||
2nd | 57.86 | 52.91 | 0.43 | 50.16 | 46.03 | 0.38 | ||||||||||||||||||
3rd | 58.79 | 51.70 | 0.43 | 54.74 | 45.62 | 0.38 | ||||||||||||||||||
4th | 70.05 | 53.39 | 0.47 | 53.99 | 47.57 | 0.43 |
During 2014, 2013, and 2012, Idaho Power paid dividends to its parent, IDACORP, in the amounts shown in Idaho Power's Consolidated Statements of Retained Earnings included in this report.
IDACORP did not repurchase any shares of its common stock during the fourth quarter of 2014.
Performance Graph
The graph below shows a comparison of the five-year cumulative total shareholder return for IDACORP common stock, the S&P 500 Index, and the Edison Electric Institute (EEI) Electric Utilities Index. The data assumes that $100 was invested on
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December 31, 2009, with beginning-of-period weighting of the peer group indices (based on market capitalization) and monthly compounding of returns.
Source: Bloomberg and EEI
2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | |||||||||||||||||||
IDACORP | $ | 100.00 | $ | 119.85 | $ | 141.72 | $ | 149.76 | $ | 184.97 | $ | 243.49 | ||||||||||||
S&P 500 | 100.00 | 115.08 | 117.47 | 136.24 | 180.33 | 204.96 | ||||||||||||||||||
EEI Electric Utilities Index | 100.00 | 107.04 | 128.43 | 131.11 | 148.17 | 191.00 |
The foregoing performance graph and data shall not be deemed “filed” as part of this Form 10-K for purposes of Section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 or otherwise subject to the liabilities of that section and shall not be deemed incorporated by reference into any other filing of IDACORP or Idaho Power under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, except to the extent IDACORP or Idaho Power specifically incorporates it by reference into such filing.
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ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA
IDACORP, Inc. | ||||||||||||||||||||
SUMMARY OF OPERATIONS | ||||||||||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars, except per share amounts and statistics) | ||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2011 | 2010 | ||||||||||||||||
Operating revenues | $ | 1,282,524 | $ | 1,246,214 | $ | 1,080,662 | $ | 1,026,756 | $ | 1,036,029 | ||||||||||
Operating income | 253,696 | 291,742 | 242,602 | 155,352 | 191,811 | |||||||||||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 193,480 | 182,417 | 173,014 | 169,981 | 145,018 | |||||||||||||||
Diluted earnings per share | 3.85 | 3.64 | 3.46 | 3.43 | 3.00 | |||||||||||||||
Dividends declared per share | 1.76 | 1.57 | 1.37 | 1.20 | 1.20 | |||||||||||||||
Financial Condition: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total assets | 5,716,853 | 5,364,563 | 5,291,290 | 4,925,319 | 4,635,304 | |||||||||||||||
Long-term debt (including current portion) | $ | 1,615,502 | $ | 1,616,322 | $ | 1,537,696 | $ | 1,488,614 | $ | 1,610,859 | ||||||||||
Financial Statistics: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Times interest charges earned: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Before tax(1) | 3.38 | 3.87 | 3.41 | 2.48 | 2.78 | |||||||||||||||
After tax(2) | 3.19 | 3.06 | 3.02 | 3.00 | 2.69 | |||||||||||||||
Book value per share(3) | $ | 38.85 | $ | 36.84 | $ | 34.73 | $ | 32.76 | $ | 30.51 | ||||||||||
Market-to-book ratio(4) | 170 | % | 141 | % | 125 | % | 129 | % | 121 | % | ||||||||||
Payout ratio(5) | 46 | % | 43 | % | 40 | % | 35 | % | 40 | % | ||||||||||
Return on year-end common equity(6) | 9.9 | % | 9.9 | % | 9.9 | % | 10.4 | % | 9.6 | % | ||||||||||
The financial statistics listed above are calculated in the following manner: | ||||||||||||||||||||
(1) The sum of interest on long-term debt, other interest expense excluding AFUDC credits, and income before income taxes divided by the sum of interest on long-term debt and other interest expense excluding AFUDC credits. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(2) The sum of interest on long-term debt, other interest expense excluding AFUDC credits, and income from continuing operations divided by the sum of interest on long-term debt and other interest expense excluding AFUDC credits. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(3) Total equity, excluding non-controlling interests, at the end of the year divided by shares outstanding at the end of the year. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(4) The closing price of IDACORP stock on the last day of the year divided by the book value per share, which is described in footnote (3) above. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(5) Dividends paid per common share divided by diluted earnings per share. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(6) Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. divided by total equity, excluding non-controlling interests, at the end of the year. |
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ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
INTRODUCTION
In Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (MD&A), the general financial condition and results of operations for IDACORP, Inc. and its subsidiaries (collectively, IDACORP) and Idaho Power Company and its subsidiary (collectively, Idaho Power) are discussed. While reading the MD&A, please refer to the accompanying consolidated financial statements of IDACORP and Idaho Power. Also refer to "Cautionary Note Regarding Forward-Looking Statements" and Part I - Item 1A - "Risk Factors" in this report for important information regarding forward-looking statements made in this MD&A and elsewhere in this report.
IDACORP is a holding company formed in 1998 whose principal operating subsidiary is Idaho Power. IDACORP’s common stock is listed and trades on the New York Stock Exchange under the trading symbol “IDA”. Idaho Power is an electric utility with a service territory covering approximately 24,000 square miles in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon. Idaho Power provided electric service to approximately 516,000 general business customers as of December 31, 2014. As a regulated utility, many of Idaho Power's fundamental business decisions are subject to the approval of governmental agencies. Idaho Power is under the jurisdiction (as to rates, service, accounting, and other general matters of utility operation) of the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (IPUC), the Public Utility Commission of Oregon (OPUC), and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). The IPUC and OPUC determine the rates that Idaho Power charges to its retail customers. Idaho Power is also under the regulatory jurisdiction of the IPUC, the OPUC, and the Public Service Commission of Wyoming as to the issuance of debt and equity securities. As a public utility under the Federal Power Act, Idaho Power has authority to charge market-based rates for wholesale energy sales under its FERC tariff and to provide transmission services under its open access transmission tariff (OATT). Idaho Power uses general rate cases, cost adjustment mechanisms, tariff riders, and subject-specific filings to recover its costs of providing service and the costs of its energy efficiency and demand-response programs, and to seek to earn a return on investment.
Idaho Power generates revenues and cash flows primarily from the sale and distribution of electricity to customers in its Idaho and Oregon service territories, as well as from the wholesale sale and transmission of electricity. Idaho Power’s revenues and income from operations are subject to fluctuations during the year due to the impacts of seasonal weather conditions on demand for electricity, availability of water for hydroelectric generation, price changes, customer usage patterns (which are affected in large part by the condition of the economy across the service territory), and the availability and price of purchased power and fuel. Idaho Power experiences its highest retail energy sales during the summer irrigation and cooling season, with a lower peak in the winter that generally results from heating demand. IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s financial condition are also affected by regulatory decisions through which Idaho Power seeks to recover its costs on a timely basis and earn an authorized return on investment, and by the ability to obtain financing through the issuance of debt and/or equity securities.
IDACORP’s other subsidiaries include IDACORP Financial Services, Inc. (IFS), an investor in affordable housing and other real estate investments; Ida-West Energy Company, an operator of small hydroelectric generation projects that satisfy the requirements of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA); and IDACORP Energy Services Co., which is the former limited partner of, and successor by merger to, IDACORP Energy L.P., a marketer of energy commodities that wound down operations in 2003. Idaho Power is the parent of Idaho Energy Resources Co. (IERCo), a joint venturer in Bridger Coal Company (BCC), which mines and supplies coal to the Jim Bridger generating plant owned in part by Idaho Power.
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EXECUTIVE OVERVIEW
Management's Outlook
In recent years Idaho Power has seen positive growth in its customer count and associated positive impacts on Idaho Power's revenue. To encourage responsible and sustainable growth, and as part of its planning for the future, Idaho Power actively participates in and supports state and local economic development initiatives. At the same time that Idaho Power pursues customer growth, it must also plan for that growth. Idaho Power's biennial Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) seeks to identify cost-effective and responsible means for Idaho Power to address future customer demand for electricity. Preparation of the 2015 IRP is underway and is expected to be completed by the end of the second quarter of 2015. Recent infrastructure investments and future anticipated infrastructure projects are intended to help Idaho Power both provide reliable service to existing customers and meet projected future customer growth. Idaho Power has invested significant capital in recent years to maintain and replace aging assets and to build for the future. Idaho Power expects to continue these significant levels of capital investment going forward. Idaho Power's noteworthy capital projects include the replacement of aging assets, upgrades to generation plants, a multi-year plan for replacement of underground conductor, ongoing system upgrades, and continued progress on permitting the Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West 500-kV transmission lines. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power estimates total capital expenditures of approximately $1.5 billion over the next five years.
Idaho Power operates within what it believes to be a constructive regulatory framework, achieved through general rate cases, subject-specific rate filings, tariff riders, and cost recovery mechanisms that share risks and benefits with Idaho Power customers. To further complement these efforts, Idaho Power has also been focusing on controlling power supply, operating, maintenance, and capital costs through process review and improvement initiatives, and by empowering employees to identify new means to reduce costs, increase efficiencies, and enhance individual and enterprise performance for the benefit of IDACORP's shareholders, Idaho Power's customers, and other stakeholders. Based on its assessment, as of the date of this report Idaho Power does not expect to file an application for a general rate change in Idaho or Oregon during 2015.
Another area of recent focus has been IDACORP's dividend. In November 2011, IDACORP's board of directors adopted a target dividend payout ratio of between 50 and 60 percent of sustainable IDACORP earnings. From 2012 through 2014, IDACORP's board of directors has approved a collective 57 percent increase in the quarterly dividend, from $0.30 to $0.47 per share. Idaho Power's need and ability to construct infrastructure, the availability of timely regulatory recovery of costs associated with that construction, and IDACORP's earnings, among other factors discussed elsewhere in this report, all influence dividend decisions. A number of positive outcomes in those areas have been important elements that IDACORP's board of directors has considered in its recent dividend decisions.
2014 Accomplishments and 2015 Initiatives
IDACORP’s business strategy emphasizes Idaho Power as IDACORP’s core business. For the past several years, Idaho Power has been implementing its three-part strategy of responsible planning, responsible development and protection of resources, and responsible energy use to ensure adequate energy supplies. This strategy is described in Part I, Item 1 - "Business" of this report. Examples of IDACORP's and Idaho Power's achievements during 2014 under its three-part business strategy include:
• | achieved net income growth for a seventh consecutive year; |
• | extended (with modifications) the December 2011 Idaho settlement stipulation to provide potential earnings support for 2015 through 2019; |
• | executed on business optimization initiatives, focusing on improving operations and controlling expenditures; |
• | managed through planned retirements, natural attrition, and business optimization, while scoring in the top quartile of a benchmark employee engagement survey; |
• | implemented Safety4Life—an initiative to increase employee safety awareness and improve employee safety behaviors and practices, and maintained Occupational Safety and Health Administration recordable injury rates well below utility industry national averages; |
• | continued progress toward the permitting of the Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West 500-kV transmission projects, including the issuance of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's (BLM) draft environmental impact statement for the Boardman-to-Hemingway project in December 2014; |
• | remained on target to meet its goal to reduce average CO2 emissions intensity by 10 to 15 percent below 2005 emissions for the six-year period 2010 through 2015; and |
• | improved Idaho Power's ranking from 29 to 17 in the annual "40 Best Energy Companies" list published by Public Utilities Fortnightly. |
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For 2015, in addition to its specific infrastructure and regulatory projects noted above, Idaho Power has established a number of organizational initiatives, including the following:
• | emphasize and enhance its enterprise safety culture; |
• | actively manage costs and the ability to fund planned capital investments by optimizing business practices; |
• | continue innovative approaches to regulatory strategy; |
• | promote economic development through collaboration with the states of Idaho and Oregon to attract new businesses and expand existing businesses that utilize Idaho Power's available capacity and generation resources; |
• | focus on operational excellence through responsible resource planning, by matching resources to customer loads, managing the impacts of environmental regulations, maintaining Idaho Power's hydroelectric base, and enhancing power quality and reliability, and customer satisfaction; |
• | continue progress toward federal relicensing for the Hells Canyon Complex (HCC) hydroelectric facility and permitting of the 500-kV transmission projects; |
• | address issues related to the integration of renewable generation resources on the system grid; |
• | actively participate in the process for shaping carbon emission regulation for the electric utility industry; and |
• | address workforce attrition associated with anticipated retirements, using targeted succession planning and development programs. |
Overview of General Factors and Trends Affecting Results of Operations and Financial Condition
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition are affected by regulatory, operational, weather-related, economic, and other factors, many of which are described below.
Timely Regulatory Cost Recovery: The price that Idaho Power is authorized to charge for its electric service is a critical factor in determining IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition. Because of the significant impact of ratemaking decisions, and in furtherance of its goal of advancing a purposeful regulatory strategy, Idaho Power has focused on timely recovery of its costs through filings with the company's regulators, and on the prudent management of expenses and investments.
One of the most notable regulatory developments during 2014 was the IPUC's October 2014 approval of a regulatory settlement stipulation extending, with modifications, a December 2011 settlement stipulation that permitted Idaho Power to amortize additional accumulated deferred investment tax credits (ADITC) to help achieve a minimum 9.5 percent Idaho-jurisdictional return on year-end equity (Idaho ROE) in 2012, 2013, and 2014, subject to prescribed limits and conditions. The October 2014 settlement stipulation allows for Idaho Power's amortization of up to a total of $45 million of additional ADITCs for the period from 2015 through 2019 to help achieve a minimum 9.5 percent Idaho ROE for an applicable year, subject to prescribed limits and conditions. Like the December 2011 settlement stipulation, the new settlement stipulation provides for the sharing between Idaho Power and Idaho customers of Idaho-jurisdictional earnings in excess of specified levels of Idaho ROE. While providing no assurance that Idaho Power will obtain a 9.5 percent Idaho ROE in any of the years, IDACORP and Idaho Power believe the ability to amortize additional ADITC under the settlement stipulation provides an element of earnings stability for 2015 and potentially the next several years.
Another item that Idaho Power believes is representative of its active approach to regulatory matters was the IPUC's approval during 2014 of Idaho Power's request to shift recovery of approximately $99 million in Idaho-jurisdiction power supply expenses historically collected through the PCA mechanism to collection via base rates. While approval of the application results in no net change in the amount collected through base rates and the PCA mechanism in the aggregate, approval of the application will decrease the amount of any base rate increase requested in Idaho Power's next general rate case application filed with the IPUC.
The October 2014 settlement stipulation, base level power supply expense order, and other significant rate proceedings during 2012, 2013, and 2014 are described in "Regulatory Matters" in this MD&A. Important regulatory matters are also discussed in Note 3 - "Regulatory Matters" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
Economic Conditions and Customer/Load Growth: Idaho Power monitors a number of economic indicators, including employment statistics, growth in customer numbers, foreclosure rates, and other housing-related data on a national and state scale and within Idaho Power's service territory. Economic conditions can impact consumer demand for electricity, collectability of accounts, the volume of off-system sales, and the need to construct and improve infrastructure, purchase power, and implement programs to meet customer load demands. Idaho Power has in recent years observed what it believes to be a number of positive economic factors in its service territory. For example:
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• | Based on Idaho Department of Labor preliminary data, the total number of persons employed in the service area in December 2014 was 459,531, compared with 452,666 in December 2013, and the associated unemployment rate for the service area was 3.6 percent, compared with 5.3 percent in December 2013. The U.S. rate stood at 5.6 percent in December 2014, according to U.S. Department of Labor data. |
• | Gross area product for Idaho Power's service area, as reported by Moody's Analytics, grew by 1.9 percent for 2014. Moody's forecasts, as of January 14, 2015, 3.1 percent and 3.5 percent growth in gross area product for 2015 and 2016, respectively. |
• | Customer growth from 2013 to 2014 was 1.4 percent. |
• | A number of businesses have recently constructed, or are in the process of constructing, sizable facilities in Idaho Power's service territory, including office and manufacturing complexes, particularly in the food processing industry. |
Based on recent economic data, Idaho Power predicts that customer growth within its service area will continue to be positive. Idaho Power's most recent load forecast predicts a 1.4 percent five-year compound annual growth rate in residential loads and a 2.1 percent five-year compound annual growth rate in residential customers. For longer-term resource planning purposes, Idaho Power expects to include in its 2015 IRP, to be filed with the IPUC and OPUC in June 2015, a forecasted long-term annual residential customer growth rate of 1.6 percent, an increase over the 1.4 percent residential customer growth rate used in the 2013 IRP. These projected residential customer growth rates are improvements over the 1.0 percent growth rate experienced the past 5 years, but less than the 2.3 percent growth rate realized over the past 20 years.
Should the updated estimates of higher growth rates materialize, or if there is a significant increase in loads due to new, unanticipated large-load customers, growth would exceed the projections and Idaho Power could be required to adjust its infrastructure development timing and plans accordingly.
Weather Conditions and Associated Impacts: Weather and agricultural growing conditions have a significant impact on energy sales and the seasonality of those sales. Relatively low and high temperatures result in greater energy use for heating and cooling, respectively. During the agricultural growing season, which in large part occurs during the second and third quarters, irrigation customers use electricity to operate irrigation pumps, and weather conditions can impact the timing and degree of use of those pumps. Idaho Power also has tiered rates and seasonal rates, which contribute to increased revenues during higher-load periods, most notably during the third quarter of each year when overall customer demand is highest. In 2014, weather-related sales fluctuations were less dramatic than during the abnormally cold first quarter of 2013 and abnormally hot third quarter of 2013.
Idaho Power's hydroelectric facilities comprise nearly one-half of Idaho Power's nameplate generation capacity. However, the availability and volume of hydroelectric power generated depends on several factors - the snow pack levels in the mountains upstream of Idaho Power's facilities, reservoir storage, springtime snow pack run-off, base flows in the Snake River, spring flows, rainfall, water leases and other water rights, and other weather and stream flow considerations. Idaho Power's hydroelectric generation during 2014 was 6.2 million megawatt-hours (MWh), compared with actual generation of 5.7 million MWh in 2013 and 8.0 million MWh in 2012. Since 1928, the resource-adjusted median annual hydroelectric generation is 8.5 million MWh. For 2015, Idaho Power estimates generation from its hydroelectric facilities of between 7.0 million MWh and 9.0 million MWh.
When hydroelectric generation is reduced, Idaho Power must rely on more expensive generation sources and purchased power. Most of the increase in power supply costs is collected from customers through the Idaho and Oregon PCA mechanisms. Conversely, in periods of greater hydroelectric generation most of the resulting decrease in power supply costs that typically occurs is returned to customers through the PCA mechanisms. When favorable hydroelectric generating conditions exist for Idaho Power, they also may exist for other Pacific Northwest hydroelectric facility operators – increasing the available supply of lower-cost power, lowering regional wholesale market prices, and impacting the revenue Idaho Power receives from off-system sales of its excess power. Conversely, when hydroelectric generating conditions are poor, wholesale market prices may be higher due to lower supply, but Idaho Power would generally have less surplus energy available for sale into the wholesale markets at those times. Much of the adverse or favorable impact of this volatility is addressed through the PCA mechanisms.
Fuel and Purchased Power Expense: In addition to hydroelectric generation, Idaho Power relies significantly on coal and natural gas to fuel its generation facilities and power purchases in the wholesale markets. Fuel costs are impacted by electricity sales volumes, the terms of contracts for fuel, Idaho Power's generation capacity, the availability of hydroelectric generation resources, transmission capacity, energy market prices, and Idaho Power's hedging program for managing fuel costs. Operation of Idaho Power's Langley Gulch power plant, placed into operation in June 2012, has increased Idaho Power's use of natural gas as a generation fuel and thus its exposure to volatility in natural gas prices.
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Purchased power costs are impacted by the terms of contracts for purchased power, the rate of expansion of alternative energy generation sources such as wind or solar energy, and wholesale energy market prices. Idaho Power is required by law to purchase power from some PURPA generation projects at a specified price regardless of the then-current load demand or wholesale energy market prices. This increases the likelihood that Idaho Power will at times be required to reduce output from its lower-cost hydroelectric and fossil fuel-fired generation resources and may be required to sell in the wholesale power market the power it purchases from PURPA projects at a significant loss. Softened market prices due to PURPA impacts also decrease Idaho Power's excess power sales. The proceeds from off-system sales lower overall power supply costs. Integration of intermittent, non-dispatchable resources (such as wind or solar energy) into Idaho Power's portfolio also creates a number of complex operational challenges and risks that Idaho Power must address. Notably, integration of these sources of power into Idaho Power's portfolio does not eliminate Idaho Power's need to construct facilities and infrastructure that provide reliable power. For instance, at the time Idaho Power reached its all-time system peak demand of 3,407 MW on July 2, 2013, wind resources on Idaho Power's system, representing roughly 675 MW of nameplate capacity, were contributing only 57 MW of power due to lack of wind. Increases in federally mandated PURPA power purchases have contributed to increases in customer rates.
The Idaho and Oregon PCA mechanisms mitigate in large part the potential adverse impacts of fluctuations in power supply costs to Idaho Power, including substantially all of the Idaho-jurisdiction PURPA power purchase costs. Idaho Power also uses physical and financial forward contracts for both electricity and fuel and other hedging strategies in order to manage the risks relating to fuel and power price exposures.
Regulatory and Environmental Compliance Costs: Idaho Power is subject to extensive federal and state laws, policies, and regulations, as well as regulatory actions and audits by agencies and quasi-governmental agencies, including the FERC and the North American Electric Reliability Corporation. Compliance with these requirements directly influences Idaho Power's operating environment and affects Idaho Power's operating costs. Potential fines and monetary awards that result from a violation of, and costs associated with operational changes that are necessary to comply with, applicable laws or regulations may be substantial. Accordingly, Idaho Power has in place numerous compliance policies and initiatives to help ensure compliance, and periodically evaluates and updates those policies and initiatives.
Environmental laws and regulations in particular may, among other things, increase the cost of operating generation plants and constructing new facilities, require that Idaho Power install additional pollution control devices at existing generating plants, or require that Idaho Power cease operating certain generation plants. For instance, the Boardman coal-fired power plant, in which Idaho Power owns a 10-percent interest, is scheduled to cease coal-fired operations by the end of 2020, the decision for which was driven in large part by the substantial cost of environmental controls required by existing regulations. Idaho Power expects to spend a considerable amount on environmental compliance and controls in the next decade. As legislation and regulations concerning greenhouse gas emissions develop, including the proposed rule under Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act, Idaho Power will continue to actively participate in the rulemaking process.
Other Notable Matters and Areas of Focus
Water Management and Relicensing of the Hells Canyon Hydroelectric Project: Because of Idaho Power's reliance on stream flow in the Snake River and its tributaries, Idaho Power participates in numerous proceedings and venues that may affect its water rights, seeking to preserve the long-term availability of its rights for use at its hydroelectric projects. Also, Idaho Power is involved in renewing its federal license for the HCC, its largest hydroelectric generation source. Relicensing involves numerous environmental issues and substantial costs. Idaho Power is working with the states of Idaho and Oregon, federal and state regulatory authorities, and interested parties to address concerns and take appropriate measures relating to the relicensing of the HCC. However, given the number of parties and issues involved, Idaho Power's relicensing costs have been and will continue to be substantial, and the terms of, and costs associated with, any resulting license are not currently determinable.
Transmission Projects: Idaho Power continues to focus on expansion of its transmission system in an effort to enhance system reliability and access to wholesale markets. Its most notable transmission projects in progress are the proposed Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West 500-kV transmission projects. In January 2012, Idaho Power entered into cost-sharing arrangements with third parties for the permitting phases of both projects. Construction of these projects cannot commence until all federal, state, and local regulatory requirements are met. As it relates to the Boardman-to-Hemingway project, for which Idaho Power is the project manager, environmental requirements and regulations (particularly relating to sage grouse) for the siting process have changed significantly since commencement of the project, making permitting for the transmission line more difficult. This has resulted in project delays and increased permitting costs. In light of the delays and siting impediments that have occurred and are expected to continue, Idaho Power estimates that the in-service date for the Boardman-to-
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Hemingway line would be 2021 or beyond. The Boardman-to-Hemingway line remains Idaho Power's preferred resource alternative, as identified in Idaho Power's 2013 IRP.
Summary of 2014 Financial Results
The following is a summary of Idaho Power's net income, net income attributable to IDACORP, and IDACORP's earnings per diluted share for the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012 (in thousands, except earnings per share amounts):
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Idaho Power net income | $ | 189,387 | $ | 176,741 | $ | 168,168 | ||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | $ | 193,480 | $ | 182,417 | $ | 173,014 | ||||||
Average outstanding shares – diluted (000’s) | 50,199 | 50,126 | 50,010 | |||||||||
IDACORP, Inc. earnings per diluted share | $ | 3.85 | $ | 3.64 | $ | 3.46 |
The table below provides a reconciliation of net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. for year ended December 31, 2014 to the year ended December 31, 2013 (items are in millions and are before tax unless otherwise noted):
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. - December 31, 2013 | $ | 182.4 | ||||||
Change in Idaho Power net income: | ||||||||
Decreased sales volumes attributable to usage per customer, net of associated power supply costs and PCA mechanism impacts | $ | (38.1 | ) | |||||
Increased sales volumes attributable to customer growth, net of associated power supply costs and PCA mechanism impacts | 9.1 | |||||||
Increased labor-related expenses | (4.6 | ) | ||||||
Increased depreciation, property tax, and other (net) | (3.8 | ) | ||||||
Greater sharing-related costs reflected as pension expense and revenue sharing | (0.6 | ) | ||||||
Decrease in Idaho Power operating income | (38.0 | ) | ||||||
Increase in allowance for funds used during construction (AFUDC) | 3.9 | |||||||
Gains on sale of investments in 2013, not repeated in 2014 | (11.6 | ) | ||||||
Changes in other non-operating income and expenses | 1.6 | |||||||
Decreased income taxes due to tax method changes for years prior to 2014 | 29.1 | |||||||
Decreased income taxes due to greater capitalized repairs deduction in 2014 | 7.8 | |||||||
Decreased other income tax expense | 19.8 | |||||||
Total increase in Idaho Power net income | 12.6 | |||||||
Other net changes (net of tax) | (1.5 | ) | ||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. - December 31, 2014 | $ | 193.5 |
IDACORP's net income increased $11.1 million for the year ended December 31, 2014 when compared with 2013. Idaho Power's operating income decreased by $38.0 million for 2014 compared with 2013. Lower overall usage per customer, primarily due to a return to moderate weather conditions in 2014 compared with 2013, decreased operating income by $38.1 million. These weather-related decreases were partially offset by increased sales volumes associated with continued growth in the number of Idaho Power customers, which increased operating income by $9.1 million when compared with 2013. The number of Idaho Power's general business customers increased by 1.4 percent from December 31, 2013 to December 31, 2014. Increases in labor-related expenses, depreciation, property taxes, and other items combined to decrease operating income by $8.4 million in 2014 when compared with 2013.
In 2014, Idaho Power recorded a $3.9 million increase in AFUDC related to greater average construction work in progress, while in 2013 it recorded a gain of $11.6 million related to the sale of investments in securities that was not repeated in 2014. The net decrease in income tax expense of $56.7 million more than offset the lower pre-tax income in 2014.
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Effect of Income Taxes and Tax Method Changes on Results
Income tax accounting method changes for years prior to 2014 increased net income by $29.1 million for 2014 when compared with 2013. In 2013, Idaho Power recorded $4.6 million of income tax expense as a result of a cumulative method change adjustment related to its capitalized repairs deduction for generation assets for years prior to 2013. By contrast, during 2014, Idaho Power recorded an income tax benefit of $24.5 million related to finalization of its method change adjustment for generation assets for years prior to 2014 as well as modifications to its overall capitalized repairs deduction tax method as agreed to with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS). The income tax benefit related to Idaho Power's 2014 capitalized repairs deduction was $7.8 million greater than 2013, due to the impact of the method changes and the amount and type of 2014 capital additions. Income tax expense at Idaho Power not related to method changes was $19.8 million lower in 2014 than in 2013, primarily due to lower pre-tax earnings in 2014.
Effect of Sharing Mechanism on Results
During 2014, Idaho Power recorded a total of $24.7 million related to a December 2011 Idaho regulatory settlement agreement, which requires sharing with Idaho customers of a portion of 2014 earnings exceeding a 10.0 percent Idaho ROE. In accordance with the terms of the settlement agreement, of the $24.7 million, $16.7 million was recorded as additional pension expense and $8.0 million was recorded as a provision against current revenues to be refunded to customers through a future rate reduction. Idaho Power recorded similar amounts in 2013. A total of $118 million in earnings has been shared with Idaho customers through sharing mechanisms since 2009. The settlement agreement is described further in "Regulatory Matters" in this MD&A. The impact of sharing on 2014 and 2013 results is reflected in the following table (in millions):
2014 | 2013 | Variance | ||||||||||
Additional pension expense funded through sharing | $ | (16.7 | ) | $ | (16.5 | ) | $ | (0.2 | ) | |||
Provision against current revenue as a result of sharing | (8.0 | ) | (7.6 | ) | (0.4 | ) | ||||||
Total | $ | (24.7 | ) | $ | (24.1 | ) | $ | (0.6 | ) |
Key Operating and Financial Metric Estimates for 2015
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's estimates, as of the date of this report, for 2015 metrics are as follows:
2015 Estimate | 2014 Actual | |||||
Idaho Power Operating & Maintenance Expense (millions) | $340-$350 | $ | 355 | |||
Idaho Power Additional Amortization of ADITC (millions) | None | None | ||||
Idaho Power Capital Expenditures, excluding AFUDC (millions) | $300-$310 | $ | 265 | |||
Idaho Power Hydroelectric Generation (MWh) | 7.0-9.0 | 6.2 |
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RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
This section of the MD&A takes a closer look at the significant factors that affected IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s earnings. In this analysis, the results for 2014 are compared with 2013 and the results for 2013 are compared with 2012. In the MD&A, MWh and dollar amounts in tables, other than earnings per share, are in thousands unless otherwise indicated.
Utility Operations
The table below presents Idaho Power’s energy sales and supply (in thousands of MWh) for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | |||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||
General business sales | 14,092 | 14,619 | 14,085 | ||||||
Off-system sales | 2,220 | 1,683 | 2,183 | ||||||
Total energy sales | 16,312 | 16,302 | 16,268 | ||||||
Hydroelectric generation | 6,170 | 5,656 | 7,956 | ||||||
Coal generation | 5,851 | 6,327 | 5,227 | ||||||
Natural gas and other generation | 1,175 | 1,576 | 676 | ||||||
Total system generation | 13,196 | 13,559 | 13,859 | ||||||
Purchased power | 4,153 | 3,902 | 3,670 | ||||||
Line losses | (1,037 | ) | (1,159 | ) | (1,261 | ) | |||
Total energy supply | 16,312 | 16,302 | 16,268 |
Sales Volume and Generation: In 2014, general business sales volume decreased by 0.5 million MWh, or 4 percent, compared with the prior year, mostly related to decreased residential customer usage attributable to more moderate weather conditions in 2014 compared with 2013. Industrial customer usage increased when compared with the prior year, partially offsetting the overall decrease in general business sales volumes. Off-system sales volume increased by 0.5 million MWh, or 32 percent, in 2014 as small increases in output from hydroelectric resources, a decrease in general business customer load, and favorable wholesale market conditions increased surplus power available for sale.
Hydroelectric generation provided 47 percent of Idaho Power’s total system generation during 2014. Hydroelectric generation in 2014 was 73 percent of the annual median generation of 8.5 million MWh, which is based on median hydrologic conditions as derived from the Snake River Basin historical stream flow record normalized to reflect the current level of water resource development. The below-average hydroelectric generation during 2012 through 2014 resulted from relatively low snow pack and spring season run-off in the Snake River basin during the three-year period.
The small increase in hydroelectric generation during 2014 compared with 2013 contributed to decreased utilization of coal-fired and natural-gas fired generation.
The financial impacts of fluctuations in off-system sales, purchased power, fuel expense, and other power supply-related expenses are addressed in Idaho Power's Idaho and Oregon PCA mechanisms, which are described later in this MD&A.
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General Business Revenues: The table below presents Idaho Power’s general business revenues, MWh sales, and number of customers for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Revenue | ||||||||||||
Residential | $ | 500,195 | $ | 513,914 | $ | 431,555 | ||||||
Commercial | 299,462 | 281,009 | 241,519 | |||||||||
Industrial | 182,675 | 165,941 | 145,054 | |||||||||
Irrigation | 158,654 | 159,242 | 137,424 | |||||||||
Total | 1,140,986 | 1,120,106 | 955,552 | |||||||||
Provision for sharing | (7,999 | ) | (7,602 | ) | (7,151 | ) | ||||||
Deferred revenue related to HCC relicensing AFUDC(1) | (10,706 | ) | (10,776 | ) | (10,636 | ) | ||||||
Total general business revenues | $ | 1,122,281 | $ | 1,101,728 | $ | 937,765 | ||||||
Volume of Sales (MWh) | ||||||||||||
Residential | 4,965 | 5,365 | 5,039 | |||||||||
Commercial | 3,944 | 3,975 | 3,865 | |||||||||
Industrial | 3,217 | 3,182 | 3,133 | |||||||||
Irrigation | 1,966 | 2,097 | 2,048 | |||||||||
Total MWh sales | 14,092 | 14,619 | 14,085 | |||||||||
Number of customers at year-end | ||||||||||||
Residential | 428,294 | 422,188 | 416,020 | |||||||||
Commercial | 67,522 | 66,734 | 65,920 | |||||||||
Industrial | 121 | 115 | 119 | |||||||||
Irrigation | 19,826 | 19,398 | 19,045 | |||||||||
Total customers | 515,763 | 508,435 | 501,104 |
(1) As part of its January 30, 2009 general rate case order, the IPUC allowed Idaho Power to recover AFUDC for the HCC relicensing asset even though the relicensing process is not yet complete and the relicensing asset has not been placed in service. Idaho Power expects to collect approximately $10.7 million annually in the Idaho jurisdiction, but is deferring revenue recognition of the amounts collected until the license is issued and the asset is placed in service under the new license.
Changes in rates and changes in customer demand are the primary causes of fluctuations in general business revenue from period to period. See "Regulatory Matters" in this MD&A for a list of rate changes implemented over the last three years. The primary influence on changes in customer demand for electricity is weather conditions. Extreme temperatures increase sales to customers who use electricity for cooling and heating, while moderate temperatures decrease sales. Precipitation levels and the timing of precipitation during the agricultural growing season affect sales to customers who use electricity to operate irrigation pumps. Rates are seasonally adjusted and based on a tiered rate structure that provides for higher rates during peak load periods. These seasonal and tiered rate structures contribute to seasonal fluctuations in revenues and earnings. For purposes of illustration and comparison, Boise, Idaho weather-related information for the last three years is presented in the following table:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | Normal | |||||||||
Heating degree-days(1) | 4,976 | 6,032 | 4,723 | 5,514 | ||||||||
Cooling degree-days(1) | 1,129 | 1,320 | 1,274 | 942 |
(1) Heating and cooling degree-days are common measures used in the utility industry to analyze the demand for electricity and indicate when a customer would use electricity for heating and air conditioning. A degree-day measures how much the average daily temperature varies from 65 degrees. Each degree of temperature above 65 degrees is counted as one cooling degree-day, and each degree of temperature below 65 degrees is counted as one heating degree-day. While Boise, Idaho weather conditions are not necessarily representative of weather conditions throughout Idaho Power's service territory, the greater Boise area has the majority of Idaho Power's customers.
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General Business Revenues - 2014 Compared with 2013: General business revenue increased $20.6 million in 2014 compared with 2013. The factors affecting general business revenues are discussed below.
• | Rates. Rate changes, primarily associated with increased power supply costs, combined to increase general business revenue by $64.8 million. The revenue impact of the rate changes was partially offset by associated changes in operating expenses—Idaho PCA amortization expense increased $42.8 million in 2014 due to the change in the corresponding Idaho PCA true-up rate in the current year. The PCA mechanism is discussed later in this MD&A. |
• | Usage. Lower usage per customer, primarily driven by the impact of more moderate weather during 2014 on residential customer usage, decreased general business revenue by $55.7 million. Residential usage per customer was 9.1 percent lower in 2014. |
• | Customers. Continued customer growth partially offset the decrease in overall MWh sales, increasing revenue by $11.9 million. Customer growth from 2013 to 2014 was 1.4 percent. |
• | Sharing. The overall increase in general business revenue was impacted by Idaho Power's revenue sharing mechanism. This mechanism, which was in place for 2012 through 2014, is associated with the December 2011 Idaho regulatory settlement agreement that provides for the sharing with customers of a portion of Idaho-jurisdiction earnings exceeding a 10.0 percent Idaho ROE. The impact of this mechanism is partially recorded as a reduction to general business revenue. Reductions of $8.0 million and $7.6 million were recorded in 2014 and 2013, respectively, resulting in a net decrease to general business revenue of $0.4 million in 2014. |
General Business Revenues - 2013 Compared with 2012: General business revenue increased $164.0 million in 2013 compared with 2012. The factors affecting general business revenues are discussed below.
• | Rates. Rate changes, primarily associated with increased power supply costs, combined to increase general business revenue by $130.8 million. The revenue impact of several of the rate changes was directly offset by associated changes in operating expenses. For example, Idaho PCA amortization expense increased $42.0 million in 2013 due to the change in the corresponding Idaho PCA true-up rate in the current year. |
• | Usage. Higher usage per customer, primarily driven by residential customers, increased general business revenue by $27.9 million. While usage increased across all customer classes, residential usage per customer was 5.2 percent higher for 2013 due largely to more extreme summer and winter temperatures. |
• | Customers. Customer growth contributed to the increase in overall MWh sales, increasing revenue $12.3 million. Customer growth from 2012 to 2013 was 1.5 percent. The positive impact of customer growth was partially offset by a $6.6 million decrease in revenues resulting from the termination in 2012 of an electric service agreement with Hoku Materials, Inc. Combined, these changes increased general business revenues by $5.7 million. |
• | Sharing. The overall increase in general business revenue was impacted by Idaho Power's revenue sharing mechanism under the December 2011 Idaho regulatory settlement agreement noted above. Reductions of $7.6 million and $7.2 million were recorded in 2013 and 2012, respectively, resulting in a net decrease to general business revenue of $0.4 million in 2013. |
Off-System Sales: Off-system sales consist primarily of long-term sales contracts and opportunity sales of surplus system energy. The table below presents Idaho Power’s off-system sales for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Revenue | $ | 77,165 | $ | 54,473 | $ | 61,534 | ||||||
MWh sold | 2,220 | 1,683 | 2,183 | |||||||||
Revenue per MWh | $ | 34.76 | $ | 32.37 | $ | 28.19 |
Off-System Sales - 2014 Compared with 2013: Off-system sales revenue increased by $22.7 million, or 42 percent, in 2014 as a result of favorable market conditions, at times, for selling power off-system. Off-system sales volumes also benefitted from
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greater amounts of surplus system energy resulting from slightly lower system loads and increased hydroelectric generation and PURPA power purchases.
Off-System Sales - 2013 Compared with 2012: Off-system sales revenue decreased by $7.1 million, or 11 percent, in 2013 as a result of lower volumes of surplus power available for sale. Sales volumes decreased by 23 percent due to lower output from hydroelectric plants due to unfavorable hydroelectric generating conditions (as a result of lower snow pack and spring season run-off) and an increase in general business customer loads.
Other Revenues: The table below presents the components of other revenues for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Transmission services and other | $ | 52,051 | $ | 51,260 | $ | 50,126 | ||||||
Energy efficiency | 27,154 | 35,637 | 27,300 | |||||||||
Total other revenues | $ | 79,205 | $ | 86,897 | $ | 77,426 |
Other Revenues - 2014 Compared with 2013: Other revenues decreased $7.7 million in 2014, resulting primarily from an order issued by the IPUC in the prior year that allowed Idaho Power to recover custom efficiency program incentive payments made between January 1, 2011 and June 1, 2013, through the energy efficiency rider. Based on the order, $14.3 million of other revenue (as well as energy efficiency program expense) was recognized in the second quarter of 2013. Partially offsetting the impact of this order from the IPUC was higher utilization of energy efficiency programs when compared with 2013.
Most energy efficiency activities are funded through a rider mechanism on customer bills. Energy efficiency program expenditures funded through the rider are reported as an operating expense with an equal amount of revenues recorded in other revenues, resulting in no net impact on earnings.
Other Revenues - 2013 Compared with 2012: Other revenues increased $9.5 million in 2013, mainly due to an increase in energy efficiency revenues of $8.3 million, due to an order issued by the IPUC allowing Idaho Power to recover custom efficiency program incentive payments between January 1, 2011 and June 1, 2013, through the energy efficiency rider. Based on the order, $14.3 million of other revenue (as well as energy efficiency program expense) was recognized in the second quarter of 2013. The impact of the order was offset by decreased utilization of demand response programs during 2013.
Purchased Power: The table below presents Idaho Power’s purchased power expenses and volumes for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Expense | ||||||||||||
PURPA contracts | $ | 144,617 | $ | 131,338 | $ | 117,618 | ||||||
Other purchased power (including wheeling) | 92,071 | 85,038 | 64,838 | |||||||||
Demand response incentive payments | 7,940 | 4,203 | 14,479 | |||||||||
Total purchased power expense | $ | 244,628 | $ | 220,579 | $ | 196,935 | ||||||
MWh purchased | ||||||||||||
PURPA contracts | 2,286 | 2,127 | 1,961 | |||||||||
Other purchased power | 1,867 | 1,775 | 1,709 | |||||||||
Total MWh purchased | 4,153 | 3,902 | 3,670 | |||||||||
Cost per MWh from PURPA contracts | $ | 63.26 | $ | 61.75 | $ | 59.98 | ||||||
Cost per MWh from other purchased power | $ | 49.31 | $ | 47.91 | $ | 37.94 | ||||||
Weighted average - all sources (excluding demand response incentive payments) | $ | 56.99 | $ | 55.45 | $ | 49.72 |
The purchased power cost per MWh often exceeds the off-system sales revenue per MWh because Idaho Power generally needs to purchase more power during heavy load periods than during light load periods, and conversely has less energy available for off-system sales during heavy load periods than light load periods. Market energy prices are typically higher during heavy load periods than during light load periods. Also, in accordance with Idaho Power’s risk management policy, Idaho Power may purchase or sell energy several months in advance of anticipated delivery. The regional energy market price is dynamic and
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additional energy purchase or sale transactions that Idaho Power makes at current market prices may be noticeably different than the advance purchase or sale transaction prices. Most of the non-PURPA purchased power and substantially all of the PURPA power purchase costs are recovered through base rates and Idaho Power's PCA mechanisms.
Purchased Power - 2014 Compared with 2013: Purchased power expense increased $24.0 million, or 11 percent, in 2014, mostly resulting from an increase in generation provided by PURPA wind contracts when compared with 2013. In addition, wholesale gas and electricity market conditions warranted third-party power purchases to serve system load at times rather than dispatching Idaho Power-owned thermal resources. Finally, the increases in demand response program incentive payments primarily relate to the temporary cessation of some of these programs during 2013, which were reinstated for 2014.
Purchased Power - 2013 Compared with 2012: Purchased power expense increased $23.6 million, or 12 percent, in 2013, principally due to additional PURPA wind generation that came on-line, as well as less favorable hydroelectric generating conditions, which increased the need to purchase power from third parties. The volume of power purchased through PURPA contracts increased 8 percent, contributing to a $13.7 million increase in PURPA power purchase expense in 2013, while MWh purchased through other sources increased 4 percent. Reductions in demand response program costs, due to temporary suspension of two programs in 2013, partially offset the increased expenses related to power purchases.
Fuel Expense: The table below presents Idaho Power’s fuel expenses and generation at its thermal generating plants for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Expense | ||||||||||||
Coal | $ | 156,172 | $ | 160,277 | $ | 134,501 | ||||||
Natural gas and other thermal | 45,069 | 54,205 | 24,912 | |||||||||
Total fuel expense | $ | 201,241 | $ | 214,482 | $ | 159,413 | ||||||
MWh generated | ||||||||||||
Coal | 5,851 | 6,327 | 5,227 | |||||||||
Natural gas and other thermal | 1,175 | 1,576 | 676 | |||||||||
Total MWh generated | 7,026 | 7,903 | 5,903 | |||||||||
Cost per MWh | ||||||||||||
Coal | $ | 26.69 | $ | 25.33 | $ | 25.73 | ||||||
Natural gas and other thermal | 38.36 | 34.39 | 36.85 | |||||||||
Weighted average, all sources | $ | 28.64 | $ | 27.14 | $ | 27.01 |
Most fuel supply contracts are subject to changes in published indexes that are closely related to materials and supplies, labor, and diesel costs. In addition to commodity (variable) costs, both natural gas and coal expense include costs that are more fixed in nature for items such as capacity charges, transportation, and fuel handling. Period to period variances in fuel expense per MWh are noticeably impacted by these fixed charges when generation output is substantially different between the periods.
