From 8-K

UNITED STATES

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

Form 8-K

CURRENT REPORT

PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE

SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

Date of Report (Date of earliest event reported) August 13, 2007

PORTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY

(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

 

Oregon   Commission File Number   93-0256820

(State or other jurisdiction of

incorporation or organization)

  1-5532-99  

(I.R.S. Employer

Identification No.)

121 SW Salmon Street, Portland, Oregon 97204

(Address of principal executive offices) (zip code)

Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (503) 464-8000

Check the appropriate box below if the Form 8-K filing is intended to simultaneously satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following provisions:

 

¨ Written communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR 230.425)

 

¨ Soliciting material pursuant to Rule 14a-12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14a-12)

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 14d-2(b) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.14d-2(b))

 

¨ Pre-commencement communications pursuant to Rule 13e-4(c) under the Exchange Act (17 CFR 240.13e-4(c))

 



Section 7 - Regulation FD

 

Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure.

On August 13, 2007, representatives of PGE will commence presentations to various members of the financial and investment community, at which the presentation attached hereto as Exhibit 99.1 will be used.

Section 9 - Financial Statements and Exhibits

 

Item 9.01 Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

(d) Exhibits

 

Exhibit   

Description

(99)    Additional exhbits
99.1    Portland General Electric Company slide presentation dated August 2007

SIGNATURE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned hereunto duly authorized.

 

   

PORTLAND GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY

(Registrant)

Date:   August 13, 2007     By:   /s/ J. Jeffrey Dudley
       

J. Jeffrey Dudley

Vice President

General Counsel and

Corporate Compliance Officer

 

2

Portland General Electric Slide Presentation
Investor
Roadshow
Copyright ©
2007 Portland General Electric. All Rights Reserved.
August 2007
Exhibit 99.1


Information Current as of August 3, 2007
The
information
in
this
presentation
is
current
as
of
August
3,
2007
-
the
date
on
which
PGE
filed
its
Quarterly
Report
on
Form
10-Q
for
the
quarter
ended
June
30,
2007
-
and
should
not
be
relied
upon
as
being
current
as
of
any
subsequent
date. 
PGE
undertakes
no
duty
to
update
the
presentation,
except
as
may
be
required
by
law.
Forward-looking Statements
This presentation contains statements that are forward-looking within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of
1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.  Forward-looking statements are statements of expectations,
beliefs, plans, objectives, assumptions or future events or performance.  Words or phrases such as "anticipates,"
"believes,"
"should,"
"estimates,"
"expects,"
"intends,"
"plans,"
"predicts,"
"projects,"
"will
likely
result,"
"will
continue,"
or
similar expressions identify forward-looking statements.  The forward-looking statements in this presentation include, but
are not limited to, events related to 2007 earnings guidance, statements concerning estimated capital expenditures in 2007,
final review of the deferral of excess power costs for the Boardman Plant outage; final approval of rates for the new Port
Westward power plant; completion and rate treatment of Phase I of the Biglow Canyon Wind Farm and the Advanced
Metering Infrastructure (AMI) project; the expected completion dates of Phases II and III of the Biglow Canyon Wind Farm;
statements concerning the estimated cost savings resulting from deployment of AMI; statements concerning the recovery
of
costs
through
future
rate
increases;
changes
in
weather,
hydroelectric,
and
energy
market
conditions,
which
could
affect
the availability and cost of fuel or purchased power; and the outcome of various legal and regulatory proceedings.
Although PGE believes that the expectations reflected in any forward-looking statements are based on reasonable
assumptions, PGE can give no assurance that its expectations will be attained.  Factors that could cause actual results to
differ
materially
from
those
contemplated
include,
among
others,
events
related
to
governmental
policies;
the
outcome
of
legal and regulatory proceedings; changes in weather, hydroelectric, and energy market conditions; wholesale energy
prices; operational factors affecting PGE's power generation facilities; growth and demographic patterns in PGE's service
territory; general political, economic, and financial market conditions; other factors that might be described from time to
time in PGE's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Any forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date on which such statement is made, and, except as required by law,
PGE undertakes no obligation to update any forward-looking statement to reflect events or circumstances after the date on
which such statement is made or to reflect the occurrence of unanticipated events.
Cautionary Statement
2


