Long Beach, CA
File #: 16-1114    Version: 1 Name: LBGO/FM - NAESB Contract
Type: Contract Status: CCIS
File created: 11/3/2016 In control: City Council
On agenda: 12/13/2016 Final action: 12/13/2016
Title: Recommendation to authorize City Manager, or designee, to execute a North American Energy Standards Board Base Contract with Direct Energy Marketing, LLC, of Houston, TX, for the purchase and sale of natural gas. (Citywide)
Sponsors: Long Beach Gas and Oil
Attachments: 1. 121316-R-24sr.pdf
Related files: 34477_000, 34477_001
TITLE
Recommendation to authorize City Manager, or designee, to execute a North American Energy Standards Board Base Contract with Direct Energy Marketing, LLC, of Houston, TX, for the purchase and sale of natural gas. (Citywide)

DISCUSSION
Effective November 1, 2007, the City of Long Beach (City) entered into a 30-year prepay agreement with Merrill Lynch Commodities, Inc., to deliver a daily contracted volume of natural gas to the Long Beach Gas and Oil (LBGO) pipeline system for consumption by LBGO customers. Currently, the amount delivered under the prepay contract meets approximately 75 percent of total demand. While natural gas producers located within the Long Beach service territory deliver a relatively small volume of gas directly into the LBGO system, the remaining demand is primarily met by purchasing on the open market through LBGO’s trading partners. Natural gas delivered under the prepay agreement and purchased on the open market is transported by interstate pipelines to the California border. The City utilizes intrastate pipelines owned by the Southern California Gas Company (SoCalGas) to transport this natural gas from the California border to LBGO’s utility distribution system.

Natural gas transported through the SoCalGas system is subject to balancing requirements. SoCalGas imposes monthly balancing rules that require entities that use its system to deliver no more than 10 percent above or below their actual use. Any volume of gas outside of this 10 percent tolerance is subject to financial penalties. As a result of the Aliso Canyon gas storage leak, SoCalGas now imposes more stringent daily balancing requirements. If SoCalGas anticipates reliability issues from an excess or insufficient supply of natural gas delivered into its system, a 5 percent daily balancing requirement is now imposed.

The City’s overall natural gas demand is highly volatile, with large fluctuations primarily driven by weather conditions. The high volatility o...

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