Fuel Expense - 2014 Compared with 2013: In 2014, fuel expense decreased $13.2 million, or 6 percent, compared with 2013, due principally to decreased output from the natural gas-fired plants during 2014, resulting from lower system load demands and increased generation provided by facilities under PURPA contracts. The thermal coal plants were also operated less in 2014 when compared with 2013, as higher hydroelectric generation enabled lower utilization of the coal plants to serve system load requirements. Partially offsetting these decreases were higher commodity costs when compared with 2013.
Fuel Expense - 2013 Compared with 2012: In 2013, fuel expense increased $55.1 million, or 35 percent, compared with 2012, due principally to the following factors:
• | Idaho Power's Langley Gulch natural gas-fired power plant came on line on June 29, 2012. Operation of the plant accounted for $23.9 million of the increase in fuel expense. Idaho Power operated the plant primarily to serve peak load, to integrate intermittent resources, and for economic dispatch opportunities. During 2013, Idaho Power relied more on Langley Gulch and other gas plants to meet customer loads as a result of the decline in hydroelectric generation compared with the same period in 2012; and |
• | generation from coal-fired facilities increased 21 percent in 2013. This increase in generation accounted for $25.6 million of the increase in fuel expense compared with 2012. During 2013, higher wholesale power prices and lower |
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hydroelectric generation when compared with 2012 increased Idaho Power's reliance on its coal-fired plants to meet customer loads.
PCA Mechanisms: Idaho Power's power supply costs (primarily purchased power and fuel, less off-system sales) can vary significantly from year to year. Volatility of power supply costs arises from factors such as weather conditions, wholesale market prices and volumes of power purchased and sold in the wholesale markets, Idaho Power's hydroelectric and thermal generation volumes and fuel costs, generation plant availability, and retail loads. To address the volatility of power supply costs, Idaho Power's PCA mechanisms in the Idaho and Oregon jurisdictions allow Idaho Power to recover from or refund to customers most of the fluctuations in power supply costs. In the Idaho jurisdiction, the PCA includes a cost or benefit sharing ratio that allocates the deviations in net power supply expenses between customers (95 percent) and the company (5 percent), with the exception of PURPA power purchases and demand-response program incentives, which are allocated 100 percent to customers. Because of the PCA mechanisms, the primary financial impacts of power supply cost variations is that cash is paid out but recovery from customers does not occur until a future period, or cash that is collected is refunded to customers in a future period, resulting in fluctuations in operating cash flows from year to year. The table that follows presents the components of the Idaho and Oregon PCA mechanisms for the last three years:
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Idaho power supply cost deferral | $ | (48,104 | ) | $ | (67,127 | ) | $ | (45,064 | ) | |||
Oregon power supply cost deferral | — | — | (1,523 | ) | ||||||||
Amortization of prior year authorized balances | 70,339 | 27,590 | (14,503 | ) | ||||||||
Total power cost adjustment expense | $ | 22,235 | $ | (39,537 | ) | $ | (61,090 | ) |
The power supply deferrals represent the portion of the power supply cost fluctuations deferred under the PCA mechanisms. When actual power supply costs are higher than the amount forecasted in PCA rates, which was the case for 2014, 2013, and 2012, most of the difference is deferred. The amortization of the prior year’s balances represents the offset to the amounts being collected or refunded in the current PCA year that were deferred or accrued in the prior PCA year (the true-up component of the PCA).
PCA Mechanisms - 2014 Compared with 2013: Actual net power supply cost deferrals decreased in 2014 relative to 2013, a change of $19.0 million—from $67.1 million to $48.1 million. Power supply costs collected through base rates increased on June 1, 2014, resulting in less costs needing to be recovered through the PCA mechanism since that time. The $70.3 million of amortization offsets the collection from customers of prior years' deferrals.
PCA Mechanisms - 2013 Compared with 2012: Actual net power supply cost deferrals increased in 2013 relative to 2012, a change of $20.5 million—from deferrals of $46.6 million to $67.1 million. The $27.6 million of amortization offsets the net collection from customers of prior years' deferrals.
Other Operations and Maintenance Expenses: The changes in operations and maintenance (O&M) expenses for the periods presented are discussed below.
O&M - 2014 Compared with 2013: Other O&M expense increased by $5.7 million in 2014 compared with 2013, an increase of less than two percent, due to the following factors:
• | an increase of $4.6 million in labor-related expenses, caused by normal escalations in labor and benefits costs; and |
• | an increase of $0.9 million in bad debt expense resulting from fewer collections related to a billing system change made in 2013. Due to full implementation of the billing system change, Idaho Power expects that bad debt expense will return to more normal levels in future periods. |
O&M - 2013 Compared with 2012: Other O&M expense decreased by $0.2 million in 2013 compared with 2012, a decrease of less than one percent, due to the following factors:
• | pension expense increased $1.9 million as the sharing mechanism in place during both years resulted in higher sharing-related pension expense in 2013; |
• | other O&M expenses were $1.3 million lower, reflecting business optimization efforts; |
• | labor-related expenses increased by $1.5 million as a result of normal escalations in labor and benefits costs; and |
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• | O&M expenses associated with hydroelectric generation were $2.3 million lower, primarily due to water lease payments made in 2012 that were not made in 2013 because less water associated with these leases was available in 2013. |
Gain on Sale of Investments
In 2013, Idaho Power recognized an $11.6 million gain on the sale of marketable securities. These investments relate to the Rabbi trust designated to provide funding for Idaho Power's obligations under its Security Plan for Senior Management Employees. Gross proceeds from the sale were $25.7 million. No such sale occurred in 2014 or 2012.
Income Taxes
Income tax accounting method changes decreased 2014 income tax expense by $29.1 million when compared with 2013. In 2013, Idaho Power recorded $4.6 million of income tax expense as a result of a method change related to its capitalized repair deduction for generation assets for years prior to 2013. By contrast, in 2014, Idaho Power, in coordination with the IRS through IDACORP’s Compliance Assurance Process program, implemented aspects of the final tangible property regulations and other technical interpretations of these rules into its existing capitalized repairs tax accounting method for generation, transmission, and distribution assets. These technical interpretations were received from the IRS in 2014. An $11.1 million tax benefit related to the portion of the 2013 capitalized repairs deduction based on these modifications was recorded in 2014. Idaho Power finalized these changes with the filing of IDACORP’s 2013 consolidated federal income tax return in September 2014. In 2014, Idaho Power also recorded a $13.4 million for years prior to 2013 income tax benefit for the finalization of the cumulative method change impact related to the generation asset method change. The income tax benefit related to Idaho Power's 2014 capitalized repairs deduction was $7.8 million greater than 2013, due to the impact of the method changes and the amount and type of 2014 capital additions. Further, income tax expense (excluding the tax method changes) decreased $19.8 million compared with 2013, principally due to lower Idaho pre-tax earnings in 2014. Income tax expense in 2013 increased significantly compared with 2012, principally as a result of greater Idaho Power pre-tax earnings in 2013.
On August 18, 2014, the U.S. Treasury and IRS issued final regulations addressing the disposition of property subject to depreciation and general asset accounts. The regulations are generally effective for tax years beginning on or after January 1, 2014. IDACORP and Idaho Power do not believe these disposition regulations will have a material adverse effect on future tax filings. Therefore, as of December 31, 2014, no income tax impacts have been recorded related to the new guidance.
For additional information relating to IDACORP's and Idaho Power's income taxes, including the availability of tax credit carryforwards, see Note 2 - “Income Taxes” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
Overview
Idaho Power has been pursuing significant enhancements to its utility infrastructure in an effort to ensure an adequate supply of electricity, to provide service to new customers, and to maintain system reliability. Idaho Power's existing hydroelectric and thermal generation facilities also require continuing upgrades and component replacement. Idaho Power's expenditures for property, plant and equipment, excluding AFUDC, were $265 million in 2014 and $228 million in 2013. Idaho Power expects these substantial capital expenditures to continue, with estimated total capital expenditures of approximately $1.5 billion over the period from 2015 through 2019.
Idaho Power funds its liquidity needs for capital expenditures through cash flows from operations, debt offerings, commercial paper markets, credit facilities, and capital contributions from IDACORP. Idaho Power periodically files for rate adjustments for recovery of operating costs and capital investments to provide the opportunity to align Idaho Power's earned returns with those allowed by regulators. Idaho Power uses operating and capital budgets to control operating costs and capital expenditures, and has also been focusing on optimizing its business operations, which has included controlling operating and maintenance costs through process review and improvement initiatives. Consistent with 2014, during 2015 IDACORP and Idaho Power will continue to focus on optimizing operations, controlling costs, and generating sufficient operating cash inflows to meet operating expenditures, contribute to capital expenditure requirements, and pay dividends to shareholders.
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As of February 13, 2015, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's access to debt, equity, and credit arrangements included:
• | $125 million and $300 million revolving credit facilities, respectively; |
• | IDACORP's shelf registration statement filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on May 22, 2013, which may be used for the issuance of debt securities and common stock, including up to 3 million shares of IDACORP common stock available for issuance under IDACORP's sales agency agreement executed in July 2013; |
• | Idaho Power's shelf registration statement, filed with the SEC jointly with IDACORP on May 22, 2013, which may be used for the issuance of first mortgage bonds and debt securities; $500 million is available for issuance under a selling agency agreement executed in July 2013 and pursuant to state regulatory authority; and |
• | IDACORP's and Idaho Power's issuance of commercial paper, which may be issued up to an amount equal to the available credit capacity under their respective credit facilities. |
IDACORP and Idaho Power have no significant long-term debt maturities until 2018. Based on planned capital expenditures and operating and maintenance expenses for 2015, the companies believe they will be able to meet capital requirements and fund corporate expenses during 2015 with a combination of existing cash and operating cash flows generated by Idaho Power's utility business, together with proceeds from either draws upon credit facilities or Idaho Power's issuance of debt securities. IDACORP and Idaho Power would expect to meet any short-term cash shortfalls during 2015 with existing credit facilities and expect to continue to manage short-term liquidity through commercial paper markets.
IDACORP and Idaho Power also monitor capital markets with a view toward opportunistic debt and equity transactions, taking into account current and potential long-term future needs. As a result, IDACORP may issue debt securities or may issue common stock under the existing continuous equity program, and Idaho Power may issue debt securities, if the companies believe terms available in the capital markets are favorable and that issuances would be financially prudent. Idaho Power also periodically analyzes whether partial or full early redemption of one or more existing outstanding series of first mortgage bonds is desirable, and in some cases may refinance indebtedness with new indebtedness issued with more favorable terms, including interest rates lower than the series being redeemed.
IDACORP and Idaho Power seek to maintain capital structures of approximately 50 percent debt and 50 percent equity, and maintaining this ratio influences IDACORP's and Idaho Power's debt and equity issuance decisions. As of December 31, 2014, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's capital structures were as follows:
IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||
Debt | 46% | 47% | ||
Equity | 54% | 53% |
IDACORP and Idaho Power generally maintain their cash and cash equivalents in highly liquid investments, such as U.S. Treasury Bills, money market funds, and bank deposits.
Operating Cash Flows
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's principal sources of cash flows from operations are Idaho Power's sales of electricity and transmission capacity. Significant uses of cash flows from operations include the purchase of fuel and power, other operating expenses, interest, and pension plan contributions. Operating cash flows can be significantly influenced by factors such as weather conditions, rates and the outcome of regulatory proceedings, and economic conditions. As fuel and purchased power are significant uses of cash, Idaho Power has regulatory mechanisms in place that provide for the deferral and recovery of the majority of the fluctuation in those costs. However, if actual costs rise above the level allowed in retail rates, deferral balances increase (reflected as a regulatory asset), negatively affecting operating cash flows until such time as those costs, with interest, are recovered from customers.
IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s operating cash inflows in 2014 were $364 million and $343 million, respectively, increases of $59 million and $53 million, respectively, compared with 2013. Significant items that affected the companies' operating cash flows in 2014 relative to 2013 included:
• | changes in regulatory assets and liabilities, mostly related to the relative amounts of power supply costs deferred and collected under the Idaho PCA mechanism, increased operating cash inflows by $58 million; |
• | changes in working capital balances due primarily to timing. Decreases in receivable balances from 2013 to 2014 compared with the increase in receivable balances experienced from 2012 to 2013 resulted in an increase to cash flows for 2014 of approximately $50 million for IDACORP and $52 million for Idaho Power; |
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• | cash outflows related to income taxes increased by approximately $10 million for IDACORP and $16 million for Idaho Power from 2013 to 2014; and |
• | Idaho Power's joint venture, BCC, made net distributions to Idaho Power of $4 million in 2014, as compared with $15 million in 2013. A build-up in coal inventories at BCC during 2014 reduced BCC's cash available for distribution. |
IDACORP's and Idaho Power's operating cash inflows in 2013 were $306 million and $290 million, respectively, increases of $56 million and $32 million, respectively, compared with 2012. In addition to increased pre-tax earnings, significant items that affected the companies' operating cash flows in 2013 relative to 2012 included:
• | Idaho Power made $30 million of cash contributions to its defined benefit pension plan in 2013, compared with $44 million of cash contributions during 2012; |
• | changes in regulatory assets and liabilities, mostly related to the relative amounts of power supply costs deferred and collected under the Idaho PCA mechanism, increased operating cash inflows by $28 million; |
• | cash outflows related to income taxes increased by approximately $25 million for Idaho Power from 2012 to 2013 and cash outflows related to incomes taxes remained relatively flat at $1 million for IDACORP between 2012 and 2013; and |
• | changes in working capital balances due primarily to timing. Increases in receivable balances reduced cash flows by approximately $27 million, primarily as a result of increased year-end sales in 2013 compared with 2012. Fluctuations in accounts payables and other accrued liabilities reduced cash flows by $11 million, largely as a result of reduced accruals for PURPA-related payables. Other current liabilities increased cash flows by $10 million primarily due to customer deposits returned in 2012. |
Investing Cash Flows
Investing activities consist primarily of capital expenditures related to new construction and improvements to Idaho Power’s generation, transmission, and distribution facilities. Idaho Power's construction expenditures, including AFUDC, were $274 million, $235 million, and $240 million in 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively. These capital expenditures were primarily for construction of utility infrastructure needed to address Idaho Power’s aging plant and equipment, customer growth, and environmental and regulatory compliance requirements.
Financing Cash Flows
Financing activities provide supplemental cash for both day-to-day operations and capital requirements as needed. Idaho Power funds liquidity needs for capital investment, working capital, managing commodity price risk, and other financial commitments through cash flows from operations, debt offerings, commercial paper markets, credit facilities, and capital contributions from IDACORP. IDACORP funds its cash requirements, such as payment of taxes, capital contributions to Idaho Power, and non-utility operating expenses through cash flows from operations, commercial paper markets, sales of common stock, and credit facilities. The following are significant items and transactions that affected financing cash flows in 2012, 2013, and 2014:
• | on April 13, 2012, Idaho Power issued $75 million in principal amount of 2.95% first mortgage bonds due 2022 and $75 million in principal amount of 4.30% first mortgage bonds due 2042; |
• | in May 2012, Idaho Power redeemed prior to maturity $100 million of 4.75% first mortgage bonds due in November 2012; |
• | on April 8, 2013, Idaho Power issued $75 million in principal amount of 2.50% first mortgage bonds due 2023 and $75 million in principal amount of 4.00% first mortgage bonds due 2043; |
• | on October 1, 2013 Idaho Power repaid at maturity $70 million of its 4.25% first mortgage bonds; |
• | IDACORP and Idaho Power paid dividends of approximately $88 million, $79 million, and $69 million in 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively; |
• | Idaho Power received capital contributions of $8 million from IDACORP in 2012; and |
• | IDACORP's net change in commercial paper borrowings was a reduction of $23 million and $15 million in 2014 and 2013, respectively, and an increase of $16 million in 2012. |
Financing Programs and Available Liquidity
IDACORP Equity Programs: On July 12, 2013, IDACORP entered into a Sales Agency Agreement with BNY Mellon Capital Markets, LLC (BNYMCM), under which IDACORP may offer and sell up to 3 million shares of its common stock from time to time through BNYMCM as IDACORP's agent. IDACORP has no obligation to sell any minimum number of shares under the
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Sales Agency Agreement. As of the date of this report, 3 million shares of IDACORP common stock remain available for sale under the Sales Agency Agreement with BNYMCM.
Effective July 1, 2012, IDACORP discontinued original issuances of common stock and instructed the plan administrators to use market purchases of IDACORP common stock for purposes of acquiring IDACORP common stock for the IDACORP, Inc. Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan and the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan. However, IDACORP may determine at any time to resume original issuances of common stock under those plans. As noted above, an important component of that determination will be IDACORP's and Idaho Power's capital structure. Under the dividend reinvestment and employee-related stock purchase plans in effect prior to July 1, 2012, IDACORP issued 111,380 shares in 2012 for proceeds of $4.5 million.
Idaho Power First Mortgage Bonds: Idaho Power's issuance of long-term indebtedness is subject to the approval of the IPUC, OPUC, and Wyoming Public Service Commission (WPSC). In April 2013, Idaho Power received orders from the IPUC, OPUC, and WPSC authorizing Idaho Power to issue and sell from time to time up to $500 million in aggregate principal amount of debt securities and first mortgage bonds, subject to conditions specified in the orders. Authority from the IPUC is through April 9, 2015, though Idaho Power may request an extension by letter filed with the IPUC prior to that date. The OPUC's and WPSC's orders do not impose a time limitation for issuances, but the OPUC order does impose a number of other conditions, including a maximum interest rate limit of seven percent.
On July 12, 2013, Idaho Power entered into a Selling Agency Agreement with eight banks named in the agreement in connection with the potential issuance and sale from time to time of up to $500 million in aggregate principal amount of first mortgage bonds, Series J (Series J Notes), under Idaho Power’s Indenture of Mortgage and Deed of Trust, dated as of October 1, 1937, as amended and supplemented (Indenture). Also on July 12, 2013, Idaho Power entered into the Forty-seventh Supplemental Indenture, dated as of July 1, 2013, to the Indenture. The Forty-seventh Supplemental Indenture provides for, among other items, the issuance of up to $500 million in aggregate principal amount of Series J Notes. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power has not sold any first mortgage bonds or debt securities under the Selling Agency Agreement.
The issuance of first mortgage bonds requires that Idaho Power meet interest coverage and security provisions set forth in the Indenture. Future issuances of first mortgage bonds are subject to satisfaction of covenants and security provisions set forth in the Indenture, market conditions, regulatory authorizations, and covenants contained in other financing agreements.
The Indenture limits the maximum amount of first mortgage bonds at any one time outstanding to $2.0 billion, and as a result the maximum amount of first mortgage bonds Idaho Power could issue as of December 31, 2014 was limited to approximately $409 million. Idaho Power may increase the $2.0 billion limit on the maximum amount of first mortgage bonds outstanding by filing a supplemental indenture with the trustee as provided in the Indenture of Mortgage and Deed of Trust. Separately, the Indenture also limits the amount of additional first mortgage bonds that Idaho Power may issue to the sum of (a) the principal amount of retired first mortgage bonds and (b) 60 percent of total unfunded property additions, as defined in the Indenture. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power could issue approximately $1.6 billion of additional first mortgage bonds based on retired first mortgage bonds and total unfunded property additions.
Refer to Note 4 - “Long-Term Debt” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report for more information regarding long-term financing arrangements.
IDACORP and Idaho Power Credit Facilities: IDACORP and Idaho Power have $125 million and $300 million credit facilities, respectively. Each of the credit facilities may be used for general corporate purposes and commercial paper back-up. IDACORP's facility permits borrowings under a revolving line of credit of up to $125 million at any one time outstanding, including swingline loans not to exceed $15 million at any time and letters of credit not to exceed $50 million at any time. IDACORP's facility may be increased, subject to specified conditions, to $150 million. Idaho Power's facility permits borrowings through the issuance of loans and standby letters of credit of up to $300 million at any one time outstanding, including swingline loans not to exceed $30 million at any one time. Idaho Power's facility may be increased, subject to specified conditions, to $450 million. The interest rates for any borrowings under the facilities are based on either (1) a floating rate that is equal to the highest of the prime rate, federal funds rate plus 0.5 percent, or LIBOR rate plus 1.0 percent, or (2) the LIBOR rate, plus, in each case, an applicable margin. The applicable margin is based on IDACORP's or Idaho Power's, as applicable, senior unsecured long-term indebtedness credit rating, as set forth on a schedule to the credit agreements. The companies also pay a facility fee based on the respective company's credit rating for senior unsecured long-term debt securities.
Each facility contains a covenant requiring each company to maintain a leverage ratio of consolidated indebtedness to consolidated total capitalization equal to or less than 65 percent as of the end of each fiscal quarter. In determining the leverage
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ratio, “consolidated indebtedness” broadly includes all indebtedness of the respective borrower and its subsidiaries, including, in some instances, indebtedness evidenced by certain hybrid securities (as defined in the credit agreement). “Consolidated total capitalization” is calculated as the sum of all consolidated indebtedness, consolidated stockholders' equity of the borrower and its subsidiaries, and the aggregate value of outstanding hybrid securities. At December 31, 2014, the leverage ratios for IDACORP and Idaho Power were 46 percent and 47 percent, respectively. IDACORP's and Idaho Power's ability to utilize the credit facilities is conditioned upon their continued compliance with the leverage ratio covenants included in the credit facilities, which could limit the ability of the companies to issue first mortgage bonds and debt securities. There are additional covenants, subject to exceptions, that prohibit certain mergers, acquisitions, and investments, restrict the creation of certain liens, and prohibit entering into any agreements restricting dividend payments from any material subsidiary. At December 31, 2014, IDACORP and Idaho Power believe they were in compliance with all facility covenants. Further, IDACORP and Idaho Power do not believe they will be in violation or breach of their respective debt covenants during 2015.
The events of default under both facilities include, without limitation, non-payment of principal, interest, or fees; materially false representations or warranties; breach of covenants; bankruptcy or insolvency events; condemnation of property; cross-default to certain other indebtedness; failure to pay certain judgments; change of control; failure of IDACORP to own free and clear of liens the voting stock of Idaho Power; the occurrence of specified events or the incurring of specified liabilities relating to benefit plans; and the incurring of certain environmental liabilities, subject, in certain instances, to cure periods.
Upon any event of default relating to the voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy of IDACORP or Idaho Power or the appointment of a receiver, the obligations of the lenders to make loans under the applicable facility and to issue letters of credit will automatically terminate and all unpaid obligations will become due and payable. Upon any other event of default, the lenders holding greater than 50 percent of the outstanding loans or greater than 50 percent of the aggregate commitments (required lenders) or the administrative agent with the consent of the required lenders may terminate or suspend the obligations of the lenders to make loans under the facility and to issue letters of credit under the facility and/or declare the obligations to be due and payable. During an event of default under the facilities, the lenders may, at their option, increase the applicable interest rates then in effect and the letter of credit fee by 2.0 percentage points per annum. A ratings downgrade would result in an increase in the cost of borrowing, but would not result in a default or acceleration of the debt under the facilities. However, if Idaho Power's ratings are downgraded below investment grade, Idaho Power must extend or renew its authority for borrowings under its IPUC and OPUC regulatory orders.
In October 2013, IDACORP and Idaho Power executed agreements with the lenders, extending the maturity date under both credit agreements to October 26, 2018. No other terms of the credit agreements, including the amount of permitted borrowings under the credit agreements, were affected by the extension.
Without additional approval from the IPUC, the OPUC, and the WPSC, the aggregate amount of short-term borrowings by Idaho Power at any one time outstanding may not exceed $450 million.
IDACORP and Idaho Power Commercial Paper: IDACORP and Idaho Power have commercial paper programs under which they issue unsecured commercial paper notes up to a maximum aggregate amount outstanding at any time not to exceed the available capacity under their respective credit facilities, described above. IDACORP's and Idaho Power's credit facilities are available to the companies to support borrowings under their commercial paper programs. The commercial paper issuances are used to provide an additional financing source for the companies' short-term liquidity needs. The maturities of the commercial paper issuances will vary, but may not exceed 270 days from the date of issue. Individual instruments carry a fixed rate during their respective terms, although the interest rates are reflective of current market conditions, subjecting the companies to fluctuations in interest rates.
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Available Short-Term Borrowing Liquidity
The following table outlines available short-term borrowing liquidity as of the dates specified:
December 31, 2014 | December 31, 2013 | |||||||||||||||
IDACORP(2) | Idaho Power | IDACORP(2) | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||
Revolving credit facility | $ | 125,000 | $ | 300,000 | $ | 125,000 | $ | 300,000 | ||||||||
Commercial paper outstanding | (31,300 | ) | — | (54,750 | ) | — | ||||||||||
Identified for other use(1) | — | (24,245 | ) | — | (24,245 | ) | ||||||||||
Net balance available | $ | 93,700 | $ | 275,755 | $ | 70,250 | $ | 275,755 | ||||||||
(1) Port of Morrow and American Falls bonds that Idaho Power could be required to purchase prior to maturity under the optional or mandatory purchase provisions of the bonds, if the remarketing agent for the bonds were unable to sell the bonds to third parties. | ||||||||||||||||
(2) Holding company only. |
At February 13, 2015, IDACORP had no loans outstanding under its credit facility and $24.2 million of commercial paper outstanding, and Idaho Power had no loans outstanding under its credit facility and no commercial paper outstanding. The table below presents additional information about short-term commercial paper borrowing during the years ended December 31, 2014 and 2013:
December 31, 2014 | December 31, 2013 | |||||||||||||||
IDACORP(1) | Idaho Power | IDACORP(1) | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||
Commercial paper: | ||||||||||||||||
Year end: | ||||||||||||||||
Amount outstanding | $ | 31,300 | $ | — | $ | 54,750 | $ | — | ||||||||
Weighted average interest rate | 0.43 | % | — | % | 0.34 | % | — | % | ||||||||
Daily average amount outstanding during the year | $ | 37,786 | $ | — | $ | 61,121 | $ | 2,209 | ||||||||
Weighted average interest rate during the year | 0.32 | % | — | % | 0.39 | % | 0.43 | % | ||||||||
Maximum month-end balance | $ | 47,300 | $ | — | $ | 67,150 | $ | 16,600 | ||||||||
(1) Holding company only. |
Impact of Credit Ratings on Liquidity and Collateral Obligations
IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s access to capital markets, including the commercial paper market, and their respective financing costs in those markets, depends in part on their respective credit ratings. The following table outlines the ratings of Idaho Power’s and IDACORP’s securities, and the ratings outlook, by Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services and Moody’s Investors Service as of the date of this report:
S&P | Moody’s | |||||||
IDACORP | Idaho Power | IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||||
Corporate Credit Rating/Long-Term Issuer Rating | BBB | BBB | Baa 1 | A3 | ||||
Senior Secured Debt | None | A- | None | A1 | ||||
Senior Unsecured Debt | None | BBB | None | A3 | ||||
Short-Term Tax-Exempt Debt | None | BBB/A-2 | None | A3/ VMIG-2 | ||||
Commercial Paper | A-2 | A-2 | P-2 | P-2 | ||||
Senior Unsecured Credit Facility | None | None | Baa 1 | A3 | ||||
Rating Outlook | Stable | Stable | Stable | Stable | ||||
These security ratings reflect the views of the ratings agencies. An explanation of the significance of these ratings may be obtained from each rating agency. Such ratings are not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold securities. Any rating can be revised upward or downward or withdrawn at any time by a rating agency if it decides that the circumstances warrant the change. Each rating agency has its own methodology for assigning ratings and, accordingly, each rating should be evaluated independently of any other rating.
Idaho Power maintains margin agreements relating to its wholesale commodity contracts that allow performance assurance collateral to be requested of and/or posted with certain counterparties. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had posted no
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performance assurance collateral. Should Idaho Power experience a reduction in its credit rating on its unsecured debt to below investment grade Idaho Power could be subject to requests by its wholesale counterparties to post additional performance assurance collateral, and counterparties to derivative instruments and other forward contracts could request immediate payment or demand immediate ongoing full daily collateralization on derivative instruments and contracts in net liability positions. Based upon Idaho Power’s current energy and fuel portfolio and market conditions as of December 31, 2014, the amount of additional collateral that could be requested upon a downgrade to below investment grade is approximately $8.1 million. To minimize capital requirements, Idaho Power actively monitors its portfolio exposure and the potential exposure to additional requests for performance assurance collateral, through sensitivity analysis.
Capital Requirements
Idaho Power's construction expenditures, excluding AFUDC, were $265 million during the year ended December 31, 2014. The table below presents Idaho Power's estimated cash requirements for construction, excluding AFUDC, for 2015 through 2019 (in millions of dollars). Given the uncertainty associated with the timing of infrastructure projects and associated expenditures, actual expenditures and their timing could deviate substantially from those set forth in the table.
2015 | 2016 | 2017-2019 | |||||||
Ongoing capital expenditures (excluding item listed below in this table) | $ | 255-260 | $ | 285-290 | $ | 850-905 | |||
Jim Bridger plant selective catalytic reduction equipment (discussed below) | 45-50 | 15-20 | 20-25 | ||||||
Total (excluding AFUDC) | $ | 300-310 | $ | 300-310 | $ | 870-930 |
Major Infrastructure Projects: Idaho Power is engaged in the development of a number of significant projects and has entered into arrangements with third parties concerning joint infrastructure development. The most notable projects are described below.
Jim Bridger Plant Selective Catalytic Reduction Equipment and Related IPUC Filing: Idaho Power and the plant co-owners are installing selective catalytic reduction (SCR) equipment to reduce nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions at the Jim Bridger power plant, in order to comply with regional haze rules. The regional haze rules provide for installation and operation of SCR on unit 3 by 2015 and unit 4 by 2016. The rules provide for an equivalent technology for NOx reductions on unit 2 by 2021 and unit 1 by 2022. Idaho Power estimates that the total cost for Idaho Power's share of the upgrades on units 3 and 4 is approximately $113 million, excluding AFUDC. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had expended $46 million, excluding AFUDC, on SCR installation at units 3 and 4.
In June 2013, Idaho Power filed an application with the IPUC requesting that the IPUC issue a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity (CPCN) related to the SCR investments planned for units 3 and 4. Idaho Power's CPCN application requested that the IPUC provide Idaho Power with authorization and a binding commitment to provide rate base treatment for Idaho Power's share of the capital investment in the SCR. By filing the CPCN, Idaho Power intended to provide the IPUC with an opportunity to review the prudence of the investment in SCR prior to Idaho Power's incurring the bulk of the associated expenses. In December 2013, the IPUC issued an order granting the CPCN. However, the IPUC declined to grant Idaho Power's additional request for an early determination of binding ratemaking treatment.
Boardman-to-Hemingway Transmission Line: The Boardman-to-Hemingway line, a proposed 300-mile, 500-kV transmission project between a station near Boardman, Oregon and the Hemingway station near Boise, Idaho, would provide transmission service to meet future resource needs. The Boardman-to-Hemingway line was included in the preferred resource portfolio in Idaho Power’s 2013 IRP. In January 2012, Idaho Power entered into a joint funding agreement with PacifiCorp and the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) to pursue permitting of the project. The joint funding agreement provides that Idaho Power's interest in the permitting phase of the project would be approximately 21 percent, and that during future negotiations relating to construction of the transmission line Idaho Power would seek to retain that percentage interest in the completed project. Assuming both other participants fund their full share of the total cost of the permitting phase of the project, Idaho Power's estimated share of the cost of the permitting phase of the project is approximately $35 million, including AFUDC, which has been extended to the project's anticipated in-service date. Total cost estimates for the project are between $1.0 billion and $1.2 billion, including AFUDC. This cost estimate excludes the impacts of inflation and price changes of materials and labor resources that may occur following the date of the estimate. Idaho Power's share of the permitting phase of the project (excluding AFUDC) is included in the capital requirements table above. Construction costs beyond the permitting phase are not included in the table above.
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Idaho Power has expended approximately $64 million on the Boardman-to-Hemingway project through December 31, 2014. Pursuant to the terms of the joint funding arrangements, approximately $32 million of that amount must be reimbursed to Idaho Power by joint permitting participants for expenses Idaho Power incurred, $23 million of which Idaho Power had received as of December 31, 2014. An additional $15 million is subject to reimbursement at a later date from the joint permitting participants, assuming their continued participation in the project, for expenses Idaho Power incurred prior to execution of the joint funding arrangements. Idaho Power plans to seek recovery of its share of project costs through the regulatory process.
The permitting phase of the Boardman-to-Hemingway project is subject to review and approval by the BLM (as the lead federal agency on behalf of other federal agencies), the U.S. Forest Service, and the Oregon Department of Energy. The BLM issued a draft EIS for the project on December 19, 2014, and as of the date of this report Idaho Power expects the BLM to issue a final EIS during 2016. In the separate Oregon state permitting process, Idaho Power submitted a preliminary application for a site certificate in February 2013 and intends to submit an amended preliminary application in late 2015 or in 2016.
The environmental requirements for, and application of environmental regulations (particularly relating to sage grouse) to, the siting process have changed during the project, making permitting for the transmission line more difficult. This has resulted in project delays and increased permitting costs. The completion date of the project is subject to these siting, permitting, and regulatory approval requirements, as well as in-service date requirements of the parties electing to construct the line, the terms of any resulting joint construction agreements, and other factors. In light of the delays and siting impediments that have occurred and are expected, Idaho Power is unable to accurately determine an approximate in-service date for the line but expects the in-service date would be in 2021 or beyond.
Gateway West Transmission Line: Idaho Power and PacifiCorp are pursuing the joint development of the Gateway West project, a 500-kV transmission project between a station located near Douglas, Wyoming and the Hemingway station. In January 2012, Idaho Power and PacifiCorp entered a new joint funding agreement (Gateway Funding Agreement) for permitting of the project. Idaho Power's estimated cost for the permitting phase of the Gateway West project is approximately $71 million, including AFUDC, which has been extended to the project's anticipated in-service date. Idaho Power has expended approximately $27 million on the permitting phase of the project through December 31, 2014. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power estimates the total cost for its share of the project (including both permitting and construction) to be between $200 million and $400 million, including AFUDC. Idaho Power's share of the permitting phase of the project (excluding AFUDC) is included in the capital requirements table above. Construction costs are not included in the table above.
The Gateway Funding Agreement outlines the terms under which the parties will jointly own, develop, design, permit, site, and acquire rights-of-way for the Gateway West transmission project. Idaho Power's interest in the Gateway West project applies to four of 10 segments involved in the project. PacifiCorp is designated as the project manager under the agreement. The Gateway Funding Agreement provides that the project manager may seek to reconfigure portions of the federal permitting project, including segments in which Idaho Power has an interest, subject to certain limitations. Further, PacifiCorp retains the right to remove specified segments from the federal permitting project, including segments in which Idaho Power has an interest, subject to certain limitations specified in the Gateway Funding Agreement. Each party is responsible for its pro rata share, based on its respective federal and state permitting ownership interest, of the costs incurred under the agreement. The Gateway Funding Agreement provides for the parties to subsequently negotiate the terms and conditions of one or more definitive development and construction agreements for the Gateway West transmission line.
The permitting phase of the project is subject to review and approval of the BLM. The BLM released its record of decision under the National Environmental Policy Act in November 2013. In its record of decision, the BLM identified its final decision on the routing of the project, issued right-of-way grants on public land for some segments, and deferred a decision on two segments (in both of which Idaho Power has an interest) to resolve routing concerns in those areas. Several interested parties have appealed the BLM's record of decision, and Idaho Power has intervened in the proceedings. The BLM has initiated the supplemental EIS process for the two deferred segments. As of the date of this report, the BLM's schedule provides for the issuance of a record of decision on the two deferred segments by late 2016.
Shoshone Falls Plant Expansion: The Shoshone Falls plant expansion project was included in Idaho Power's 2013 IRP and consists of constructing a new powerhouse, intake structure, penstock, and substation and the installation of a new turbine to increase the nameplate generation capacity of the plant from 12.5 MW to 61.5 MW. The most recent FERC license amendment issued for the plant in 2012 required the project to be completed by 2017. However, as the project is unlikely to be completed by 2017, Idaho Power sought from the FERC an additional schedule extension. In May 2014, the FERC authorized extension of the date of commencement of construction to July 2018 and completion of construction by July 2022. Idaho Power's determination to proceed with the expansion project remains subject to the outcome of additional cost studies and analysis and the results of further engineering and design work, and further analysis of Idaho Power's supply-side resource needs. If Idaho
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Power ultimately determines to move forward with the full project, Idaho Power may seek to obtain regulatory support from the IPUC and OPUC prior to commencement of construction to mitigate in part the regulatory cost-recovery risk associated with the project.
Pending Transmission System Transaction: To enhance the abilities of Idaho Power and PacifiCorp to serve their respective customers, on October 24, 2014, Idaho Power and PacifiCorp executed a Joint Ownership and Operating Agreement (Joint Operating Agreement) applicable to certain transmission-related equipment proposed to be exchanged by Idaho Power and PacifiCorp. The proposed exchange would be made pursuant to the terms of a Joint Purchase and Sale Agreement, also dated October 24, 2014, between Idaho Power and PacifiCorp, under which each party agreed to transfer to the other specified transmission-related equipment with an estimated year-end 2014 net book value of approximately $43 million, subject to true-up as of the closing date. The proposed transaction also provides for the termination and amendment of a number of legacy long-term agreements related to the ownership and operation of jointly-owned facilities and transmission services between Idaho Power and PacifiCorp.
The Joint Operating Agreement is intended to provide Idaho Power and PacifiCorp with access to integrated transmission facilities that aligns more closely with current industry standards and allows the parties to more efficiently satisfy regulatory and reliability requirements. The Joint Operating Agreement allocates the directional transmission capacity of the exchanged transmission-related assets between the companies, which will be managed pursuant to each company's OATT. The Joint Operating Agreement also provides for the operation, upgrade, repair, rebuilding, and decommissioning of the exchanged assets and certain other equipment each company owns. Closing of the proposed transaction, effectiveness of the Joint Operating Agreement, and termination and amendment of the legacy long-term transmission service agreements is subject to a number of conditions, including approval by, or notice to, the public utility commissions of California, Idaho, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, and approval by the FERC.
Other Infrastructure Projects: Idaho Power continues to add to its system to accommodate for growth and to reinvest for reliability and general system improvement. These system enhancement projects involve significant capital expenditures. Examples of system enhancements over the period 2015 through 2019, and their estimated costs, include the following:
• | $10-$15 million per year for replacement of underground distribution cables; |
• | $30-$40 million per year for reconstruction of distribution lines; |
• | $5-$10 million per year for reliability-related construction projects, such as wood pole crossarm replacements and feeder system improvement; |
• | $50-$90 million per year for transmission-related projects other than the Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West projects; |
• | $30-$60 million per year for ongoing thermal plant improvement programs other than SCR equipment; |
• | $10-$20 million per year for hydroelectric plant improvement programs; and |
• | $20-$30 million per year for general plant improvements, such as information technology, facilities, and fleet vehicles. |
Depending on changes in load and project timing Idaho Power may seek to accelerate, scale back, modify, or eliminate projects, or seek alternative projects, to accommodate anticipated resource needs and to help ensure its ability to provide reliable electric service and meet load and transmission capacity obligations. Scaling back or eliminating a project due to regulatory challenges or other factors influencing the feasibility of a project may result in Idaho Power pursuing one or more separate, more costly projects. For instance, if Idaho Power were unable to secure permits or joint funding commitments to develop transmission infrastructure necessary to serve loads, it may terminate those projects and, as an alternative, develop additional generation facilities within areas where Idaho Power has available transmission capacity. Termination of a project carries with it the potential for a write-off of all or a significant portion of the costs associated with the project, largely dependent on decisions of regulators as to the prudence of project expenditures.
Environmental Regulation Costs: Idaho Power anticipates that it will incur significant expenditures for the installation of environmental controls at its coal plants and for its hydroelectric relicensing efforts. These cost estimates are summarized in Part I - Item 1 - "Business" of this report. The capital portion of these amounts is included in the Capital Requirements table above but do not include costs related to possible changes in current or new environmental laws or regulations and enforcement policies that may be enacted in response to issues such as climate change and emissions from coal-fired and gas-fired generation plants.
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Defined Benefit Pension Plan Contributions and Recovery
Idaho Power contributed $30 million, $30 million, and $44 million to its defined benefit pension plan in 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively. Idaho Power estimates that it has no minimum contribution requirement for 2015, though it plans to contribute at least $20 million to the pension plan during 2015 in a continued effort to balance the regulatory collection of these expenditures with the cost of being in an underfunded position. In 2016 and beyond, Idaho Power expects significant contribution obligations under the pension plan. Refer to Note 11 - "Benefit Plans" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report and the section titled "Contractual Obligations" below in this MD&A for information relating to those obligations.
Idaho Power defers its Idaho-jurisdiction pension expense as a regulatory asset until recovered from Idaho customers. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power's deferral balance associated with the Idaho jurisdiction was $60.9 million. Deferred pension costs are expected to be amortized to expense to match the revenues received when contributions are recovered through rates. Idaho Power only records a carrying charge on the unrecovered balance of cash contributions. In May 2011, the IPUC authorized Idaho Power to increase its annual recovery and amortization of deferred pension costs from $5.4 million to $17.1 million. The primary impact of pension contributions is on timing of cash flows, as cost recovery lags behind the timing of contributions.
Contractual Obligations
The following table presents IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s contractual cash obligations for the respective periods in which they are due:
Payments Due by Period | ||||||||||||||||||||
Total | 2015 | 2016-2017 | 2018-2019 | Thereafter | ||||||||||||||||
(millions of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||||||
Long-term debt(1) | $ | 1,618 | $ | 1 | $ | 2 | $ | 220 | $ | 1,395 | ||||||||||
Future interest payments(2) | 1,249 | 81 | 161 | 151 | 856 | |||||||||||||||
Operating leases(3) | 18 | — | 2 | 2 | 14 | |||||||||||||||
Purchase obligations: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Cogeneration and small power production | 5,143 | 181 | 419 | 479 | 4,064 | |||||||||||||||
Fuel supply agreements | 235 | 64 | 84 | 19 | 68 | |||||||||||||||
Purchased power & transmission(4) | 21 | 6 | 9 | 2 | 4 | |||||||||||||||
Other(5) | 211 | 74 | 42 | 29 | 66 | |||||||||||||||
Pension and postretirement benefit plans(6) | 198 | 8 | 51 | 97 | 42 | |||||||||||||||
Other long-term liabilities | 1 | — | 1 | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Total | $ | 8,694 | $ | 415 | $ | 771 | $ | 999 | $ | 6,509 | ||||||||||
(1) For additional information, see Note 4 – “Long-Term Debt” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(2) Future interest payments are calculated based on the assumption that all debt is outstanding until maturity. For debt instruments with variable rates, interest is calculated for all future periods using the rates in effect at December 31, 2014. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(3) The operating leases include right-of-way easements. Approximately $1 million of the obligations included have contracts that do not specify terms related to expiration. As these contracts are presumed to continue indefinitely, 10 years of information, estimated based on current contract terms, has been included in the table for presentation purposes. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(4) Approximately $9 million of the obligations included in purchased power and transmission have contracts that do not specify terms related to expiration. As these contracts are presumed to continue indefinitely, 10 years of information, estimated based on current contract terms, has been included in the table for presentation purposes. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(5) Approximately $122 million of the amounts in other purchase obligations are contracts that do not specify terms related to expiration. As these contracts are presumed to continue indefinitely, 10 years of information, estimated based on current contract terms, has been included in the table for presentation purposes. Other purchase obligations also includes Idaho Power's estimated proportionate funding obligation for goods and services under non-fuel purchase agreements at its jointly owned generation facilities. In some instances, Idaho Power is not a direct party to an underlying purchase agreement, but is obligated under the instruments governing the joint ventures to reimburse the co-owner for payments the co-owner makes pursuant to the purchase agreement. Those estimated amounts have been included in the table above. | ||||||||||||||||||||
(6) Idaho Power estimates pension contributions based on actuarial data. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power cannot estimate pension contributions beyond 2019 with any level of precision, and amounts through 2019 are estimates only and are subject to change. For more information on pension and postretirement plans, refer to Note 11 – "Benefit Plans" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. |
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Dividends
The amount and timing of dividends paid on IDACORP’s common stock are within the discretion of IDACORP’s board of directors. IDACORP's board of directors reviews the dividend rate periodically to determine its appropriateness in light of IDACORP’s current and long-term financial position and results of operations, capital requirements, rating agency considerations, contractual and regulatory restrictions, legislative and regulatory developments affecting the electric utility industry in general and Idaho Power in particular, competitive conditions, and any other factors the board of directors deems relevant. The ability of IDACORP to pay dividends on its common stock is dependent upon dividends paid to it by its subsidiaries, primarily Idaho Power.
IDACORP has a dividend policy that provides for a target long-term dividend payout ratio of between 50 and 60 percent of sustainable IDACORP earnings, with the flexibility to achieve that payout ratio over time and to adjust the payout ratio or to deviate from the target payout ratio from time to time based on the various factors that drive IDACORP's board of directors' dividend decisions. Notwithstanding the dividend policy adopted by IDACORP's board of directors, the dividends IDACORP pays remain in the discretion of the board of directors who, when evaluating the dividend amount, will continue to take into account the factors above, among others.