Presenting Team
Jim Piro, Executive Vice President, Finance, Chief Financial Officer
and Treasurer
Bill Valach, Director of Investor Relations
Chris Liddle, Analyst, Investor Relations
3


Investment Highlights
Portland General Electric is a well-capitalized, vertically integrated,
regulated electric utility
Earnings and dividend growth driven by load growth and investment
in regulated assets
Annual capital expenditures are expected to significantly exceed
depreciation
Diversified power supply portfolio includes hydro, coal, wind and
natural gas-fired resources
Proactive, open working relationship with regulators
Experienced management team with a strong track record
Strong balance sheet and stable cash flow
4


Company Overview
793,000 retail customer accounts
Service territory population 1.6 million,
43% of state’s population
52 cities served –
Portland and Salem the largest
Net
Utility
Plant
$2.31
billion
(1)
Generation $536 million
Distribution $987 million
Transmission $145 million
CWIP $412 million
Other $227 million
4,000-square-mile service area
26,000 miles of T&D lines
2,374
MW
of
generation
(2)
Summer peak load of 3,706 MW (2006)
Winter peak load of 4,073 MW (1998)
Annual demand of 2,348 MWa (weather adjusted)
2,635 employees
OR
WA
(1) Source: 2006 FERC Form 1.
(2) Includes Port Westward.
Note: All numbers updated for year-ending December 31, 2006.
OREGON
WASHINGTON
Beaver
Port Westward
Oak Grove
Portland
Bull Run
Columbia River
Pelton
Round Butte
(Madras)
Colstrip 3
Colstrip 4
(Montana)
Salem
North Fork
Biglow Canyon
5
Boardman
Coyote Springs
Faraday
River Mill
T.W. Sullivan


Statement of Direction:  2007-2009
Focus Goals:
Reliable, reasonably priced power
Design and maintain a reliable energy
resource portfolio, maintaining high plant availability and achieving stable,
predictable and reasonable prices.
High customer value
Achieve high customer value by doing a great job of
understanding and meeting our customers' needs.
Strong financial performance
Achieve a return on equity that is at or above
our peers.
Engaged, valued workforce
Attract, retain and engage employees to
achieve a performance advantage for PGE and provide a fulfilling
work
experience.
Active corporate responsibility
Act in a manner true to our values and
uphold our core principles as we work with stakeholders to effectively balance
and prioritize operational and policy decisions.
6


(1) 2006 10-K.
Attractive and Growing Customer Base
Revenue by Customer Group
15%
39%
46%
Residential
Industrial
Commercial
Customers
(1)
Revenues
($ mm)
(1)
Energy
(000s of
MWh)
(1)
Residential
696,779
$628
7,573
Commercial
95,734
541
7,749
Industrial
259
200
4,110
Total
792,772
$1,369
19,432
Retail Revenue and Load Growth
1.7% annualized customer growth from
1996-2006, with 1.7% customer growth in 2006
7


Growing Oregon Economy
Growth in Oregon’s economy is expected to require further investment by PGE to meet
increased energy demand
Growth in Portland and Salem exceeds rest of state –
core operational areas for PGE
Taking advantage of steady state population growth, PGE has achieved annual customer
growth of 1.6% since the end of 2002
Population
Growth
US
vs.
Oregon
Customers
1.0%
1.3%
1.0%
1.7%
'02-'06 US
'02-'06 OR
'05-'06 US
'05-'06 OR
792,772
779,837
767,066
754,028
743,473
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Residential
Commerical
Industrial
Source: Oregon office of Economic Analysis, PGE customer database, US Census Bureau.
8


Investment Opportunities
Regulated Growth
Net short utility
Growing customer base
Capital investments outpace
depreciation
Potential capital investment of
$550
-
$650
million
2
for
Biglow
Canyon Phases II & III across 2007
-
2010
(1) Excludes AFDC and Advanced Metering Infrastructure. Forecasted expenditures are preliminary and subject to change.
(2) Excludes AFDC.
9
$650 - $670
$310 - $330
$525 - $535
$0
$100
$200
$300
$400
$500
$600
$700
2007
2008
2009
($ mm)
Capital
Expenditures
Range
1
Depreciation & Amortization
$180 -
$200