In January 2012, IDACORP's board of directors voted to increase the quarterly dividend from $0.30 to $0.33 per share of IDACORP common stock. In September of 2012, 2013, and 2014, IDACORP's board of directors voted to increase the quarterly dividend to $0.38 per share, $0.43 per share, and $0.47 per share of IDACORP common stock, respectively.
For additional information relating to IDACORP and Idaho Power dividends, including restrictions on IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s payment of dividends, see Note 6 – “Common Stock” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
Contingencies and Proceedings
IDACORP and Idaho Power are involved in a number of litigation, alternative dispute resolution, and administrative proceedings, and are subject to claims and legal actions arising in the ordinary course of business, that could affect their future results of operations and financial condition. Certain legal or administrative proceedings to which IDACORP or Idaho Power are parties or are otherwise involved, and certain actual or potential legal claims pertaining to Idaho Power, are described in Note 10 - "Contingencies" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. Except where noted in Note 10, in many instances IDACORP and Idaho Power are unable to predict the outcomes of the matters or estimate the impact the proceedings may have on their financial positions, results of operations, or cash flows.
Idaho Power is also actively monitoring various environmental regulations that may have a significant impact on its future operations. Given uncertainties regarding the outcome, timing, and compliance plans for these environmental matters, Idaho Power is unable to determine the financial impact of potential new regulations but does believe that future capital investment for infrastructure and modifications to its electric generating facilities to comply with these regulations could be significant.
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
Through a self-bonding mechanism, Idaho Power guarantees its portion of reclamation activities and obligations at BCC, of which IERCo owns a one-third interest. This guarantee, which is renewed annually with the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality, was $70 million at December 31, 2014, representing IERCo's one-third share of BCC's total reclamation obligation of $209 million. BCC has a reclamation trust fund set aside specifically for the purpose of paying these reclamation costs. At December 31, 2014, the value of the reclamation trust fund totaled $67 million. During 2014, the reclamation trust fund distributed approximately $13 million for reclamation activity costs associated with the BCC surface mine. BCC periodically assesses the adequacy of the reclamation trust fund and its estimate of future reclamation costs. To ensure that the reclamation trust fund maintains adequate reserves, BCC has the ability to add a per-ton surcharge to coal sales. Starting in 2010, BCC began applying a nominal surcharge to coal sales in order to maintain adequate reserves in the reclamation trust fund. Because of the existence of the fund and the ability to apply a per-ton surcharge, the estimated fair value of this guarantee is minimal.
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REGULATORY MATTERS
Introduction
Idaho Power's need for rate relief and the development of rate case plans take into consideration short-term and long-term needs, as well as specific factors that can affect the timing of rate filings. Such factors include, among other things, in-service dates of major capital investments, the timing of changes in major revenue and expense items, and customer growth rates. Idaho Power filed general rate cases in Idaho and Oregon during 2011, as well as a single-issue rate case for the Langley Gulch power plant in Idaho and Oregon in 2012. These significant rate cases resulted in the resetting of base rates in both Idaho and Oregon during 2012.
Between general rate cases, Idaho Power relies upon power cost adjustment mechanisms, tariff riders, and other mechanisms to reduce regulatory lag, which refers to the period of time between making an investment or incurring an expense and recovering that investment or expense and earning a return. Management's focus on constructive regulatory outcomes in recent years has been targeted largely at general rate cases, regulatory settlement stipulations, and rate mechanisms. Going forward, Idaho Power will continue to assess its need for general rate relief in consideration of the factors described above. As of the date of this report Idaho Power does not anticipate filing an application for a general rate change in Idaho or Oregon during 2015.
Idaho and Oregon Significant Regulatory Developments
Included in the table below are notable regulatory developments during 2012, 2013, and 2014 that affected Idaho Power's results for the periods. Also refer to Note 3 - "Regulatory Matters" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report for a description of the applicable regulatory mechanism and associated orders of the IPUC and OPUC, which should be read in conjunction with the discussion of regulatory matters in this MD&A.
Description | Effective Date | Estimated Annualized Revenue Impact (millions)(1) | ||||
Oregon general rate case settlement - 2012 stipulation | 3/1/2012 | $ | 2 | |||
2012 Idaho PCA(2)(3) | 6/1/2012 | 16 | ||||
Idaho - Boardman power plant cost recovery | 6/1/2012 | 1 | ||||
Idaho depreciation rate for non-AMI meters | 6/1/2012 | (11 | ) | |||
Idaho depreciation update (other than non-AMI meters and Boardman plant) | 6/1/2012 | (1 | ) | |||
2012 Idaho FCA(2) | 6/1/2012 | 1 | ||||
2012 Oregon APCU(2) | 6/1/2012 | 2 | ||||
Idaho - Langley Gulch power plant | 7/1/2012 | 58 | ||||
Oregon - Langley Gulch power plant | 10/1/2012 | 3 | ||||
2013 Idaho FCA(2) | 6/1/2013 | (1 | ) | |||
2013 Idaho PCA(2)(4) | 6/1/2013 | 140 | ||||
2013 Oregon APCU(2) | 6/1/2013 | 3 | ||||
2014 Idaho FCA(2) | 6/1/2014 | 6 | ||||
2014 Idaho PCA(2)(5) | 6/1/2014 | (88 | ) | |||
Transfer of power supply costs from the Idaho PCA mechanism to Idaho base rates(6) | 6/1/2014 | 99 | ||||
(1) The annual amount collected in rates is typically not recovered on a linear basis (i.e., 1/12th per month), and is instead recovered in proportion to general business sales volumes. | ||||||
(2) The rate changes for the Idaho PCA and FCA are applicable only for one-year periods. Similarly, a portion of the rate changes from the Oregon APCU are applicable only for one-year periods. | ||||||
(3) 2012 PCA rates reflect $27 million of Idaho customer revenue sharing related to 2011 financial results pursuant to an Idaho regulatory settlement stipulation, resulting in a net rate increase of $16 million. | ||||||
(4) 2013 PCA rates reflect $7 million of Idaho revenue-sharing related to 2012 financial results pursuant to an IPUC order issued in 2013 under regulatory settlement agreements approved in January 2010 and December 2011. The $140 million increase in PCA rates includes the reduction in the PCA mechanism component of the revenue sharing amount from $27 million for the 2012 PCA to $7 million for the 2013 PCA. | ||||||
(5) 2014 PCA rates reflect (a) the application of $20 million of surplus Idaho energy efficiency rider funds, (b) $8 million of customer revenue sharing for the year 2013 under a regulatory settlement agreement approved in December 2011, and (c) a $99 million shift in base net power supply expenses from recovery via the PCA mechanism to recovery through base rates. | ||||||
(6) See footnote 5 above. Approval of the transfer of collection of specified power supply costs from the Idaho PCA mechanism to Idaho base rates resulted in no net change in customer rates. |
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Resetting of Idaho Base Rates: In December 2011, the IPUC approved a settlement stipulation in Idaho Power's Idaho general rate case, which provided for a 7.86 percent authorized overall rate of return on an Idaho-jurisdiction rate base of approximately $2.36 billion. The approved settlement stipulation resulted in a 4.07 percent, or $34.0 million, overall increase in Idaho Power's annual Idaho-jurisdiction base rate revenues. New rates in conformity with the settlement became effective on January 1, 2012.
On June 29, 2012, the IPUC issued an order approving a $58.1 million, or 6.83 percent, increase in annual Idaho-jurisdiction base rates, effective July 1, 2012, for recovery of Idaho Power's investment in the Langley Gulch power plant and associated costs. Neither of the IPUC's general rate change orders nor the December 2011 settlement stipulation specified an authorized rate of return on equity.
Since 2010, when Idaho Power's normalized level of net power supply expenses included in Idaho base rates last received a comprehensive review, many of the individual cost and revenue components of these "base level" net power supply expenses, which were being recovered through the Idaho PCA, changed significantly and permanently. The primary components that contributed to the increase in net power supply expenses are increased energy purchases pursuant to PURPA power purchase agreements, lower surplus energy sales revenue resulting from lower energy market prices, and the elimination of anticipated offsetting revenues from one special contract customer. In light of these permanent increases, on November 1, 2013, Idaho Power filed an application with the IPUC requesting an increase of approximately $106 million on a total-system basis in the normalized or “base level” power supply expense to be used to update base rates and in the determination of the PCA rate that would become effective June 1, 2014. On March 21, 2014, the IPUC issued an order approving Idaho Power's application. This removed the Idaho-jurisdiction portion of those expenses ($99 million) from collection via the Idaho PCA mechanism and instead results in Idaho Power collecting that portion in base rates. Approval of the application resulted in no change in the aggregate amount collected through base rates and the PCA mechanism. However, the approved application will reduce the magnitude of any base rate increase requested by Idaho Power in its next general rate case application filed with the IPUC.
Resetting of Oregon Base Rates: On February 23, 2012, the OPUC approved a settlement stipulation in Idaho Power's Oregon general rate case providing for a $1.8 million base rate increase, a return on equity of 9.9 percent, and an overall rate of return of 7.757 percent in the Oregon jurisdiction. New rates in conformity with the settlement stipulation went into effect on March 1, 2012. On September 20, 2012, the OPUC issued an order approving an approximately $3.0 million increase in annual Oregon jurisdiction base rates, effective October 1, 2012, for inclusion of the Langley Gulch power plant in Idaho Power's Oregon rate base.
Idaho Regulatory Settlement Stipulations: In December 2011, the IPUC issued an order, separate from the then-pending Idaho general rate case proceeding, approving a settlement stipulation that allowed Idaho Power to, in certain circumstances, amortize additional ADITC if Idaho Power's actual Idaho ROE for 2012, 2013, or 2014 was less than 9.5 percent, to help achieve a 9.5 percent Idaho ROE for the applicable year. When Idaho Power's actual Idaho ROE for any of those years exceeded 10.0 percent, Idaho Power was required to share a portion of its Idaho-jurisdiction earnings with Idaho customers. As Idaho Power's 2012, 2013, and 2014 Idaho ROE exceeded 10.0 percent, Idaho Power did not amortize additional ADITC for those years, but instead shared earnings with customers. The amounts Idaho Power recorded for sharing for those years were as follows (in millions of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Additional pension expense funded through sharing | $ | 16.7 | $ | 16.5 | $ | 14.6 | ||||||
Provision against current revenue as a result of sharing | 8.0 | 7.6 | 7.2 | |||||||||
Total | $ | 24.7 | $ | 24.1 | $ | 21.8 |
In October 2014, the IPUC issued an order approving an extension, with modifications, of the terms of the December 2011 Idaho settlement stipulation for the period from 2015 through 2019, or until the terms are otherwise modified or terminated by order of the IPUC or the full $45 million of additional ADITC contemplated by the settlement stipulation has been amortized. The more specific terms and conditions of the December 2011 and October 2014 Idaho settlement stipulations are described in Note 3 - "Regulatory Matters - Idaho Regulatory Matters" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. IDACORP and Idaho Power believe that the terms allowing amortization of additional ADITC in the October 2014 settlement stipulation provide the companies with a greater degree of earnings stability than would be possible without the terms of the stipulation in effect.
IPUC Review of Annual Rate Adjustment Mechanisms: On July 1, 2014, the IPUC opened a docket pursuant to which Idaho Power, the IPUC Staff, and other interested parties would further evaluate Idaho Power's application of the true-up component of the PCA mechanism and whether a deferral balance adjustment is appropriate. The docket arose from the IPUC's May 2014 PCA order, which noted that the IPUC Staff believed that Idaho Power's application of the true-up component introduces a line-
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loss bias that inflated the true-up revenue it must collect by $14.2 million. The IPUC's docket was closed via an order issued by the IPUC on August 6, 2014, with no change to the PCA mechanism. Idaho Power has subsequently met with interested parties to explore approaches to increasing the accuracy of the actual cost recovery under the PCA mechanism, and discussions are ongoing.
Also on July 1, 2014, the IPUC opened a docket to allow Idaho Power, the IPUC Staff, and other interested parties to further evaluate the IPUC Staff's concerns regarding the application of the FCA. The FCA is designed to remove Idaho Power’s financial disincentive to invest in energy efficiency programs by separating (or decoupling) the recovery of fixed costs from the variable kilowatt-hour charge and linking it instead to a set amount per customer. The FCA is adjusted each year to collect, or refund, the difference between the allowed fixed-cost recovery amount and the actual (weather-normalized) fixed costs recovered by Idaho Power during the year. Concerns cited by interested parties included the application of weather-normalization, the customer count methodology, the rate adjustment cap, cross-subsidization issues, and whether the FCA is in fact effectively removing Idaho Power's disincentive to aggressively pursue energy efficiency programs. Proceedings in the FCA docket, which remains open, could result in significant changes to the FCA.
Deferred (Accrued) Net Power Supply Costs
Deferred power supply costs represent certain differences between Idaho Power's actual net power supply costs and the costs included in its retail rates, the latter being based on annual forecasts of power supply costs. Deferred power supply costs are recorded on the balance sheets for future recovery or refund through customer rates. Idaho Power's PCA mechanisms in its Idaho and Oregon jurisdictions provide for annual adjustments to the rates charged to retail customers. The PCA mechanism and associated financial impacts are described in "Results of Operations" in this MD&A and in Note 3 - "Regulatory Matters" to the consolidated financial statements included in this report.
Factors that have influenced significant PCA rate changes in recent years include year-to-year volatility in hydroelectric generation conditions, market energy prices and the volume of off-system sales, power purchase costs from renewable energy projects, and revenue sharing under Idaho regulatory settlement stipulations. From year to year, the factors that influence power supply costs can vary significantly, which can result in significant accruals and deferrals under the PCA mechanism.
For example, in May 2012 the IPUC issued an order approving a PCA rate increase of $15.9 million, after application of the revenue sharing amount required by the December 2011 Idaho regulatory settlement stipulation. By comparison, in May 2013 the IPUC issued an order authorizing a $140.4 million increase in PCA rates.
As noted above under "Resetting of Idaho Base Rates," in light of the existence of permanent increases in power supply costs, in March 2014 the IPUC issued an order approving Idaho Power's application requesting recovery of a portion of its ongoing power supply costs through base rates rather than through the Idaho PCA mechanism.
The table that follows summarizes the change in deferred net power supply costs over the prior two years:
Idaho | Oregon(1) | Total | ||||||||||
Balance at December 31, 2012 | $ | 34,571 | $ | 8,331 | $ | 42,902 | ||||||
Current period net power supply costs deferred | 67,127 | — | 67,127 | |||||||||
Revenue sharing liability applied to PCA true-up mechanism | (7,172 | ) | — | (7,172 | ) | |||||||
Prior deferred costs amortized and recovered through rates | (9,728 | ) | (2,224 | ) | (11,952 | ) | ||||||
SO2 allowance and renewable energy certificate (REC) sales | (522 | ) | (15 | ) | (537 | ) | ||||||
Interest and other | 567 | 519 | 1,086 | |||||||||
Balance at December 31, 2013 | 84,843 | 6,611 | 91,454 | |||||||||
Current period net power supply costs deferred | 48,104 | — | 48,104 | |||||||||
Revenue sharing and energy efficiency rider funds | (27,624 | ) | — | (27,624 | ) | |||||||
Prior deferred costs amortized and recovered through rates | (48,489 | ) | (2,210 | ) | (50,699 | ) | ||||||
SO2 allowance and renewable energy certificate (REC) sales | (2,895 | ) | (127 | ) | (3,022 | ) | ||||||
Interest and other | 573 | 403 | 976 | |||||||||
Balance at December 31, 2014 | $ | 54,512 | $ | 4,677 | $ | 59,189 | ||||||
(1) Oregon power supply cost deferrals are subject to a statute that specifically limits rate amortizations of deferred costs to six percent of gross Oregon revenue per year (approximately $3 million). Deferrals are amortized sequentially. |
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Relicensing of Hydroelectric Projects
Overview: Idaho Power, like other utilities that operate nonfederal hydroelectric projects on qualified waterways, obtains licenses for its hydroelectric projects from the FERC. These licenses have a term of 30 to 50 years depending on the size, complexity, and cost of the project. The expiration dates for the FERC licenses for each of the facilities are included in Part I - Item 2 - "Properties" in this report. Costs for the relicensing of Idaho Power's hydroelectric projects are recorded in construction work in progress until new multi-year licenses are issued by the FERC, at which time the charges are transferred to electric plant in service. Relicensing costs and costs related to new licenses will be submitted to regulators for recovery through the ratemaking process. Relicensing costs of $199 million for the HCC, Idaho Power's largest hydroelectric complex and a major relicensing effort, were included in construction work in progress at December 31, 2014. As of the date of this report, the IPUC authorizes Idaho Power to include in its Idaho jurisdiction rates approximately $6.5 million annually ($10.7 million grossed up for income taxes) of AFUDC relating to the HCC relicensing project. Collecting these amounts now will reduce the amount collected in the future once the HCC relicensing costs are approved for recovery in base rates. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power's regulatory liability for collection of AFUDC relating to the HCC was $73 million. In addition to the discussion below, see "Environmental Matters" in this MD&A for a discussion of environmental compliance under FERC licenses for Idaho Power's hydroelectric generating plants.
Hells Canyon Complex: The HCC, located on the Snake River where it forms the border between Idaho and Oregon, provides approximately 68 percent of Idaho Power's hydroelectric generating nameplate capacity and 32 percent of its total generating nameplate capacity. In July 2003, Idaho Power filed an application with the FERC for a new license in anticipation of the July 2005 expiration of the then-existing license. Since the expiration of that license, Idaho Power has been operating the project under annual licenses issued by the FERC. In December 2004, Idaho Power and eleven other parties, including National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), involved in the HCC relicensing process entered into an interim agreement that addresses the effects of the ongoing operations of the HCC on Endangered Species Act (ESA) listed species pending the relicensing of the project. In August 2007 the FERC Staff issued a final EIS for the HCC, which the FERC will use to determine whether, and under what conditions, to issue a new license for the project. The purpose of the final EIS is to inform the FERC, federal and state agencies, Native American tribes, and the public about the environmental effects of Idaho Power's operation of the HCC. Certain portions of the final EIS involve issues that may be influenced by water quality certifications for the project under Section 401 of the Clean Water Act (CWA) and formal consultations under the ESA, which remain unresolved.
In connection with its relicensing efforts, Idaho Power has filed water quality certification applications, required under Section 401 of the CWA, with the states of Idaho and Oregon requesting that each state certify that any discharges from the project comply with applicable state water quality standards. Section 401 of the CWA requires that a state either approve or deny a Section 401 water quality certification application within one year of the filing of the application or the state may be considered to have waived its certification authority under the CWA. As a consequence, Idaho Power has been filing and withdrawing its Section 401 certification applications with Oregon and Idaho on an annual basis while it has been working with the states to identify measures that will provide reasonable assurance that discharges from the HCC will adequately address applicable water quality standards.
In September 2007, in connection with the issuance of its final EIS, the FERC notified the NMFS and the USFWS of its determination that the licensing of the HCC was likely to adversely affect ESA-listed species, including the bull trout and fall Chinook salmon and steelhead, under the NMFS's and USFWS's jurisdiction and requested that the NMFS and USFWS initiate formal consultation under Section 7 of the ESA on the licensing of the HCC. Each of the NMFS and USFWS responded to the FERC that the conditions relating to the licensing of the HCC were not fully described or developed in the final EIS as the measures to address the water quality effects of the project were yet to be fully defined by the Section 401 certification process pending before the Oregon and Idaho Departments of Environmental Quality. The NMFS and USFWS therefore recommended that formal consultation under the ESA be delayed until the Section 401 certification process is completed.
Idaho Power continues to work with Idaho and Oregon in the development of measures to provide reasonable assurance that any discharges from the HCC will comply with applicable state water quality standards so that appropriate water quality certifications can be issued for the project, and continues to cooperate with the USFWS, NMFS, and the FERC in an effort to address ESA concerns. Idaho Power has begun the process for construction of new aerated runners at the Brownlee project (part of the HCC) at an estimated cost of $50 million. Other measures that have been proposed or considered have included modification of spillways at Brownlee and Hells Canyon to address total dissolved gas issues, and upstream watershed improvements or the installation of a temperature control structure to address water temperatures during a small portion of the year. If Idaho Power is required to take these or other additional measures to satisfy relicensing requirements, it could add
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substantially to project costs. Idaho Power continues to work with the Oregon and Idaho Departments of Environmental Quality on the water quality certification issue and the water quality measures that will be required to obtain 401 certification. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power is unable to predict the timing of issuance by the FERC of any license order or the ultimate capital investment and ongoing operating and maintenance costs Idaho Power will incur in complying with any new license.
Renewable Energy Standards and Contracts
Renewable Portfolio Standards: Numerous proponents have introduced legislation in the U.S. Congress that would require electric utilities to obtain a specified percentage of their electricity from renewable sources, commonly referred to as a "renewable portfolio standard" or "RPS." However, as of the date of this report no federal or State of Idaho RPS is in effect. Idaho Power will be required to comply with a 10-percent RPS in Oregon beginning in 2025, and Idaho Power expects to meet this requirement with RECs obtained from the purchase of power from the Elkhorn Valley wind project. Idaho Power continues to monitor proposed federal RPS legislation and the possibility of additional state RPS legislation.
Pursuant to an IPUC order, Idaho Power is selling its near-term RECs and returning to customers their share (shared 95% with customers in the Idaho jurisdiction) of those proceeds through the PCA. For the years ended December 31, 2014 and 2013, Idaho Power's REC sales totaled $3.2 million and $0.6 million, respectively. The comparative increase in REC sales resulted primarily from the execution of new REC purchase and sale agreements with third parties for sales during 2014. Idaho Power has sold all of its 2013 and earlier vintage RECs. Idaho Power has sold a portion of its 2014 RECs and intends to continue selling its 2014 and later RECs as they are generated and become available for sale.
Were Idaho Power to be subject to additional RPS legislation, it may cease in full or in part the sale of RECs it receives, seek to obtain RECs from additional projects, generate RECs from any REC-generating facilities it owns or may be required to construct in light of an RPS, or purchase RECs in the market. Historically, Idaho Power has generally not received the RECs associated with PURPA projects. However, an order issued by the IPUC in December 2012, described below, provides that Idaho Power will own a portion of the RECs generated by some PURPA projects. The required purchase of additional RECs to meet RPS requirements would increase Idaho Power's costs, which Idaho Power expects would be wholly or largely passed on to customers through rates and the PCA mechanisms.
Renewable Energy Contracts and PURPA: Idaho Power purchases wind power from both cogeneration and small power production (CSPP) and non-CSPP facilities, including its largest non-CSPP wind power project -- the Elkhorn Valley wind project with a 101 MW nameplate capacity. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had contracts to purchase energy from on-line CSPP wind power projects with a combined nameplate rating of 577 MW and an additional 50 MW of CSPP wind power projects not on-line and scheduled to come on-line by year-end 2016. In addition to its power purchase arrangements with wind power generators, Idaho Power has contracts for the purchase of power from other CSPP and non-CSPP renewable generation sources, such as biomass, solar, small hydroelectric projects, and two geothermal projects. Recently, Idaho Power has received numerous requests for proposed power purchase contracts from developers of a number of potential solar power projects. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had contracts to purchase energy from solar projects not yet on-line for a total of 461 MW. All of these solar projects have estimated on-line dates no later than year-end 2016. The following tables sets forth, as of December 31, 2014, the number and nameplate capacity of Idaho Power's signed CSPP-related agreements. These agreements have original contract terms ranging from one to 35 years.
Status | Number of CSPP Contracts | Nameplate Capacity (MW) | ||
On-line as of December 31, 2014 | 105 | 781 | ||
Contracted and projected to come on-line by June 1, 2017 | 28 | 521 |
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 210 of PURPA, the IPUC and OPUC have each issued orders and rules regulating Idaho Power's purchase of power from CSPP facilities. A key component of the PURPA power purchase contracts is the energy price contained within the agreements. Regulatory-mandated execution of PURPA agreements can result in Idaho Power acquiring energy that it does not need to serve customer loads at above wholesale market prices and require additional operational integration measures, thus increasing costs to Idaho Power's customers. As the volume of CSPP purchases increases under PURPA, the magnitude of the costs and integration issues also increases. Substantially all PURPA power purchase costs are recovered through base rates and Idaho Power's PCA mechanisms, and thus the primary impact of PURPA agreements is on customer rates.
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Idaho Power has been involved in a number of PURPA-related proceedings at the IPUC, OPUC, and the FERC, and has previously intervened in proceedings between the IPUC and the FERC. In June 2011, the IPUC issued an order providing for a 100 kW eligibility cap for published avoided cost rates for wind and solar PURPA projects. In December 2012, the IPUC issued an order providing that for projects not eligible for published avoided cost rates, the price used for power purchase determinations would be updated annually based on updated natural gas prices and Idaho Power's updated load forecast. The IPUC also determined that RECs will be owned by the PURPA project developer for projects eligible for published avoided cost rates, and apportioned equally between the project developer and Idaho Power for other projects. The IPUC's order also provided that new projects will be paid for capacity based on the project's ability to deliver during peak hours and when Idaho Power's long-range plan shows the company is capacity deficient. Additionally, in December 2013 the IPUC and the FERC signed a memorandum of agreement dismissing claims brought in a U.S. District Court in Idaho relating to the interpretation and enforcement of PURPA as it pertained to several power purchase agreements with wind power developers.
Most recently, in light of the volume of intermittent generation Idaho Power is required to purchase pursuant to existing PURPA power purchase agreements and the substantial increase in volume of proposed new solar generation facilities seeking power purchase agreements with Idaho Power, on January 30, 2015, Idaho Power filed an application with the IPUC requesting that the IPUC issue an order directing that the maximum required term for prospective PURPA power purchase agreements be reduced from 20 years to two years. In its application, Idaho Power stated that the requested modification to terms of PURPA energy purchases is necessary to prevent harm to Idaho Power's customers that may result from entering into additional long-term, fixed-rate purchase agreements when Idaho Power predicts that there is no need for new generation capacity through 2021. On February 6, 2015, the IPUC issued an order reducing the maximum contract term of future PURPA power purchase agreements from 20 years to five years during the pendency of the proceedings.
ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS
Overview
Idaho Power is subject to a broad range of federal, state, regional, and local laws and regulations designed to protect, restore, and enhance the environment, including the Clean Air Act (CAA), the Clean Water Act, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, the Toxic Substances Control Act, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, and the ESA, among other laws. Current and pending environmental legislation relates to, among other issues, climate change, greenhouse gas, mercury and other emissions, air quality, hazardous wastes, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and threatened and endangered species. These laws are administered by a number of federal, state, and local agencies. In addition to imposing continuing compliance obligations and associated costs, these laws and regulations provide authority to regulators to levy substantial penalties for noncompliance, injunctive relief, and other sanctions. Idaho Power's three co-owned coal-fired power plants and three natural gas-fired combustion turbine power plants are subject to many of these regulations. Idaho Power's 17 hydroelectric projects are also further subject to a number of water discharge standards and other environmental requirements.
Compliance with current and future environmental laws and regulations may:
• | increase the operating costs of generating plants; |
• | increase the construction costs and lead time for new facilities; |
• | require the modification of existing generating plants, which could result in additional costs; |
• | require the curtailment or shut-down of existing generating plants; or |
• | reduce the output from current generating facilities. |
Current and future environmental laws and regulations will increase the cost of operating coal-fired power plants and constructing new facilities, in large part as a result of the installation of additional pollution control devices at existing generating plants. The cost of additional pollution control equipment could cause Idaho Power to discontinue the operation of one or more coal-fired plants, where those costs are substantial and cause operation of the plant to become uneconomical. In connection with its IRP process, Idaho Power has conducted cost studies and scenario analysis to assess the potential future investments necessary for the continued operation of the Jim Bridger and North Valmy coal generation facilities, in light of the environmental laws and regulations impacting the costs of operating those plants. The results of that study are discussed in Part I, Item 1 - "Business - Utility Operations - Environmental Regulation and Costs."
In addition to increasing costs generally, these environmental laws and regulations could affect IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition if the costs associated with these environmental requirements and early plant retirements cannot be fully recovered in rates on a timely basis. Part I, Item 1 - “Business - Utility Operations - Environmental
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Regulation and Costs” in this report includes a summary of Idaho Power's expected capital and operating expenditures for environmental matters during the period from 2015 to 2017. Given the uncertainty of future environmental regulations and technological advances, Idaho Power is unable to predict its environmental-related expenditures beyond 2017, though they could be substantial.
Endangered Species and Fisheries Matters
Overview: The listing of a species of fish, wildlife, or plants as threatened or endangered under the ESA may have an adverse impact on Idaho Power's ability to construct generation, transmission, or distribution facilities or relicense or operate its hydroelectric facilities. When a species is added to the federal list of threatened and endangered species, it is protected from “take,” which is defined to include harming the species. The ESA directs that, concurrent with a designation of a threatened or endangered species, and where prudent and determinable, the applicable agency also designate “any habitat of such species which is then considered to be critical habitat.” The ESA also provides that each federal agency shall ensure that any action they authorize, fund, or carry out is not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of a listed species or result in the destruction or adverse modification of its critical habitat. If an action is determined to result in adverse modification of critical habitat, the federal action agency must adopt changes to the proposed action to avoid such adverse modification. These changes are often quite extensive and can affect the size, scope and even the feasibility of a project moving forward. In May 2014, the USFWS and the NMFS proposed a set of regulatory changes and policies relating to critical habitat and adverse modification determinations. Taken as a whole, Idaho Power believes that the proposed changes could result in the applicable agencies having greater authority in making broad-scale designations of critical habitat and could increase the likelihood of adverse modification determinations.
The construction of generation, transmission, or distribution facilities and the relicensing of Idaho Power's hydroelectric projects can be federally authorized actions that fall under the ESA. There are a number of threatened or endangered species within Idaho Power's service area and within or near proposed transmission line routes. Further, there are a number of ESA-listed fish and other aquatic species located in waterways in which Idaho Power has hydroelectric facilities, including fall Chinook salmon, bull trout, Bliss Rapids snail, and Snake River physa snail. To date, efforts to protect these and other listed species have not significantly affected generation levels or operating costs at any of Idaho Power's hydroelectric facilities. However, the ongoing relicensing of the HCC presents endangered species and fisheries issues that may require generation or other operational adjustments. These adjustments may reduce the generation output or capital or operating costs of the plants, potentially causing Idaho Power to rely on more expensive sources for power generation or market purchases.
ESA Issues Related to Specific Species:
Slickspot Peppergrass: This southwestern Idaho plant species was listed as threatened by the USFWS in 2009. In May 2011, the USFWS issued a proposed rule to designate critical habitat for the slickspot peppergrass and proposed to designate approximately 58,000 acres of critical habitat in four southeast Idaho counties. Most of the species is located on federal land owned by the BLM and the U.S. Department of Defense. The BLM is currently treating the species as a proposed species under the ESA and will confer with the USFWS until a final decision is made. Parts of the Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West 500-kV transmission lines will cross BLM land upon which this species is located. The listing of the slickspot peppergrass would require that Idaho Power, as one of the project developers, engage in an ESA Section 7 consultation with the USFWS, which would increase the cost of the transmission projects and potentially delay the receipt of a permit for construction.
Greater Sage Grouse: The greater sage grouse is considered a “candidate species” under the ESA, which allows land management agencies to implement additional conservation measures. In March 2010, the USFWS announced that listing of the greater sage grouse as threatened or endangered under the ESA is warranted but precluded by higher priority listing actions. In February 2012, a federal district court in Idaho denied a request to expedite the listing of the greater sage grouse under the ESA. As a result, the USFWS has until September 30, 2015 to make a final listing determination under the ESA. Also in February 2012, the same court issued an order holding that the BLM had violated the National Environmental Policy Act and other federal laws in connection with the granting of livestock grazing permit renewals in sage grouse habitat. Due to the presence of sage grouse in the vicinity of the Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West 500-kV transmission lines, siting of these projects has required more extensive, costly, and time consuming evaluation, permitting, and engineering. In the event the USFWS lists the greater sage grouse as threatened or endangered, federal agencies that may authorize rights-of-way to Idaho Power, as one of the project developers, would be required to conduct a Section 7 consultation under the ESA for these transmission projects. Any required additional conservation measures may impact the timing and feasibility of siting, permitting, and constructing the Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West transmission lines and other projects.
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Washington Ground Squirrel: The Washington ground squirrel is considered a “candidate species” under the ESA. There are multiple records of Washington ground squirrels within or near portions of the proposed Boardman-to-Hemingway transmission line project. If this species is listed under the ESA, the BLM would be required to conduct a Section 7 consultation under the ESA for the Boardman-to-Hemingway project. If additional surveys are required, or if additional conservation and mitigation measures need to be developed, the overall timing of the permitting and construction, and the cost, of the Boardman-to-Hemingway project may be adversely affected.
ESA Issues Related to Specific Projects:
Hells Canyon Relicensing Project: In 2007, the FERC requested initiation of formal consultation under the ESA with the NMFS and the USFWS regarding potential effects of HCC relicensing on several listed aquatic and terrestrial species. Formal consultation has yet to be initiated and the NMFS and the USFWS continue to gather and consider information relative to the effects of relicensing on relevant ESA listed species. Idaho Power continues to cooperate with the USFWS, the NMFS, and the FERC in an effort to address ESA concerns. In December 2004, Idaho Power and eleven other parties, including NMFS and the USFWS, entered into an interim agreement that addresses the effects of the ongoing operations of the HCC on ESA listed species pending the relicensing of the project. At the conclusion of formal consultation and with the issuance of biological opinions by the NMFS and the USFWS and an operating license by the FERC, Idaho Power may be required to implement additional measures or further modify or adjust operations to comply with Section 7 of the ESA. The issuance of a final biological opinion during 2015 is unlikely.
Boardman-to-Hemingway and Gateway West Transmission Projects: As noted above, the existence of the slickspot peppergrass, greater sage grouse, and Washington ground squirrel within or near the proposed routes for these projects is impacting, and Idaho Power expects it to continue to impact, the cost and timing of permitting and construction of the projects.
Climate Change and the Regulation of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions
Overview: Long-term climate change could significantly affect Idaho Power's business in a variety of ways, including:
• | changes in temperature and precipitation could affect customer demand and energy loads; |
• | extreme weather events could increase service interruptions, outages, maintenance costs, and the need for additional backup systems, and can affect the supply of, and demand for, electricity and natural gas, which may impact the price of those and other commodities; |
• | changes in the amount and timing of snowpack and stream flows could adversely affect hydroelectric generation; |
• | legislative and/or regulatory developments related to climate change could affect plants and operations, including restrictions on the construction of new generation resources, the expansion of existing resources, or the operation of generation resources; and |
• | consumer preference for, and resource planning decisions requiring, renewable or low GHG-emitting sources of energy could impact usage of existing generation sources and require significant investment in new generation and transmission infrastructure. |
Federal and state regulations pertaining to GHG emissions under the CAA, including a proposed rule issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under Section 111(d) of the CAA, could raise uncertainty about the future viability of fossil fuels, specifically coal, as an economical energy source for new and existing electric generation facilities because many new technologies for reducing CO2 emissions from coal, including carbon capture and storage, are still in the development stage and are not yet proven. Stringent emissions standards could result in significant increases in capital expenditures and operating costs, which may accelerate the retirement of coal-fired units and create power system reliability issues. Due in part to the uncertainty of future GHG regulations, in its 2011 and 2013 IRPs Idaho Power did not include any new conventional coal resources in its resource portfolios. While it is not yet possible to determine the requirements of the final rule, in its 2015 IRP Idaho Power expects to include planning scenarios that take into account potential provisions of Rule 111(d) under the CAA.
A variety of factors contribute to the financial, regulatory, and logistical uncertainties related to GHG reductions, including the specific GHG emissions limits, the timing of implementation of these limits, the level of emissions allowances allocated and the level that must be purchased, the purchase price of emissions allowances, the development and commercial availability of technologies for renewable energy and for the reduction of emissions, the degree to which offsets may be used for compliance, provisions for cost containment (if any), the impact on coal and natural gas prices, and cost recovery through rates. Accordingly, Idaho Power cannot predict the effect on its results of operations, financial position, or cash flows of any GHG emission or other climate change requirements that may be adopted, although the costs to implement and comply with any such
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requirements could be substantial. A more detailed discussion of legislative and regulatory developments related to climate change follows.
National GHG Initiatives; Proposed Rule Under CAA Section 111(d): There is concern both nationally and internationally about climate change and the possible contribution of GHG emissions to climate change. The EPA has become increasingly active in the regulation of GHGs. The EPA's endangerment finding in 2009 that GHGs threaten public health and welfare resulted in the enactment of a series of EPA regulations to address GHG emissions. The EPA has issued final rules regulating GHG emissions under the New Source Review (NSR)/Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) and Title V Operating Permit programs under the CAA. Specifically, in May 2010 the EPA issued the “Tailoring Rule,” which set thresholds for GHG emissions that define when permits are required for new and existing industrial facilities. The final rule “tailors” the requirements of these CAA permitting programs to limit which facilities will be required to obtain PSD and Title V permits. Additionally, in December 2010 the EPA issued a series of final regulations for GHG emissions designed to ensure that industrial facilities can obtain CAA permits for GHG emissions, and that facilities emitting GHGs at levels below those established in the Tailoring Rule do not need federal CAA permits. The first phase of the rules took effect in January 2011 and required imposition of "best available control technology" for GHG emissions if a new major source or modification of an existing major source is projected to result in GHG emissions of at least 75,000 tons per year (CO2 equivalent). In addition, Title V permit renewals or modifications for existing major sources must include applicable requirements relating to GHGs. While the rules are complex, Idaho Power believes that its owned and co-owned generation plants are, as of the date of this report, in compliance with the GHG Tailoring Rule.
On June 2, 2014, the EPA released, under Section 111(d) of the CAA, a proposed rule for addressing GHG emissions from existing fossil fuel-fired electric generating units (EGUs). According to the EPA, the rule is designed to achieve a 30 percent reduction in CO2 emissions from the power sector. The proposal has two main elements: (1) state-specific emission rate-based CO2 goals and (2) guidelines for the development, submission, and implementation of state plans. The EPA used 2012 as the baseline when calculating the state-specific emission rate goals. While the proposal lays out state-specific CO2 goals that each state is required to meet, it does not prescribe how a state should meet its goal. Under the proposal, each state may seek to do so alone or may seek to collaborate with other states on multi-state plans.
Under the proposed rule, the EPA would permit states to develop plans to reduce CO2 emissions under an approach referred to as the “best system of emission reduction.” This approach is intended to take into account both the cost and technical feasibility of achieving such reduction. States would have flexibility to implement measures that, in some cases, are already in progress. The EPA has grouped these measures into the following four "building blocks," which generally describe four approaches for CO2 emission reduction:
1. | Reducing the carbon intensity of generation at individual affected EGUs through heat rate improvements. |
2. | Reducing emissions from the most carbon-intensive affected EGUs in the amount that results from substituting generation at those EGUs with generation from less carbon-intensive affected EGUs. |
3. | Reducing emissions from affected EGUs in the amount that results from substituting generation at those EGUs with expanded low- or zero-carbon generation. |
4. | Reducing emissions from affected EGUs in the amount that results from the use of demand-side energy efficiency that reduces the amount of generation required. |
The EPA's proposal requires that states meet their goal by 2030, with periodic reports to the EPA starting in 2022. The proposal also provides for states meeting interim goals from 2020 to 2029. The EPA has stated that it expects to finalize the rulemaking by mid-summer 2015. State implementation plans would be due by June 30, 2016, subject to extension for portions of the plan to June 30, 2017 for state plans or June 30, 2018 for multi-state plans, under certain circumstances.
Idaho Power has analyzed the proposed rule and is participating in state, regional, and national forums that are seeking to address the potential financial and operational impacts of the proposal and identify the means by which states may seek to achieve compliance. Because the rule is premised on state implementation plans, the terms of which Idaho Power does not control, as of the date of this report Idaho Power is unable to determine the financial or operational impacts of the proposed rule, if it were to be adopted as proposed.
State and Regional GHG Initiatives: On a regional level, there are a number of initiatives, including the Western Regional Climate Action Initiative, considering market-based mechanisms to reduce GHG emissions. Separately, in August 2007 the Oregon legislature enacted legislation setting goals of reducing GHG levels to 10 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 and at least 75 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. Oregon imposes GHG emission reporting requirements on facilities emitting 2,500 metric tons or more of CO2 equivalent annually. The Boardman coal-fired power plant located in Oregon, in which Idaho
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Power is a 10-percent owner, is subject to and in compliance with Oregon's GHG reporting requirements and is scheduled to cease coal-fired operations in 2020.
The State of Idaho has not passed legislation specifically regulating GHGs, but in May 2007 Governor Otter issued Executive Order 2007-05, which directed the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality to work with the state government to implement GHG reductions within each agency, complete a statewide emissions inventory, and provide recommendations to the Governor, among other tasks. Wyoming and Nevada similarly have not enacted legislation to regulate GHG emissions and do not have a reporting requirement, but are members of the Climate Registry, a national, voluntary GHG emission reporting system. The Climate Registry is a collaboration aimed at developing and managing a common GHG emission reporting system across states, provinces, and tribes to track GHG emissions nationally. All states for which Idaho Power has traditional fuel generating plants (i.e. Idaho, Oregon, Wyoming, and Nevada) are members of the Climate Registry.
Idaho Power's Voluntary GHG Reduction Initiatives: Despite the current absence of a national mandatory GHG reduction program, Idaho Power is engaged in voluntary GHG emissions intensity reduction efforts. Also, Idaho Power has voluntarily submitted information to the Carbon Disclosure Project, an independent, not-for-profit organization that claims the largest database of corporate climate change information in the world. Information on Idaho Power’s emission intensity is included in Part I, Item 1 - “Business - Environmental Regulation and Costs” in this report. In 2013, Idaho Power and Ida-West together ranked as the 38th lowest emitter of CO2 per MWh produced and the 36th lowest emitter of CO2 by tons of emissions among the nation's 100 largest electricity producers, according to the May 2014 Benchmarking Air Emissions of the 100 Largest Electric Power Producers in the United States, based on 2012 generation and emissions data. This report is the product of a collaborative effort among Ceres, Bank of America, four power producers, and the Natural Resources Defense Council.
Public Nuisance-Related Suits for GHGs: In June 2011, the U.S. Supreme Court held that federal courts do not have jurisdiction to hear federal common law nuisance claims relating to GHG emissions because the legal authority to regulate GHGs has been delegated by Congress to the EPA, not to the federal courts. The Court did not address, however, whether state common law nuisance claims would also be barred by the federal CAA. Accordingly, the Supreme Court's decision did not completely eliminate the potential for future nuisance-related suits for GHG emissions.
Clean Air Act Matters
Overview: In addition to the CAA developments related to GHG emissions described above, several other regulatory programs developed under the CAA impact Idaho Power. These include the final Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS), National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS), NSR/PSD Rules, and the Regional Haze Rule.
Final MATS Implementation: Several regulatory programs developed under the CAA impact Idaho Power. The CAA requires the EPA to develop industry-based standards to control emissions of hazardous air pollutants (HAPs). In February 2012, the EPA issued the final MATS rule to control emissions of mercury and other HAPs from coal- and oil-fired EGUs under the CAA. Additionally, in March 2013, the EPA issued a notice by which it finalized its MATS with regard to all pending issues except for the shutdown and startup of plants, in light of a number of requests for reconsideration that were filed by the electric utility industry. The notice revised the mercury emissions standard originally proposed in the February 2012 rule to make the mercury emission standard less stringent. The final rule took effect in April 2013. The compliance deadline for the new MATS has been established as April 2015. While the new MATS only applies to EGUs constructed in the future, and as a result Idaho Power does not expect the new standards to impact its existing generation facilities, the new MATS would impact the nature and extent of environmental controls to be installed on new EGUs, and thus would likely increase the cost of constructing new EGUs.
National Ambient Air Quality Standards: The CAA requires the EPA to set ambient air quality standards for six "criteria" pollutants considered harmful to public health and the environment. These six pollutants are carbon monoxide, lead, ozone, particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide. States are then required to develop emission reduction strategies through State Implementation Plans, or SIPs, based on attainment of these ambient air quality standards. Recent developments related to certain of those items relevant to Idaho Power include the following:
• | Particular Matter (PM2.5). In 1997, the EPA adopted NAAQS for fine particulate matter of less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter (PM2.5 standard), setting an annual limit of 15 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3), calculated as a three-year average. In 2006, the EPA adopted a 24-hour NAAQS for PM2.5. of 35 µg/m3. All of the counties in Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Wyoming in which Idaho Power's power plants are located have been designated as "attainment" with these PM2.5 standards. However, in December 2012, the EPA released final revisions to the PM2.5 NAAQS. The revised annual standard is 12 µg/m3, calculated as a three-year average. The EPA retained the existing 24-hour |
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standard of 35 µg/m3. On December 18, 2014, the EPA issued final area designations for the 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS, with the states of Wyoming, Nevada, and Oregon and all Idaho counties within Idaho Power's service area receiving attainment designations.
• | NOx. In 2010, the EPA adopted a new NAAQS for NOx at a level of 100 parts per billion averaged over a 1-hour period. In connection with the new NAAQS, in February 2012 the EPA issued a final rule designating all of the counties in Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Wyoming where Idaho Power owns or has an interest in a natural gas or coal-fired power plant as “unclassifiable/attainment” for NOx. The EPA indicated it will review the designations after 2015, when three years of air quality monitoring data are available, and may formally designate the counties as attainment or non-attainment for NOx. A designation of non-attainment may increase the likelihood that Idaho Power would be required to install costly pollution control technology at one or more of its plants. As the designations have not yet been finalized, as of the date of this report Idaho Power is unable to predict the impact of the NAAQS for NOx on its operations. However, the costs of installation and implementation of any additional pollution reduction technology could be substantial. |
• | SO2. In 2010, the EPA adopted a new NAAQS for SO2 at a level of 75 parts per billion averaged over a one-hour period. In 2011, the states of Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Wyoming sent letters to the EPA recommending that all counties in these states be classified as "unclassifiable" under the new one-hour SO2 NAAQS because of a lack of definitive monitoring and modeling data. In February 2013, the EPA issued letters to the states of Idaho and Oregon, finding that the most recent air quality data for those states showed no violations of the 2010 SO2 standard. As a result, the EPA is waiting to propose designation actions for those states, and is likely to proceed with designation actions once additional data is gathered. Idaho Power expects that designations for Nevada and Wyoming will also be addressed in a separate future action. |
• | Ozone. In late 2014, the EPA issued a proposed rule that would update the ozone standard under the CAA, from 75 parts per billion over an eight-hour period to 65 to 70 parts per billion over an eight-hour period. Under the proposed rule, the EPA would make attainment and non-attainment designations for any revised standards by October 2017, with states having until 2020 to late 2037 to meet the proposed standard, with attainment dates varying based on the ozone level in the area. The designation of an area as non-attainment, and SIPs implemented in order to reach attainment, could make the construction of new power generation plants, and operation of existing generation plants, more difficult or costly. |
Because the EPA has not yet completed the designation of areas as attaining or not attaining the NAAQS for NOx, SO2, and ozone, Idaho Power is unable to predict what impact the adoption and implementation of these standards may have on its operations, though it does expect at least some increases in capital and operating costs from the standards.
Regional Haze Rules: In accordance with federal regional haze rules under the CAA, coal-fired utility boilers are subject to regional haze - best available retrofit technology (RH BART) if they were built between 1962 and 1977 and affect any "Class I" (wilderness) areas. This includes all four units at the Jim Bridger and the Boardman coal-fired plants.
Jim Bridger Plant: In December 2009, the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality (WDEQ) issued a RH BART permit to PacifiCorp as the operator of the Jim Bridger plant. As part of the WDEQ's long term strategy for regional haze, the permit requires that PacifiCorp install SCR equipment for NOx control at Jim Bridger units 3 and 4 by December 31, 2015 and December 31, 2016, respectively, and submit an application by December 31, 2017 to install add-on NOx controls at Jim Bridger unit 2 by 2021 and unit 1 by 2022. In November 2010, PacifiCorp and the WDEQ signed a settlement agreement under which PacifiCorp agreed to the timing and nature of the controls. The settlement agreement was conditioned on the EPA ultimately approving those portions of the Wyoming Regional Haze SIP that are consistent with the terms of the settlement agreement. On January 10, 2014, the EPA approved Wyoming's Regional Haze SIP as to the Jim Bridger plant, with the NOx control compliance dates set forth in the settlement agreement. Several interested parties have appealed the EPA's decisions on Wyoming's RH SIP on various grounds. Idaho Power has not appealed the EPA's decisions but has intervened in the proceedings to participate if and to the extent the Jim Bridger plant could be affected.
Boardman Plant: Following the introduction of various plans and an extensive public process, in December 2010 the Oregon Environmental Quality Commission (OEQC) approved a plan to cease coal-fired operations at the Boardman power plant no later than December 31, 2020. The rules implementing the plan require the installation of a number of emissions controls and repeal the OEQC's 2009 BART rule, which would have allowed continued operation of the Boardman plant through at least 2040 with installation of a more extensive suite of emissions controls. Idaho Power's share of the capital cost of the required controls under the plan approved by the OEQC for controlling mercury, NOx, and SO2 was approximately $6 million.
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New Source Review / Prevention of Significant Deterioration: NSR/PSD is a pre-construction permitting program that requires a stationary source of air pollution to obtain a permit before beginning construction. The purpose of the program is to ensure that air quality is not significantly degraded by the addition of new and modified facilities, industrial boilers, and power plants. Under current NSR provisions of the CAA, any facility that emits regulated pollutants is required to obtain a permit from the EPA or a state regulatory equivalent before beginning the construction of a stationary source that will emit regulated pollutants, or before modifying an existing stationary source that will increase its emission levels. Since 1999, the EPA and the U.S. Department of Justice have been pursuing a national enforcement initiative focused on the compliance status of coal-fired power plants with the NSR permitting requirements and NSPS under the CAA. This initiative has resulted in both enforcement litigation and significant settlements with a large number of public utilities and other owners of coal-fired power plants across the country. As part of an industry-wide assessment of compliance with NSR and NSPS, EPA has sought information from a number of utilities regarding their coal-fired generating facilities. In 2003, the EPA sent information requests pursuant to the CAA to the Jim Bridger plant, seeking information relevant to NSR and NSPS compliance. Additional requests were received by the Boardman plant in 2008, with a follow up request for information in 2009 and by the Valmy plant in 2009. In September 2010, the EPA issued a Notice of Violation to Portland General Electric Company, the operator of the Boardman plant, alleging that Portland General Electric Company violated the NSPS under Section 111 of the CAA and operating permit requirements under Title V of the CAA at the Boardman coal-fired plant as a result of certain modifications made to the plant in 1998 and 2004. To date, the EPA has not taken action on the Notice of Violation, and a related private lawsuit under the CAA was settled in 2011.
Regulation of Coal Combustion Residuals (CCRs)
The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) is a federal statute regulating the generation, treatment, storage, and disposal of solid and hazardous wastes. In December 2008, the breach of a dike at the Tennessee Valley Authority's Kingston Station resulted in a spill of several million cubic yards of ash into a nearby river and onto private properties. In response, in June 2010 the EPA proposed regulations governing the disposal and management of CCRs, which are regulated under the RCRA. In December 2014, the EPA signed a final rule for the disposal of CCRs. The rule establishes structural integrity design criteria and requires that owners and operators periodically conduct a number of structural integrity related assessments and install monitoring apparatus. The final rule also imposes location restrictions on impoundments, requires the closure of impoundments that cannot meet the location restrictions, imposes liner design criteria and operating requirements, and imposes certain record keeping and notification requirements. Additionally, the EPA's rule imposes obligations associated with the closure of CCR impoundments. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power and its co-owners of coal-fired units are performing engineering and cost studies to determine the financial and operational impact of the rule. The rule becomes effective in 2015. Upon completion of engineering and cost studies, Idaho Power plans to incorporate any impact of this rule into its estimates of asset retirement obligations associated with coal ash disposal facilities at its coal plants.
Regulation of Polychlorinated Biphenyls
The Toxic Substances Control Act is a federal statute providing the EPA with the authority to, among other things, require use restrictions relating to chemical substances including PCBs. Generally, PCBs are prohibited from use, but some uses of PCBs - such as in electrical equipment - remain authorized under certain conditions. In April 2010, the EPA issued an advance notice of proposed rulemaking stating that it is considering revisiting the authorization allowing the continued use of PCBs in equipment. If new regulations require the replacement of existing equipment, they could have an adverse effect on IDACORP's and Idaho Power's financial condition and results of operations. However, the financial and operational consequences cannot be determined until final regulations are issued. Idaho Power currently records asset retirement obligation liabilities and associated regulatory assets for the estimated retirement costs of equipment containing PCBs. Final regulations could accelerate Idaho Power's estimated timing for the retirement of equipment with PCBs.
Clean Water Act Matters
Potential Expansion of CWA Scope: On April 21, 2014, the EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers jointly published for public comment a proposed rule to revise the definition of "waters of the United States" for purposes of the CWA. The proposed rule would potentially expand federal jurisdiction under the CWA beyond traditional navigable waters, interstate waters, territorial seas, tributaries, and adjacent wetlands, to a number of other waters, including waters with a "significant nexus" to those traditional waters. The rule could trigger substantial additional permitting and regulatory requirements under multiple provisions of the CWA. Idaho Power is analyzing the proposed rule but as of the date of this report is unable to determine the impact of the proposed rule, should it become final, on its operations.
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Potential Section 316(b) Regulation of Cooling Water Intake Structures: The CWA generally prohibits the discharge of any "pollutant" from a point source into waters of the United States without a permit. Pollutants are broadly defined to include changes in temperature. Section 316(b) of the CWA requires that National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permits for facilities with cooling water intake structures ensure that the location, design, construction, and capacity of the structures employ the best technology available (BTA) to minimize harmful impacts on the environment, such as the removal of fish, fish larvae, marine mammals, and other aquatic organisms from waters of the U.S. In May 2014, the EPA issued final rules that establish requirements under Section 316(b) of the CWA for existing power generation facilities that withdraw more than 2 million gallons per day of water from waters of the U.S. and use at least 25 percent of the water they withdraw exclusively for cooling purposes. These facilities are required to reduce fish impingement under the final rules, using one of several options for meeting BTA requirements for reducing impingement. Based on the qualification criteria, Idaho Power is evaluating whether these new requirements apply to the Jim Bridger plant. Idaho Power and the plant's co-owner are performing studies at the plant to determine the applicability of the new rules and the infrastructure improvements or operational changes that may be required for the plant to comply with the new rules, if applicable. Based on its preliminary analysis, as of the date of this report Idaho Power does not expect that compliance with the new rules will result in a material increase in costs.
Idaho Power is also addressing CWA issues associated with the relicensing of its HCC. See “Relicensing of Hydroelectric Projects” in this MD&A for additional information on the impact of the CWA on that relicensing effort.
Effluent Limitation Guidelines and Standards: In June 2013, the EPA issued proposed rulemaking to revise the technology-based effluent limitation guidelines and standards under the CWA for water discharged from steam electric power plants, which includes coal-fired plants. The proposed rule would establish new or additional requirements for wastewater streams from a number of processes associated with steam electric power generation. The EPA has stated that more than half of coal-fired plants in the United States would be in compliance with the proposed rules without incurring any additional cost, and stated that its cost analysis shows very small effects on the electric power market. Idaho Power has conducted a preliminary analysis based on the proposed rule and as of the date of this report does not anticipate that the proposed rule would materially affect Idaho Power’s operations or financial condition, but the company expects to conduct an additional assessment when and if final rules are issued.
CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND ESTIMATES
When preparing financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s management must apply accounting policies and make estimates that affect the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, revenues, and expenses and related disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities. These estimates often involve judgment about factors that are difficult to predict and are beyond management’s control. Management adjusts these estimates based on historical experience and on other assumptions and factors that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. Actual amounts could materially differ from the estimates. Management believes the accounting policies and estimates discussed below are the most critical to the portrayal of their financial condition and results of operations and require management’s most difficult, subjective, or complex judgments, often as a result of the need to make estimates about the effect of matters that are inherently uncertain and may change in subsequent periods.
Accounting for Rate Regulation
Entities that meet specific conditions are required by GAAP to reflect the impact of regulatory decisions in their consolidated financial statements and to defer certain costs as regulatory assets until matching revenues can be recognized. Similarly, certain items may be deferred as regulatory liabilities. Idaho Power must satisfy three conditions to apply regulatory accounting: (1) an independent regulator must set rates; (2) the regulator must set the rates to cover specific costs of delivering service; and (3) the service territory must lack competitive pressures to reduce rates below the rates set by the regulator.
Idaho Power has determined that it meets these conditions, and its financial statements reflect the effects of the different rate-making principles followed by the jurisdictions regulating Idaho Power. The primary effect of this policy is that Idaho Power had recorded $1.2 billion of regulatory assets and $402 million of regulatory liabilities at December 31, 2014. Idaho Power expects to recover these regulatory assets from customers through rates and refund these regulatory liabilities to customers through rates, but recovery or refund is subject to final review by the regulatory bodies. If future recovery or refund of these amounts ceases to be probable, or if Idaho Power determines that it no longer meets the criteria for applying regulatory accounting, or if accounting rules change to no longer provide for regulatory assets and liabilities, Idaho Power could be required to eliminate those regulatory assets or liabilities. Either circumstance could have a material effect on Idaho Power’s financial condition or results of operations.
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Income Taxes
IDACORP and Idaho Power use judgment and estimation in developing the provision for income taxes and the reporting of tax-related assets and liabilities. The interpretation of tax laws can involve uncertainty, since tax authorities may interpret such laws differently. Actual income taxes could vary from estimated amounts and may result in favorable or unfavorable impacts to net income, cash flows, and tax-related assets and liabilities.
Idaho Power provides deferred income taxes related to its plant assets for the difference between income tax depreciation and book depreciation used for financial statement purposes. Deferred income taxes for other items are provided for the temporary differences between the income tax and financial accounting treatment of such items. Unless contrary to applicable income tax guidance, deferred income taxes are not provided for those income tax temporary differences where the prescribed regulatory accounting methods, or flow-through, direct Idaho Power to recognize the tax impacts currently for rate making and financial reporting.
Refer to Note 1 - “Summary of Significant Accounting Policies” and Note 2 - “Income Taxes” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report for additional information relating to income taxes.
Pension and Other Postretirement Benefits
Idaho Power maintains a tax-qualified, noncontributory defined benefit pension plan covering most employees, an unfunded nonqualified deferred compensation plan for certain senior management employees and directors called the Security Plan for Senior Management Employees (SMSP), and a postretirement benefit plan (consisting of health care and death benefits).
The costs IDACORP and Idaho Power record for these plans depend on the provisions of the plans, changing employee demographics, actual returns on plan assets, and several assumptions used in the actuarial valuations from which the expense is derived. The key actuarial assumptions that affect expense are the expected long-term return on plan assets and the discount rate used in determining future benefit obligations. Management evaluates the actuarial assumptions on an annual basis, taking into account changes in market conditions, trends, and future expectations. Estimates of future stock market performance, changes in interest rates, and other factors used to develop the actuarial assumptions are uncertain, and actual results could vary significantly from the estimates.
The assumed discount rate is based on reviews of market yields on high-quality corporate debt. Specifically, IDACORP and Idaho Power determined the discount rate for each plan through the construction of hypothetical portfolios of bonds selected from high-quality corporate bonds available as of December 31, 2014, with maturities matching the projected cash outflows of the plans. Based on the results of this analysis, the discount rate used to calculate the 2015 pension expense will be decreased to 4.25 percent from the 5.20 percent used in 2014.
Rate-of-return projections for plan assets are based on historical risk/return relationships among asset classes. The primary measure is the historical risk premium each asset class has delivered versus the yield on the Moody's AA Corporate Bond Index. This historical risk premium is then added to the current yield on the Moody's AA Corporate Bond Index, and Idaho Power believes the result provides a reasonable prediction of future investment performance. Additional analysis is performed to measure the expected range of returns, as well as worst-case and best-case scenarios. Based on the current interest rate environment, current rate-of-return expectations are lower than the nominal returns generated over the past 20 years when interest rates were generally much higher. The long-term rate of return used to calculate the 2015 pension expense will be decreased to 7.5 percent from 7.75 percent for 2014.
Gross net periodic pension and other postretirement benefit cost for these plans totaled $32 million, $55 million, and $51 million for the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012, respectively, including amounts deferred as regulatory assets (see discussion below) and amounts allocated to capitalized labor. For 2015, gross pension and other postretirement benefit costs are expected to total approximately $54 million, which takes into account the changes in the assumed long-term rate of return and discount rate noted above.
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Had different actuarial assumptions been used, pension expense could have varied significantly. The following table reflects the sensitivities associated with changes in the discount rate and rate-of-return on plan assets actuarial assumptions on historical and future pension and postretirement expense:
Discount rate | Rate of return | |||||||||||||||
2015 | 2014 | 2015 | 2014 | |||||||||||||
(millions of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||
Effect of 0.5% rate increase on net periodic benefit cost | $ | (7.2 | ) | $ | (6.1 | ) | $ | (2.9 | ) | $ | (2.8 | ) | ||||
Effect of 0.5% rate decrease on net periodic benefit cost | 8.0 | 6.5 | 3.0 | 2.9 |
Additionally, a 0.5 percent increase in the plans' discount rates would have resulted in a $72 million decrease in the combined benefit obligations of the plans as of December 31, 2014. A 0.5 percent decrease in the plans' discount rates would have resulted in an $82 million increase in the combined benefit obligations of the plans as of December 31, 2014.
The IPUC has authorized Idaho Power to account for its defined benefit pension plan expense on a cash basis, and to defer and account for accrued pension expense as a regulatory asset. The IPUC acknowledged that it is appropriate for Idaho Power to seek recovery in its revenue requirement of reasonable and prudently incurred pension expense based on actual cash contributions. In 2007, Idaho Power began deferring pension expense to a regulatory asset account to be matched with revenue when future pension contributions are recovered through rates. At December 31, 2014, a total of $64 million of expense was deferred as a regulatory asset. Approximately $24 million is expected to be deferred in 2015. Idaho Power recorded pension expense in 2014, 2013, and 2012 of $35 million, $36 million, and $34 million, respectively.
Refer to Note 11 – “Benefit Plans” to the consolidated financial statements included in this report for additional information relating to pension and postretirement benefit plans.
Contingent Liabilities
An estimated loss from a loss contingency is charged to income if (a) it is probable that a liability had been incurred at the date of the financial statements and (b) the amount of the loss can be reasonably estimated. If a probable loss cannot be reasonably estimated, no accrual is recorded but disclosure of the contingency, if material, in the notes to the financial statements is required. Gain contingencies are not recorded until realized. IDACORP and Idaho Power have a number of unresolved issues related to regulatory and legal matters. If the recognition criteria have been met, liabilities have been recorded. Estimates of this nature are highly subjective and the final outcome of these matters could vary significantly from the amounts that have been included in the financial statements.
RECENTLY ISSUED ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
In May 2014, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606). ASU 2014-09 is intended to enable users of financial statements to better understand and consistently analyze an entity's revenue across industries, transactions, and geographies. Under the ASU, recognition of revenue occurs when a customer obtains control of promised goods or services. In addition, the ASU requires disclosure of the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows arising from contracts with customers. The amendments in ASU 2014-09 are effective for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2016, including interim periods within that reporting period. Early adoption is not permitted. The guidance permits two implementation approaches, one requiring retrospective application of the new standard with restatement of prior years and one requiring prospective application of the new standard including a cumulative-effect adjustment with disclosure of results under old standards. As such, at IDACORP's and Idaho Power's required adoption date of January 1, 2017, amounts in 2015 and 2016 may have to be revised. IDACORP and Idaho Power are currently evaluating the impact of ASU 2014-09 on their financial statements.
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ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
IDACORP and Idaho Power are exposed to market risks, including changes in interest rates, changes in commodity prices, credit risk, and equity price risk. The following discussion summarizes these risks and the financial instruments, derivative instruments, and derivative commodity instruments sensitive to changes in interest rates, commodity prices, and equity prices that were held at December 31, 2014. IDACORP has not entered into any of these market-risk-sensitive instruments for trading purposes.
Interest Rate Risk
IDACORP and Idaho Power manage interest expense and short- and long-term liquidity through a combination of fixed rate and variable rate debt. Generally, the amount of each type of debt is managed through market issuance, but interest rate swap and cap agreements with highly-rated financial institutions may be used to achieve the desired combination.
Variable Rate Debt: As of December 31, 2014, IDACORP and Idaho Power had $55.4 million and $24.1 million, respectively, in net floating rate debt. The fair market value of this debt was a respective $55.4 million and $24.1 million. Assuming no change in financial structure, if variable interest rates were to average one percentage point higher than the average rate on December 31, 2014, annual interest expense would increase and pre-tax earnings would decrease by approximately $0.5 million for IDACORP and $0.2 million for Idaho Power.
Fixed Rate Debt: As of December 31, 2014, IDACORP and Idaho Power had $1.6 billion in fixed rate debt, with a fair market value equal to $1.8 billion. These instruments are fixed rate and, therefore, do not expose the companies to a loss in earnings due to changes in market interest rates. However, the fair value of these instruments would increase by approximately $220 million if market interest rates were to decline by one percentage point from their December 31, 2014 levels.
Commodity Price Risk
IDACORP's exposure to changes in commodity prices is related to Idaho Power's ongoing utility operations that produce electricity to meet the demand of its retail electric customers. These effects of changes in commodity prices on Idaho Power are mitigated in large part by Idaho Power's Idaho and Oregon PCA mechanisms. To supplement its generation resources and balance its supply of power with the demand of its retail customers, Idaho Power participates in the wholesale marketplace. These purchased power arrangements allow Idaho Power to respond to fluctuations in the demand for electricity and variability in generating plant operations. Idaho Power also enters into arrangements for the purchase of fuel for natural gas and coal-fired generating plants. These contracts for the purchase of power and fuel expose Idaho Power to commodity price risk.
A number of factors associated with the structure and operation of the energy markets influence the level and volatility of prices for energy commodities and related derivative products. The weather is a major uncontrollable factor affecting the local and regional demand for electricity and the availability and cost of power generation. Other factors include the occurrence and timing of demand peaks due to seasonal, daily, and hourly power demand; power supply; power transmission capacity; changes in federal and state regulation and compliance obligations; fuel supplies; and market liquidity.
The primary objectives of Idaho Power’s energy purchase and sale activity are to meet the demand of retail electric customers, to maintain appropriate physical reserves to ensure reliability, and to make economic use of temporary surpluses that may develop. Idaho Power has adopted a risk management program, which has been reviewed and accepted by the IPUC, designed to reduce exposure to power supply cost-related uncertainty, further mitigating commodity price risk. Idaho Power’s Energy Risk Management Policy (Policy) and associated standards implementing the Policy describe a collaborative process with customers and regulators via a committee called the Customer Advisory Group (CAG). The Risk Management Committee (RMC), comprised of selected Idaho Power officers and other senior staff, oversees the risk management program. The RMC is responsible for communicating the status of risk management activities to the Idaho Power Board of Directors and to the CAG, and Idaho Power’s Audit Committee is responsible for approving the Policy and associated standards. The RMC is also responsible for conducting an ongoing general assessment of the appropriateness of Idaho Power’s strategies for energy risk management activities. In its risk management process, Idaho Power considers both demand-side and supply-side options consistent with its IRP. The primary tools for risk mitigation are physical and financial forward power transactions and fueling alternatives for utility-owned generation resources. Idaho Power only engages in a nominal amount of trading activity for non-retail purposes.
The Policy requires monitoring monthly volumetric electricity position and total monthly dollar (net power supply cost) exposure on a rolling 18-month forward view. The power supply business unit produces and evaluates projections of the
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operating plan based on factors such as forecasted resource availability, stream flows, and load, and orders risk mitigating actions, including resource optimization and hedging strategies, dictated by the limits stated in the Policy to bring exposures within pre-established risk guidelines. The RMC evaluates the actions initiated by power supply for consistency and compliance with the Policy. Idaho Power representatives meet with the CAG at least annually to assess effectiveness of the limits. Changes to the limits can be endorsed by the CAG and referred to the board of directors for approval.
Credit Risk
IDACORP is subject to credit risk based on Idaho Power's activity with market counterparties. Idaho Power is exposed to this risk to the extent that a counterparty may fail to fulfill a contractual obligation to provide energy, purchase energy, or complete financial settlement for market activities. Idaho Power mitigates this exposure by actively establishing credit limits; measuring, monitoring, and reporting credit risk using appropriate contractual arrangements; and transferring of credit risk through the use of financial guarantees, cash, or letters of credit. Idaho Power maintains a current list of acceptable counterparties and credit limits.
The use of performance assurance collateral in the form of cash, letters of credit, or guarantees is common industry practice. Idaho Power maintains margin agreements relating to its wholesale commodity contracts that allow performance assurance collateral to be requested of and/or posted with certain counterparties. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had posted no performance assurance collateral. Should Idaho Power experience a reduction in its credit rating on Idaho Power’s unsecured debt to below investment grade Idaho Power could be subject to requests by its wholesale counterparties to post additional performance assurance collateral. Counterparties to derivative instruments and other forward contracts could request immediate payment or demand immediate ongoing full daily collateralization on derivative instruments and contracts in net liability positions. Based upon Idaho Power’s energy and fuel portfolio and market conditions as of December 31, 2014, the amount of collateral that could be requested upon a downgrade to below investment grade was approximately $8.1 million. To minimize capital requirements, Idaho Power actively monitors the portfolio exposure and the potential exposure to additional requests for performance assurance collateral calls through sensitivity analysis.
Idaho Power is obligated to provide service to all electric customers within its service area. Credit risk for Idaho Power’s retail customers is managed by credit and collection policies that are governed by rules issued by the IPUC or OPUC. Idaho Power records a provision for uncollectible accounts, based upon historical experience, to provide for the potential loss from nonpayment by these customers. Idaho Power continuously monitors the impact of current economic conditions on nonpayment from customers and makes any necessary adjustments to its provision for uncollectible accounts accordingly.
Idaho utility customer relations rules prohibit Idaho Power from terminating electric service during the months of December through February to any residential customer who declares that he or she is unable to pay in full for utility service and whose household includes children, elderly, or infirm persons. Idaho Power’s provision for uncollectible accounts could be affected by changes in future prices as well as changes in IPUC or OPUC regulations.
Equity Price Risk
IDACORP is exposed to price fluctuations in equity markets, primarily through Idaho Power's defined benefit pension plan assets, a mine reclamation trust fund owned by an equity-method investment of Idaho Power, and other equity security investments at Idaho Power. The equity securities held by the pension plan and in such accounts are diversified to achieve broad market participation and reduce the impact of any single investment, sector, or geographic region. Idaho Power has established asset allocation targets for the pension plan holdings, which are described in Note 11 - "Benefit Plans" to the notes to the consolidated financial statements included in this report. A hypothetical 10 percent decrease in equity prices would result in an approximate $4.5 million decrease in the fair value of financial instruments that are classified as available-for-sale securities as of December 31, 2014.
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ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
Index to Financial Statements and Financial Statement Schedules
Consolidated Financial Statements | Page |
IDACORP, Inc.: | |
Consolidated Statements of Income | |
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income | |
Consolidated Balance Sheets | |
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows | |
Consolidated Statements of Equity | |
Idaho Power Company: | |
Consolidated Statements of Income | |
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income | |
Consolidated Balance Sheets | |
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows | |
Consolidated Statements of Retained Earnings | |
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements | |
Reports of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm | |
Supplemental Financial Information and Financial Statement Schedules | |
Supplemental Financial Information (unaudited) | |
Financial Statement Schedules | |
IDACORP, Inc. - Schedule I - Condensed Financial Information of Registrant | |
IDACORP, Inc. - Schedule II - Consolidated Valuation and Qualifying Accounts | |
Idaho Power Company - Schedule II - Consolidated Valuation and Qualifying Accounts |
All other schedules have been omitted because they are not required, not applicable, or the required information is otherwise included.
74
IDACORP, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Income
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars except for per share amounts) | ||||||||||||
Operating Revenues: | ||||||||||||
Electric utility: | ||||||||||||
General business | $ | 1,122,281 | $ | 1,101,728 | $ | 937,765 | ||||||
Off-system sales | 77,165 | 54,473 | 61,534 | |||||||||
Other revenues | 79,205 | 86,897 | 77,426 | |||||||||
Total electric utility revenues | 1,278,651 | 1,243,098 | 1,076,725 | |||||||||
Other | 3,873 | 3,116 | 3,937 | |||||||||
Total operating revenues | 1,282,524 | 1,246,214 | 1,080,662 | |||||||||
Operating Expenses: | ||||||||||||
Electric utility: | ||||||||||||
Purchased power | 244,628 | 220,579 | 196,935 | |||||||||
Fuel expense | 201,241 | 214,482 | 159,413 | |||||||||
Power cost adjustment | 22,235 | (39,537 | ) | (61,090 | ) | |||||||
Other operations and maintenance | 354,567 | 348,867 | 349,033 | |||||||||
Energy efficiency programs | 27,154 | 35,636 | 27,300 | |||||||||
Depreciation | 132,987 | 129,735 | 123,941 | |||||||||
Taxes other than income taxes | 31,748 | 30,561 | 30,489 | |||||||||
Total electric utility expenses | 1,014,560 | 940,323 | 826,021 | |||||||||
Other | 14,268 | 14,149 | 12,039 | |||||||||
Total operating expenses | 1,028,828 | 954,472 | 838,060 | |||||||||
Operating Income | 253,696 | 291,742 | 242,602 | |||||||||
Allowance for Equity Funds Used During Construction | 17,931 | 14,858 | 22,433 | |||||||||
Earnings of Unconsolidated Equity-Method Investments | 12,372 | 11,939 | 11,617 | |||||||||
Other Income, Net | 6,328 | 17,013 | 4,209 | |||||||||
Interest Expense: | ||||||||||||
Interest on long-term debt | 80,562 | 81,492 | 78,922 | |||||||||
Other interest | 7,703 | 7,203 | 6,876 | |||||||||
Allowance for borrowed funds used during construction | (8,464 | ) | (7,663 | ) | (11,929 | ) | ||||||
Total interest expense, net | 79,801 | 81,032 | 73,869 | |||||||||
Income Before Income Taxes | 210,526 | 254,520 | 206,992 | |||||||||
Income Tax Expense | 16,772 | 72,226 | 33,805 | |||||||||
Net Income | 193,754 | 182,294 | 173,187 | |||||||||
Adjustment for (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests | (274 | ) | 123 | (173 | ) | |||||||
Net Income Attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | $ | 193,480 | $ | 182,417 | $ | 173,014 | ||||||
Weighted Average Common Shares Outstanding - Basic (000’s) | 50,131 | 50,052 | 49,930 | |||||||||
Weighted Average Common Shares Outstanding - Diluted (000’s) | 50,199 | 50,126 | 50,010 | |||||||||
Earnings Per Share of Common Stock: | ||||||||||||
Earnings Attributable to IDACORP, Inc. - Basic | $ | 3.86 | $ | 3.64 | $ | 3.47 | ||||||
Earnings Attributable to IDACORP, Inc. - Diluted | $ | 3.85 | $ | 3.64 | $ | 3.46 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
75
IDACORP, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Net Income | $ | 193,754 | $ | 182,294 | $ | 173,187 | ||||||
Other Comprehensive Income: | ||||||||||||
Unrealized gains (losses) on securities: | ||||||||||||
Unrealized holding gains arising during the year, net of tax of $0, $1,894, and $1,006 | — | 2,951 | 1,567 | |||||||||
Reclassification adjustment for gains included in net income, net of tax of $0, $4,550, and $0 | — | (7,087 | ) | — | ||||||||
Net unrealized (losses) gains | — | (4,136 | ) | 1,567 | ||||||||
Unfunded pension liability adjustment, net of tax of $(4,881), $3,016, and ($4,532) | (7,605 | ) | 4,699 | (7,061 | ) | |||||||
Total Comprehensive Income | 186,149 | 182,857 | 167,693 | |||||||||
Comprehensive (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests | (274 | ) | 123 | (173 | ) | |||||||
Comprehensive Income Attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | $ | 185,875 | $ | 182,980 | $ | 167,520 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
76
IDACORP, Inc.
Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31, | ||||||||
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||
Assets | ||||||||
Current Assets: | ||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents | $ | 56,808 | $ | 78,162 | ||||
Receivables: | ||||||||
Customer (net of allowance of $1,960 and $2,349, respectively) | 79,083 | 97,873 | ||||||
Other (net of allowance of $144 and $153, respectively) | 16,018 | 15,274 | ||||||
Income taxes receivable | 11,867 | 156 | ||||||
Accrued unbilled revenues | 56,270 | 63,507 | ||||||
Materials and supplies (at average cost) | 55,404 | 53,643 | ||||||
Fuel stock (at average cost) | 55,171 | 41,546 | ||||||
Prepayments | 18,476 | 15,338 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes | 42,359 | 46,874 | ||||||
Current regulatory assets | 50,042 | 61,837 | ||||||
Other | 603 | 2,401 | ||||||
Total current assets | 442,101 | 476,611 | ||||||
Investments | 165,424 | 159,072 | ||||||
Property, Plant and Equipment: | ||||||||
Utility plant in service | 5,248,212 | 5,080,402 | ||||||
Accumulated provision for depreciation | (1,841,011 | ) | (1,766,680 | ) | ||||
Utility plant in service - net | 3,407,201 | 3,313,722 | ||||||
Construction work in progress | 401,930 | 327,000 | ||||||
Utility plant held for future use | 7,090 | 7,090 | ||||||
Other property, net of accumulated depreciation | 17,256 | 17,229 | ||||||
Property, plant and equipment - net | 3,833,477 | 3,665,041 | ||||||
Other Assets: | ||||||||
American Falls and Milner water rights | 13,698 | 15,803 | ||||||
Company-owned life insurance | 23,893 | 22,037 | ||||||
Regulatory assets | 1,192,345 | 978,234 | ||||||
Long-term receivables (net of allowance of $552 and $885, respectively) | 6,317 | 4,811 | ||||||
Other | 39,598 | 42,954 | ||||||
Total other assets | 1,275,851 | 1,063,839 | ||||||
Total | $ | 5,716,853 | $ | 5,364,563 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
77
IDACORP, Inc.
Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31, | ||||||||
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||
Liabilities and Equity | ||||||||
Current Liabilities: | ||||||||
Current maturities of long-term debt | $ | 1,064 | $ | 1,064 | ||||
Notes payable | 31,300 | 54,750 | ||||||
Accounts payable | 97,271 | 91,519 | ||||||
Taxes accrued | 10,367 | 13,302 | ||||||
Interest accrued | 22,630 | 22,764 | ||||||
Accrued compensation | 43,774 | 38,510 | ||||||
Current regulatory liabilities | 11,400 | 10,684 | ||||||
Other | 23,975 | 17,779 | ||||||
Total current liabilities | 241,781 | 250,372 | ||||||
Other Liabilities: | ||||||||
Deferred income taxes | 1,065,290 | 969,593 | ||||||
Regulatory liabilities | 390,207 | 375,873 | ||||||
Pension and other postretirement benefits | 403,334 | 244,627 | ||||||
Other | 44,238 | 54,100 | ||||||
Total other liabilities | 1,903,069 | 1,644,193 | ||||||
Long-Term Debt | 1,614,438 | 1,615,258 | ||||||
Commitments and Contingencies | ||||||||
Equity: | ||||||||
IDACORP, Inc. shareholders’ equity: | ||||||||
Common stock, no par value (shares authorized 120,000,000; 50,308,702 and 50,233,463 shares issued, respectively) | 845,402 | 839,750 | ||||||
Retained earnings | 1,132,237 | 1,027,461 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss | (24,158 | ) | (16,553 | ) | ||||
Treasury stock (38,764 and 718 shares at cost, respectively) | (280 | ) | (8 | ) | ||||
Total IDACORP, Inc. shareholders’ equity | 1,953,201 | 1,850,650 | ||||||
Noncontrolling interests | 4,364 | 4,090 | ||||||
Total equity | 1,957,565 | 1,854,740 | ||||||
Total | $ | 5,716,853 | $ | 5,364,563 | ||||
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements. |
78
IDACORP, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Operating Activities: | ||||||||||||
Net income | $ | 193,754 | $ | 182,294 | $ | 173,187 | ||||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities: | ||||||||||||
Depreciation and amortization | 137,088 | 133,776 | 128,611 | |||||||||
Deferred income taxes and investment tax credits | 19,163 | 65,568 | 33,985 | |||||||||
Changes in regulatory assets and liabilities | 32,135 | (25,581 | ) | (53,468 | ) | |||||||
Pension and postretirement benefit plan expense | 44,627 | 45,907 | 45,230 | |||||||||
Contributions to pension and postretirement benefit plans | (33,720 | ) | (33,393 | ) | (47,695 | ) | ||||||
Earnings of unconsolidated equity-method investments | (12,372 | ) | (11,939 | ) | (11,617 | ) | ||||||
Distributions from unconsolidated equity-method investments | 5,261 | 17,526 | 18,546 | |||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction | (17,931 | ) | (14,858 | ) | (22,433 | ) | ||||||
Gain on sale of investments and assets | (193 | ) | (11,678 | ) | (202 | ) | ||||||
Other non-cash adjustments to net income, net | 5,085 | 3,297 | 6,121 | |||||||||
Change in: | ||||||||||||
Accounts receivable | 20,433 | (29,557 | ) | (2,741 | ) | |||||||
Accounts payable and other accrued liabilities | 6,359 | (517 | ) | 10,580 | ||||||||
Taxes accrued/receivable | (13,631 | ) | 4,747 | (604 | ) | |||||||
Other current assets | (13,124 | ) | (12,165 | ) | (5,255 | ) | ||||||
Other current liabilities | 1,771 | 1,819 | (8,500 | ) | ||||||||
Other assets | (3,655 | ) | (830 | ) | (7,064 | ) | ||||||
Other liabilities | (6,707 | ) | (8,867 | ) | (7,412 | ) | ||||||
Net cash provided by operating activities | 364,343 | 305,549 | 249,269 | |||||||||
Investing Activities: | ||||||||||||
Additions to property, plant and equipment | (274,094 | ) | (235,310 | ) | (239,788 | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from the sale of utility assets | 620 | — | — | |||||||||
Proceeds from the sale of emission allowances and RECs | 2,931 | 498 | 2,739 | |||||||||
Investments in affordable housing | — | — | (381 | ) | ||||||||
Distributions from affordable housing investments | 1,161 | 1,746 | 242 | |||||||||
Purchase of available-for-sale securities | (8,000 | ) | (32,661 | ) | (7,000 | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from sale of available-for-sale securities | — | 25,661 | — | |||||||||
Other | 4,962 | 3,473 | 367 | |||||||||
Net cash used in investing activities | (272,420 | ) | (236,593 | ) | (243,821 | ) | ||||||
Financing Activities: | ||||||||||||
Issuance of long-term debt | — | 150,000 | 150,000 | |||||||||
Retirement of long-term debt | (1,064 | ) | (71,064 | ) | (101,064 | ) | ||||||
Dividends on common stock | (88,489 | ) | (78,832 | ) | (68,928 | ) | ||||||
Net change in short-term borrowings | (23,450 | ) | (14,950 | ) | 15,500 | |||||||
Issuance of common stock | 195 | 255 | 4,882 | |||||||||
Acquisition of treasury stock | (2,737 | ) | (2,124 | ) | (2,062 | ) | ||||||
Other | 2,268 | (606 | ) | (5,062 | ) | |||||||
Net cash used in financing activities | (113,277 | ) | (17,321 | ) | (6,734 | ) | ||||||
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents | (21,354 | ) | 51,635 | (1,286 | ) | |||||||
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year | 78,162 | 26,527 | 27,813 | |||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the year | $ | 56,808 | $ | 78,162 | $ | 26,527 | ||||||
Supplemental Disclosure of Cash Flow Information: | ||||||||||||
Cash paid during the year for: | ||||||||||||
Income taxes | $ | 11,364 | $ | 1,437 | $ | 1,451 | ||||||
Interest (net of amount capitalized) | $ | 77,295 | $ | 77,968 | $ | 70,887 | ||||||
Non-cash investing activities: | ||||||||||||
Additions to property, plant and equipment in accounts payable | $ | 28,438 | $ | 24,246 | $ | 26,882 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
79
IDACORP, Inc.