Power Supply Strategy
Manage power supply operations to:
Capitalize on PGE’s assets and position in the marketplace
Meet load in most economic fashion to lower costs to customers
Capture the benefits of PGE’s assets and their positioning in real-time
markets
Manage and monitor risks with appropriate systems and processes to
assure strategy is prudently implemented
PGE’s Integrated Resource Plan is a road map to provide reliable
affordable electricity for the long term
Latest IRP filed on June 29, 2007
Public process
Acknowledgement standard from OPUC
IRP includes a combination of energy efficiency, renewable and
purchased power
10


Power Supply Portfolio
2007E Generation Capacity
% of Total
Capacity
Physical
Capacity
Hydro
Deschutes River Projects
Clackamas/Willamette
River
Projects
(1)
Hydro Contracts
Natural Gas/Oil
Beaver Units 1-8
Coyote Springs
Coal
Boardman
Colstrip
298 MW
212
602
1,112
545 MW
243
1,188
380 MW
296
676
7.8%
5.5
15.7
29.1
9.9%
7.7
17.7
Port Westward
400
14.3%
6.4
10.5
31.1
Wind
Klondike II Contract
0.7%
2007E
Peak
Load
(2)
3,823 MW
27 MW
Net Purchased Power
Short-/Long-term
21.4%
820 MW
100.0%
Boardman Coal Plant
(1) Includes Bull Run located on the Sandy River.
(2) Estimated peak as of January 1, 2007.
Note: Totals may not foot due to rounding.
11


Generation Expansion –
Port Westward
Port Westward
Clatskanie, Oregon
CCGT utilizing Mitsubishi G-class turbine
400 MW gas-fired plant
6,826 heat rate
(without duct-firing)
$280 million                                          
(through June 30, 2007, including AFDC)
Placed into service June 11, 2007
EPC contractor: Black & Veatch
Fully wrapped EPC contract
Power island mft.: Mitsubishi
Power Systems
August 2001
March 2006
June 2007
12


Generation Expansion -
Biglow
Biglow Canyon Wind Farm
Columbia Gorge,
eastern Oregon
400 –
450 MW total installed capacity
Phase 1: 125 MW
$255 -
$265 million                 
(including AFDC)
76 Vestas turbines
1.65 MW/turbine
37% capacity factor
27 year asset life
Expected online December 2007
Phases II & III under review
Construction 2008 –
2010
13


Generation Growth Opportunity
Load Growth
PGE’s retail load is expected to grow
consistently while selected long-term
power purchase contracts expire, driving
need for additional generation capacity
Assumptions:
1.9% annual load growth through 2015
Expiration of certain contract hydro
rights by 2012
Energy supply based on plant
capabilities under normal hydro and
operating conditions
Most of our Beaver CCT facility is
treated as an intermediate (capacity)
resource and is not included as an
energy resource
Load Resource Balance
Annual
Average
Energy
(1)(2)
Retail Load & Resource Balance
Peak
Capacity
(1)
(1) Data as of June 29, 2007.
(2) Includes Energy Trust of Oregon energy efficiency. Does not include 5-year opt out ESS customers.
14
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
Long-term Contracts
Generation
(Theoretical Availability, Normal Conditions)
1-in-2 Peak Retail Load + 12% Reserves
MW
MW
1,540
1,842
818 MWa
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
Generation
(Theoretical Availability,
Beaver used for peaking,)
Long-term Contracts
818
MWa
Retail Load
MWa
1,003