Consolidated Statements of Equity
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Common Stock: | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of year | $ | 839,750 | $ | 834,922 | $ | 828,389 | ||||||
Issued | 195 | 255 | 4,882 | |||||||||
Other | 5,457 | 4,573 | 1,651 | |||||||||
Balance at end of year | 845,402 | 839,750 | 834,922 | |||||||||
Retained Earnings: | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of year | 1,027,461 | 923,981 | 819,676 | |||||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 193,480 | 182,417 | 173,014 | |||||||||
Common stock dividends ($1.76, $1.57, and $1.37 per share, respectively) | (88,704 | ) | (78,937 | ) | (68,709 | ) | ||||||
Balance at end of year | 1,132,237 | 1,027,461 | 923,981 | |||||||||
Accumulated Other Comprehensive (Loss) Income: | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of year | (16,553 | ) | (17,116 | ) | (11,622 | ) | ||||||
Net unrealized holding (loss) gain on securities (net of tax) | — | (4,136 | ) | 1,567 | ||||||||
Unfunded pension liability adjustment (net of tax) | (7,605 | ) | 4,699 | (7,061 | ) | |||||||
Balance at end of year | (24,158 | ) | (16,553 | ) | (17,116 | ) | ||||||
Treasury Stock: | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of year | (8 | ) | (21 | ) | (29 | ) | ||||||
Issued | 2,465 | 2,137 | 2,070 | |||||||||
Acquired | (2,737 | ) | (2,124 | ) | (2,062 | ) | ||||||
Balance at end of year | (280 | ) | (8 | ) | (21 | ) | ||||||
Total IDACORP, Inc. shareholders’ equity at end of year | 1,953,201 | 1,850,650 | 1,741,766 | |||||||||
Noncontrolling Interests: | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of year | 4,090 | 4,213 | 4,040 | |||||||||
Net income (loss) attributable to noncontrolling interests | 274 | (123 | ) | 173 | ||||||||
Balance at end of year | 4,364 | 4,090 | 4,213 | |||||||||
Total equity at end of year | $ | 1,957,565 | $ | 1,854,740 | $ | 1,745,979 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
80
Idaho Power Company
Consolidated Statements of Income
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Operating Revenues: | ||||||||||||
General business | $ | 1,122,281 | $ | 1,101,728 | $ | 937,765 | ||||||
Off-system sales | 77,165 | 54,473 | 61,534 | |||||||||
Other revenues | 79,205 | 86,897 | 77,426 | |||||||||
Total operating revenues | 1,278,651 | 1,243,098 | 1,076,725 | |||||||||
Operating Expenses: | ||||||||||||
Operation: | ||||||||||||
Purchased power | 244,628 | 220,579 | 196,935 | |||||||||
Fuel expense | 201,241 | 214,482 | 159,413 | |||||||||
Power cost adjustment | 22,235 | (39,537 | ) | (61,090 | ) | |||||||
Other operations and maintenance | 354,567 | 348,867 | 349,033 | |||||||||
Energy efficiency programs | 27,154 | 35,636 | 27,300 | |||||||||
Depreciation | 132,987 | 129,735 | 123,941 | |||||||||
Taxes other than income taxes | 31,748 | 30,561 | 30,489 | |||||||||
Total operating expenses | 1,014,560 | 940,323 | 826,021 | |||||||||
Income from Operations | 264,091 | 302,775 | 250,704 | |||||||||
Other Income (Expense): | ||||||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction | 17,931 | 14,858 | 22,433 | |||||||||
Earnings of unconsolidated equity-method investments | 10,814 | 10,242 | 9,412 | |||||||||
Other (expense) income, net | (4,363 | ) | 5,772 | (4,982 | ) | |||||||
Total other income | 24,382 | 30,872 | 26,863 | |||||||||
Interest Charges: | ||||||||||||
Interest on long-term debt | 80,562 | 81,492 | 78,922 | |||||||||
Other interest | 7,472 | 6,817 | 6,436 | |||||||||
Allowance for borrowed funds used during construction | (8,464 | ) | (7,663 | ) | (11,929 | ) | ||||||
Total interest charges | 79,570 | 80,646 | 73,429 | |||||||||
Income Before Income Taxes | 208,903 | 253,001 | 204,138 | |||||||||
Income Tax Expense | 19,516 | 76,260 | 35,970 | |||||||||
Net Income | $ | 189,387 | $ | 176,741 | $ | 168,168 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
81
Idaho Power Company
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Net Income | $ | 189,387 | $ | 176,741 | $ | 168,168 | ||||||
Other Comprehensive Income: | ||||||||||||
Unrealized gains (losses) on securities: | ||||||||||||
Unrealized holding gains arising during the year, net of tax of $0, $1,894, and $1,006 | — | 2,951 | 1,567 | |||||||||
Reclassification adjustment for gains included in net income, net of tax of $0, $4,550, and $0 | — | (7,087 | ) | — | ||||||||
Net unrealized (losses) gains | — | (4,136 | ) | 1,567 | ||||||||
Unfunded pension liability adjustment, net of tax of $(4,881), $3,016, and ($4,532) | (7,605 | ) | 4,699 | (7,061 | ) | |||||||
Total Comprehensive Income | $ | 181,782 | $ | 177,304 | $ | 162,674 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
82
Idaho Power Company
Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31, | ||||||||
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||
Assets | ||||||||
Electric Plant: | ||||||||
In service (at original cost) | $ | 5,248,212 | $ | 5,080,402 | ||||
Accumulated provision for depreciation | (1,841,011 | ) | (1,766,680 | ) | ||||
In service - net | 3,407,201 | 3,313,722 | ||||||
Construction work in progress | 401,930 | 327,000 | ||||||
Held for future use | 7,090 | 7,090 | ||||||
Electric plant - net | 3,816,221 | 3,647,812 | ||||||
Investments and Other Property | 142,825 | 131,520 | ||||||
Current Assets: | ||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents | 46,695 | 66,535 | ||||||
Receivables: | ||||||||
Customer (net of allowance of $1,960 and $2,349, respectively) | 79,083 | 97,873 | ||||||
Other (net of allowance of $144 and $153, respectively) | 15,890 | 14,290 | ||||||
Income taxes receivable | 20,428 | — | ||||||
Accrued unbilled revenues | 56,270 | 63,507 | ||||||
Materials and supplies (at average cost) | 55,404 | 53,643 | ||||||
Fuel stock (at average cost) | 55,171 | 41,546 | ||||||
Prepayments | 18,356 | 15,204 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes | — | 12,386 | ||||||
Current regulatory assets | 50,042 | 61,837 | ||||||
Other | 603 | 2,401 | ||||||
Total current assets | 397,942 | 429,222 | ||||||
Deferred Debits: | ||||||||
American Falls and Milner water rights | 13,698 | 15,803 | ||||||
Company-owned life insurance | 23,893 | 22,037 | ||||||
Regulatory assets | 1,192,345 | 978,234 | ||||||
Other | 39,753 | 41,783 | ||||||
Total deferred debits | 1,269,689 | 1,057,857 | ||||||
Total | $ | 5,626,677 | $ | 5,266,411 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
83
Idaho Power Company
Consolidated Balance Sheets
December 31, | ||||||||
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||
Capitalization and Liabilities | ||||||||
Capitalization: | ||||||||
Common stock equity: | ||||||||
Common stock, $2.50 par value (50,000,000 shares authorized; 39,150,812 shares outstanding) | $ | 97,877 | $ | 97,877 | ||||
Premium on capital stock | 712,258 | 712,258 | ||||||
Capital stock expense | (2,097 | ) | (2,097 | ) | ||||
Retained earnings | 1,033,350 | 932,547 | ||||||
Accumulated other comprehensive loss | (24,158 | ) | (16,553 | ) | ||||
Total common stock equity | 1,817,230 | 1,724,032 | ||||||
Long-term debt | 1,614,438 | 1,615,258 | ||||||
Total capitalization | 3,431,668 | 3,339,290 | ||||||
Current Liabilities: | ||||||||
Current maturities of long-term debt | 1,064 | 1,064 | ||||||
Accounts payable | 96,499 | 90,529 | ||||||
Accounts payable to related parties | 2,027 | 1,158 | ||||||
Taxes accrued | 10,329 | 14,031 | ||||||
Interest accrued | 22,630 | 22,764 | ||||||
Accrued compensation | 43,410 | 38,297 | ||||||
Current regulatory liabilities | 11,400 | 10,684 | ||||||
Other | 29,476 | 17,095 | ||||||
Total current liabilities | 216,835 | 195,622 | ||||||
Deferred Credits: | ||||||||
Deferred income taxes | 1,141,755 | 1,058,734 | ||||||
Regulatory liabilities | 390,207 | 375,873 | ||||||
Pension and other postretirement benefits | 403,334 | 244,627 | ||||||
Other | 42,878 | 52,265 | ||||||
Total deferred credits | 1,978,174 | 1,731,499 | ||||||
Commitments and Contingencies | ||||||||
Total | $ | 5,626,677 | $ | 5,266,411 | ||||
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements. |
84
Idaho Power Company
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Operating Activities: | ||||||||||||
Net income | $ | 189,387 | $ | 176,741 | $ | 168,168 | ||||||
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating activities: | ||||||||||||
Depreciation and amortization | 136,496 | 133,135 | 128,009 | |||||||||
Deferred income taxes and investment tax credits | 15,454 | 59,355 | 48,255 | |||||||||
Changes in regulatory assets and liabilities | 32,135 | (25,581 | ) | (53,467 | ) | |||||||
Pension and postretirement benefit plan expense | 44,579 | 45,861 | 45,230 | |||||||||
Contributions to pension and postretirement benefit plans | (33,672 | ) | (33,347 | ) | (47,695 | ) | ||||||
Earnings of unconsolidated equity-method investments | (10,814 | ) | (10,242 | ) | (9,412 | ) | ||||||
Distributions from unconsolidated equity-method investments | 3,586 | 14,901 | 17,921 | |||||||||
Allowance for equity funds used during construction | (17,931 | ) | (14,858 | ) | (22,433 | ) | ||||||
Gain on sale of investments and assets | (186 | ) | (11,678 | ) | (202 | ) | ||||||
Other non-cash adjustments to net income, net | 2,087 | 629 | 438 | |||||||||
Change in: | ||||||||||||
Accounts receivable | 20,072 | (31,472 | ) | (3,344 | ) | |||||||
Accounts payable | 6,183 | (397 | ) | 10,762 | ||||||||
Taxes accrued/receivable | (22,911 | ) | 6,740 | 3,301 | ||||||||
Other current assets | (13,137 | ) | (12,166 | ) | (5,252 | ) | ||||||
Other current liabilities | 1,776 | 1,721 | (8,506 | ) | ||||||||
Other assets | (3,655 | ) | (831 | ) | (7,064 | ) | ||||||
Other liabilities | (6,238 | ) | (8,603 | ) | (6,856 | ) | ||||||
Net cash provided by operating activities | 343,211 | 289,908 | 257,853 | |||||||||
Investing Activities: | ||||||||||||
Additions to utility plant | (273,911 | ) | (235,306 | ) | (239,761 | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from the sale of utility assets | 620 | — | — | |||||||||
Proceeds from the sale of emission allowances and RECs | 2,931 | 498 | 2,739 | |||||||||
Purchase of available-for-sale securities | (8,000 | ) | (32,661 | ) | (7,000 | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from the sale of available-for-sale securities | — | 25,661 | — | |||||||||
Other | 4,957 | 3,473 | 367 | |||||||||
Net cash used in investing activities | (273,403 | ) | (238,335 | ) | (243,655 | ) | ||||||
Financing Activities: | ||||||||||||
Issuance of long-term debt | — | 150,000 | 150,000 | |||||||||
Retirement of long-term debt | (1,064 | ) | (71,064 | ) | (101,064 | ) | ||||||
Dividends on common stock | (88,584 | ) | (78,926 | ) | (68,740 | ) | ||||||
Capital contribution from parent | — | — | 7,500 | |||||||||
Other | — | (2,299 | ) | (3,959 | ) | |||||||
Net cash used in financing activities | (89,648 | ) | (2,289 | ) | (16,263 | ) | ||||||
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents | (19,840 | ) | 49,284 | (2,065 | ) | |||||||
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year | 66,535 | 17,251 | 19,316 | |||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the year | $ | 46,695 | $ | 66,535 | $ | 17,251 | ||||||
Supplemental Disclosure of Cash Flow Information: | ||||||||||||
Cash paid (received) during the year for: | ||||||||||||
Income taxes | $ | 26,116 | $ | 9,667 | $ | (14,558 | ) | |||||
Interest (net of amount capitalized) | $ | 77,063 | $ | 77,583 | $ | 70,447 | ||||||
Non-cash investing activities: | ||||||||||||
Additions to property, plant and equipment in accounts payable | $ | 28,438 | $ | 24,246 | $ | 26,882 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
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Idaho Power Company
Consolidated Statements of Retained Earnings
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Retained Earnings, Beginning of Year | $ | 932,547 | $ | 834,732 | $ | 735,304 | ||||||
Net Income | 189,387 | 176,741 | 168,168 | |||||||||
Dividends on Common Stock | (88,584 | ) | (78,926 | ) | (68,740 | ) | ||||||
Retained Earnings, End of Year | $ | 1,033,350 | $ | 932,547 | $ | 834,732 |
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these statements.
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IDACORP, INC. AND IDAHO POWER COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
This Annual Report on Form 10-K is a combined report of IDACORP, Inc. (IDACORP) and Idaho Power Company (Idaho Power). Therefore, the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements apply to both IDACORP and Idaho Power. However, Idaho Power makes no representation as to the information relating to IDACORP’s other operations.
Nature of Business
IDACORP is a holding company formed in 1998 whose principal operating subsidiary is Idaho Power. Idaho Power is an electric utility with a service area covering approximately 24,000 square miles in southern Idaho and eastern Oregon. Idaho Power is regulated primarily by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the state regulatory commissions of Idaho and Oregon. Idaho Power is the parent of Idaho Energy Resources Co. (IERCo), a joint venturer in Bridger Coal Company (BCC), which mines and supplies coal to the Jim Bridger generating plant owned in part by Idaho Power.
IDACORP’s other wholly-owned subsidiaries include IDACORP Financial Services, Inc. (IFS), an investor in affordable housing and other real estate investments; Ida-West Energy Company (Ida-West), an operator of small hydroelectric generation projects that satisfy the requirements of the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA); and IDACORP Energy Services Co. (IESCo), which is the former limited partner of, and current successor by merger to, IDACORP Energy L.P. (IE), a marketer of energy commodities that wound down operations in 2003.
Principles of Consolidation
IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s consolidated financial statements include the accounts of each company, the subsidiaries that the companies control, and any variable interest entities (VIEs) for which the companies are the primary beneficiaries. Intercompany balances have been eliminated in consolidation. Investments in subsidiaries that the companies do not control and investments in VIEs for which the companies are not the primary beneficiaries, but have the ability to exercise significant influence over operating and financial policies, are accounted for using the equity method of accounting.
The entities that IDACORP and Idaho Power consolidate consist primarily of the wholly-owned subsidiaries discussed above. In addition, IDACORP consolidates one VIE, Marysville Hydro Partners (Marysville), which is a joint venture owned 50 percent by Ida-West and 50 percent by Environmental Energy Company (EEC). At December 31, 2014, Marysville had approximately $20 million of assets, primarily a hydroelectric plant, and approximately $13 million of intercompany long-term debt, which is eliminated in consolidation. EEC has borrowed amounts from Ida-West to fund a portion of its required capital contributions to Marysville. The loans are payable from EEC’s share of distributions and are secured by the stock of EEC and EEC’s interest in Marysville. Ida-West is identified as the primary beneficiary because of its ownership interest in the joint venture combined with the intercompany note and the EEC note, which collectively result in Ida-West's ability to control the activities of the joint ventures. Creditors of Marysville have no recourse to the general credit of IDACORP and there are no other arrangements that could require IDACORP to provide financial support to Marysville or expose IDACORP to losses.
The BCC joint venture is also a VIE, but because the power to direct the activities that most significantly impact the economic performance of BCC is shared with the joint venture partner, Idaho Power is not the primary beneficiary. The carrying value of BCC was $96 million at December 31, 2014, and Idaho Power's maximum exposure to loss is the carrying value, any additional future contributions to BCC, and a $70 million guarantee for mine reclamation costs, which is discussed further in Note 9.
IFS's investments in affordable housing and other real estate are also VIEs for which IDACORP is not the primary beneficiary. IFS's limited partnership interests range from 5 to 99 percent and were acquired between 1996 and 2010. As a limited partner, IFS does not control these entities and they are not consolidated. IFS’s maximum exposure to loss in these developments is limited to its net carrying value, which was $13 million at December 31, 2014.
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Management Estimates
Management makes estimates and assumptions when preparing financial statements in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). These estimates and assumptions include those related to rate regulation, retirement benefits, contingencies, litigation, asset impairment, income taxes, unbilled revenues, and bad debt. These estimates and assumptions affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements, and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. These estimates involve judgments with respect to, among other things, future economic factors that are difficult to predict and are beyond management’s control. As a result, actual results could differ from those estimates.
System of Accounts
The accounting records of Idaho Power conform to the Uniform System of Accounts prescribed by the FERC and adopted by the public utility commissions of Idaho, Oregon, and Wyoming.
Regulation of Utility Operations
As a regulated utility, many of Idaho Power's fundamental business decisions are subject to the approval of governmental
agencies, including the prices that Idaho Power is authorized to charge for its electric service. These approvals are a critical
factor in determining IDACORP's and Idaho Power's results of operations and financial condition.
IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s financial statements reflect the effects of the different ratemaking principles followed by the jurisdictions regulating Idaho Power. The application of accounting principles related to regulated operations sometimes results in Idaho Power recording expenses and revenues in a different period than when an unregulated enterprise would record such expenses and revenues. In these instances, the amounts are deferred as regulatory assets or regulatory liabilities on the balance sheet and recorded on the income statement when recovered or returned in rates. Additionally, regulators can impose regulatory liabilities upon a regulated company for amounts previously collected from customers that are expected to be refunded. The effects of applying these regulatory accounting principles to Idaho Power’s operations are discussed in more detail in Note 3.
Cash and Cash Equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents include cash on-hand and highly liquid temporary investments that mature within 90 days of the date of acquisition.
Receivables and Allowance for Uncollectible Accounts
Customer receivables are recorded at the invoiced amounts and do not bear interest. A late payment fee of one percent may be assessed on account balances after 30 days. An allowance is recorded for potential uncollectible accounts. The allowance is reviewed periodically and adjusted based upon a combination of historical write-off experience, aging of accounts receivable, and an analysis of specific customer accounts. Adjustments are charged to income. Customer accounts receivable balances that remain outstanding after reasonable collection efforts are written off through a charge to the allowance and a credit to accounts receivable.
Other receivables, primarily notes receivable from business transactions, are also reviewed for impairment periodically, based upon transaction-specific facts. When it is probable that IDACORP or Idaho Power will be unable to collect all amounts due according to the contractual terms of the agreement, an allowance is established for the estimated uncollectible portion of the receivable and charged to income.
There were no impaired receivables without related allowances at December 31, 2014 and 2013. Once a receivable is determined to be impaired, any further interest income recognized is fully reserved.
Derivative Financial Instruments
Financial instruments such as commodity futures, forwards, options, and swaps are used to manage exposure to commodity price risk in the electricity and natural gas markets. All derivative instruments are recognized as either assets or liabilities at fair value on the balance sheet unless they are designated as normal purchases and normal sales. With the exception of forward contracts for the purchase of natural gas for use at Idaho Power's natural gas generation facilities and a nominal number of
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power transactions, Idaho Power’s physical forward contracts are designated as normal purchases and normal sales. Because of Idaho Power’s regulatory accounting mechanisms, Idaho Power records the changes in fair value of derivative instruments related to power supply as regulatory assets or liabilities.
Revenues
Operating revenues related to Idaho Power’s sale of energy are recorded when service is rendered or energy is delivered to customers. Idaho Power accrues estimated unbilled revenues for electric services delivered to customers but not yet billed at year-end. Idaho Power collects franchise fees and similar taxes related to energy consumption. None of these collections are reported on the income statement. Beginning in February 2009, Idaho Power is collecting in base rates a portion of the allowance for funds used during construction (AFUDC) related to its Hells Canyon Complex (HCC) relicensing project. Cash collected under this ratemaking mechanism is not recorded as revenue but is instead recorded as a regulatory liability.
Property, Plant and Equipment and Depreciation
The cost of utility plant in service represents the original cost of contracted services, direct labor and material, AFUDC, and indirect charges for engineering, supervision, and similar overhead items. Repair and maintenance costs associated with planned major maintenance are expensed as the costs are incurred, as are maintenance and repairs of property and replacements and renewals of items determined to be less than units of property. For utility property replaced or renewed, the original cost plus removal cost less salvage is charged to accumulated provision for depreciation, while the cost of related replacements and renewals is added to property, plant and equipment.
All utility plant in service is depreciated using the straight-line method at rates approved by regulatory authorities. Annual depreciation provisions as a percent of average depreciable utility plant in service approximated 2.68 percent in 2014, 2.69 percent in 2013, and 2.75 percent in 2012.
During the period of construction, costs expected to be included in the final value of the constructed asset, and depreciated once the asset is complete and placed in service, are classified as construction work in progress on the consolidated balance sheets. If the project becomes probable of being abandoned, such costs are expensed in the period such determination is made. If any costs are expensed, Idaho Power may seek recovery of such costs in customer rates, although there can be no guarantee such recovery would be granted.
Long-lived assets are periodically reviewed for impairment when events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of an asset may not be recoverable. If the sum of the undiscounted expected future cash flows from an asset is less than the carrying value of the asset, impairment is recognized in the financial statements. There were no material impairments of these assets in 2014, 2013, or 2012.
Allowance for Funds Used During Construction
AFUDC represents the cost of financing construction projects with borrowed funds and equity funds. With one exception, as discussed above for the HCC relicensing project, cash is not realized currently from such allowance; it is realized under the ratemaking process over the service life of the related property through increased revenues resulting from a higher rate base and higher depreciation expense. The component of AFUDC attributable to borrowed funds is included as a reduction to total interest expense. Idaho Power’s weighted-average monthly AFUDC rate was 7.7 percent for 2014, 2013, and 2012.
Income Taxes
IDACORP and Idaho Power account for income taxes under the asset and liability method, which requires the recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities for the expected future tax consequences of events that have been included in the financial statements. Under this method (commonly referred to as normalized accounting), deferred tax assets and liabilities are determined based on the differences between the financial statements and tax basis of assets and liabilities using enacted tax rates in effect for the year in which the differences are expected to reverse. In general, deferred income tax expense or benefit for a reporting period is recognized as the change in deferred tax assets and liabilities from the beginning to the end of the period. The effect of a change in tax rates on deferred tax assets and liabilities is recognized in income in the period that includes the enactment date unless Idaho Power's primary regulator, the Idaho Public Utilities Commission (IPUC), orders direct deferral of the effect of the change in tax rates over a longer period of time.
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Consistent with orders and directives of the IPUC, unless contrary to applicable income tax guidance, Idaho Power does not provide deferred income taxes for certain income tax temporary differences and instead recognizes the tax impact currently (commonly referred to as flow-through accounting) for rate making and financial reporting. Therefore, Idaho Power's effective income tax rate is impacted as these differences arise and reverse. Regulated enterprises are required to recognize such adjustments as regulatory assets or liabilities if it is probable that such amounts will be recovered from or returned to customers in future rates.
In compliance with the federal income tax requirements for the use of accelerated tax depreciation, Idaho Power provides deferred income taxes related to its plant assets for the difference between income tax depreciation and book depreciation used for financial statement purposes. Deferred income taxes are provided for other temporary differences unless accounted for using flow-through.
The state of Idaho allows a three percent investment tax credit on qualifying plant additions. Investment tax credits earned on regulated assets are deferred and amortized to income over the estimated service lives of the related properties. Credits earned on non-regulated assets or investments are recognized in the year earned.
Income taxes are discussed in more detail in Note 2.
Other Accounting Policies
Debt discount, expense, and premium are deferred and are being amortized over the terms of the respective debt issues.
Recently Issued Accounting Pronouncements
In May 2014, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Accounting Standards Update (ASU) 2014-09, Revenue from Contracts with Customers (Topic 606). ASU 2014-09 is intended to enable users of financial statements to better understand and consistently analyze an entity's revenue across industries, transactions, and geographies. Under the ASU, recognition of revenue occurs when a customer obtains control of promised goods or services. In addition, the ASU requires disclosure of the nature, amount, timing, and uncertainty of revenue and cash flows arising from contracts with customers. The amendments in ASU 2014-09 are effective for annual reporting periods beginning after December 15, 2016, including interim periods within that reporting period. Early adoption is not permitted. The guidance permits two implementation approaches, one requiring retrospective application of the new standard with restatement of prior years and one requiring prospective application of the new standard including a cumulative-effect adjustment with disclosure of results under old standards. As such, at IDACORP's and Idaho Power's required adoption date of January 1, 2017, amounts in 2015 and 2016 may have to be revised. IDACORP and Idaho Power are currently evaluating the impact of ASU 2014-09 on their financial statements.
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2. INCOME TAXES
A reconciliation between the statutory federal income tax rate and the effective tax rate is as follows:
IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Federal income tax expense at 35% statutory rate | $ | 73,588 | $ | 89,125 | $ | 72,387 | $ | 73,116 | $ | 88,550 | $ | 71,448 | ||||||||||||
Change in taxes resulting from: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
AFUDC | (9,238 | ) | (7,882 | ) | (12,027 | ) | (9,238 | ) | (7,882 | ) | (12,027 | ) | ||||||||||||
Capitalized interest | 2,278 | 1,832 | 5,075 | 2,278 | 1,832 | 5,075 | ||||||||||||||||||
Investment tax credits | (3,002 | ) | (3,119 | ) | (3,267 | ) | (3,002 | ) | (3,119 | ) | (3,267 | ) | ||||||||||||
Removal costs | (3,656 | ) | (3,527 | ) | (2,697 | ) | (3,656 | ) | (3,527 | ) | (2,697 | ) | ||||||||||||
Capitalized overhead costs | (8,750 | ) | (8,750 | ) | (8,750 | ) | (8,750 | ) | (8,750 | ) | (8,750 | ) | ||||||||||||
Capitalized repair costs | (26,250 | ) | (19,250 | ) | (19,250 | ) | (26,250 | ) | (19,250 | ) | (19,250 | ) | ||||||||||||
Tax method change – capitalized repairs | (24,516 | ) | 4,583 | (7,845 | ) | (24,516 | ) | 4,583 | (7,845 | ) | ||||||||||||||
State income taxes, net of federal benefit | 4,680 | 6,730 | 7,801 | 5,334 | 6,970 | 7,646 | ||||||||||||||||||
Depreciation | 16,040 | 14,820 | 14,398 | 16,040 | 14,820 | 14,398 | ||||||||||||||||||
Affordable housing tax credits | (5,189 | ) | (5,503 | ) | (5,493 | ) | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Affordable housing investment amortization | 2,757 | 1,684 | 3,172 | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Other, net | (1,970 | ) | 1,483 | (9,699 | ) | (1,840 | ) | 2,033 | (8,761 | ) | ||||||||||||||
Total income tax expense | $ | 16,772 | $ | 72,226 | $ | 33,805 | $ | 19,516 | $ | 76,260 | $ | 35,970 | ||||||||||||
Effective tax rate | 8.0% | 28.4% | 16.3% | 9.3% | 30.1% | 17.6% |
The items comprising income tax expense are as follows:
IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Income taxes current: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Federal | $ | (4,926 | ) | $ | 3,416 | $ | 547 | $ | (2,805 | ) | $ | 10,988 | $ | (13,131 | ) | |||||||||
State | 3,516 | 3,241 | 306 | 6,867 | 5,917 | 846 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total | (1,410 | ) | 6,657 | 853 | 4,062 | 16,905 | (12,285 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Income taxes deferred: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Federal | 17,159 | 61,947 | 28,315 | 21,833 | 60,934 | 48,839 | ||||||||||||||||||
State | (3,260 | ) | 1,806 | (9,300 | ) | (6,421 | ) | (804 | ) | (9,640 | ) | |||||||||||||
Total | 13,899 | 63,753 | 19,015 | 15,412 | 60,130 | 39,199 | ||||||||||||||||||
Investment tax credits: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Deferred | 3,044 | 2,344 | 12,323 | 3,044 | 2,344 | 12,323 | ||||||||||||||||||
Restored | (3,002 | ) | (3,119 | ) | (3,267 | ) | (3,002 | ) | (3,119 | ) | (3,267 | ) | ||||||||||||
Total | 42 | (775 | ) | 9,056 | 42 | (775 | ) | 9,056 | ||||||||||||||||
Affordable housing investment amortization | 4,241 | 2,591 | 4,881 | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||||
Total income tax expense | $ | 16,772 | $ | 72,226 | $ | 33,805 | $ | 19,516 | $ | 76,260 | $ | 35,970 |
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The components of the net deferred tax liability are as follows:
IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2013 | |||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||
Deferred tax assets: | ||||||||||||||||
Regulatory liabilities | $ | 55,490 | $ | 55,017 | $ | 55,490 | $ | 55,017 | ||||||||
Deferred compensation | 25,355 | 23,739 | 25,240 | 23,647 | ||||||||||||
Deferred revenue | 28,529 | 23,063 | 28,529 | 23,063 | ||||||||||||
Tax credits | 154,044 | 149,188 | 26,843 | 23,698 | ||||||||||||
Net operating losses | — | 30,921 | — | 29,628 | ||||||||||||
Partnership investments | 8,190 | 8,195 | — | — | ||||||||||||
Retirement benefits | 132,571 | 69,033 | 132,571 | 69,033 | ||||||||||||
Other | 15,222 | 11,067 | 14,553 | 10,359 | ||||||||||||
Total | 419,401 | 370,223 | 283,226 | 234,445 | ||||||||||||
Deferred tax liabilities: | ||||||||||||||||
Property, plant and equipment | 451,118 | 436,837 | 451,118 | 436,837 | ||||||||||||
Regulatory assets | 802,188 | 710,482 | 802,188 | 710,482 | ||||||||||||
Power cost adjustments | 23,192 | 35,763 | 23,192 | 35,763 | ||||||||||||
Partnership investments | 17,492 | 19,372 | 10,227 | 12,000 | ||||||||||||
Retirement benefits | 122,360 | 65,810 | 122,360 | 65,810 | ||||||||||||
Other | 25,982 | 24,678 | 22,252 | 19,901 | ||||||||||||
Total | 1,442,332 | 1,292,942 | 1,431,337 | 1,280,793 | ||||||||||||
Net deferred tax liabilities | $ | 1,022,931 | $ | 922,719 | $ | 1,148,111 | $ | 1,046,348 |
IDACORP's tax allocation agreement provides that each member of its consolidated group compute its income taxes on a separate company basis. Amounts payable or refundable are settled through IDACORP. See Note 1 for further discussion of accounting policies related to income taxes.
Tax Credit Carryforwards
As of December 31, 2014, IDACORP had $113.9 million of general business credit and $2.8 million of alternative minimum tax credit carryforwards for federal income tax purposes and $37.4 million of Idaho investment tax credit carryforward. The general business credit carryforward period expires from 2024 to 2034, and the Idaho investment tax credit expires from 2021 to 2028.
Uncertain Tax Positions
IDACORP and Idaho Power believe that they have no material income tax uncertainties for 2014 and prior tax years. Both companies recognize interest accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits as interest expense and penalties as other expense.
IDACORP and Idaho Power are subject to examination by their major tax jurisdictions - U.S. federal and the State of Idaho. The open tax years for examination are 2014 for federal and 2011-2014 for Idaho. In May 2009, IDACORP formally entered the U.S. Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Compliance Assurance Process (CAP) program for its 2009 tax year and has remained in the CAP program for all subsequent years. The CAP program provides for IRS examination and issue resolution throughout the current year with the objective of return filings containing no contested items. In 2014, the IRS completed its examination of IDACORP's 2013 tax year with no unresolved income tax issues.
Tax Accounting Method Changes for Repair-Related Expenditures
In the fourth quarter of 2014, Idaho Power finalized an income tax accounting method change for its 2014 tax year associated with the electric generation property portion of its capitalized repairs tax method it adopted in fiscal year 2010. As a result of the change, Idaho Power recorded an $8.8 million tax benefit related to the cumulative method change adjustment for years prior to 2014 and reversed a related $4.6 million tax expense estimate it had recorded in 2013 (discussed below), for a total adjustment of $13.4 million.
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The method change is pursuant to Revenue Procedure 2013-24 and will bring Idaho Power's existing method into alignment with the Revenue Procedure's safe harbor unit-of-property definitions for electric generation property. The change also incorporates provisions of the final tangible property regulations issued by the U.S. Treasury Department (Treasury) and IRS in the third quarter of 2013 that address the deduction or capitalization of expenditures related to tangible property. Following the automatic consent procedures provided for in the Revenue Procedure, Idaho Power expects to adopt this method with the filing of IDACORP’s 2014 consolidated federal income tax return in September 2015. The method change will be subject to IRS review as part of IDACORP’s CAP examination.
In the third quarter of 2014, Idaho Power, in coordination with the IRS through IDACORP’s CAP examination process, implemented aspects of the final tangible property regulations and other technical interpretations of these rules into its existing capitalized repairs tax accounting method for generation, transmission and distribution assets. These technical interpretations were received from the IRS in 2014. An $11.1 million tax benefit related to the portion of the 2013 capitalized repairs deduction based on these modifications was recorded in the third quarter. Idaho Power finalized these changes with the filing of IDACORP’s 2013 consolidated federal income tax return in September 2014. The IRS approved the repairs method modifications prior to the filing of the return as part of IDACORP’s 2013 CAP examination.
In connection with the issuance of the tangible property regulations and following the provisions of Revenue Procedure 2013-24 (discussed above), in the third quarter of 2013 Idaho Power assessed and estimated the impact of a method change associated with the electric generation property portion of its capitalized repairs method. Based upon this assessment, in 2013 Idaho Power recorded $4.6 million of income tax expense related to the estimated cumulative method change adjustment for years prior to 2013.
In the third quarter of 2012, Idaho Power completed an income tax accounting method change for its 2011 tax year associated with the electric transmission and distribution property portion (as opposed to the generation property portion described above) of the capitalized repairs method it adopted in fiscal year 2010. As a result of the change, in 2012 Idaho Power recorded a $7.8 million tax benefit related to the filed deduction for the cumulative method change adjustment for years prior to 2011. The change was made pursuant to Revenue Procedure 2011-43 to bring Idaho Power’s existing method into alignment with the Revenue Procedure’s safe harbor unit-of-property definitions for electric transmission and distribution property. Following the automatic consent procedures provided for in the Revenue Procedure, Idaho Power adopted this method with the filing of IDACORP’s 2011 consolidated federal income tax return. The IRS approved the method change prior to the filing of the return as part of IDACORP’s 2011 CAP examination. The final tangible property regulations issued in September 2013 did not adversely impact this tax accounting method.
The amount of the capitalized repairs annual tax deduction will vary depending on a number of factors, but most directly by the amount and type of Idaho Power’s annual capital additions. The reversal of this temporary difference from prior years will offset a portion of the ongoing annual benefit. Idaho Power’s prescribed regulatory accounting treatment requires immediate income recognition for temporary tax differences of this type, commonly referred to as “flow-through.” A net regulatory asset is established to reflect Idaho Power’s ability to recover the net increased income tax expense when such temporary differences reverse. Idaho Power’s 2014 capitalized repairs deduction estimate incorporates the provisions of both method changes.
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3. REGULATORY MATTERS
Included below is information on Idaho Power's regulatory assets and liabilities, as well as a summary of Idaho Power's most recent general rate changes and other notable recent or pending regulatory matters and proceedings.
Regulatory Assets and Liabilities
The application of accounting principles related to regulated operations sometimes results in Idaho Power recording expenses and revenues in a different period than when an unregulated enterprise would record such expenses and revenues. Regulatory assets represent incurred costs that have been deferred because it is probable they will be recovered from customers through future rates. Regulatory liabilities represent obligations to make refunds to customers for previous collections, or represent amounts collected in advance of incurring an expense. The following table presents a summary of Idaho Power’s regulatory assets and liabilities (in thousands of dollars):
As of December 31, 2014 | ||||||||||||||||||
Remaining Amortization Period | Earning a Return(1) | Not Earning a Return | Total as of December 31, | |||||||||||||||
Description | 2014 | 2013 | ||||||||||||||||
Regulatory Assets: | ||||||||||||||||||
Income taxes | $ | — | $ | 802,188 | $ | 802,188 | $ | 710,482 | ||||||||||
Unfunded postretirement benefits(2) | — | 264,548 | 264,548 | 116,583 | ||||||||||||||
Pension expense deferrals | 40,816 | 22,828 | 63,644 | 75,108 | ||||||||||||||
Energy efficiency program costs(3) | 4,690 | — | 4,690 | 3,694 | ||||||||||||||
Power supply costs(3) | Varies | 59,189 | — | 59,189 | 91,477 | |||||||||||||
Fixed cost adjustment(3) | 2015-2016 | 23,737 | — | 23,737 | 19,526 | |||||||||||||
Asset retirement obligations(4) | — | 17,309 | 17,309 | 18,026 | ||||||||||||||
Mark-to-market liabilities(5) | — | 3,961 | 3,961 | 1,629 | ||||||||||||||
Other | 2015-2021 | 1,215 | 1,906 | 3,121 | 3,546 | |||||||||||||
Total | $ | 129,647 | $ | 1,112,740 | $ | 1,242,387 | $ | 1,040,071 | ||||||||||
Regulatory Liabilities: | ||||||||||||||||||
Income taxes | $ | — | $ | 55,490 | $ | 55,490 | $ | 55,017 | ||||||||||
Removal costs(4) | — | 180,063 | 180,063 | 173,974 | ||||||||||||||
Investment tax credits | — | 79,163 | 79,163 | 79,121 | ||||||||||||||
Deferred revenue-AFUDC(6) | 48,306 | 24,669 | 72,975 | 58,991 | ||||||||||||||
Energy efficiency program costs(3) | — | — | — | 6,686 | ||||||||||||||
Power supply costs(3) | Varies | 1 | — | 1 | 24 | |||||||||||||
Settlement agreement sharing mechanism(3) | 2015-2016 | 7,999 | — | 7,999 | 7,602 | |||||||||||||
Mark-to-market assets(5) | — | 1,880 | 1,880 | 1,672 | ||||||||||||||
Other | 3,114 | 922 | 4,036 | 3,470 | ||||||||||||||
Total | $ | 59,420 | $ | 342,187 | $ | 401,607 | $ | 386,557 | ||||||||||
(1) Earning a return includes either interest or a return on the investment as a component of rate base at the allowed rate of return.
(2) Represents the unfunded obligation of Idaho Power’s pension and postretirement benefit plans, which are discussed in Note 11.
(3) These items are discussed in more detail in this Note 3.
(4) Asset retirement obligations and removal costs are discussed in Note 13.
(5) Mark-to-market assets and liabilities are discussed in Note 16.
(6) As part of its January 30, 2009 general rate case order, the IPUC allowed Idaho Power to recover AFUDC for the HCC relicensing asset even though the relicensing process is not yet complete and the relicensing asset has not been placed in service. Idaho Power has collected revenue in the Idaho jurisdiction for these relicensing costs, but is deferring revenue recognition of the amounts collected until the license is issued and the asset is placed in service under the new license.
Idaho Power’s regulatory assets and liabilities are typically amortized over the period in which they are reflected in customer rates. In the event that recovery of Idaho Power’s costs through rates becomes unlikely or uncertain, regulatory accounting would no longer apply to some or all of Idaho Power’s operations and the items above may represent stranded investments. If
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not allowed full recovery of these items, Idaho Power would be required to write off the applicable portion, which could have a materially adverse financial impact.
Power Cost Adjustment Mechanisms and Deferred Power Supply Costs
In both its Idaho and Oregon jurisdictions, Idaho Power's power cost adjustment (PCA) mechanisms address the volatility of power supply costs and provide for annual adjustments to the rates charged to its retail customers. The PCA mechanisms compare Idaho Power's actual and forecast net power supply costs (primarily fuel and purchased power less off-system sales) against net power supply costs currently being recovered in retail rates. Under the PCA mechanisms, certain differences between actual net power supply costs incurred by Idaho Power and the costs included in retail rates are recorded as a deferred charge or credit on the balance sheets for future recovery or refund through retail rates. The power supply costs deferred primarily result from changes in contracted power purchase prices and volumes, changes in wholesale market prices and transaction volumes, fuel prices, and the levels of Idaho Power's own generation.
Idaho Jurisdiction Power Cost Adjustment Mechanism: In the Idaho jurisdiction, the annual PCA adjustment consists of (a) a forecast component, based on a forecast of net power supply costs in the coming year as compared with net power supply costs included in base rates; and (b) a true-up component, based on the difference between the previous year’s actual net power supply costs and the previous year’s forecast. The latter component also includes a balancing mechanism so that, over time, the actual collection or refund of authorized true-up dollars matches the amounts authorized. The Idaho PCA mechanism also includes:
• | a cost or benefit sharing ratio that allocates the deviations in net power supply expenses between customers (95 percent) and shareholders (5 percent), with the exceptions of expenses associated with PURPA power purchases and demand response incentive payments, which are allocated 100 percent to customers; and |
• | a load change adjustment rate, which is intended to ensure that power supply expense fluctuations resulting solely from load changes do not distort the results of the mechanism. |
The table below summarizes the three most recent Idaho PCA rate adjustments, all of which also include non-PCA-related rate adjustments as ordered by the IPUC:
Effective Date | $ Change (millions) | Notes | ||||
June 1, 2014 | $ | (88.2 | ) | 2014 PCA rates are net of (a) $20.0 million of surplus Idaho energy efficiency rider funds, and (b) $7.6 million of customer revenue sharing under a regulatory settlement stipulation. In addition, on June 1, 2014, there was an increase in base net power supply costs that shifted $99.3 million in power supply expenses from recovery via the PCA mechanism to recovery via base rates. See further discussion of the change in base net power supply costs below. | ||
June 1, 2013 | $ | 140.4 | The 2013 PCA rate increase was net of $7.2 million of customer revenue sharing under regulatory settlement stipulations. | |||
June 1, 2012 | $ | 15.9 | 2012 PCA rates were net of $27.1 million of customer revenue sharing under a regulatory settlement stipulation. |
On November 1, 2013, Idaho Power filed an application with the IPUC requesting an increase of approximately $106 million in the normalized or "base level" net power supply expense on a total-system basis to be used to update base rates and in the determination of the PCA rate that would become effective June 1, 2014. Idaho Power's request was intended to remove the Idaho-jurisdictional portion of those expenses (approximately $99 million) from collection via the Idaho PCA mechanism and instead collect that portion through base rates. On March 21, 2014, the IPUC issued an order approving Idaho Power's application, with the change in collection methodology effective June 1, 2014.
Oregon Jurisdiction Power Cost Adjustment Mechanism: Idaho Power’s power cost recovery mechanism in Oregon has two components: an annual power cost update (APCU) and a power cost adjustment mechanism (PCAM). The APCU allows Idaho Power to reestablish its Oregon base net power supply costs annually, separate from a general rate case, and to forecast net power supply costs for the upcoming water year. The PCAM is a true-up filed annually in February. The filing calculates the deviation between actual net power supply expenses incurred for the preceding calendar year and the net power supply expenses recovered through the APCU for the same period. Under the PCAM, Idaho Power is subject to a portion of the business risk or benefit associated with this deviation through application of an asymmetrical deadband (or range of deviations) within which Idaho Power absorbs cost increases or decreases. For deviations in actual power supply costs outside of the deadband, the PCAM provides for 90/10 sharing of costs and benefits between customers and Idaho Power. However, collection by Idaho Power will occur only to the extent that Idaho Power’s actual Oregon-jurisdictional return on equity (ROE) for the year is no greater than 100 basis points below Idaho Power’s last authorized ROE. A refund to customers will occur
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only to the extent that Idaho Power’s actual ROE for that year is no less than 100 basis points above Idaho Power’s last authorized ROE. Oregon jurisdiction power supply cost changes under the APCU and PCAM during each of 2014, 2013, and 2012 are summarized in the table that follows:
Year and Mechanism | APCU or PCAM Adjustment | |
2014 PCAM | Idaho Power estimates that actual net power supply costs were within the deadband, which would result in no deferral. | |
2014 APCU | A rate increase of $0.4 million annually took effect June 1, 2014. | |
2013 PCAM | Actual net power supply costs were within the deadband, resulting in no deferral. | |
2013 APCU | A rate increase of $2.9 million annually took effect June 1, 2013. | |
2012 PCAM | Actual net power supply costs were within the deadband, resulting in no deferral. | |
2012 APCU | A rate increase of $1.8 million annually took effect June 1, 2012. |
Idaho Regulatory Matters
Idaho Base Rate Changes: Effective January 1, 2012, Idaho Power implemented new Idaho base rates resulting from IPUC approval of a settlement stipulation that provided for a 7.86 percent authorized overall rate of return on an Idaho-jurisdiction rate base of approximately $2.36 billion. The settlement stipulation resulted in a 4.07 percent, or $34.0 million, overall increase in Idaho Power's annual Idaho-jurisdiction base rate revenues. Idaho base rates were subsequently adjusted again in 2012, in connection with Idaho Power's completion of the Langley Gulch power plant. On June 29, 2012, the IPUC issued an order approving a $58.1 million increase in annual Idaho-jurisdiction base rates, effective July 1, 2012. The order also provided for a $335.9 million increase in Idaho rate base. Neither the settlement stipulation nor the IPUC orders adjusting base rates specified an authorized rate of return on equity or imposed a moratorium on Idaho Power filing a general rate case at a future date.
As noted above in this Note 3, the IPUC also issued a March 2014 order approving Idaho Power's request for an increase in the normalized or "base level" net power supply expense to be used to update base rates and in the determination of the Idaho PCA rate that would become effective June 1, 2014.
December 2011 Idaho Settlement Stipulation: On December 27, 2011, the IPUC issued an order, separate from the general rate case proceeding, approving a settlement stipulation that provided as follows:
• | If Idaho Power's actual Idaho-jurisdiction return on year-end equity (Idaho ROE) for 2012, 2013, or 2014 is less than 9.5 percent, then Idaho Power may amortize up to a total of $45 million of additional ADITC to help achieve a minimum 9.5 percent Idaho ROE in the applicable year. |
• | If Idaho Power's actual Idaho ROE for 2012, 2013, or 2014 exceeds 10.0 percent, the amount of Idaho Power's Idaho-jurisdiction earnings exceeding a 10.0 percent and up to and including a 10.5 percent Idaho ROE for the applicable year would be shared equally between Idaho Power and its Idaho customers in the form of a rate reduction to become effective at the time of the subsequent year's PCA mechanism adjustment. |
• | If Idaho Power's actual Idaho ROE for 2012, 2013, or 2014 exceeds 10.5 percent, the amount of Idaho Power's Idaho jurisdictional earnings exceeding a 10.5 percent Idaho ROE for the applicable year would be allocated 75 percent to Idaho Power's Idaho customers as a reduction to the pension regulatory asset and 25 percent to Idaho Power. |
As Idaho Power's Idaho ROE exceeded 10.5 percent for each of 2012, 2013, and 2014, Idaho Power did not amortize additional ADITC for those years, but instead shared a portion of its Idaho-jurisdiction earnings with Idaho customers. The amounts Idaho Power recorded in each of 2012, 2013, and 2014 for sharing with customers under the December 2011 Idaho regulatory settlement stipulation were as follows (in millions):
Year | Recorded as Refunds to Customers | Recorded as a Pre-tax Charge to Pension Expense | ||
2014 | $8.0 | $16.7 | ||
2013 | $7.6 | $16.5 | ||
2012 | $7.2 | $14.6 |
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October 2014 Idaho Settlement Stipulation: In October 2014, the IPUC issued an order approving an extension, with modifications, of the terms of the December 2011 Idaho settlement stipulation for the period from 2015 through 2019, or until the terms are otherwise modified or terminated by order of the IPUC or the full $45 million of additional ADITC contemplated by the settlement stipulation has been amortized. The provisions of the new settlement stipulation are as follows:
• | If Idaho Power's annual Idaho ROE in any year is less than 9.5 percent, then Idaho Power may amortize up to $25 million of additional ADITC to help achieve a 9.5 percent Idaho ROE for that year, and may amortize up to a total of $45 million of additional ADITC over the 2015 through 2019 period. |
• | If Idaho Power's annual Idaho ROE in any year exceeds 10.0 percent, the amount of earnings exceeding a 10.0 percent Idaho ROE and up to and including a 10.5 percent Idaho ROE will be allocated 75 percent to Idaho Power's Idaho customers as a rate reduction to be effective at the time of the subsequent year's power cost adjustment and 25 percent to Idaho Power. |
• | If Idaho Power's annual Idaho ROE in any year exceeds 10.5 percent, the amount of earnings exceeding a 10.5 percent Idaho ROE will be allocated 50 percent to Idaho Power's Idaho customers as a rate reduction to be effective at the time of the subsequent year's power cost adjustment, 25 percent to Idaho Power's Idaho customers in the form of a reduction to the pension regulatory asset balancing account (to reduce the amount to be collected in the future from Idaho customers), and 25 percent to Idaho Power. |
• | If the full $45 million of additional ADITC contemplated by the settlement stipulation has been amortized the sharing provisions would terminate. |
• | In the event the IPUC approves a change to Idaho Power's Idaho-jurisdictional allowed return on equity as part of a general rate case proceeding seeking a rate change effective prior to January 1, 2020, the Idaho ROE thresholds (9.5 percent, 10.0 percent, and 10.5 percent) will be adjusted prospectively. |
Neither the settlement stipulation nor the associated IPUC order impose a moratorium on Idaho Power filing a general rate case or other form of rate proceeding during the term of the settlement stipulation.
Fixed Cost Adjustment: The Idaho jurisdiction fixed cost adjustment (FCA) mechanism is designed to remove Idaho Power’s financial disincentive to invest in energy efficiency programs by separating (or decoupling) the recovery of fixed costs from the variable kilowatt-hour charge and linking it instead to a set amount per customer. The FCA mechanism is adjusted each year to collect, or refund, the difference between the allowed fixed-cost recovery amount and the actual (weather-normalized) fixed costs recovered by Idaho Power during the year. The amount of the FCA recovery is capped at no more than 3 percent of base revenue, with any excess deferred for collection in a subsequent year. The following table summarizes FCA amounts approved for collection in the prior three FCA years:
FCA Year | Period Rates in Effect | Annual Amount (in millions) | ||
2013 | June 1, 2014-May 31, 2015 | $14.9 | ||
2012 | June 1, 2013-May 31, 2014 | $8.9 | ||
2011 | June 1, 2012-May 31, 2013 | $10.3 |
On July 1, 2014, the IPUC opened a docket to allow Idaho Power, the IPUC Staff, and other interested parties to further evaluate the IPUC Staff's concerns regarding the application of the FCA mechanism. Concerns cited by interested parties included the application of weather-normalization, the customer count methodology, the rate adjustment cap, cross-subsidization issues, and whether the FCA mechanism is in fact effectively removing Idaho Power's disincentive to aggressively pursue energy efficiency programs. Proceedings in the FCA mechanism docket, which remains open, could result in significant changes to the FCA mechanism.
Energy Efficiency and Demand Response Programs: Idaho Power has implemented and/or manages a wide range of opportunities for its customers to participate in energy efficiency and demand response programs. Typically, a majority of energy efficiency activities are funded through a rider mechanism on customer bills. Program expenditures are reported as an operating expense with an equal amount of revenues recorded in other revenues, resulting in no impact on earnings. The cumulative variance between expenditures and amounts collected through the rider is recorded as a regulatory asset or liability pending future collection from or obligation to customers. The December 2011 IPUC general rate case settlement order described above reset Idaho Power's energy efficiency rider rate at 4.0 percent of the sum of the monthly billed charges for the base rate components, a reduction from the 4.75 percent rider amount in effect prior to that date. As of December 31, 2014, the Idaho energy efficiency rider balance was a regulatory asset of $0.8 million.
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On June 12, 2013, the IPUC issued an order authorizing Idaho Power to recover custom efficiency program incentive payments, including the then-current regulatory asset balance of approximately $14 million, as well as subsequent custom efficiency program incentive payments, through the Idaho energy efficiency rider mechanism. As a result of the order, Idaho Power recognized the balance as other revenue and energy efficiency program expenses in 2013.
Oregon Regulatory Matters
Oregon Base Rate Changes: On February 23, 2012, the OPUC issued an order approving a settlement stipulation that provided for a $1.8 million base rate increase, a return on equity of 9.9 percent, and an overall rate of return of 7.757 percent in the Oregon jurisdiction. New rates in conformity with the settlement stipulation were effective March 1, 2012. Subsequently, on September 20, 2012, the OPUC issued an order approving an approximately $3.0 million increase in annual Oregon jurisdiction base rates, effective October 1, 2012, for inclusion of the Langley Gulch power plant in Idaho Power's Oregon rate base.
Federal Regulatory Matters - Open Access Transmission Tariff Rates
In 2006, Idaho Power moved from a fixed rate to a formula rate for transmission service provided under its OATT, which allows transmission rates to be updated annually based primarily on financial and operational data Idaho Power files with the FERC. Idaho Power's OATT rates submitted to the FERC in Idaho Power's four most recent annual OATT Final Informational Filings were as follows:
Applicable Period | OATT Rate (per kW-year) | |||
October 1, 2014 to September 30, 2015 | $ | 22.71 | ||
October 1, 2013 to September 30, 2014 | $ | 22.80 | ||
October 1, 2012 to September 30, 2013 | $ | 21.32 | ||
October 1, 2011 to September 30, 2012 | $ | 19.79 |
Idaho Power's current OATT rate is based on a net annual transmission revenue requirement of $120.8 million, which represents the OATT formulaic determination of Idaho Power's net cost of providing OATT-based transmission service.
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4. LONG-TERM DEBT
The following table summarizes IDACORP's and Idaho Power's long-term debt at December 31 (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
First mortgage bonds: | ||||||||
6.025% Series due 2018 | $ | 120,000 | $ | 120,000 | ||||
6.15% Series due 2019 | 100,000 | 100,000 | ||||||
4.50% Series due 2020 | 130,000 | 130,000 | ||||||
3.40% Series due 2020 | 100,000 | 100,000 | ||||||
2.95% Series due 2022 | 75,000 | 75,000 | ||||||
2.50% Series due 2023 | 75,000 | 75,000 | ||||||
6% Series due 2032 | 100,000 | 100,000 | ||||||
5.50% Series due 2033 | 70,000 | 70,000 | ||||||
5.50% Series due 2034 | 50,000 | 50,000 | ||||||
5.875% Series due 2034 | 55,000 | 55,000 | ||||||
5.30% Series due 2035 | 60,000 | 60,000 | ||||||
6.30% Series due 2037 | 140,000 | 140,000 | ||||||
6.25% Series due 2037 | 100,000 | 100,000 | ||||||
4.85% Series due 2040 | 100,000 | 100,000 | ||||||
4.30% Series due 2042 | 75,000 | 75,000 | ||||||
4.00% Series due 2043 | 75,000 | 75,000 | ||||||
Total first mortgage bonds | 1,425,000 | 1,425,000 | ||||||
Pollution control revenue bonds: | ||||||||
5.15% Series due 2024(1) | 49,800 | 49,800 | ||||||
5.25% Series due 2026(1) | 116,300 | 116,300 | ||||||
Variable Rate Series 2000 due 2027 | 4,360 | 4,360 | ||||||
Total pollution control revenue bonds | 170,460 | 170,460 | ||||||
American Falls bond guarantee | 19,885 | 19,885 | ||||||
Milner Dam note guarantee | 3,191 | 4,255 | ||||||
Unamortized premium/discount - net | (3,034 | ) | (3,278 | ) | ||||
Total IDACORP and Idaho Power outstanding debt(2) | 1,615,502 | 1,616,322 | ||||||
Current maturities of long-term debt | (1,064 | ) | (1,064 | ) | ||||
Total long-term debt | $ | 1,614,438 | $ | 1,615,258 | ||||
(1) Humboldt County and Sweetwater County Pollution Control Revenue Bonds are secured by the first mortgage, bringing the total first mortgage bonds outstanding at December 31, 2014 to $1.591 billion.
(2) At December 31, 2014 and 2013, the overall effective cost of Idaho Power's outstanding debt was 5.19 percent.
At December 31, 2014, the maturities for the aggregate amount of IDACORP and Idaho Power long-term debt outstanding were as follows (in thousands of dollars):
2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | Thereafter | ||||||||||||||||||
$ | 1,064 | $ | 1,064 | $ | 1,064 | $ | 120,000 | $ | 100,000 | $ | 1,395,344 |
Long-Term Debt Issuances, Maturities, and Availability
On April 8, 2013, Idaho Power issued $75 million in principal amount of 2.50% first mortgage bonds, Series I, maturing on April 1, 2023, and $75 million in principal amount of 4.00% first mortgage bonds, Series I, maturing on April 1, 2043. On October 1, 2013, Idaho Power used a portion of the net proceeds of the April 2013 sale of first mortgage bonds to satisfy its obligations upon maturity of $70 million in principal amount of 4.25% first mortgage bonds.
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In February 2013, Idaho Power filed applications with the IPUC, OPUC, and Wyoming Public Service Commission (WPSC) seeking authorization to issue and sell from time to time up to $500 million in aggregate principal amount of debt securities and first mortgage bonds. In April 2013, Idaho Power received orders from the IPUC, OPUC, and WPSC authorizing such issuance and sales, subject to conditions specified in the orders. The order from the IPUC approved the issuance of the securities through April 9, 2015, subject to extension upon request to the IPUC. The OPUC’s and WPSC’s orders do not impose a time limitation for issuances, but the OPUC order does impose a number of other conditions, including a maximum interest rate limit of 7 percent.
In anticipation of the expiration of the prior registration statement, on May 22, 2013, IDACORP and Idaho Power filed a joint shelf registration statement with the SEC, which became effective upon filing, for the offer and sale of, in the case of Idaho Power, an unspecified principal amount of its first mortgage bonds and debt securities. On July 12, 2013, Idaho Power entered into a Selling Agency Agreement with eight banks named in the agreement in connection with the potential issuance and sale from time to time of up to $500 million aggregate principal amount of first mortgage bonds, secured medium term notes, Series J (Series J Notes), under Idaho Power’s Indenture of Mortgage and Deed of Trust, dated as of October 1, 1937, as amended and supplemented (Indenture). Also on July 12, 2013, Idaho Power entered into the Forty-seventh Supplemental Indenture, dated as of July 1, 2013, to the Indenture. The Forty-seventh Supplemental Indenture provides for, among other items, the issuance of up to $500 million in aggregate principal amount of Series J Notes pursuant to the Indenture. As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had not sold any first mortgage bonds, including Series J Notes, or debt securities under the Selling Agency Agreement.
Mortgage: As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power could issue under its Indenture approximately $1.6 billion of additional first mortgage bonds based on retired first mortgage bonds and total unfunded property additions. These amounts are further limited by the maximum amount of first mortgage bonds set forth in the Indenture.
The mortgage of the Indenture secures all bonds issued under the Indenture equally and ratably, without preference, priority, or distinction. First mortgage bonds issued in the future will also be secured by the mortgage of the Indenture. The lien constitutes a first mortgage on all the properties of Idaho Power, subject only to certain limited exceptions including liens for taxes and assessments that are not delinquent and minor excepted encumbrances. Certain of the properties of Idaho Power are subject to easements, leases, contracts, covenants, workmen's compensation awards, and similar encumbrances and minor defects and clouds common to properties. The mortgage of the Indenture does not create a lien on revenues or profits, or notes or accounts receivable, contracts or choses in action, except as permitted by law during a completed default, securities, or cash, except when pledged, or merchandise or equipment manufactured or acquired for resale. The mortgage of the Indenture creates a lien on the interest of Idaho Power in property subsequently acquired, other than excepted property, subject to limitations in the case of consolidation, merger, or sale of all or substantially all of the assets of Idaho Power. The Indenture requires Idaho Power to spend or appropriate 15 percent of its annual gross operating revenues for maintenance, retirement, or amortization of its properties. Idaho Power may, however, anticipate or make up these expenditures or appropriations within the five years that immediately follow or precede a particular year.
On February 17, 2010, Idaho Power entered into the Forty-fifth Supplemental Indenture, dated as of February 1, 2010, to the Indenture for the purpose of increasing the maximum amount of first mortgage bonds issuable by Idaho Power from $1.5 billion to $2.0 billion. The amount issuable is also restricted by property, earnings, and other provisions of the Indenture and supplemental indentures to the Indenture. Idaho Power may amend the Indenture and increase this amount without consent of the holders of the first mortgage bonds. The Indenture requires that Idaho Power's net earnings be at least twice the annual interest requirements on all outstanding debt of equal or prior rank, including the bonds that Idaho Power may propose to issue. Under certain circumstances, the net earnings test does not apply, including the issuance of refunding bonds to retire outstanding bonds that mature in less than two years or that are of an equal or higher interest rate, or prior lien bonds.
5. NOTES PAYABLE
Credit Facilities
IDACORP and Idaho Power have in place credit facilities that may be used for general corporate purposes and commercial paper backup. IDACORP's credit facility consists of a revolving line of credit not to exceed the aggregate principal amount at any one time outstanding of $125 million, including swingline loans in an aggregate principal amount at any time outstanding not to exceed $15 million, and letters of credit in an aggregate principal amount at any time outstanding not to exceed $50 million. Idaho Power's credit facility consists of a revolving line of credit, through the issuance of loans and standby letters of credit, not to exceed the aggregate principal amount at any one time outstanding of $300 million, including swingline loans in an aggregate principal amount at any time outstanding not to exceed $30 million. IDACORP and Idaho Power have the right to
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request an increase in the aggregate principal amount of the facilities to $150 million and $450 million, respectively, in each case subject to certain conditions.
The IDACORP and Idaho Power credit facilities have similar terms and conditions. The interest rates for any borrowings under the facilities are based on either (1) a floating rate that is equal to the highest of the prime rate, federal funds rate plus 0.5 percent, or LIBOR rate plus 1.0 percent, or (2) the LIBOR rate, plus, in each case, an applicable margin. The margin is based on IDACORP's or Idaho Power's, as applicable, senior unsecured long-term indebtedness credit rating by Moody's Investors Service, Inc., Standard and Poor's Ratings Services, and Fitch Rating Services, Inc., as set forth on a schedule to the credit agreements. Under their respective credit facilities, the companies pay a facility fee on the commitment based on the respective company's credit rating for senior unsecured long-term debt securities. While the credit facilities provide for an original termination date of October 26, 2016, the credit agreements grant IDACORP and Idaho Power the right to request up to two one-year extensions, in each case subject to certain conditions. In October 2012 and October 2013, IDACORP and Idaho Power executed agreements with the lenders, extending the maturity date under both credit agreements to October 26, 2018. No other terms of the credit facilities, including the amount of permitted borrowings under the credit agreements, were affected by the extensions.
At December 31, 2014, no loans were outstanding under either IDACORP's or Idaho Power's facilities. At December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had regulatory authority to incur up to $450 million in principal amount of short-term indebtedness at any one time outstanding. Balances (in thousands of dollars) and interest rates of IDACORP’s and Idaho Power's short-term borrowings were as follows at December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013:
IDACORP | Idaho Power | Total | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2013 | |||||||||||||||||||
Commercial paper balances: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
At the end of year | $ | 31,300 | $ | 54,750 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 31,300 | $ | 54,750 | ||||||||||||
Average during the year | $ | 37,786 | $ | 61,121 | $ | — | $ | 2,209 | $ | 37,786 | $ | 63,330 | ||||||||||||
Weighted-average interest rate | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
At the end of the year | 0.43 | % | 0.34 | % | — | % | — | % | 0.43 | % | 0.34 | % |
6. COMMON STOCK
IDACORP Common Stock
The following table summarizes common stock transactions during the last three years and shares reserved at December 31, 2014:
Shares issued | Shares reserved | |||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | December 31, 2014 | |||||||||
Balance at beginning of year | 50,233,463 | 50,158,486 | 49,964,172 | |||||||||
Continuous equity program | — | — | — | 3,000,000 | ||||||||
Dividend reinvestment and stock purchase plan | — | — | 62,084 | 2,576,723 | ||||||||
Employee savings plan | — | — | 49,296 | 3,567,954 | ||||||||
Long-term incentive and compensation plan | 75,239 | 74,977 | 82,934 | 1,469,234 | ||||||||
Restricted stock plan | — | — | — | 256,154 | ||||||||
Balance at end of year | 50,308,702 | 50,233,463 | 50,158,486 |
IDACORP enters into sales agency agreements as a means of selling its common stock from time to time pursuant to a continuous equity program. On July 12, 2013, IDACORP entered into its current Sales Agency Agreement with BNY Mellon Capital Markets, LLC (BNYMCM). IDACORP may offer and sell up to 3 million shares of its common stock from time to time in at-the-market offerings through BNYMCM as IDACORP's agent. IDACORP has no obligation to issue any minimum number of shares under the Sales Agency Agreement. As of the date of this report, no shares of IDACORP common stock have been issued under the current Sales Agency Agreement.
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Idaho Power Common Stock
In 2012, IDACORP contributed $7.5 million of additional equity to Idaho Power. No contributions were made to Idaho Power in 2014 or 2013. No additional shares of Idaho Power common stock were issued in exchange for the contribution.
Restrictions on Dividends
Idaho Power’s ability to pay dividends on its common stock held by IDACORP and IDACORP’s ability to pay dividends on its common stock are limited to the extent payment of such dividends would violate the covenants in their respective credit facilities or Idaho Power’s Revised Code of Conduct. A covenant under IDACORP’s credit facility and Idaho Power’s credit facility requires IDACORP and Idaho Power to maintain leverage ratios of consolidated indebtedness to consolidated total capitalization, as defined therein, of no more than 65 percent at the end of each fiscal quarter. At December 31, 2014, the leverage ratios for IDACORP and Idaho Power were 46 percent and 47 percent, respectively. Based on these restrictions, IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s dividends were limited to $1.1 billion and $944 million, respectively, at December 31, 2014. There are additional facility covenants, subject to exceptions, that prohibit or restrict the sale or disposition of property without consent and any agreements restricting dividend payments to the company from any material subsidiary. At December 31, 2014, IDACORP and Idaho Power were in compliance with those covenants.
Idaho Power’s Revised Policy and Code of Conduct relating to transactions between and among Idaho Power, IDACORP, and other affiliates, which was approved by the IPUC in April 2008, provides that Idaho Power will not pay any dividends to IDACORP that will reduce Idaho Power’s common equity capital below 35 percent of its total adjusted capital without IPUC approval. At December 31, 2014, Idaho Power's common equity capital was 53 percent of its total adjusted capital. Further, Idaho Power must obtain approval from the OPUC before it can directly or indirectly loan funds or issue notes or give credit on its books to IDACORP.
Idaho Power’s articles of incorporation contain restrictions on the payment of dividends on its common stock if preferred stock dividends are in arrears. As of the date of this report, Idaho Power has no preferred stock outstanding.
In addition to contractual restrictions on the amount and payment of dividends, the Federal Power Act prohibits the payment of dividends from "capital accounts." The term "capital account" is undefined in the Federal Power Act or its regulations, but Idaho Power does not believe the restriction would limit Idaho Power's ability to pay dividends out of current year earnings or retained earnings.
7. STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION
IDACORP has two share-based compensation plans -- the 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan (LTICP) and the 1994 Restricted Stock Plan (RSP). These plans are intended to align employee and shareholder objectives related to IDACORP’s long-term growth.
The LTICP (for officers, key employees, and directors) permits the grant of stock options, restricted stock, performance shares, and several other types of stock-based awards. The RSP (for officers and key employees) permits only the grant of restricted stock or performance-based restricted stock. At December 31, 2014, the maximum number of shares available under the LTICP and RSP were 1,166,210 and 15,796, respectively, excluding (i) issued but unvested performance-based restricted shares and (ii) issued but unvested time-based restricted shares.
Stock Awards: Restricted stock awards have three-year vesting periods and entitle the recipients to dividends and voting rights. Unvested shares are restricted as to disposition and subject to forfeiture under certain circumstances. The fair value of these awards is based on the closing market price of common stock on the grant date and is charged to compensation expense over the vesting period, based on the number of shares expected to vest.
Performance-based restricted stock awards have three-year vesting periods and entitle the recipients to voting rights. Unvested shares are restricted as to disposition, subject to forfeiture under certain circumstances, and subject to the attainment of specific performance conditions over the three-year vesting period. The performance conditions are two equally-weighted metrics, cumulative earnings per share (CEPS) and total shareholder return (TSR) relative to a peer group. Depending on the level of attainment of the performance conditions, the final number of shares awarded can range from zero to 150 percent of the target award. Dividends are accrued during the vesting period and paid out based on the final number of shares awarded.
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The grant-date fair value of the CEPS portion is based on the closing market value at the date of grant, reduced by the loss in time-value of the estimated future dividend payments. The fair value of this portion of the awards is charged to compensation expense over the requisite service period, based on the number of shares expected to vest. The grant-date fair value of the TSR portion is estimated using the market value at the date of grant and a statistical model that incorporates the probability of meeting performance targets based on historical returns relative to the peer group. The fair value of this portion of the awards is charged to compensation expense over the requisite service period, provided the requisite service period is rendered, regardless of the level of TSR metric attained.
A summary of restricted stock and performance share activity is presented below. Idaho Power share amounts represent the portion of IDACORP amounts related to Idaho Power employees:
IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||
Number of Shares | Weighted-Average Grant Date Fair Value | Number of Shares | Weighted-Average Grant Date Fair Value | |||||||||||
Nonvested shares at January 1, 2014 | 310,379 | $ | 36.88 | 305,984 | $ | 36.85 | ||||||||
Shares granted | 106,527 | 48.75 | 105,367 | 48.74 | ||||||||||
Shares forfeited | (35,298 | ) | 46.34 | (35,298 | ) | 46.34 | ||||||||
Shares vested | (126,535 | ) | 30.09 | (125,657 | ) | 30.09 | ||||||||
Nonvested shares at December 31, 2014 | 255,073 | $ | 43.90 | 250,396 | $ | 43.91 |
The total fair value of shares vested during the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012 was $6.6 million, $5.0 million, and $4.9 million, respectively. At December 31, 2014, IDACORP had $4.6 million of total unrecognized compensation cost related to nonvested share-based compensation that was expected to vest. Idaho Power’s share of this amount was $4.6 million. These costs are expected to be recognized over a weighted-average period of 1.69 years. IDACORP uses original issue and/or treasury shares for these awards.
In 2014, a total of 14,599 shares were awarded to directors at a grant date fair value of $56.05 per share. Directors elected to defer receipt of 8,004 of these shares, which are being held as deferred stock units with dividend equivalents reinvested in additional stock units.
Stock Options: IDACORP has not granted any stock option awards since 2006 and has no plans to do so in the future. At December 31, 2014, there were no outstanding options.
Compensation Expense: The following table shows the compensation cost recognized in income and the tax benefits resulting from these plans, as well as the amounts allocated to Idaho Power for those costs associated with Idaho Power’s employees (in thousands of dollars):
IDACORP | Idaho Power | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||
Compensation cost | $ | 5,609 | $ | 4,888 | $ | 4,696 | $ | 5,458 | $ | 4,783 | $ | 4,577 | ||||||||||||
Income tax benefit | 2,193 | 1,911 | 1,836 | 2,134 | 1,870 | 1,789 |
No equity compensation costs have been capitalized.
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8. EARNINGS PER SHARE
The following table presents the computation of IDACORP’s basic and diluted earnings per share (EPS) for the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012 (in thousands, except for per share amounts):
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Numerator: | ||||||||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | $ | 193,480 | $ | 182,417 | $ | 173,014 | ||||||
Denominator: | ||||||||||||
Weighted-average common shares outstanding - basic | 50,131 | 50,052 | 49,930 | |||||||||
Effect of dilutive securities | 68 | 74 | 80 | |||||||||
Weighted-average common shares outstanding - diluted | 50,199 | 50,126 | 50,010 | |||||||||
Basic earnings per share | $ | 3.86 | $ | 3.64 | $ | 3.47 | ||||||
Diluted earnings per share | $ | 3.85 | $ | 3.64 | $ | 3.46 | ||||||
9. COMMITMENTS
Purchase Obligations
At December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had the following long-term commitments relating to purchases of energy, capacity, transmission rights, and fuel (in thousands of dollars):
2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | Thereafter | |||||||||||||||||||
Cogeneration and power production | $ | 181,468 | $ | 189,493 | $ | 229,255 | $ | 240,280 | $ | 238,501 | $ | 4,064,213 | ||||||||||||
Power and transmission rights | 6,370 | 5,416 | 3,337 | 1,199 | 1,105 | 4,487 | ||||||||||||||||||
Fuel | 64,415 | 42,124 | 41,744 | 9,352 | 9,169 | 68,359 |
As of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power had 781 MW nameplate capacity of PURPA-related projects on-line, with an additional 521 MW nameplate capacity of projects projected to be on-line by June 1, 2017. The power purchase contracts for these projects have original contract terms ranging from one to 35 years. Idaho Power's expenses associated with PURPA-related projects were approximately $145 million in 2014, $131 million in 2013, and $118 million in 2012.
In addition, Idaho Power has the following long-term commitments for lease guarantees, equipment, maintenance and services, and industry related fees (in thousands of dollars):
2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | Thereafter | |||||||||||||||||||
Operating leases | $ | 162 | $ | 1,039 | $ | 1,065 | $ | 1,088 | $ | 1,167 | $ | 14,136 | ||||||||||||
Equipment, maintenance, and service agreements | 61,492 | 19,610 | 8,279 | 7,794 | 7,978 | 31,489 | ||||||||||||||||||
FERC and other industry-related fees | 12,954 | 6,813 | 6,813 | 6,813 | 6,813 | 34,063 |
IDACORP’s expense for operating leases was approximately $5.9 million in 2014, $5.3 million in 2013, and $6.1 million in 2012.
Guarantees
Through a self-bonding mechanism, Idaho Power guarantees its portion of reclamation activities and obligations at BCC, of which IERCo owns a one-third interest. This guarantee, which is renewed annually with the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality, was $70 million at December 31, 2014, representing IERCo's one-third share of BCC's total reclamation obligation. BCC has a reclamation trust fund set aside specifically for the purpose of paying these reclamation costs. At December 31, 2014, the value of the reclamation trust fund was $67 million. During 2014 the reclamation trust fund distributed approximately $13 million for reclamation activity costs associated with the BCC surface mine. BCC periodically assesses the adequacy of the reclamation trust fund and its estimate of future reclamation costs. To ensure that the reclamation trust fund maintains adequate reserves, BCC has the ability to add a per-ton surcharge to coal sales, all of which are made to the Jim Bridger plant. Starting in 2010, BCC began applying a nominal surcharge to coal sales in order to maintain adequate
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reserves in the reclamation trust fund. Because of the existence of the fund and the ability to apply a per-ton surcharge, the estimated fair value of this guarantee is minimal.
IDACORP and Idaho Power enter into financial agreements and power purchase and sale agreements that include indemnification provisions relating to various forms of claims or liabilities that may arise from the transactions contemplated by these agreements. Generally, a maximum obligation is not explicitly stated in the indemnification provisions and, therefore, the overall maximum amount of the obligation under such indemnification provisions cannot be reasonably estimated. IDACORP and Idaho Power periodically evaluate the likelihood of incurring costs under such indemnities based on their historical experience and the evaluation of the specific indemnities. As of December 31, 2014, management believes the likelihood is remote that IDACORP or Idaho Power would be required to perform under such indemnification provisions or otherwise incur any significant losses with respect to such indemnification obligations. Neither IDACORP nor Idaho Power has recorded any liability on their respective consolidated balance sheets with respect to these indemnification obligations.
10. CONTINGENCIES
IDACORP and Idaho Power have in the past and expect in the future to become involved in various claims, controversies, disputes, and other contingent matters, including the items described in this Note 10. Some of these claims, controversies, disputes, and other contingent matters involve litigation and regulatory or other contested proceedings. The ultimate resolution and outcome of litigation and regulatory proceedings is inherently difficult to determine, particularly where (a) the remedies or penalties sought are indeterminate, (b) the proceedings are in the early stages or the substantive issues have not been well developed, or (c) the matters involve complex or novel legal theories or a large number of parties. In accordance with applicable accounting guidance, IDACORP and Idaho Power, as applicable, establish an accrual for legal proceedings when those matters proceed to a stage where they present loss contingencies that are both probable and reasonably estimable. In such cases, there may be a possible exposure to loss in excess of any amounts accrued. IDACORP and Idaho Power monitor those matters for developments that could affect the likelihood of a loss and the accrued amount, if any, and adjust the amount as appropriate. If the loss contingency at issue is not both probable and reasonably estimable, IDACORP and Idaho Power do not establish an accrual and the matter will continue to be monitored for any developments that would make the loss contingency both probable and reasonably estimable. As of the date of this report, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's accruals for loss contingencies are not material to their financial statements as a whole; however, future accruals could be material in a given period. IDACORP's and Idaho Power's determination is based on currently available information, and estimates presented in financial statements and other financial disclosures involve significant judgment and may be subject to significant uncertainty. For matters that affect Idaho Power’s operations, Idaho Power intends to seek, to the extent permissible and appropriate, recovery through the ratemaking process of costs incurred.
Western Energy Proceedings
High prices for electricity, energy shortages, and blackouts in California and in western wholesale markets during 2000 and 2001 caused numerous purchasers of electricity in those markets to initiate proceedings seeking refunds or other forms of relief and the FERC to initiate its own investigations. Some of these proceedings remain pending before the FERC or are on appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Idaho Power and IESCo (as successor to IDACORP Energy L.P.) believe that settlement releases they have obtained will restrict potential claims that might result from the disposition of pending proceedings and predict that these matters will not have a material adverse effect on IDACORP's or Idaho Power's results of operations or financial condition. However, the settlements and associated FERC orders have not fully eliminated the potential for so-called "ripple claims," which involve potential claims for refunds in the Pacific Northwest markets from an upstream seller of power based on a finding that its downstream buyer was liable for refunds as a seller of power during the relevant period. The FERC has characterized these ripple claims as "speculative." However, the FERC has refused to dismiss Idaho Power and IESCo from the proceedings in the Pacific Northwest and refused to approve portions of two settlements that provided for waivers of claims in those proceedings, despite only limited objections from two market participants to one of the two settlements and no objections to the other settlement. Idaho Power and IESCo have petitions for review of the FERC's decisions refusing to approve the waiver provision of the settlements, on the basis that the FERC failed to apply its established precedents and rules. The petitions for review are pending in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Based on its evaluation of the merits of ripple claims and the inability to estimate the potential exposure should the claims ultimately have any merit, particularly in light of Idaho Power and IESCo being both purchasers and sellers in the energy market during the relevant period, Idaho Power and IESCo have no amount accrued relating to the proceedings. To the extent the availability of any ripple claims materializes, Idaho Power and IESCo will continue to vigorously defend their positions in the proceedings.
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Other Proceedings
IDACORP and Idaho Power are parties to legal claims and legal and regulatory actions and proceedings in the ordinary course of business that are in addition to those discussed above and, as noted above, records an accrual for associated loss contingencies when they are probable and reasonably estimable. As of the date of this report the companies believe that resolution of those matters will not have a material adverse effect on their respective consolidated financial statements. Idaho Power is also actively monitoring various pending environmental regulations, including the EPA's proposed rule under Section 111(d) of the Clean Air Act, that may have a significant impact on its future operations. Given uncertainties regarding the outcome, timing, and compliance plans for these environmental matters, Idaho Power is unable to estimate the financial impact of these regulations but does believe that future capital investment for infrastructure and modifications to its electric generating facilities to comply with these regulations could be significant.
11. BENEFIT PLANS
Idaho Power sponsors defined benefit and other postretirement benefit plans that cover the majority of its employees. Idaho Power also sponsors a defined contribution 401(k) employee savings plan and provides certain post-employment benefits.
Pension Plans
Idaho Power has two pension plans – a noncontributory defined benefit pension plan (pension plan) and a nonqualified defined benefit pension plan for certain senior management employees called the Security Plan for Senior Management Employees (SMSP). Idaho Power also has a nonqualified defined benefit pension plan for directors that was frozen in 2002. Remaining vested benefits from that plan are included with the SMSP in the disclosures below. The benefits under these plans are based on years of service and the employee's final average earnings.
Idaho Power’s funding policy for the pension plan is to contribute at least the minimum required under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) but not more than the maximum amount deductible for income tax purposes. In 2014, 2013, and 2012 Idaho Power elected to contribute more than the minimum required amounts in order to bring the pension plan to a more funded position, to reduce future required contributions, and to reduce Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation premiums.
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The following table summarizes the changes in benefit obligations and plan assets of these plans (in thousands of dollars):
Pension Plan | SMSP | |||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2013 | |||||||||||||
Change in projected benefit obligation: | ||||||||||||||||
Benefit obligation at January 1 | $ | 695,093 | $ | 767,692 | $ | 77,773 | $ | 80,515 | ||||||||
Service cost | 25,292 | 31,357 | 1,645 | 2,178 | ||||||||||||
Interest cost | 35,415 | 31,830 | 3,856 | 3,258 | ||||||||||||
Actuarial loss (gain) | 114,496 | (112,215 | ) | 15,324 | (4,663 | ) | ||||||||||
Benefits paid | (25,484 | ) | (23,571 | ) | (4,188 | ) | (3,515 | ) | ||||||||
Projected benefit obligation at December 31 | 844,812 | 695,093 | 94,410 | 77,773 | ||||||||||||
Change in plan assets: | ||||||||||||||||
Fair value at January 1 | 545,092 | 460,862 | — | — | ||||||||||||
Actual return on plan assets | 10,111 | 77,801 | — | — | ||||||||||||
Employer contributions | 30,000 | 30,000 | — | — | ||||||||||||
Benefits paid | (25,484 | ) | (23,571 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||
Fair value at December 31 | 559,719 | 545,092 | — | — | ||||||||||||
Funded status at end of year | $ | (285,093 | ) | $ | (150,001 | ) | $ | (94,410 | ) | $ | (77,773 | ) | ||||
Amounts recognized in the statement of financial position consist of: | ||||||||||||||||
Other current liabilities | $ | — | $ | — | $ | (4,193 | ) | $ | (3,905 | ) | ||||||
Noncurrent liabilities | (285,093 | ) | (150,001 | ) | (90,217 | ) | (73,868 | ) | ||||||||
Net amount recognized | $ | (285,093 | ) | $ | (150,001 | ) | $ | (94,410 | ) | $ | (77,773 | ) | ||||
Amounts recognized in accumulated other comprehensive income consist of: | ||||||||||||||||
Net loss | $ | 263,350 | $ | 120,587 | $ | 38,808 | $ | 26,102 | ||||||||
Prior service cost | 295 | 642 | 857 | 1,077 | ||||||||||||
Subtotal | 263,645 | 121,229 | 39,665 | 27,179 | ||||||||||||
Less amount recorded as regulatory asset | (263,645 | ) | (121,229 | ) | — | — | ||||||||||
Net amount recognized in accumulated other comprehensive income | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 39,665 | $ | 27,179 | ||||||||
Accumulated benefit obligation | $ | 719,617 | $ | 591,649 | $ | 84,684 | $ | 70,530 |
The actuarial loss affecting the change in projected benefit obligations from December 31, 2013 to December 31, 2014 is due to the reduction in the discount rates, as identified in the plan assumptions table included later in this footnote.
As a non-qualified plan, the SMSP has no plan assets. However, Idaho Power has a Rabbi trust designated to provide funding for SMSP obligations. The Rabbi trust holds investments in marketable securities and corporate-owned life insurance. The fair value of these investments was approximately $65.0 million and $59.2 million at December 31, 2014 and 2013, respectively, and is reflected in Investments and in Company-owned life insurance on the consolidated balance sheets.
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The following table shows the components of net periodic benefit cost for these plans (in thousands of dollars). For purposes of calculating the expected return on plan assets, the market-related value of assets is equal to the fair value of the assets.
Pension Plan | SMSP | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||
Service cost | $ | 25,292 | $ | 31,357 | $ | 25,571 | $ | 1,645 | $ | 2,178 | $ | 2,151 | ||||||||||||
Interest cost | 35,415 | 31,830 | 31,489 | 3,856 | 3,258 | 3,218 | ||||||||||||||||||
Expected return on assets | (42,289 | ) | (35,755 | ) | (31,737 | ) | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||
Amortization of net loss | 3,911 | 17,118 | 14,114 | 2,618 | 2,840 | 1,530 | ||||||||||||||||||
Amortization of prior service cost | 347 | 347 | 347 | 220 | 212 | 212 | ||||||||||||||||||
Net periodic pension cost | 22,676 | 44,897 | 39,784 | 8,339 | 8,488 | 7,111 | ||||||||||||||||||
Adjustments due to the effects of regulation(1) | 12,124 | (9,013 | ) | (5,860 | ) | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||||
Net periodic benefit cost recognized for financial reporting | $ | 34,800 | $ | 35,884 | $ | 33,924 | $ | 8,339 | $ | 8,488 | $ | 7,111 | ||||||||||||
(1) Net periodic benefit costs for the pension plan are recognized for financial reporting based upon the authorization of each regulatory jurisdiction in which Idaho Power operates. Under IPUC order, income statement recognition of pension plan costs is deferred until costs are recovered through rates.
The following table shows the components of other comprehensive income for the plans (in thousands of dollars):
Pension Plan | SMSP | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||
Actuarial (loss) gain during the year | $ | (146,674 | ) | $ | 154,261 | $ | (60,448 | ) | $ | (15,324 | ) | $ | 4,664 | $ | (13,335 | ) | ||||||||
Reclassification adjustments for: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Amortization of net loss | 3,911 | 17,118 | 14,114 | 2,618 | 2,840 | 1,530 | ||||||||||||||||||
Amortization of prior service cost | 347 | 347 | 347 | 220 | 212 | 212 | ||||||||||||||||||
Adjustment for deferred tax effects | 55,678 | (67,136 | ) | 17,979 | 4,881 | (3,017 | ) | 4,532 | ||||||||||||||||
Adjustment due to the effects of regulation | 86,738 | (104,590 | ) | 28,008 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||
Other comprehensive income recognized related to pension benefit plans | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — | $ | (7,605 | ) | $ | 4,699 | $ | (7,061 | ) |
In 2015, IDACORP and Idaho Power expect to recognize as components of net periodic benefit cost $18.8 million from amortizing amounts recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income (or as a regulatory asset for the pension plan) as of December 31, 2014, relating to the pension plan and SMSP. This amount consists of $14.2 million of amortization of net loss and $0.2 million of amortization of prior service cost for the pension plan, and $4.2 million of amortization of net loss and $0.2 million of amortization of prior service cost for the SMSP.
The following table summarizes the expected future benefit payments of these plans (in thousands of dollars):
2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020-2024 | |||||||||||||||||||
Pension Plan | $ | 27,634 | $ | 29,938 | $ | 32,428 | $ | 35,036 | $ | 37,644 | $ | 226,411 | ||||||||||||
SMSP | 4,274 | 4,198 | 4,262 | 4,134 | 4,291 | 23,868 |
As of December 31, 2014, IDACORP's and Idaho Power's minimum required contributions to the pension plan are estimated to be zero in 2015, though Idaho Power plans to contribute at least $20 million to the pension plan during 2015.
Postretirement Benefits
Idaho Power maintains a defined benefit postretirement benefit plan (consisting of health care and death benefits) that covers all employees who were enrolled in the active-employee group plan at the time of retirement as well as their spouses and qualifying dependents. Retirees hired on or after January 1, 1999 have access to the standard medical option at full cost, with no contribution by Idaho Power. Benefits for employees who retire after December 31, 2002 are limited to a fixed amount, which has limited the growth of Idaho Power’s future obligations under this plan.
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The following table summarizes the changes in benefit obligation and plan assets (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
Change in accumulated benefit obligation: | ||||||||
Benefit obligation at January 1 | $ | 57,341 | $ | 72,547 | ||||
Service cost | 1,011 | 1,315 | ||||||
Interest cost | 2,841 | 2,633 | ||||||
Actuarial loss (gain) | 7,026 | (16,788 | ) | |||||
Benefits paid(1) | (2,220 | ) | (2,366 | ) | ||||
Benefit obligation at December 31 | 65,999 | 57,341 | ||||||
Change in plan assets: | ||||||||
Fair value of plan assets at January 1 | 37,111 | 33,387 | ||||||
Actual return on plan assets | 3,888 | 6,212 | ||||||
Employer contributions(1) | (404 | ) | (122 | ) | ||||
Benefits paid(1) | (2,220 | ) | (2,366 | ) | ||||
Fair value of plan assets at December 31 | 38,375 | 37,111 | ||||||
Funded status at end of year (included in noncurrent liabilities) | $ | (27,624 | ) | $ | (20,230 | ) | ||
(1) Contributions and benefits paid are each net of $3,379 thousand and $3,272 thousand of plan participant contributions, and $344 thousand and $372 thousand of Medicare Part D subsidy receipts for 2014 and 2013, respectively.
Amounts recognized in accumulated other comprehensive income consist of the following (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
Net loss | $ | 759 | $ | (4,974 | ) | |||
Prior service cost | 145 | 328 | ||||||
Subtotal | 904 | (4,646 | ) | |||||
Less amount recognized in regulatory assets | (904 | ) | 4,646 | |||||
Net amount recognized in accumulated other comprehensive income | $ | — | $ | — |
The net periodic postretirement benefit cost was as follows (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Service cost | $ | 1,011 | $ | 1,315 | $ | 1,292 | ||||||
Interest cost | 2,841 | 2,633 | 3,135 | |||||||||
Expected return on plan assets | (2,595 | ) | (2,328 | ) | (2,234 | ) | ||||||
Amortization of net loss | — | 98 | 384 | |||||||||
Amortization of prior service cost | 183 | (229 | ) | (422 | ) | |||||||
Amortization of unrecognized transition obligation | — | — | 2,040 | |||||||||
Net periodic postretirement benefit cost | $ | 1,440 | $ | 1,489 | $ | 4,195 |
The following table shows the components of other comprehensive income for the plan (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Actuarial (loss) gain during the year | $ | (5,733 | ) | $ | 20,673 | $ | (2,068 | ) | ||||
Reclassification adjustments for: | ||||||||||||
Amortization of net loss | — | 98 | 384 | |||||||||
Amortization of prior service cost | 183 | (229 | ) | (422 | ) | |||||||
Amortization of unrecognized transition obligation | — | — | 2,040 | |||||||||
Adjustment for deferred tax effects | 2,170 | (8,031 | ) | (153 | ) | |||||||
Adjustment due to the effects of regulation | 3,380 | (12,511 | ) | 219 | ||||||||
Other comprehensive income related to postretirement benefit plans | $ | — | $ | — | $ | — |
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In 2015, IDACORP and Idaho Power expect to recognize as components of net periodic benefit cost $15 thousand from amortizing amounts recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income as of December 31, 2014, relating to the postretirement benefit plan. The entire amount represents $15 thousand of amortization of prior service cost.
Medicare Act: The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003 was signed into law in December 2003 and established a prescription drug benefit under Medicare Part D, as well as a federal subsidy to sponsors of retiree health care benefit plans that provide a prescription drug benefit that is at least actuarially equivalent to Medicare’s prescription drug coverage.
The following table summarizes the expected future benefit payments of the postretirement benefit plan and expected Medicare Part D subsidy receipts (in thousands of dollars):
2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020-2024 | |||||||||||||||||||
Expected benefit payments | $ | 3,970 | $ | 4,040 | $ | 4,090 | $ | 4,160 | $ | 4,210 | $ | 21,310 | ||||||||||||
Expected Medicare Part D subsidy receipts | 390 | 430 | 470 | 520 | 560 | 3,560 |
Plan Assumptions
The following table sets forth the weighted-average assumptions used at the end of each year to determine benefit obligations for all Idaho Power-sponsored pension and postretirement benefits plans:
Pension Plan | SMSP | Postretirement Benefits | ||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2013 | 2014 | 2013 | |||||||||||||
Discount rate | 4.25 | % | 5.20 | % | 4.20 | % | 5.10 | % | 4.20 | % | 5.15 | % | ||||||
Rate of compensation increase(1) | 4.30 | % | 4.38 | % | 4.50 | % | 4.50 | % | — | — | ||||||||
Medical trend rate | — | — | — | — | 6.4 | % | 6.8 | % | ||||||||||
Dental trend rate | — | — | — | — | 5.0 | % | 5.0 | % | ||||||||||
Measurement date | 12/31/2014 | 12/31/2013 | 12/31/2014 | 12/31/2013 | 12/31/2014 | 12/31/2013 | ||||||||||||
(1) The 2014 rate of compensation increase assumption for the pension plan includes an inflation component of 2.75% plus a 1.55% composite merit increase component that is based on employees' years of service. Merit salary increases are assumed to be 8.0% for employees in their first year of service and scale down to 0% for employees in their fortieth year of service and beyond.
The following table sets forth the weighted-average assumptions used to determine net periodic benefit cost for all Idaho Power-sponsored pension and postretirement benefit plans:
Pension Plan | SMSP | Postretirement Benefits | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||
Discount rate | 5.20 | % | 4.20 | % | 4.90 | % | 5.10 | % | 4.15 | % | 5.10 | % | 5.15 | % | 4.20 | % | 5.05 | % | |||||||||
Expected long-term rate of return on assets | 7.75 | % | 7.75 | % | 7.75 | % | — | — | — | 7.25 | % | 7.25 | % | 7.25 | % | ||||||||||||
Rate of compensation increase | 4.30 | % | 4.38 | % | 4.35 | % | 4.50 | % | 4.50 | % | 4.50 | % | — | — | — | ||||||||||||
Medical trend rate | — | — | — | — | — | — | 6.4 | % | 6.8 | % | 6.5 | % | |||||||||||||||
Dental trend rate | — | — | — | — | — | — | 5.0 | % | 5.0 | % | 5.0 | % |
The assumed health care cost trend rate used to measure the expected cost of health benefits covered by the postretirement plan was 6.4 percent in 2014 and is assumed to decrease gradually to 5.1 percent by 2093. The assumed dental cost trend rate used to measure the expected cost of dental benefits covered by the plan was 5.0 percent for all years. A one percentage point change in the assumed health care cost trend rate would have the following effects at December 31, 2014 (in thousands of dollars):
One-Percentage-Point | ||||||||
Increase | Decrease | |||||||
Effect on total of cost components | $ | 325 | $ | (241 | ) | |||
Effect on accumulated postretirement benefit obligation | 3,426 | (2,657 | ) |
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Plan Assets
Pension Asset Allocation Policy: The target allocation and actual allocations at December 31, 2014 for the pension asset portfolio by asset class is set forth below:
Asset Class | Target Allocation | Actual Allocation December 31, 2014 | ||||
Debt securities | 24 | % | 24 | % | ||
Equity securities | 54 | % | 55 | % | ||
Real estate | 6 | % | 6 | % | ||
Other plan assets | 16 | % | 15 | % | ||
Total | 100 | % | 100 | % |
Assets are rebalanced as necessary to keep the portfolio close to target allocations.