Generation Growth Opportunity
Proposed Action Plan
(1)
Expected
and
potential
resource
actions,
capacity
need
based
on
winter
season.
(2) Assumes normal hydro.
(3) Renewable portfolio standard.
Note: Data as of June 29, 2007.
15
Energy
Capacity
Energy/Capacity Actions
(1)
MWa
(2)
% of Target
MW
(2)
2012 Resource Target
818
-
1,540
Additional cost-effective EE 2008 – 2012
45
5%
59
Plant efficiency upgrades
7
1%
13
Hydro
70
9%
170
Biglow Canyon II & III (300 MW nameplate)
105
13%
45
PPAs of up to 5 year terms
180
22%
180
PPAs of 6 to 10 year terms
192
23%
192
Required added renewables to meet 2015 RPS
(3)
218
27%
133
Total of Possible Energy Actions
818
100%
792
Dual-purpose (Capacity and Wind following) SCCTs
-
-
100
Load control, curtailment tariff, DSG
-
-
140
Seasonal capacity purchases
-
-
508
Total of Possible Energy & Capacity Actions
-
-
1,540


Generation Growth Opportunity
Proposed Action Plan -
Generation Capacity
16%
21%
6%
32%
17%
8%
Purchased
Coal
2012E Power Sources
(1)
Total PGE System Capability
3,423 MW
2012E Peak Load
4,127 MW
18%
29%
31%
22%
Purchased
Hydro
(2)
Coal
Gas
Total
PGE
System
Capability
(3)
3,003
MW
2007E
Peak
Load
(4)
3,823
MW
2007E Power Sources
(1)
Non-hydro
Renewables
Hydro
(2)
Gas
(1) As a percent of peak load, 2012 data as of June 29, 2007. 2012E assumes PGE ownership of proposed action plan assets.
(2) Includes long-term hydro contracts.
(3) Includes 27 MW of capacity from a long-term wind contract.
(4) Estimated peak as of January 1, 2007.
16
EE, DSG &
Load Control


Forward Capital Expenditures Driving Rate Base Growth
Capital Expenditures
Attractive growth opportunities through capital investment in core utility assets
Earnings expected to grow 4 to 6 percent per year over the long term
Depreciation and amortization of $180 -
$200 million (2007 –
2009)
(1) Does not include AFDC.
(2) Under review; forecasted expenditures are preliminary and subject to change.
(3) Phase II & III timing subject to turbine availability and project economics.
(4) Includes maintenance and upgrades on transmission, distribution and existing generation as well as new customer connects.
17
$130 -
$135
Advanced
Metering
Infrastructure
2
-
-
-
-
$16
Port
Westward
$150 -
$160
Hydro
Relicensing
2
-
$550 –
$650
Biglow
Canyon
Wind
Farm:
Phase
II
&
III
3
$245 -
$250
-
2009
$210 -
$215
$130 -
$140
-
2008
-
-
$200 -
$205
Biglow Canyon Wind Farm: Phase I
-
Boardman
emissions
controls
2
Ongoing
capital
expenditures
4
Projects
(in
millions)¹
$225 -
$230
$240 -
$245
$185 -
$190
2011
2010
2007


Proactive Regulatory Strategy
Oregon Public Utility Commission
Three-member governor-appointed Commission with four-year terms
Rates set based on a forward test year
PGE’s Approach to Regulation
Communicate constantly
No surprises
Understand our issues; participate in crafting solutions
Seek agreement on goals or outcomes
Propose paths
Internally consistent alternatives
Alignment of interests always preferable
Keep an eye on total result: must be reasonable, in context
Deregulation
Oregon’s approach allows direct access for industrial and commercial customers
beginning March 2002
PGE essentially economically neutral to customers choosing direct access
Estimate that 10 percent of load from largest customers will be served by energy
service suppliers in 2007
18


Strong Management and Engaged, Valued Workforce
Experienced management team with officers averaging 26 years in
the utility industry
Dedicated and knowledgeable employee base of over 2,600
Scorecard-driven and customer-focused culture
Continued cost-effective and reliable plant operations
19


Recent Financial Results
Invested over $800 million in system since 2002
Operating statistics positive
Solid customer satisfaction
Volatile hydro conditions
2005 and 2006 Boardman outage
Lack of power cost adjustment mechanism
Senate Bill 408 reserve
Key Drivers of Historical Performance
Financial Summary
Year End 12/31
Year-to-Date 6/30
2005
2006
2006
2007
Revenue
$1,446
$1,520
$732
$838
Net Operating Income
126
121
47
120
Net Income
64
71
21
101
EPS
$1.02
$1.14
$0.34
$1.61
20
($ in millions, except for per share amounts)