The plan’s principal investment objective is to maximize total return (defined as the sum of realized interest and dividend income and realized and unrealized gain or loss in market price) consistent with prudent parameters of risk and the liability profile of the portfolio. Emphasis is placed on preservation and growth of capital along with adequacy of cash flow sufficient to fund current and future payments to pensioners.
The three major goals in Idaho Power’s asset allocation process are to:
• | determine if the investments have the potential to earn the rate of return assumed in the actuarial liability calculations; |
• | match the cash flow needs of the plan. Idaho Power sets bond allocations sufficient to cover at least five years of benefit payments and cash allocations sufficient to cover the current year benefit payments. Idaho Power then utilizes growth instruments (equities, real estate, venture capital) to fund the longer-term liabilities of the plan; and |
• | maintain a prudent risk profile consistent with ERISA fiduciary standards. |
Allowable plan investments include stocks and stock funds, investment-grade bonds and bond funds, core real estate funds, private equity funds, and cash and cash equivalents. With the exception of real estate holdings and private equity, investments must be readily marketable so that an entire holding can be disposed of quickly with only a minor effect upon market price.
Rate-of-return projections for plan assets are based on historical risk/return relationships among asset classes. The primary measure is the historical risk premium each asset class has delivered versus the yield on the Moody's AA Corporate Bond Index. This historical risk premium is then added to the current yield on the Moody's AA Corporate Bond Index. Additional analysis is performed to measure the expected range of returns, as well as worst-case and best-case scenarios. Based on the current low interest rate environment, current rate-of-return expectations are lower than the nominal returns generated over the past 20 years when interest rates were generally much higher.
Idaho Power’s asset modeling process also utilizes historical market returns to measure the portfolio’s exposure to a “worst-case” market scenario, to determine how much performance could vary from the expected “average” performance over various time periods. This “worst-case” modeling, in addition to cash flow matching and diversification by asset class and investment style, provides the basis for managing the risk associated with investing portfolio assets.
Fair Value of Plan Assets: Idaho Power classifies its pension plan and postretirement benefit plan investments using the three-level fair value hierarchy described in Note 16. The following table presents the fair value of the plans' investments by asset category (in thousands of dollars). If the inputs used to measure the securities fall within different levels of the hierarchy, the
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categorization is based on the lowest level input (Level 3 being the lowest) that is significant to the fair value measurement of the security.
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||||||
Assets at December 31, 2014 | ||||||||||||||||
Pension plan assets: | ||||||||||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents | $ | 19,190 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 19,190 | ||||||||
Short-term bonds | — | 10,991 | — | 10,991 | ||||||||||||
Intermediate bonds | — | 101,867 | — | 101,867 | ||||||||||||
Long-term bonds | — | 21,615 | — | 21,615 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Large-Cap | 66,151 | — | — | 66,151 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Mid-Cap | 68,974 | — | — | 68,974 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Small-Cap | 50,972 | — | — | 50,972 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Micro-Cap | 22,962 | — | — | 22,962 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: International | 6,555 | 57,705 | — | 64,260 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Emerging Markets | 8,629 | 22,915 | — | 31,544 | ||||||||||||
Real estate | — | — | 33,996 | 33,996 | ||||||||||||
Private market investments | — | — | 37,118 | 37,118 | ||||||||||||
Commodities funds | — | 30,079 | — | 30,079 | ||||||||||||
Total pension assets | $ | 243,433 | $ | 245,172 | $ | 71,114 | $ | 559,719 | ||||||||
Postretirement plan assets(1) | $ | 11 | $ | 38,364 | $ | — | $ | 38,375 | ||||||||
Assets at December 31, 2013 | ||||||||||||||||
Pension plan assets: | ||||||||||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents | $ | 33,030 | $ | — | $ | — | $ | 33,030 | ||||||||
Short-term bonds | — | 11,068 | — | 11,068 | ||||||||||||
Intermediate bonds | — | 76,312 | — | 76,312 | ||||||||||||
Long-term bonds | — | 19,024 | — | 19,024 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Large-Cap | 71,042 | — | — | 71,042 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Mid-Cap | 23,346 | 23,112 | — | 46,458 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Small-Cap | 48,998 | — | — | 48,998 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Micro-Cap | 24,687 | — | — | 24,687 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: International | 19,128 | 74,908 | — | 94,036 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Emerging Markets | 3,523 | 22,107 | — | 25,630 | ||||||||||||
Equity Securities: Market Neutral | 3,870 | — | — | 3,870 | ||||||||||||
Real estate | — | — | 28,019 | 28,019 | ||||||||||||
Private market investments | — | — | 33,709 | 33,709 | ||||||||||||
Commodities funds | — | 29,209 | — | 29,209 | ||||||||||||
Total pension assets | $ | 227,624 | $ | 255,740 | $ | 61,728 | $ | 545,092 | ||||||||
Postretirement plan assets(1) | $ | 75 | $ | 37,036 | $ | — | $ | 37,111 | ||||||||
(1) The postretirement benefits assets are primarily life insurance contracts.
For the year ended December 31, 2014, the only significant transfer in and out of Levels 1, 2, or 3 was $23.1 million of mid-cap equity security investments that were transferred from Level 2 to Level 1. For the year ended December 31, 2013, there were no significant transfers into or out of Levels 1, 2, or 3.
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The following table presents a reconciliation of the beginning and ending balances of the fair value measurements using significant unobservable inputs (Level 3) (in thousands of dollars):
Private Equity | Real Estate | Total | ||||||||||
Beginning balance - January 1, 2013 | $ | 30,507 | $ | 27,874 | $ | 58,381 | ||||||
Realized gains | — | 739 | 739 | |||||||||
Unrealized gains | 2,941 | 1,579 | 4,520 | |||||||||
Purchases | 89 | 4,726 | 4,815 | |||||||||
Sales | — | (6,899 | ) | (6,899 | ) | |||||||
Settlements | 172 | — | 172 | |||||||||
Ending balance - December 31, 2013 | 33,709 | 28,019 | 61,728 | |||||||||
Realized gains | 1,430 | 866 | 2,296 | |||||||||
Unrealized (losses) gains | (545 | ) | 1,305 | 760 | ||||||||
Purchases | 2,434 | 3,806 | 6,240 | |||||||||
Settlements | 90 | — | 90 | |||||||||
Ending balance - December 31, 2014 | $ | 37,118 | $ | 33,996 | $ | 71,114 |
Fair Value Measurement of Level 2 and Level 3 Plan Asset Inputs:
Level 2 Bonds, Equity Securities, and Level 2 Commodities: These investments represent U.S. government and agency bonds, corporate bonds, and commingled funds consisting of publicly traded equity securities or exchange-traded commodity contracts and other contractual claims to commodity holdings. The U.S. government and agency bonds, as well as the corporate bonds, are not traded on an exchange and are valued utilizing quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets. The commingled funds themselves are not publicly traded, and therefore no publicly quoted market price is readily available. The value of these investments is calculated by the custodian for the fund company on a monthly basis, and is based on market prices of the assets held by the commingled fund divided by the number of fund shares outstanding.
Level 2 Postretirement Assets: These assets represent an investment in a life insurance contract and are recorded at fair value, which is the cash surrender value, less any unpaid expenses. The cash surrender value of this insurance contract is contractually equal to the insurance contract's proportionate share of the market value of an associated investment account held by the insurer. The investments held by the insurer's investment account are all instruments traded on exchanges with readily determinable market prices.
Level 3 Real Estate: Real estate holdings represent investments in open-ended commingled real estate funds. As the property interests held in these real estate funds are not frequently traded, establishing the market value of the property interests held by the fund, and the resulting unit value of fund shareholders, is based on unobservable inputs including property appraisals by the fund company, property appraisals by independent appraisal firms, analysis of the replacement cost of the property, discounted cash flows generated by property rents and changes in property values, and comparisons with sale prices of similar properties in similar markets. These open-ended real estate funds also furnish annual audited financial statements that are also used to further validate the information provided.
Level 3 Private Market Investments: Private market investments represent two categories: fund of hedge funds and venture capital funds. These funds are valued by the fund company based on the estimated fair value of the underlying fund holdings divided by the fund shares outstanding. Some hedge fund strategies utilize securities with readily available market prices, while others utilize less liquid investment vehicles that are valued based on unobservable inputs including cost, operating results, recent funding activity, or comparisons with similar investment vehicles. Venture capital fund investments are valued by the fund company based on estimated fair value of the underlying fund holdings divided by the fund shares outstanding. Some venture capital investments have progressed to the point that they have readily available exchange-based market valuations. Early stage venture investments are valued based on unobservable inputs including cost, operating results, discounted cash flows, the price of recent funding events, or pending offers from other viable entities. These private market investments furnish annual audited financial statements that are also used to further validate the information provided.
The fair value of the Level 3 assets is determined based on pricing provided or reviewed by third-party vendors to our investment managers. While the input amounts used by the pricing vendors in determining fair value are not provided, and therefore unavailable for Idaho Power's review, the asset results are reviewed and monitored to ensure the fair values are
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reasonable and in line with market experience in similar assets classes. Additionally, the audited financial statements of the funds are reviewed at the time they are issued.
Employee Savings Plan
Idaho Power has a defined contribution plan designed to comply with Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code and that covers substantially all employees. Idaho Power matches specified percentages of employee contributions to the plan. Matching annual contributions were approximately $7 million each year from 2012 to 2014.
Post-employment Benefits
Idaho Power provides certain benefits to former or inactive employees, their beneficiaries, and covered dependents after employment but before retirement, in addition to the health care benefits required under the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. These benefits include salary continuation, health care and life insurance for those employees found to be disabled under Idaho Power’s disability plans, and health care for surviving spouses and dependents. Idaho Power accrues a liability for such benefits. The post employment benefit amounts included in other deferred credits on IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s consolidated balance sheets at December 31, 2014 and 2013 are $2.0 million and $1.9 million, respectively.
12. PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT AND JOINTLY-OWNED PROJECTS
The following table presents the major classifications of Idaho Power’s utility plant in service, annual depreciation provisions as a percent of average depreciable balance, and accumulated provision for depreciation for the years 2014 and 2013 (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | |||||||||||||
Balance | Avg Rate | Balance | Avg Rate | |||||||||||
Production | $ | 2,316,941 | 2.48 | % | $ | 2,272,381 | 2.47 | % | ||||||
Transmission | 1,016,207 | 2.03 | % | 974,697 | 2.01 | % | ||||||||
Distribution | 1,516,933 | 2.72 | % | 1,459,666 | 2.72 | % | ||||||||
General and Other | 398,131 | 5.49 | % | 373,658 | 5.91 | % | ||||||||
Total in service | 5,248,212 | 2.68 | % | 5,080,402 | 2.69 | % | ||||||||
Accumulated provision for depreciation | (1,841,011 | ) | (1,766,680 | ) | ||||||||||
In service - net | $ | 3,407,201 | $ | 3,313,722 |
Idaho Power's ownership interest in three jointly-owned generating facilities is included in the table above. Under the joint operating agreements for these facilities, each participating utility is responsible for financing its share of construction, operating, and leasing costs. Idaho Power's proportionate share of operating expenses for each facility is included in the Consolidated Statements of Income. These jointly-owned facilities, including balance sheet amounts and the extent of Idaho Power’s participation, were as follows at December 31, 2014 (in thousands of dollars):
Name of Plant | Location | Utility Plant in Service | Construction Work in Progress | Accumulated Provision for Depreciation | Ownership % | MW(1) | ||||||||||||
Jim Bridger Units 1-4 | Rock Springs, WY | $ | 569,220 | $ | 59,394 | $ | 293,432 | 33 | 771 | |||||||||
Boardman | Boardman, OR | 80,951 | 125 | 60,031 | 10 | 64 | ||||||||||||
Valmy Units 1 and 2 | Winnemucca, NV | 372,791 | 19,023 | 193,756 | 50 | 284 | ||||||||||||
(1) Idaho Power’s share of nameplate capacity.
IERCo, Idaho Power’s wholly-owned subsidiary, is a joint venturer in BCC. Idaho Power’s coal purchases from the joint venture were $79 million in 2014 and 2013, and $75 million in 2012.
Idaho Power has contracts to purchase the energy from four PURPA qualified facilities that are 50 percent owned by Ida-West. Idaho Power’s power purchases from these facilities were $9 million each year from 2012 to 2014.
See Note 1 for a discussion of the property of IDACORP’s consolidated VIE.
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13. ASSET RETIREMENT OBLIGATIONS (ARO)
The guidance relating to accounting for AROs requires that legal obligations associated with the retirement of property, plant, and equipment be recognized as a liability at fair value when incurred and when a reasonable estimate of the fair value of the liability can be made. Under the guidance, when a liability is initially recorded, the entity increases the carrying amount of the related long-lived asset to reflect the future retirement cost. Over time, the liability is accreted to its estimated settlement value and paid, and the capitalized cost is depreciated over the useful life of the related asset. If, at the end of the asset’s life, the recorded liability differs from the actual obligations paid, a gain or loss would be recognized. As a rate-regulated entity, Idaho Power records regulatory assets or liabilities instead of accretion, depreciation, and gains or losses, as approved by the IPUC. The regulatory assets recorded under this order do not earn a return on investment. Beginning June 1, 2012, accretion, depreciation, and gains or losses related to the Boardman generating facility have been exempted from such regulatory treatment as Idaho Power is now collecting amounts related to the decommissioning of Boardman in rates.
Idaho Power’s recorded AROs relate to the removal of polychlorinated biphenyl-contaminated equipment at its distribution facilities and the reclamation and removal costs at its jointly-owned coal-fired generation facilities. In 2014, changes in estimates at its distribution facilities and at the coal-fired generation facilities resulted in a net decrease of $4.1 million in the recorded AROs. The decrease in the AROs in 2014 is primarily due to decreases in estimated future costs related to evaporation ponds at the Valmy generating facility.
Idaho Power also has additional AROs associated with its transmission system, hydroelectric facilities, natural gas-fired generation facilities, and jointly owned coal-fired generation facilities; however, due to the indeterminate removal date, the fair value of the associated liabilities currently cannot be estimated and no amounts are recognized in the consolidated financial statements.
The regulated operations of Idaho Power also collect removal costs in rates for certain assets that do not have associated AROs. Idaho Power is required to redesignate these removal costs as regulatory liabilities. See Note 3 for the removal costs recorded as regulatory liabilities on IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s consolidated balance sheets as of December 31, 2014 and 2013.
The following table presents the changes in the carrying amount of AROs (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
Balance at beginning of year | $ | 25,765 | $ | 22,982 | ||||
Accretion expense | 1,061 | 1,041 | ||||||
Revisions in estimated cash flows | (4,140 | ) | 2,722 | |||||
Liability settled | (756 | ) | (980 | ) | ||||
Balance at end of year | $ | 21,930 | $ | 25,765 |
14. INVESTMENTS
The table below summarizes IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s investments as of December 31 (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
Idaho Power investments: | ||||||||
Bridger Coal Company (equity method investment) | $ | 96,219 | $ | 88,990 | ||||
Available-for-sale equity securities | 44,942 | 41,119 | ||||||
Executive deferred compensation plan investments | 141 | 1,153 | ||||||
Other investments | 1 | 1 | ||||||
Total Idaho Power investments | 141,303 | 131,263 | ||||||
Investments in affordable housing (IDACORP Financial Services) | 12,762 | 17,372 | ||||||
Ida-West joint ventures (equity method investments) | 11,393 | 11,454 | ||||||
Total IDACORP investments | $ | 165,458 | $ | 160,089 |
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Equity Method Investments
Idaho Power, through its subsidiary IERCo, is a 33 percent owner of BCC. Ida-West, through separate subsidiaries, owns 50 percent of three electric generation projects that are accounted for using the equity method: South Forks Joint Venture; Hazelton/Wilson Joint Venture, and Snow Mountain Hydro LLC. All projects are reviewed periodically for impairment. The table below presents IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s earnings (loss) of unconsolidated equity-method investments (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||||
Bridger Coal Company (Idaho Power) | $ | 10,814 | $ | 10,242 | $ | 9,412 | ||||||||
Ida-West joint ventures | 1,614 | 1,707 | 2,215 | |||||||||||
Other | (56 | ) | (10 | ) | (10 | ) | ||||||||
Total | $ | 12,372 | $ | 11,939 | $ | 11,617 |
Investments in Equity Securities
Investments in securities classified as available-for-sale securities are reported at fair value. Any unrealized gains or losses on available-for-sale securities are included in income, as the fair value option has been elected for these instruments. Unrealized gains and losses on available-for-sale securities were immaterial at December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013.
The following table summarizes sales of available-for-sale securities (in thousands of dollars):
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||||
Proceeds from sales | $ | — | $ | 25,661 | $ | — | ||||||||
Gross realized gains from sales | — | 11,637 | — | |||||||||||
Gross realized losses from sales | — | — | — |
At the end of each reporting period, IDACORP and Idaho Power analyze securities in loss positions to determine whether they have experienced a decline in market value that is considered other-than-temporary. At December 31, 2014 and December 31, 2013, there were no indicators of other-than-temporary impairment related to IDACORP's and Idaho Power's investments.
Investments in Affordable Housing
IFS invests primarily in affordable housing developments, which provide a return principally by reducing federal and state income taxes through tax credits and accelerated tax depreciation benefits. IFS has focused on a diversified approach to its investment strategy in order to limit both geographic and operational risk with most of IFS’s investments having been made through syndicated funds.
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15. DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
Commodity Price Risk
Idaho Power is exposed to market risk relating to electricity, natural gas, and other fuel commodity prices, all of which are heavily influenced by supply and demand. Market risk may be influenced by market participants’ nonperformance of their contractual obligations and commitments, which affects the supply of or demand for the commodity. Idaho Power uses derivative instruments, such as physical and financial forward contracts, for both electricity and fuel to manage the risks relating to these commodity price exposures. The primary objectives of Idaho Power’s energy purchase and sale activity are to meet the demand of retail electric customers, maintain appropriate physical reserves to ensure reliability, and make economic use of temporary surpluses that may develop.
All of Idaho Power's derivative instruments have been entered into for the purpose of economically hedging forecasted purchases and sales, though none of these instruments have been designated as cash flow hedges. Idaho Power offsets fair value amounts recognized on its balance sheet and applies collateral related to derivative instruments executed with the same counterparty under the same master netting agreement. Idaho Power does not offset a counterparty's current derivative contracts with the counterparty's long-term derivative contracts, although Idaho Power's master netting arrangements would allow current and long-term positions to be offset in the event of default. Also, in the event of default, Idaho Power's master netting arrangements would allow for the offsetting of all transactions executed under the master netting arrangement. These types of transactions may include non-derivative instruments, derivatives qualifying for scope exceptions, receivables and payables arising from settled positions, and other forms of non-cash collateral (such as letters of credit). These types of transactions are excluded from the offsetting presented in the derivative fair value and offsetting table below.
The table below presents the gains and losses on derivatives not designated as hedging instruments for the years ended December 31, 2014 and 2013 (in thousands of dollars):
Location of Realized Gain/(Loss) on Derivatives Recognized in Income | Gain/(Loss) on Derivatives Recognized in Income(1) | |||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||||
Financial swaps | Off-system sales | $ | (4,119 | ) | $ | (2,637 | ) | $ | 15,104 | |||||
Financial swaps | Purchased power | (1,416 | ) | 947 | (6,280 | ) | ||||||||
Financial swaps | Fuel expense | 3,862 | 731 | (6,359 | ) | |||||||||
Financial swaps | Other operations and maintenance | (158 | ) | 35 | (302 | ) | ||||||||
Forward contracts | Off-system sales | 277 | 185 | — | ||||||||||
Forward contracts | Purchased power | (279 | ) | (196 | ) | — | ||||||||
Forward contracts | Fuel expense | 94 | 217 | (1,755 | ) |
(1) Excludes unrealized gains or losses on derivatives, which are recorded on the balance sheet as regulatory assets or regulatory liabilities.
Settlement gains and losses on electricity swap contracts are recorded on the income statement in off-system sales or purchased power depending on the forecasted position being economically hedged by the derivative contract. Settlement gains and losses on contracts for natural gas are reflected in fuel expense. Settlement gains and losses on diesel derivatives are recorded in other operations and maintenance expense. See Note 16 for additional information concerning the determination of fair value for Idaho Power’s assets and liabilities from price risk management activities.
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Derivative Instrument Summary
The table below presents the fair values and locations of derivative instruments not designated as hedging instruments recorded on the balance sheets and reconciles the gross amounts of derivatives recognized as assets and as liabilities to the net amounts presented in the balance sheets at December 31, 2014 and 2013 (in thousands of dollars):
Asset Derivatives | Liability Derivatives | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Balance Sheet Location | Gross Fair Value | Amounts Offset | Net Assets | Gross Fair Value | Amounts Offset | Net Liabilities | ||||||||||||||||||||
December 31, 2014 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Current: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Financial swaps | Other current assets | $ | 2,509 | $ | (2,002 | ) | (1) | $ | 507 | $ | 756 | $ | (756 | ) | $ | — | ||||||||||
Financial swaps | Other current liabilities | 379 | (379 | ) | — | 4,335 | (379 | ) | 3,956 | |||||||||||||||||
Forward contracts | Other current assets | 64 | — | 64 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Forward contracts | Other current liabilities | — | — | — | 5 | — | 5 | |||||||||||||||||||
Long-term: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Forward contracts | Other assets | 63 | — | 63 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Total | $ | 3,015 | $ | (2,381 | ) | $ | 634 | $ | 5,096 | $ | (1,135 | ) | $ | 3,961 | ||||||||||||
December 31, 2013 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Current: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Financial swaps | Other current assets | $ | 1,451 | $ | (175 | ) | $ | 1,276 | $ | 175 | $ | (175 | ) | $ | — | |||||||||||
Financial swaps | Other current liabilities | 373 | (373 | ) | — | 1,975 | (1,429 | ) | (1) | 546 | ||||||||||||||||
Forward contracts | Other current assets | 109 | — | 109 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Forward contracts | Other current liabilities | — | — | — | 26 | — | 26 | |||||||||||||||||||
Long-term: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Financial swaps | Other assets | 189 | (28 | ) | 161 | 28 | (28 | ) | — | |||||||||||||||||
Forward contracts | Other assets | 126 | — | 126 | — | — | — | |||||||||||||||||||
Total | $ | 2,248 | $ | (576 | ) | $ | 1,672 | $ | 2,204 | $ | (1,632 | ) | $ | 572 | ||||||||||||
(1) Current asset and current liability derivative amounts offset include $1.2 million and $1.1 million of collateral payable and receivable for the periods ending December 31, 2014 and 2013, respectively.
The table below presents the volumes of derivative commodity forward contracts and swaps outstanding at December 31, 2014 and 2013 (in thousands of units):
December 31, | ||||||||
Commodity | Units | 2014 | 2013 | |||||
Electricity purchases | MWh | 115 | 89 | |||||
Electricity sales | MWh | 238 | 603 | |||||
Natural gas purchases | MMBtu | 6,913 | 10,804 | |||||
Natural gas sales | MMBtu | 409 | 555 | |||||
Diesel purchases | Gallons | 243 | 906 |
Credit Risk
At December 31, 2014, Idaho Power did not have material credit risk exposure from financial instruments, including derivatives. Idaho Power monitors credit risk exposure through reviews of counterparty credit quality, corporate-wide counterparty credit exposure, and corporate-wide counterparty concentration levels. Idaho Power manages these risks by establishing credit and concentration limits on transactions with counterparties and requiring contractual guarantees, cash deposits, or letters of credit from counterparties or their affiliates, as deemed necessary. Idaho Power’s physical power contracts are commonly under Western Systems Power Pool agreements, physical gas contracts are usually under North American Energy Standards Board contracts, and financial transactions are usually under International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. contracts. These contracts contain adequate assurance clauses requiring collateralization if a counterparty has debt that is downgraded below investment grade by at least one rating agency.
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Credit-Contingent Features
Certain of Idaho Power's derivative instruments contain provisions that require Idaho Power's unsecured debt to maintain an investment grade credit rating from Moody's Investors Service and Standard & Poor's Ratings Services. If Idaho Power's unsecured debt were to fall below investment grade, it would be in violation of these provisions, and the counterparties to the derivative instruments could request immediate payment or demand immediate and ongoing full overnight collateralization on derivative instruments in net liability positions. The aggregate fair value of all derivative instruments with credit-risk-related contingent features that were in a liability position at December 31, 2014, was $5.1 million. Idaho Power posted no cash collateral related to this amount. If the credit-risk-related contingent features underlying these agreements were triggered on December 31, 2014, Idaho Power would have been required to post an additional $5.9 million of cash collateral to its counterparties.
16. FAIR VALUE MEASUREMENTS
IDACORP and Idaho Power have categorized their financial instruments into a three-level fair value hierarchy, based on the priority of the inputs to the valuation technique. The fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities (Level 1) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3). If the inputs used to measure the financial instruments fall within different levels of the hierarchy, the categorization is based on the lowest level input that is significant to the fair value measurement of the instrument.
Financial assets and liabilities recorded on the consolidated balance sheets are categorized based on the inputs to the valuation techniques as follows:
• Level 1: Financial assets and liabilities whose values are based on unadjusted quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in an active market that IDACORP and Idaho Power has the ability to access.
• Level 2: Financial assets and liabilities whose values are based on the following:
a) quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities in active markets;
b) quoted prices for identical or similar assets or liabilities in non-active markets;
c) pricing models whose inputs are observable for substantially the full term of the asset or liability; and
d) pricing models whose inputs are derived principally from or corroborated by observable market data through correlation or other means for substantially the full term of the asset or liability.
IDACORP and Idaho Power Level 2 inputs are based on quoted market prices adjusted for location using corroborated, observable market data.
• Level 3: Financial assets and liabilities whose values are based on prices or valuation techniques that require inputs that are both unobservable and significant to the overall fair value measurement. These inputs reflect management’s own assumptions about the assumptions a market participant would use in pricing the asset or liability.
IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s assessment of a particular input's significance to the fair value measurement requires judgment and may affect the valuation of fair value assets and liabilities and their placement within the fair value hierarchy. An item recorded at fair value is reclassified among levels when changes in the nature of valuation inputs cause the item to no longer meet the criteria for the level in which it was previously categorized. There were no transfers between levels or material changes in valuation techniques or inputs during the years ended December 31, 2014 and 2013.
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The following table presents information about IDACORP’s and Idaho Power’s assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis as of December 31, 2014 and 2013 (in thousands of dollars):
December 31, 2014 | December 31, 2013 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Total | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Assets: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives | $ | 506 | $ | 128 | $ | — | $ | 634 | $ | 1,437 | $ | 235 | $ | — | $ | 1,672 | ||||||||||||||||
Money market funds | 100 | — | — | 100 | 100 | — | — | 100 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Trading securities: Equity securities | 141 | — | — | 141 | 1,153 | — | — | 1,153 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Available-for-sale securities: Equity securities | 44,942 | — | — | 44,942 | 41,119 | — | — | 41,119 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Liabilities: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Derivatives | $ | 17 | $ | 3,944 | $ | — | $ | 3,961 | $ | 546 | $ | 26 | $ | — | $ | 572 |
Idaho Power’s derivatives are contracts entered into as part of its management of loads and resources. Electricity derivatives are valued on the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) with quoted prices in an active market. Natural gas and diesel derivative valuations are performed using New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and ICE pricing, adjusted for location basis, which are also quoted under NYMEX and ICE pricing. Trading securities consist of employee-directed investments held in a Rabbi Trust and are related to an executive deferred compensation plan. Available-for-sale securities are related to the SMSP and are held in a Rabbi Trust and are actively traded money market and equity funds with quoted prices in active markets.
The table below presents the carrying value and estimated fair value of financial instruments that are not reported at fair value, as of December 31, 2014 and 2013, using available market information and appropriate valuation methodologies (in thousands of dollars):
December 31, 2014 | December 31, 2013 | |||||||||||||||
Carrying Amount | Estimated Fair Value | Carrying Amount | Estimated Fair Value | |||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||
IDACORP | ||||||||||||||||
Assets: | ||||||||||||||||
Notes receivable(1) | $ | 3,804 | $ | 3,804 | $ | 3,472 | $ | 3,472 | ||||||||
Liabilities: | ||||||||||||||||
Long-term debt(1) | 1,615,502 | 1,788,197 | 1,616,322 | 1,600,248 | ||||||||||||
Idaho Power | ||||||||||||||||
Liabilities: | ||||||||||||||||
Long-term debt(1) | $ | 1,615,502 | $ | 1,788,197 | $ | 1,616,322 | $ | 1,600,248 |
(1) Notes receivable and long-term debt are categorized as Level 3 and Level 2, respectively, of the fair value hierarchy, as defined earlier in this Note 16.
Notes receivable are related to Ida-West and are valued based on unobservable inputs, including discounted cash flows, which are partially based on forecasted hydroelectric conditions. Long-term debt is not traded on an exchange and is valued using quoted rates for similar debt in active markets. Carrying values for cash and cash equivalents, deposits, customer and other receivables, notes payable, accounts payable, interest accrued, and taxes accrued approximate fair value.
17. SEGMENT INFORMATION
IDACORP’s only reportable segment is utility operations. The utility operations segment’s primary source of revenue is the regulated operations of Idaho Power. Idaho Power’s regulated operations include the generation, transmission, distribution, purchase, and sale of electricity. This segment also includes income from IERCo, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Idaho Power that is also subject to regulation and is a 33 percent owner of BCC, an unconsolidated joint venture.
IDACORP’s other operating segments are below the quantitative and qualitative thresholds for reportable segments and are included in the “All Other” category in the table below. This category is comprised of IFS’s investments in affordable housing developments and historic rehabilitation projects, Ida-West’s joint venture investments in small hydroelectric generation projects, the remaining activities of IESCo, the successor to which wound down its energy marketing operations in 2003, and IDACORP’s holding company expenses.
120
The table below summarizes the segment information for IDACORP’s utility operations and the total of all other segments, and reconciles this information to total enterprise amounts (in thousands of dollars):
Utility Operations | All Other | Eliminations | Consolidated Total | |||||||||||||
2014 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 1,278,651 | $ | 3,873 | $ | — | $ | 1,282,524 | ||||||||
Operating income | 253,437 | 259 | — | 253,696 | ||||||||||||
Other income | 21,517 | 37 | — | 21,554 | ||||||||||||
Interest income | 2,705 | 34 | (34 | ) | 2,705 | |||||||||||
Equity-method income | 10,814 | 1,558 | — | 12,372 | ||||||||||||
Interest expense | 79,570 | 265 | (34 | ) | 79,801 | |||||||||||
Income before income taxes | 208,903 | 1,623 | — | 210,526 | ||||||||||||
Income tax expense (benefit) | 19,516 | (2,744 | ) | — | 16,772 | |||||||||||
Income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 189,387 | 4,093 | — | 193,480 | ||||||||||||
Total assets | 5,620,322 | 109,044 | (12,513 | ) | 5,716,853 | |||||||||||
Expenditures for long-lived assets | 273,911 | 183 | — | 274,094 |
2013 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 1,243,098 | $ | 3,116 | $ | — | $ | 1,246,214 | ||||||||
Operating income | 291,691 | 51 | — | 291,742 | ||||||||||||
Other income | 29,288 | 152 | — | 29,440 | ||||||||||||
Interest income | 2,426 | 44 | (39 | ) | 2,431 | |||||||||||
Equity-method income | 10,242 | 1,697 | — | 11,939 | ||||||||||||
Interest expense | 80,646 | 425 | (39 | ) | 81,032 | |||||||||||
Income before income taxes | 253,001 | 1,519 | — | 254,520 | ||||||||||||
Income tax expense (benefit) | 76,260 | (4,034 | ) | — | 72,226 | |||||||||||
Income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 176,741 | 5,676 | — | 182,417 | ||||||||||||
Total assets | 5,266,411 | 109,541 | (11,389 | ) | 5,364,563 | |||||||||||
Expenditures for long-lived assets | 235,306 | 4 | — | 235,310 | ||||||||||||
2012 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 1,076,725 | $ | 3,937 | $ | — | $ | 1,080,662 | ||||||||
Operating income | 242,179 | 423 | — | 242,602 | ||||||||||||
Other income | 23,996 | 368 | — | 24,364 | ||||||||||||
Interest income | 1,980 | 380 | (81 | ) | 2,279 | |||||||||||
Equity-method income | 9,412 | 2,205 | — | 11,617 | ||||||||||||
Interest expense | 73,429 | 521 | (81 | ) | 73,869 | |||||||||||
Income before income taxes | 204,138 | 2,854 | — | 206,992 | ||||||||||||
Income tax expense (benefit) | 35,970 | (2,165 | ) | — | 33,805 | |||||||||||
Income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 168,168 | 4,846 | — | 173,014 | ||||||||||||
Total assets | 5,215,711 | 87,522 | (11,943 | ) | 5,291,290 | |||||||||||
Expenditures for long-lived assets | 239,761 | 27 | — | 239,788 |
121
18. OTHER INCOME AND EXPENSE
The following table presents the components of IDACORP’s Other income, net and Idaho Power's Other (expense) income, net (in thousands of dollars):
IDACORP - Other income, net | 2014 | 2013 | 2012 | |||||||||
Investment income, net | $ | 2,655 | $ | 2,373 | $ | 2,280 | ||||||
Carrying charges on regulatory assets | 1,949 | 2,204 | 1,714 | |||||||||
Gain on sale of investments | — | 11,637 | — | |||||||||
Other income | 588 | 852 | 409 | |||||||||
Life insurance proceeds, net of premiums | 1,164 | 18 | 14 | |||||||||
Other expenses | (28 | ) | (71 | ) | (208 | ) | ||||||
Total | $ | 6,328 | $ | 17,013 | $ | 4,209 | ||||||
Idaho Power - Other (expense) income, net | ||||||||||||
Investment income, net | $ | 2,655 | $ | 2,369 | $ | 1,980 | ||||||
Carrying charges on regulatory assets | 1,949 | 2,204 | 1,714 | |||||||||
Gain on sale of investments | — | 11,637 | — | |||||||||
Other income | 551 | 700 | 271 | |||||||||
SMSP expense | (8,339 | ) | (8,488 | ) | (7,111 | ) | ||||||
Life insurance proceeds, net of premiums | 1,164 | 18 | 14 | |||||||||
Other expense | (2,343 | ) | (2,668 | ) | (1,850 | ) | ||||||
Total | $ | (4,363 | ) | $ | 5,772 | $ | (4,982 | ) | ||||
19. CHANGES IN ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
Comprehensive income includes net income, unrealized holding gains and losses on available-for-sale marketable securities, and amounts related to the SMSP. The table below presents changes in components of accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI), net of tax, during the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012 (in thousands of dollars). Items in parentheses indicate reductions to AOCI.
Unrealized Gains and Losses on Available-for-Sale Securities | Defined Benefit Pension Items | Total | ||||||||||
December 31, 2014 | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of period | $ | — | $ | (16,553 | ) | $ | (16,553 | ) | ||||
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications | — | (9,333 | ) | (9,333 | ) | |||||||
Amounts reclassified out of AOCI | — | 1,728 | 1,728 | |||||||||
Net current-period other comprehensive income | — | (7,605 | ) | (7,605 | ) | |||||||
Balance at end of period | $ | — | $ | (24,158 | ) | $ | (24,158 | ) | ||||
December 31, 2013 | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of period | $ | 4,136 | $ | (21,252 | ) | $ | (17,116 | ) | ||||
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications | 2,951 | 2,840 | 5,791 | |||||||||
Amounts reclassified out of AOCI | (7,087 | ) | 1,859 | (5,228 | ) | |||||||
Net current-period other comprehensive income | (4,136 | ) | 4,699 | 563 | ||||||||
Balance at end of period | $ | — | $ | (16,553 | ) | $ | (16,553 | ) | ||||
December 31, 2012 | ||||||||||||
Balance at beginning of period | $ | 2,569 | $ | (14,191 | ) | $ | (11,622 | ) | ||||
Other comprehensive income before reclassifications | 1,567 | (8,122 | ) | (6,555 | ) | |||||||
Amounts reclassified out of AOCI | — | 1,061 | 1,061 | |||||||||
Net current-period other comprehensive income | 1,567 | (7,061 | ) | (5,494 | ) | |||||||
Balance at end of period | $ | 4,136 | $ | (21,252 | ) | $ | (17,116 | ) |
122
The table below presents amounts reclassified out of components of AOCI and the income statement location of those amounts reclassified during the years ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012 (in thousands of dollars). Items in parentheses indicate increases to net income.
Amount Reclassified from AOCI | ||||||||||||
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
Unrealized gains on available-for-sale securities | ||||||||||||
Realized gain on sale of securities, before tax(1) | $ | — | $ | (11,637 | ) | $ | — | |||||
Tax benefit(2) | — | 4,550 | — | |||||||||
Net of tax | — | (7,087 | ) | — | ||||||||
Amortization of defined benefit pension items(3) | ||||||||||||
Prior service cost | 220 | 212 | 212 | |||||||||
Net loss | 2,618 | 2,839 | 1,530 | |||||||||
Total before tax | 2,838 | 3,051 | 1,742 | |||||||||
Tax benefit(2) | (1,110 | ) | (1,192 | ) | (681 | ) | ||||||
Net of tax | 1,728 | 1,859 | 1,061 | |||||||||
Total reclassification for the period | $ | 1,728 | $ | (5,228 | ) | $ | 1,061 | |||||
(1) The realized gain is included in IDACORP's consolidated income statement in other income, net and in Idaho Power's consolidated income statements in other income (expense), net.
(2) The tax benefit is included in income tax expense (benefit) in the consolidated income statements of both IDACORP and Idaho Power.
(3) Amortization of these items is included in IDACORP's consolidated income statements in other operating expenses and in Idaho Power's consolidated income statements in other expense, net.
20. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
IDACORP: Idaho Power performs corporate functions such as financial, legal, and management services for IDACORP and its subsidiaries. Idaho Power charges IDACORP for the costs of these services based on service agreements and other specifically identified costs. For these services Idaho Power billed IDACORP $1.4 million in 2014, $1.0 million in 2013, and $0.8 million in 2012.
Ida-West: Idaho Power purchases all of the power generated by four of Ida-West’s hydroelectric projects located in Idaho. Idaho Power paid $9 million to Ida-West in each year from 2012 to 2014.
123
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of
IDACORP, Inc.
Boise, Idaho
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of IDACORP, Inc. and subsidiaries (the “Company”) as of December 31, 2014 and 2013, and the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income, equity, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2014. Our audits also included the financial statement schedules listed in the Index at Item 8. These financial statements and financial statement schedules are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the financial statements and financial statement schedules based on our audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of IDACORP, Inc. and subsidiaries at December 31, 2014 and 2013, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2014, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Also, in our opinion, such financial statement schedules, when considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a whole, present fairly, in all material respects, the information set forth therein.
We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014, based on the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission and our report dated February 19, 2015 expressed an unqualified opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
/s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Boise, Idaho
February 19, 2015
124
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of Directors and Shareholder of
Idaho Power Company
Boise, Idaho
We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Idaho Power Company and subsidiary (the “Company”) as of December 31, 2014 and 2013, and the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income, retained earnings, and cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2014. Our audits also included the financial statement schedule listed in the Index at Item 8. These financial statements and financial statement schedule are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the financial statements and financial statement schedule based on our audits.
We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Idaho Power Company and subsidiary at December 31, 2014 and 2013, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2014, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Also, in our opinion, such financial statement schedule, when considered in relation to the basic consolidated financial statements taken as a whole, presents fairly, in all material respects, the information set forth therein.
We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014, based on the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission and our report dated February 19, 2015 expressed an unqualified opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
/s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Boise, Idaho
February 19, 2015
125
SUPPLEMENTAL FINANCIAL INFORMATION, UNAUDITED
QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA
The following unaudited information is presented for each quarter of 2014 and 2013 (in thousands of dollars, except for per share amounts). In the opinion of each company, all adjustments necessary for a fair statement of such amounts for such periods have been included. The results of operations for the interim periods are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the full year. Accordingly, earnings information for any three-month period should not be considered as a basis for estimating operating results for a full fiscal year. Amounts are based upon quarterly statements and the sum of the quarters may not equal the annual amount reported.
Quarter Ended | ||||||||||||||||
March 31 | June 30 | September 30 | December 31 | |||||||||||||
IDACORP, Inc. | ||||||||||||||||
2014 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 292,719 | $ | 317,783 | $ | 382,201 | $ | 289,821 | ||||||||
Operating income | 48,578 | 71,809 | 105,722 | 27,586 | ||||||||||||
Net income | 27,185 | 44,697 | 87,234 | 34,638 | ||||||||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 27,404 | 44,540 | 86,889 | 34,648 | ||||||||||||
Basic earnings per share | $ | 0.55 | $ | 0.89 | $ | 1.73 | $ | 0.69 | ||||||||
Diluted earnings per share | $ | 0.55 | $ | 0.89 | $ | 1.73 | $ | 0.69 | ||||||||
2013 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 264,928 | $ | 303,948 | $ | 381,107 | $ | 296,230 | ||||||||
Operating income | 59,433 | 79,406 | 115,559 | 37,343 | ||||||||||||
Net income | 35,041 | 46,639 | 73,104 | 27,509 | ||||||||||||
Net income attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 35,194 | 46,502 | 73,119 | 27,602 | ||||||||||||
Basic earnings per share | $ | 0.70 | $ | 0.93 | $ | 1.46 | $ | 0.55 | ||||||||
Diluted earnings per share | $ | 0.70 | $ | 0.93 | $ | 1.46 | $ | 0.55 | ||||||||
Idaho Power Company | ||||||||||||||||
2014 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 292,320 | $ | 316,655 | $ | 380,711 | $ | 288,964 | ||||||||
Income from operations | 51,949 | 74,369 | 107,644 | 30,129 | ||||||||||||
Net income | 27,900 | 42,653 | 84,600 | 34,233 | ||||||||||||
2013 | ||||||||||||||||
Revenues | $ | 264,368 | $ | 302,856 | $ | 380,304 | $ | 295,569 | ||||||||
Income from operations | 62,719 | 81,954 | 118,215 | 39,886 | ||||||||||||
Net income | 34,046 | 44,983 | 70,302 | 27,411 |
126
ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE
None
ITEM 9A. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Disclosure Controls and Procedures - IDACORP, Inc.
The Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer of IDACORP, Inc., based on their evaluation of IDACORP, Inc.’s disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(e)) as of December 31, 2014, have concluded that IDACORP, Inc.’s disclosure controls and procedures are effective as of that date.
Internal Control Over Financial Reporting - IDACORP, Inc.
Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
The management of IDACORP is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting for IDACORP. Internal control over financial reporting is defined in Rule 13a-15(f) promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as a process designed by, or under the supervision of, the company’s principal executive and principal financial officers and effected by the company’s board of directors, management and other personnel, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and includes those policies and procedures that:
• | pertain to the maintenance of records that in reasonable detail accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; |
• | provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with the authorizations of management and directors of the company; and |
• | provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements. |
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
IDACORP’s management assessed the effectiveness of the company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014. In making this assessment, the company’s management used the criteria set forth by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013).
Based on its assessment, management concluded that, as of December 31, 2014, IDACORP’s internal control over financial reporting is effective based on those criteria.
IDACORP’s independent registered public accounting firm has audited the financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014 and issued a report, which appears on the next page and expresses an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of IDACORP’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014.
February 19, 2015
127
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of
IDACORP, Inc.
Boise, Idaho
We have audited the internal control over financial reporting of IDACORP, Inc. and subsidiaries (the “Company”) as of December 31, 2014, based on criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in the accompanying Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed by, or under the supervision of, the company’s principal executive and principal financial officers, or persons performing similar functions, and effected by the company’s board of directors, management, and other personnel to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because of the inherent limitations of internal control over financial reporting, including the possibility of collusion or improper management override of controls, material misstatements due to error or fraud may not be prevented or detected on a timely basis. Also, projections of any evaluation of the effectiveness of the internal control over financial reporting to future periods are subject to the risk that the controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
In our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014, based on the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedules as of and for the year ended December 31, 2014 of the Company and our report dated February 19, 2015 expressed an unqualified opinion on those financial statements and financial statement schedules.
/s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Boise, Idaho
February 19, 2015
128
Disclosure Controls and Procedures - Idaho Power Company
The Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer of Idaho Power Company, based on their evaluation of Idaho Power Company's disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(e)) as of December 31, 2014, have concluded that Idaho Power Company's disclosure controls and procedures are effective as of that date.
Internal Control Over Financial Reporting - Idaho Power Company
Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
The management of Idaho Power Company (Idaho Power) is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting of Idaho Power. Internal control over financial reporting is defined in Rule 13a-15(f) promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as a process designed by, or under the supervision of, the company’s principal executive and principal financial officers and effected by the company’s board of directors, management and other personnel, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America and includes those policies and procedures that:
• | pertain to the maintenance of records that in reasonable detail accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; |
• | provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with the authorizations of management and directors of the company; and |
• | provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements. |
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
Idaho Power’s management assessed the effectiveness of the company’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014. In making this assessment, the company’s management used the criteria set forth by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013).
Based on its assessment, management concluded that, as of December 31, 2014, Idaho Power’s internal control over financial reporting is effective based on those criteria.
Idaho Power’s independent registered public accounting firm has audited the financial statements included in this Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2014 and issued a report which appears on the next page and expresses an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of Idaho Power’s internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014.
February 19, 2015
129
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of Directors and Shareholder of
Idaho Power Company
Boise, Idaho
We have audited the internal control over financial reporting of Idaho Power Company and subsidiary (the “Company”) as of December 31, 2014, based on criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in the accompanying Management’s Annual Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audit included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis for our opinion.
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed by, or under the supervision of, the company’s principal executive and principal financial officers, or persons performing similar functions, and effected by the company’s board of directors, management, and other personnel to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because of the inherent limitations of internal control over financial reporting, including the possibility of collusion or improper management override of controls, material misstatements due to error or fraud may not be prevented or detected on a timely basis. Also, projections of any evaluation of the effectiveness of the internal control over financial reporting to future periods are subject to the risk that the controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
In our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2014, based on the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedule as of and for the year ended December 31, 2014 of the Company and our report dated February 19, 2015 expressed an unqualified opinion on those financial statements and financial statement schedule.
/s/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP
Boise, Idaho
February 19, 2015
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Changes in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting - IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company
There have been no changes in IDACORP, Inc.’s or Idaho Power Company’s internal control over financial reporting during the quarter ended December 31, 2014 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, IDACORP, Inc.’s or Idaho Power Company’s internal control over financial reporting.
ITEM 9B. OTHER INFORMATION
None.
PART III
ITEM 10. DIRECTORS, EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
The portions of IDACORP’s definitive proxy statement appearing under the captions “Proposal No. 1: Election of Directors,” “Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance,” “Board of Directors - Committees of the Board of Directors - Audit Committee,” “Corporate Governance Principles and Practices - Codes of Business Conduct,” and "Corporate Governance Principles and Practices - Certain Relationships and Related Transactions - Related Person Transactions in 2014" to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders are hereby incorporated by reference.
Information regarding IDACORP’s executive officers required by this item appears in Item 1 of this report under “Executive Officers of the Registrants.”
ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
The portion of IDACORP’s definitive proxy statement appearing under the caption “Executive Compensation” to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders is hereby incorporated by reference.
ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS
The portion of IDACORP’s definitive proxy statement appearing under the caption “Security Ownership of Directors, Executive Officers, and Five-Percent Shareholders” to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders is hereby incorporated by reference. The table below includes information as of December 31, 2014 with respect to equity compensation plans where equity securities of IDACORP may be issued. These plans are the 1994 Restricted Stock Plan (RSP) and the IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan (LTICP).
Equity Compensation Plan Information
Plan Category | (a) Number of securities to be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants and rights | (b) Weighted-average exercise price of outstanding options, warrants and rights | (c) Number of securities remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding securities reflected in column (a)) | ||||||||
Equity compensation plans approved by shareholders(1) | — | $ | — | 1,182,006 | (2) | ||||||
Equity compensation plans not approved by shareholders | — | $ | — | — | |||||||
Total | — | $ | — | 1,182,006 | |||||||
(1) Consists of the RSP and the LTICP. | |||||||||||
(2) 1,166,210 shares under the LTICP may be issued in connection with stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, restricted stock units, performance units, performance shares, or other equity-based awards as of December 31, 2014. 15,796 shares remain available for future issuance under the RSP and may be issued as restricted stock or performance-based restricted stock. The number of shares listed in this column excludes (i) issued but unvested performance-based restricted shares, and (ii) issued but unvested time-based restricted shares, in both cases issued pursuant to the RSP and LTICP and unvested as of December 31, 2014. |
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ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS, AND DIRECTOR INDEPENDENCE
The portions of IDACORP’s definitive proxy statement appearing under the captions “Certain Relationships and Related Transactions” and “Corporate Governance Principles and Practices – Director Independence and Executive Sessions” to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders are hereby incorporated by reference.
ITEM 14. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES
IDACORP: The portion of IDACORP’s definitive proxy statement appearing under the caption “Independent Accountant Billings” in the proxy statement to be filed pursuant to Regulation 14A for the 2015 annual meeting of shareholders is hereby incorporated by reference.
Idaho Power: The table below presents the aggregate fees our principal independent registered public accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche LLP, billed or is expected to bill to Idaho Power for the fiscal years ended December 31, 2014 and 2013:
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
Audit fees | $ | 1,239,913 | $ | 1,223,220 | ||||
Audit-related fees(1) | 32,300 | 93,200 | ||||||
Tax fees(2) | 1,640 | 54,016 | ||||||
All other fees(3) | 2,000 | 2,200 | ||||||
Total | $ | 1,275,853 | $ | 1,372,636 | ||||
(1) Audits of Idaho Power’s benefit plans and compliance audit for the U.S. Department of Energy Smart Grid Investment Grant Program. | ||||||||
(2) Includes fees for benefit plan tax returns and consultation related to tax planning. | ||||||||
(3) Accounting research tool subscription. |
Policy on Audit Committee Pre-Approval:
Idaho Power and the Audit Committee are committed to ensuring the independence of the independent registered public accounting firm, both in fact and in appearance. In this regard, the Audit Committee has established and periodically reviews a pre-approval policy for audit and non-audit services. For 2013 and 2014, all audit and non-audit services and all fees paid in connection with those services were pre-approved by the Audit Committee.
In addition to the audits of Idaho Power’s consolidated financial statements, the independent public accounting firm may be engaged to provide certain audit-related, tax, and other services. The Audit Committee must pre-approve all services performed by the independent public accounting firm to assure that the provision of those services does not impair the public accounting firm’s independence. The services that the Audit Committee will consider include: audit services such as attest services, changes in the scope of the audit of the financial statements, and the issuance of comfort letters and consents in connection with financings; audit-related services such as internal control reviews and assistance with internal control reporting requirements; attest services related to financial reporting that are not required by statute or regulation, and accounting consultations and audits related to proposed transactions and new or proposed accounting rules, standards and interpretations; and tax compliance and planning services. Unless a type of service to be provided by the independent public accounting firm has received general pre-approval, it will require specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee. In addition, any proposed services exceeding pre-approved cost levels will require specific pre-approval by the Audit Committee. Under the pre-approval policy, the Audit Committee has delegated to the Chairman of the Audit Committee pre-approval authority for proposed services; however, the Chairman must report any pre-approval decisions to the Audit Committee at its next scheduled meeting.
Any request to engage the independent public accounting firm to provide a service which has not received general pre-approval must be submitted as a written proposal to Idaho Power’s Chief Financial Officer with a copy to the General Counsel. The request must include a detailed description of the service to be provided, the proposed fee, and the business reasons for engaging the independent public accounting firm to provide the service. Upon approval by the Chief Financial Officer, the General Counsel, and the independent public accounting firm that the proposed engagement complies with the terms of the pre-approval policy and the applicable rules and regulations, the request will be presented to the Audit Committee or the Committee Chairman, as the case may be, for pre-approval.
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In determining whether to pre-approve the engagement of the independent public accounting firm, the Audit Committee or the Committee Chairman, as the case may be, must consider, among other things, the pre-approval policy, applicable rules and regulations, and whether the nature of the engagement and the related fees are consistent with the following principles:
• the independent public accounting firm cannot function in the role of management of Idaho Power; and
• the independent public accounting firm cannot audit its own work.
The pre-approval policy and separate supplements to the pre-approval policy describe the specific audit, audit related, tax, and other services that have the general pre-approval of the Audit Committee. The term of any pre-approval is 12 months from the date of pre-approval, unless the Audit Committee specifically provides for a different period. The Audit Committee will periodically revise the list of pre-approved services, based on subsequent determinations.
PART IV
ITEM 15. EXHIBITS AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES
(1) and (2) Please refer to Part II, Item 8 - “Financial Statements and Supplementary Data” for a complete listing of all consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedules.
(3) Exhibits.
Note Regarding Reliance on Statements in Agreements: The agreements filed as exhibits to this Annual Report on Form 10-K are filed to provide information regarding their terms and are not intended to provide any other factual or disclosure information about IDACORP, Inc., Idaho Power Company, or the other parties to the agreements. Some of the agreements contain statements, representations, and warranties by each of the parties to the applicable agreement. These representations and warranties have been made solely for the benefit of the other parties to the applicable agreement and (a) should not in all instances be treated as categorical statements of fact, but rather as a way of allocating the risk to one of the parties to the agreement if those statements prove to be inaccurate; (b) have been qualified by disclosures that were made to the other party, which disclosures are not necessarily reflected in the agreement; (c) may apply standards of materiality in a way that is different from what may be viewed as material to investors; and (d) were made only as of the date of the applicable agreement or such other date or dates as may be specified in the agreement and are subject to more recent developments. Accordingly, readers should not rely upon the statements, representations, or warranties made in the agreements.
Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
2 | Agreement and Plan of Exchange between IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, dated as of February 2, 1998 | S-4 | 333-48031 | A | 3/16/1998 | |
3.1 | Restated Articles of Incorporation of Idaho Power Company as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on June 30, 1989 | S-3 Post-Effective Amend. No. 2 | 33-00440 | 4(a)(xiii) | 6/30/1989 | |
3.2 | Statement of Resolution Establishing Terms of Flexible Auction Series A, Serial Preferred Stock, Without Par Value (cumulative stated value of $100,000 per share) of Idaho Power Company, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on November 5, 1991 | S-3 | 33-65720 | 4(a)(ii) | 7/7/1993 | |
3.3 | Statement of Resolution Establishing Terms of 7.07% Serial Preferred Stock, Without Par Value (cumulative stated value of $100 per share) of Idaho Power Company, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on June 30, 1993 | S-3 | 33-65720 | 4(a)(iii) | 7/7/1993 | |
3.4 | Articles of Share Exchange, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on September 29, 1998 | S-8 Post-Effective Amend. No. 1 | 33-56071-99 | 3(d) | 10/1/1998 | |
3.5 | Articles of Amendment to Restated Articles of Incorporation of Idaho Power Company, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on June 15, 2000 | 10-Q | 1-3198 | 3(a)(iii) | 8/4/2000 | |
3.6 | Articles of Amendment to Restated Articles of Incorporation of Idaho Power Company, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on January 21, 2005 | 8-K | 1-3198 | 3.3 | 1/26/2005 |
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Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
3.7 | Articles of Amendment to Restated Articles of Incorporation of Idaho Power Company, as amended, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on November 19, 2007 | 8-K | 1-3198 | 3.3 | 11/19/2007 | |
3.8 | Articles of Amendment to Restated Articles of Incorporation of Idaho Power Company, as amended, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on May 18, 2012 | 8-K | 1-3198 | 3.14 | 5/21/2012 | |
3.9 | Amended Bylaws of Idaho Power Company, amended on November 15, 2007 and presently in effect | 8-K | 1-3198 | 3.2 | 11/19/2007 | |
3.10 | Articles of Incorporation of IDACORP, Inc. | S-3 | 333-64737 | 3.1 | 11/4/1998 | |
3.11 | Articles of Amendment to Articles of Incorporation of IDACORP, Inc. as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on March 9, 1998 | S-3 Amend. No. 1 | 333-64737 | 3.2 | 11/4/1998 | |
3.12 | Articles of Amendment to Articles of Incorporation of IDACORP, Inc. creating A Series Preferred Stock, without par value, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on September 17, 1998 | S-3 Post-Effective Amend. No. 1 | 333-00139-99 | 3(b) | 9/22/1998 | |
3.13 | Articles of Amendment to Articles of Incorporation of IDACORP, Inc., as amended, as filed with the Secretary of State of Idaho on May 18, 2012 | 8-K | 1-14465 | 3.13 | 5/21/2012 | |
3.14 | Amended and Restated Bylaws of IDACORP, Inc., amended on October 29, 2014 and presently in effect | 10-Q | 1-14465 | 3.15 | 10/30/2014 | |
4.1 | Mortgage and Deed of Trust, dated as of October 1, 1937, between Idaho Power Company and Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (formerly known as Bankers Trust Company) and R. G. Page, as Trustees | 2-3413 | B-2 | |||
4.2 | Idaho Power Company Supplemental Indentures to Mortgage and Deed of Trust: | |||||
File number 1-MD, as Exhibit B-2-a, First, July 1, 1939 | ||||||
File number 2-5395, as Exhibit 7-a-3, Second, November 15, 1943 | ||||||
File number 2-7237, as Exhibit 7-a-4, Third, February 1, 1947 | ||||||
File number 2-7502, as Exhibit 7-a-5, Fourth, May 1, 1948 | ||||||
File number 2-8398, as Exhibit 7-a-6, Fifth, November 1, 1949 | ||||||
File number 2-8973, as Exhibit 7-a-7, Sixth, October 1, 1951 | ||||||
File number 2-12941, as Exhibit 2-C-8, Seventh, January 1, 1957 | ||||||
File number 2-13688, as Exhibit 4-J, Eighth, July 15, 1957 | ||||||
File number 2-13689, as Exhibit 4-K, Ninth, November 15, 1957 | ||||||
File number 2-14245, as Exhibit 4-L, Tenth, April 1, 1958 | ||||||
File number 2-14366, as Exhibit 2-L, Eleventh, October 15, 1958 | ||||||
File number 2-14935, as Exhibit 4-N, Twelfth, May 15, 1959 | ||||||
File number 2-18976, as Exhibit 4-O, Thirteenth, November 15, 1960 | ||||||
File number 2-18977, as Exhibit 4-Q, Fourteenth, November 1, 1961 | ||||||
File number 2-22988, as Exhibit 4-B-16, Fifteenth, September 15, 1964 | ||||||
File number 2-24578, as Exhibit 4-B-17, Sixteenth, April 1, 1966 | ||||||
File number 2-25479, as Exhibit 4-B-18, Seventeenth, October 1, 1966 | ||||||
File number 2-45260, as Exhibit 2(c), Eighteenth, September 1, 1972 | ||||||
File number 2-49854, as Exhibit 2(c), Nineteenth, January 15, 1974 | ||||||
File number 2-51722, as Exhibit 2(c)(i), Twentieth, August 1, 1974 | ||||||
File number 2-51722, as Exhibit 2(c)(ii), Twenty-first, October 15, 1974 | ||||||
File number 2-57374, as Exhibit 2(c), Twenty-second, November 15, 1976 | ||||||
File number 2-62035, as Exhibit 2(c), Twenty-third, August 15, 1978 | ||||||
File number 33-34222, as Exhibit 4(d)(iii), Twenty-fourth, September 1, 1979 | ||||||
File number 33-34222, as Exhibit 4(d)(iv), Twenty-fifth, November 1, 1981 | ||||||
File number 33-34222, as Exhibit 4(d)(v), Twenty-sixth, May 1, 1982 | ||||||
File number 33-34222, as Exhibit 4(d)(vi), Twenty-seventh, May 1, 1986 | ||||||
File number 33-00440, as Exhibit 4(c)(iv), Twenty-eighth, June 30, 1989 |
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Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
File number 33-34222, as Exhibit 4(d)(vii), Twenty-ninth, January 1, 1990 | ||||||
File number 33-65720, as Exhibit 4(d)(iii), Thirtieth, January 1, 1991 | ||||||
File number 33-65720, as Exhibit 4(d)(iv), Thirty-first, August 15, 1991 | ||||||
File number 33-65720, as Exhibit 4(d)(v), Thirty-second, March 15, 1992 | ||||||
File number 33-65720, as Exhibit 4(d)(vi), Thirty-third, April 1, 1993 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K, filed on 12/20/93, as Exhibit 4, Thirty-fourth, December 1, 1993 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K, filed on 11/21/00, as Exhibit 4, Thirty-fifth, November 1, 2000 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K, filed on 10/1/01, as Exhibit 4, Thirty-sixth, October 1, 2001 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K, filed on 4/16/03, as Exhibit 4, Thirty-seventh, April 1, 2003 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2003, filed on 8/7/03, as Exhibit 4(a)(iii), Thirty-eighth, May 15, 2003 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2003, filed on 11/6/03, as Exhibit 4(a)(iv), Thirty-ninth, October 1, 2003 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 5/10/05, as Exhibit 4, Fortieth, May 1, 2005 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 10/10/06, as Exhibit 4, Forty-first, October 1, 2006 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 6/4/07, as Exhibit 4, Forty-second, May 1, 2007 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 9/26/07, as Exhibit 4, Forty-third, September 1, 2007 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 4/3/08, as Exhibit 4, Forty-fourth, April 1, 2008 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 10-K filed on 2/23/10, as Exhibit 4.10, Forty-fifth, February 1, 2010 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 6/18/10, as Exhibit 4, Forty-sixth, June 1, 2010 | ||||||
File number 1-3198, Form 8-K filed on 7/12/2013, as Exhibit 4.1, Forty-seventh, July 1, 2013 | ||||||
4.3 | Instruments relating to Idaho Power Company American Falls bond guarantee (see Exhibit 10.4) | 10-Q | 1-3198 | 4(b) | 8/4/2000 | |
4.4 | Agreement of Idaho Power Company to furnish certain debt instruments | S-3 | 33-65720 | 4(f) | 7/7/1993 | |
4.5 | Agreement of IDACORP, Inc. to furnish certain debt instruments | 10-Q | 1-14465 | 4(c)(ii) | 11/6/2003 | |
4.6 | Agreement and Plan of Merger dated March 10, 1989, between Idaho Power Company, a Maine Corporation, and Idaho Power Migrating Corporation | S-3 Post-Effective Amend. No. 2 | 33-00440 | 2(a)(iii) | 6/30/1989 | |
4.7 | Indenture for Senior Debt Securities dated as of February 1, 2001, between IDACORP, Inc. and Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (formerly known as Bankers Trust Company), as trustee | 8-K | 1-14465 | 4.1 | 2/28/2001 | |
4.8 | First Supplemental Indenture dated as of February 1, 2001 to Indenture for Senior Debt Securities dated as of February 1, 2001 between IDACORP, Inc. and Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (formerly known as Bankers Trust Company), as trustee | 8-K | 1-14465 | 4.2 | 2/28/2001 | |
4.9 | Indenture for Debt Securities dated as of August 1, 2001 between Idaho Power Company and Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (formerly known as Bankers Trust Company), as trustee | S-3 | 333-67748 | 4.13 | 8/16/2001 | |
4.10 | Idaho Power Company Instrument of Further Assurance relating to Mortgage and Deed of Trust, dated as of August 3, 2010 | 10-Q | 1-3198 | 4.12 | 8/5/2010 | |
10.1 | Agreements, dated September 22, 1969, between Idaho Power Company and Pacific Power & Light Company, relating to the operation, construction, and ownership of the Jim Bridger Project (see Exhibits 10.4 and 10.5) | 2-49584 | 5(b) | |||
10.2 | Amendment, dated February 1, 1974, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.1 (see Exhibits 10.4 and 10.5) | 2-51762 | 5(c) | |||
10.3 | Agreement, dated as of October 11, 1973, between Idaho Power Company and Pacific Power & Light Company | 2-49584 | 5(c) |
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Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
10.4 | Amended and Restated Agreement for the Operation of the Jim Bridger Project, dated December 11, 2014, between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to supersede Exhibits 10.1 and 10.2 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in the agreement) | X | ||||
10.5 | Amended and Restated Agreement for the Ownership of the Jim Bridger Project, dated December 11, 2014, between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to supersede Exhibits 10.1 and 10.2 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in the agreement) | X | ||||
10.6 | Guaranty Agreement, dated April 11, 2000, between Idaho Power Company and Bank One Trust Company, N.A., as Trustee, relating to $19,885,000 American Falls Replacement Dam Refinancing Bonds of the American Falls Reservoir District, Idaho | 10-Q | 1-3198 | 10(c) | 8/4/2000 | |
10.7 | Guaranty Agreement, dated as of August 30, 1974, between Idaho Power Company and Pacific Power & Light Company | S-7 | 2-62034 | 5(r) | 6/30/1978 | |
10.8 | Letter Agreement, dated January 23, 1976, between Idaho Power Company and Portland General Electric Company | 2-56513 | 5(i) | |||
10.9 | Agreement for Construction, Ownership and Operation of the Number One Boardman Station on Carty Reservoir, dated as of October 15, 1976, between Portland General Electric Company and Idaho Power Company | S-7 | 2-62034 | 5(s) | 6/30/1978 | |
10.10 | Amendment, dated September 30, 1977, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.8 | S-7 | 2-62034 | 5(t) | 6/30/1978 | |
10.11 | Amendment, dated October 31, 1977, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.8 | S-7 | 2-62034 | 5(u) | 6/30/1978 | |
10.12 | Amendment, dated January 23, 1978, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.8 | S-7 | 2-62034 | 5(v) | 6/30/1978 | |
10.13 | Amendment, dated February 15, 1978, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.8 | S-7 | 2-62034 | 5(w) | 6/30/1978 | |
10.14 | Amendment, dated September 1, 1979, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.8 | S-7 | 2-68574 | 5(x) | 7/23/1980 | |
10.15 | Participation Agreement, dated September 1, 1979, relating to the sale and leaseback of coal handling facilities at the Number One Boardman Station on Carty Reservoir | S-7 | 2-68574 | 5(z) | 7/23/1980 | |
10.16 | Agreements for the Operation, Construction and Ownership of the North Valmy Power Plant Project, dated December 12, 1978, between Sierra Pacific Power Company and Idaho Power Company | S-7 | 2-64910 | 5(y) | 6/29/1979 | |
10.17 | Framework Agreement, dated October 1, 1984, between the State of Idaho and Idaho Power Company relating to Idaho Power Company's Swan Falls and Snake River water rights | S-3 | 33-65720 | 10(h) | 7/7/1993 | |
10.18 | Agreement, dated October 25, 1984, between the State of Idaho and Idaho Power Company, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.17 | S-3 | 33-65720 | 10(h)(i) | 7/7/1993 | |
10.19 | Contract to Implement, dated October 25, 1984, between the State of Idaho and Idaho Power Company, relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.17 | S-3 | 33-65720 | 10(h)(ii) | 7/7/1993 | |
10.20 | Settlement Agreement, dated March 25, 2009, between the State of Idaho and Idaho Power Company relating to the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.17 | 10-Q | 1-14465 | 10.58 | 5/7/2009 | |
10.21 | Agreement Regarding the Ownership, Construction, Operation and Maintenance of the Milner Hydroelectric Project (FERC No. 2899), dated January 22, 1990, between Idaho Power Company and the Twin Falls Canal Company and the Northside Canal Company Limited | S-3 | 33-65720 | 10(m) | 7/7/1993 | |
10.22 | Hemingway Joint Ownership and Operating Agreement, dated May 3, 2010, by and between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to be superseded by the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.24 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in that agreement) | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.70 | 8/5/2010 |
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Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
10.23 | Populus Joint Ownership and Operating Agreement, dated May 3, 2010, by and between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to be superseded by the agreement filed as Exhibit 10.24 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in that agreement) | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.71 | 8/5/2010 | |
10.24 | Joint Ownership and Operating Agreement, dated October 24, 2014, between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to supersede Exhibits 10.22 and 10.23 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in the agreement) | 8-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.1 | 10/24/2014 | |
10.251 | Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Senior Management Employees I, amended and restated effective December 31, 2004, and as further amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.15 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.261 | Amendment, dated September 19, 2012, to the Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Senior Management Employees I | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.62 | 11/1/2012 | |
10.271 | Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Senior Management Employees II, effective January 1, 2005, as amended and restated November 30, 2011 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.21 | 2/22/2012 | |
10.281 | Amendment, dated September 19, 2012, to the Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Senior Management Employees II | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.63 | 11/1/2012 | |
10.291 | Amendment, dated January 16, 2014, to the Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Senior Management Employees II | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.26 | 2/20/2014 | |
10.301 | IDACORP, Inc. Restricted Stock Plan, as amended and restated September 20, 2007 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(iii) | 10/31/2007 | |
10.311 | IDACORP, Inc. Restricted Stock Plan - Form of Restricted Stock Agreement (time-vesting) | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(vi) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.321 | IDACORP, Inc. Restricted Stock Plan - Form of Performance Stock Agreement (performance vesting) | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(vii) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.331 | Idaho Power Company Security Plan for Board of Directors - a non-qualified deferred compensation plan, as amended and restated effective July 20, 2006 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(viii) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.341 | IDACORP, Inc. Non-Employee Directors Stock Compensation Plan, as amended November 20, 2014 | X | ||||
10.351 | Form of Officer Indemnification Agreement between IDACORP, Inc. and Officers of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, as amended July 20, 2006 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(xix) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.361 | Form of Director Indemnification Agreement between IDACORP, Inc. and Directors of IDACORP, Inc., as amended July 20, 2006 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(xx) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.371 | Form of Amended and Restated Change in Control Agreement between IDACORP, Inc. and Officers of IDACORP and Idaho Power Company (senior vice president and higher), approved November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.24 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.381 | Form of Amended and Restated Change in Control Agreement between IDACORP, Inc. and Officers of IDACORP and Idaho Power Company (below senior vice president), approved November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.25 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.391 | Form of Amended and Restated Change in Control Agreement between IDACORP, Inc. and Officers of IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company, approved March 17, 2010 | 8-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.1 | 3/24/2010 | |
10.401 | IDACORP, Inc. and/or Idaho Power Company Officers with Amended and Restated Change in Control Agreements chart, as of January 1, 2015 | X | ||||
10.411 | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan, as amended November 18, 2010 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.33 | 2/23/2011 | |
10.421 | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Stock Option Award Agreement | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(xvi) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.431 | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Restricted Stock Award Agreement (Time Vesting) | X | ||||
10.441 | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Performance Share Award Agreement (Performance with Two Goals) | X |
137
Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
10.451 | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Restricted Stock Award Agreement (Time Vesting) | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10(h)(xvii) | 11/2/2006 | |
10.461 | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Performance Share Award Agreement (Performance with Two Goals) | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.69 | 5/5/2011 | |
10.471 | IDACORP, Inc. Executive Incentive Plan, as amended and restated January 16, 2014 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.42 | 2/20/2014 | |
10.481 | Idaho Power Company Executive Deferred Compensation Plan, effective November 15, 2000, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.32 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.491 | IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company Compensation for Non-Employee Directors of the Board of Directors, effective January 1, 2015 | X | ||||
10.501 | IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company Compensation for Non-Employee Directors of the Board of Directors, as of January 16, 2014 (superseded by Exhibit 10.49 effective January 1, 2015) | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.44 | 2/20/2014 | |
10.511 | Form of IDACORP, Inc. Director Deferred Compensation Agreement, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.46 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.521 | Form of Letter Agreement to Amend Outstanding IDACORP, Inc. Director Deferred Compensation Agreement (November 16, 2008) | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.47 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.531 | Form of Amendment to IDACORP, Inc. Director Deferred Compensation Agreement, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.48 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.541 | Form of Termination of IDACORP, Inc. Director Deferred Compensation Agreement, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.49 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.551 | Form of Idaho Power Company Director Deferred Compensation Agreement, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.50 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.561 | Form of Letter Agreement to Amend Outstanding Idaho Power Company Director Deferred Compensation Agreement (November 16, 2008) | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.51 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.571 | Form of Amendment to Idaho Power Company Director Deferred Compensation Agreement, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.52 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.581 | Form of Termination of Idaho Power Company Director Deferred Compensation Agreement, as amended November 20, 2008 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.53 | 2/26/2009 | |
10.591 | Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, as amended and restated as of January 1, 2010 | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.63 | 2/23/2010 | |
10.601 | Amendment to the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, dated August 31, 2011 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.72 | 11/3/2011 | |
10.611 | Amendment to the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, dated November 29, 2011 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.61 | 8/2/2012 | |
10.621 | Third Amendment to the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, dated October 11, 2013 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.64 | 11/5/2013 | |
10.631 | Fourth Amendment to the Idaho Power Company Employee Savings Plan, dated June 16, 2014 | 10-Q | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 10.65 | 7/31/2014 | |
10.64 | Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated October 26, 2011, among IDACORP, Inc., various lenders, Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as administrative agent, swingline lender, and LC issuer, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as syndication agent and LC issuer, KeyBank National Association and Union Bank, N.A., as documentation agents, and Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc., Keybanc Capital Markets, and Union Bank, N.A. as joint lead arrangers and joint book runners | 8-K | 1-14465 | 10.70 | 10/28/2011 | |
10.65 | First Extension Agreement, dated October 12, 2012, to the Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated October 26, 2011, filed as Exhibit 10.63 | 10-Q | 1-14465 | 10.64 | 11/1/2012 | |
10.66 | Second Extension Agreement, dated October 8, 2013, to the Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated October 26, 2011, filed as Exhibit 10.63 | 10-Q | 1-14465 | 10.62 | 11/5/2013 |
138
Incorporated by Reference | ||||||
Exhibit No. | Exhibit Description | Form | File No. | Exhibit No. | Date | Included Herewith |
10.67 | Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated October 26, 2011, among Idaho Power Company, various lenders, Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, as administrative agent, swingline lender, and LC issuer, JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as syndication agent and LC issuer, KeyBank National Association and Union Bank, N.A., as documentation agents, and Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities Inc., Keybanc Capital Markets, and Union Bank, N.A. as joint lead arrangers and joint book runners | 8-K | 1-3198 | 10.71 | 10/28/2011 | |
10.68 | First Extension Agreement, dated October 12, 2012, to the Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated October 26, 2011, filed as Exhibit 10.66 | 10-Q | 1-3198 | 10.65 | 11/1/2012 | |
10.69 | Second Extension Agreement, dated October 8, 2013, to the Second Amended and Restated Credit Agreement, dated October 26, 2011, filed as Exhibit 10.66 | 10-Q | 1-3198 | 10.63 | 11/5/2013 | |
10.70 | Loan Agreement, dated October 1, 2006, between Sweetwater County, Wyoming and Idaho Power Company | 8-K | 1-3198 | 10.1 | 10/10/2006 | |
10.71 | Guaranty Agreement, dated February 10, 1992, between Idaho Power Company and New York Life Insurance Company, as Note Purchaser, relating to $11,700,000 Guaranteed Notes due 2017 of Milner Dam Inc. | S-3 | 33-65720 | 10(m)(i) | 7/7/1993 | |
12.1 | IDACORP, Inc. Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Supplemental Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges | X | ||||
12.2 | Idaho Power Company Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Supplemental Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges | X | ||||
21.1 | Subsidiaries of IDACORP, Inc. | 10-K | 1-14465, 1-3198 | 21.1 | 2/21/2013 | |
23.1 | Consent of Registered Independent Accounting Firm | X | ||||
23.2 | Consent of Registered Independent Accounting Firm | X | ||||
31.1 | IDACORP, Inc. Rule 13a-14(a) CEO certification | X | ||||
31.2 | IDACORP, Inc. Rule 13a-14(a) CFO certification | X | ||||
31.3 | Idaho Power Rule 13a-14(a) CEO certification | X | ||||
31.4 | Idaho Power Rule 13a-14(a) CFO certification | X | ||||
32.1 | IDACORP, Inc. Section 1350 CEO certification | X | ||||
32.2 | IDACORP, Inc. Section 1350 CFO certification | X | ||||
32.3 | Idaho Power Section 1350 CEO certification | X | ||||
32.4 | Idaho Power Section 1350 CFO certification | X | ||||
95.1 | Mine Safety Disclosures | X | ||||
101.INS | XBRL Instance Document | X | ||||
101.SCH | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document | X | ||||
101.CAL | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document | X | ||||
101.LAB | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document | X | ||||
101.PRE | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document | X | ||||
101.DEF | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document | X | ||||
1 Management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement |
139
IDACORP, INC.
SCHEDULE I - CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF REGISTRANT
CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF COMPREHENSIVE INCOME
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Income: | ||||||||||||
Equity in income of subsidiaries | $ | 193,707 | $ | 182,463 | $ | 172,844 | ||||||
Investment income | — | 3 | 295 | |||||||||
Total income | 193,707 | 182,466 | 173,139 | |||||||||
Expenses: | ||||||||||||
Operating expenses | 1,376 | 940 | 473 | |||||||||
Interest expense | 261 | 416 | 511 | |||||||||
Other expenses | 45 | 71 | 45 | |||||||||
Total expenses | 1,682 | 1,427 | 1,029 | |||||||||
Income from Before Income Taxes | 192,025 | 181,039 | 172,110 | |||||||||
Income Tax Benefit | (1,455 | ) | (1,378 | ) | (904 | ) | ||||||
Net Income Attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | 193,480 | 182,417 | 173,014 | |||||||||
Other comprehensive (income) loss | (7,605 | ) | 563 | (5,494 | ) | |||||||
Comprehensive Income Attributable to IDACORP, Inc. | $ | 185,875 | $ | 182,980 | $ | 167,520 | ||||||
The accompanying note is an integral part of these statements. |
IDACORP, INC.
CONDENSED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||
2014 | 2013 | 2012 | ||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||
Operating Activities: | ||||||||||||
Net cash provided by operating activities | $ | 109,289 | $ | 96,391 | $ | 61,876 | ||||||
Investing Activities: | ||||||||||||
Distributions from (contributions to) subsidiaries | — | 2,282 | (7,525 | ) | ||||||||
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities | — | 2,282 | (7,525 | ) | ||||||||
Financing Activities: | ||||||||||||
Issuance of common stock | 195 | 255 | 4,882 | |||||||||
Dividends on common stock | (88,489 | ) | (78,832 | ) | (68,928 | ) | ||||||
(Decrease) increase in short-term borrowings | (23,450 | ) | (14,950 | ) | 15,500 | |||||||
Change in intercompany notes payable | (198 | ) | 647 | (2,308 | ) | |||||||
Other | (469 | ) | (431 | ) | (3,147 | ) | ||||||
Net cash used in financing activities | (112,411 | ) | (93,311 | ) | (54,001 | ) | ||||||
Net (decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents | (3,122 | ) | 5,362 | 350 | ||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year | 8,898 | 3,536 | 3,186 | |||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year | $ | 5,776 | $ | 8,898 | $ | 3,536 | ||||||
The accompanying note is an integral part of these statements. |
140
IDACORP, INC.
CONDENSED BALANCE SHEETS
December 31, | ||||||||
2014 | 2013 | |||||||
Assets | (thousands of dollars) | |||||||
Current Assets: | ||||||||
Cash and cash equivalents | $ | 5,776 | $ | 8,898 | ||||
Receivables | 1,702 | 996 | ||||||
Income taxes receivable | — | 2,044 | ||||||
Deferred income taxes | 42,766 | 33,928 | ||||||
Other | 106 | 117 | ||||||
Total current assets | 50,350 | 45,983 | ||||||
Investment in subsidiaries | 1,910,084 | 1,814,565 | ||||||
Other Assets: | ||||||||
Deferred income taxes | 44,546 | 56,718 | ||||||
Other | 287 | 385 | ||||||
Total other assets | 44,833 | 57,103 | ||||||
Total assets | $ | 2,005,267 | $ | 1,917,651 | ||||
Liabilities and Shareholders’ Equity | ||||||||
Current Liabilities: | ||||||||
Notes payable | $ | 31,300 | $ | 54,750 | ||||
Accounts payable | 8 | 4 | ||||||
Taxes accrued | 8,950 | — | ||||||
Other | 854 | 684 | ||||||
Total current liabilities | 41,112 | 55,438 | ||||||
Other Liabilities: | ||||||||
Intercompany notes payable | 9,658 | 9,822 | ||||||
Other | 1,296 | 1,742 | ||||||
Total other liabilities | 10,954 | 11,564 | ||||||
IDACORP, Inc. Shareholders’ Equity | 1,953,201 | 1,850,649 | ||||||
Total Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity | $ | 2,005,267 | $ | 1,917,651 | ||||
The accompanying note is an integral part of these statements. |
NOTE TO CONDENSED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
1. BASIS OF PRESENTATION
Pursuant to rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the unconsolidated condensed financial statements of IDACORP, Inc. do not reflect all of the information and notes normally included with financial statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Therefore, these financial statements should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements and related notes included in the 2014 Form 10-K, Part II, Item 8.
Accounting for Subsidiaries: IDACORP has accounted for the earnings of its subsidiaries under the equity method of accounting in these unconsolidated condensed financial statements. Included in net cash provided by operating activities in the condensed statements of cash flows are dividends that IDACORP subsidiaries paid to IDACORP of $91 million in 2014 and 2013, and $71 million in 2012.
141
IDACORP, INC.
SCHEDULE II - CONSOLIDATED VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
Years Ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012
Column A | Column B | Column C | Column D | Column E | ||||||||||||||||
Additions | ||||||||||||||||||||
Charged | ||||||||||||||||||||
Balance at | Charged | (Credited) | Balance at | |||||||||||||||||
Beginning | to | to Other | End | |||||||||||||||||
Classification | of Year | Income | Accounts | Deductions(1) | of Year | |||||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||||||
2014: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserves deducted from applicable assets | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible accounts | $ | 2,502 | $ | 6,756 | $ | 198 | $ | 7,352 | $ | 2,104 | ||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible notes | 885 | (333 | ) | — | — | 552 | ||||||||||||||
Other Reserves: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Rate refunds | 398 | (398 | ) | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
Injuries and damages | 1,671 | 461 | — | 137 | 1,995 | |||||||||||||||
2013: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserves deducted from applicable assets | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible accounts | $ | 1,873 | $ | 5,777 | $ | (38 | ) | $ | 5,110 | $ | 2,502 | |||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible notes | 1,260 | (375 | ) | — | — | 885 | ||||||||||||||
Other Reserves: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Rate refunds | — | 398 | — | — | 398 | |||||||||||||||
Injuries and damages | 5,480 | 913 | — | 4,722 | 1,671 | |||||||||||||||
2012: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserves deducted from applicable assets | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible accounts | $ | 1,435 | $ | 4,524 | $ | 283 | $ | 4,369 | $ | 1,873 | ||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible notes | 2,743 | (1,483 | ) | — | — | 1,260 | ||||||||||||||
Other Reserves: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Injuries and damages | 1,925 | 4,481 | — | 926 | 5,480 |
(1) Represents deductions from the reserves for purposes for which the reserves were created. In the case of uncollectible accounts, and notes reserves, includes reversals of amounts previously written off.
142
IDAHO POWER COMPANY
SCHEDULE II - CONSOLIDATED VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
Years Ended December 31, 2014, 2013, and 2012
Column A | Column B | Column C | Column D | Column E | ||||||||||||||||
Additions | ||||||||||||||||||||
Charged | ||||||||||||||||||||
Balance at | Charged | (Credited) | Balance at | |||||||||||||||||
Beginning | to | to Other | End | |||||||||||||||||
Classification | of Year | Income | Accounts | Deductions(1) | of Year | |||||||||||||||
(thousands of dollars) | ||||||||||||||||||||
2014: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserves deducted from applicable assets | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible accounts | $ | 2,502 | $ | 6,756 | $ | 198 | $ | 7,352 | $ | 2,104 | ||||||||||
Other Reserves: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Rate refunds | 398 | (398 | ) | — | — | — | ||||||||||||||
Injuries and damages | 1,671 | 461 | — | 137 | 1,995 | |||||||||||||||
2013: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserves deducted from applicable assets | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible accounts | $ | 1,873 | $ | 5,777 | $ | (38 | ) | $ | 5,110 | $ | 2,502 | |||||||||
Other Reserves: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Rate refunds | — | 398 | — | — | 398 | |||||||||||||||
Injuries and damages | 5,480 | 913 | — | 4,722 | 1,671 | |||||||||||||||
2012: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserves deducted from applicable assets | ||||||||||||||||||||
Reserve for uncollectible accounts | $ | 1,435 | $ | 4,524 | $ | 283 | $ | 4,369 | $ | 1,873 | ||||||||||
Other Reserves: | ||||||||||||||||||||
Injuries and damages | 1,925 | 4,481 | — | 926 | 5,480 | |||||||||||||||
(1) Represents deductions from the reserves for purposes for which the reserves were created. In the case of uncollectible accounts, includes reversals of amounts previously written off.
143
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 and 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
February 19, 2015 | IDACORP, INC. | |||
Date | ||||
By: | /s/ Darrel T. Anderson | |||
Darrel T. Anderson | ||||
President and Chief Executive Officer |
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature | Title | Date | |||||
/s/ Robert A. Tinstman | Chairman of the Board | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Robert A. Tinstman | |||||||
/s/ Darrel T. Anderson | (Principal Executive Officer) | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Darrel T. Anderson | |||||||
President and Chief Executive Officer and Director | |||||||
/s/ Steven R. Keen | (Principal Financial Officer) | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Steven R. Keen | |||||||
Senior Vice President, Chief Financial | |||||||
Officer, and Treasurer | |||||||
/s/ Kenneth W. Petersen | (Principal Accounting Officer) | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Kenneth W. Petersen | |||||||
Vice President, Controller, and Chief Accounting Officer | |||||||
/s/ Thomas Carlile | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Thomas Carlile | |||||||
/s/ Richard J. Dahl | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Richard J. Dahl | |||||||
/s/ Ronald W. Jibson | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Ronald W. Jibson | |||||||
/s/ Judith A. Johansen | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Judith A. Johansen | |||||||
/s/ Dennis L. Johnson | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Dennis L. Johnson | |||||||
/s/ J. LaMont Keen | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
J. LaMont Keen | |||||||
/s/ Christine King | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Christine King | |||||||
/s/ Richard J. Navarro | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Richard J. Navarro | |||||||
/s/ Jan B. Packwood | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Jan B. Packwood | |||||||
/s/ Joan H. Smith | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Joan H. Smith | |||||||
/s/ Thomas J. Wilford | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Thomas J. Wilford |
144
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 and 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
February 19, 2015 | Idaho Power Company | |||
Date | ||||
By: | /s/ Darrel T. Anderson | |||
Darrel T. Anderson | ||||
President and Chief Executive Officer |
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the registrant and in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature | Title | Date | |||||
/s/ Robert A. Tinstman | Chairman of the Board | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Robert A. Tinstman | |||||||
/s/ Darrel T. Anderson | (Principal Executive Officer) | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Darrel T. Anderson | |||||||
President and Chief Executive Officer and Director | |||||||
/s/ Steven R. Keen | (Principal Financial Officer) | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Steven R. Keen | |||||||
Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer, and Treasurer | |||||||
/s/ Kenneth W. Petersen | (Principal Accounting Officer) | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Kenneth W. Petersen | |||||||
Vice President, Controller, and Chief Accounting Officer | |||||||
/s/ Thomas Carlile | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Thomas Carlile | |||||||
/s/ Richard J. Dahl | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Richard J. Dahl | |||||||
/s/ Ronald W. Jibson | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Ronald W. Jibson | |||||||
/s/ Judith A. Johansen | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Judith A. Johansen | |||||||
/s/ Dennis L. Johnson | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Dennis L. Johnson | |||||||
/s/ J. LaMont Keen | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
J. LaMont Keen | |||||||
/s/ Christine King | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Christine King | |||||||
/s/ Richard J. Navarro | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Richard J. Navarro | |||||||
/s/ Jan B. Packwood | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Jan B. Packwood | |||||||
/s/ Joan H. Smith | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Joan H. Smith | |||||||
/s/ Thomas J. Wilford | Director | February 19, 2015 | |||||
Thomas J. Wilford |
145
EXHIBIT INDEX
Exhibit No. | Description |
10.4 | Amended and Restated Agreement for the Operation of the Jim Bridger Project, dated December 11, 2014, between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to supersede Exhibits 10.1 and 10.2 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in the agreement) |
10.5 | Amended and Restated Agreement for the Ownership of the Jim Bridger Project, dated December 11, 2014, between Idaho Power Company and PacifiCorp (to supersede Exhibits 10.1 and 10.2 upon satisfaction of conditions precedent in the agreement) |
10.34(1) | IDACORP, Inc. Non-Employee Directors Stock Compensation Plan, as amended November 20, 2014 |
10.40(1) | IDACORP, Inc. and/or Idaho Power Company Officers with Amended and Restated Change in Control Agreements chart, as of January 1, 2015 |
10.43(1) | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Restricted Stock Award Agreement (Time Vesting) |
10.44(1) | IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan - Form of Performance Share Award Agreement (Performance with Two Goals) |
10.49(1) | IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company Compensation for Non-Employee Directors of the Board of Directors, effective January 1, 2015 |
12.1 | IDACORP, Inc. Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Supplemental Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges |
12.2 | Idaho Power Company Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Supplemental Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges |
23.1 | Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
23.2 | Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm |
31.1 | IDACORP, Inc. Rule 13a-14(a) CEO certification |
31.2 | IDACORP, Inc. Rule 13a-14(a) CFO certification |
31.3 | Idaho Power Rule 13a-14(a) CEO certification |
31.4 | Idaho Power Rule 13a-14(a) CFO certification |
32.1 | IDACORP, Inc. Section 1350 CEO certification |
32.2 | IDACORP, Inc. Section 1350 CFO certification |
32.3 | Idaho Power Section 1350 CEO certification |
32.4 | Idaho Power Section 1350 CFO certification |
95.1 | Mine safety disclosures |
101.INS | XBRL Instance Document |
101.SCH | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document |
101.CAL | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document |
101.LAB | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document |
101.PRE | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document |
101.DEF | XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document |
(1) Management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement. |
146