Regulatory and Financial Highlights since 2006
General Rate Case for 2007 test year concluded
Boardman deferral granted which allows PGE to apply to recover a
portion
of the replacement power costs
OPUC supportive of adding wind generation to PGE rate base
Reached a settlement that resolves all issues between PGE and certain
California parties relating to wholesale transactions in the Western Power
markets in 2000-2001
PGE credit ratings, balance sheet and access to capital remain strong
Current Ratings
Sr. Secured
Sr. Unsecured
Outlook
S&P
(1)
BBB+
BBB
Negative
Moody's
Baa1
Baa2
Stable
(1) S&P rates the business risk of PGE at “5”
on a scale of 1 to 10 with 1 being the least risky.  Most integrated utility companies are
rated from 4 to 6 on this scale.
21


2007 Rate Case Results
(1) Includes annualized rate base of Port Westward.
Power
Cost
Adjustment
Mechanism
90/10
sharing
mechanism
after
application of ROE deadband; subject to an earnings test
Intra-year Power Cost Adj.
10.1%
Allowed ROE
Annual
Power
Cost
Update
Tariff
annual
reset
of
net
variable
power
costs in January of each year
Annual Power Cost Adj.
2007 Test Year
UE-180, 181 & 184
50%
Capital Structure
$2.009 billion including Port Westward¹
Avg. Rate Base
22


Regulatory Update
PGE absorbs all costs/benefits within the ROE band irrespective of power cost
variances
After the earnings test and application of the power cost sharing PGE can earn up
to 9.1% and down to 11.1% return on equity
Power cost sharing
100 Bps
10.1%
9.1%
11.1%
100 Bps
Customer Refund
Customer Surcharge
150 Bps   
of ROE
Baseline
NVPC
75 Bps     
of ROE
90/10 Sharing¹
90/10 Sharing¹
Power Cost Adjustment Mechanism
Annual Power Cost Update Tariff
Annual reset of rates based on forecast of net variable power costs for the coming
year. Following OPUC approval, new prices go into effect on or around January 1 of
the following year
Earnings test
($11.7) million²
$23.4 million²
(1) 90 percent with customers, 10 percent with PGE.
(2) Sharing deadband for 2007. Subject to change for future years.
23
Customer Refund
Customer Surcharge


$1,766
$2,009
(2)
$1,600
$1,700
$1,800
$1,900
$2,000
$2,100
2002
2007
($ mm)
Rate Base Growth Opportunities
Capital Expenditures
Approved Average Rate Base
45%
42%
43%
47%
50%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%
60%
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007E
Debt/Capitalization
S&P “BBB”: 50% -
60%
(1)
$167
$194
$255
$371
$529
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007E
($ mm)
(1)
(1) Forecasted expenditures are preliminary and subject to change.
(2) Includes annualized rate base of Port Westward.
Note: S&P target credit statistic range based on Business Position 5.
24


Regulatory and Legal Update
Boardman Coal Plant deferral
$26.4 million granted
File for amortization in third quarter 2007
Subject to OPUC prudence review, complete process late 2007 / early 2008
Senate Bill 408 (utility income taxes)
Beginning January 2006, implements an annual rate adjustment if the difference between income taxes collected
in rates and income taxes paid to taxing authorities exceeds $100,000
OPUC adopted permanent rules using “fixed”
methodology for determining income taxes in rates
Recent legislative session did not address “double whammy”
impact
Trojan Nuclear Plant: Recovery of return on investment
OPUC proceedings
Rate reset phase in abeyance
Class action proceedings
Ordered abated pending OPUC action
Bonneville Power Administration: Residential Exchange Credit
May 21, 2007 residential exchange credit suspended
June 1, 2007 residential and small farm customer rates increased
reflecting suspension of credit
Working with stakeholders to restore benefits for customers
25


Drivers of Future Performance
Strong economic and load growth in service territory
Continued operational excellence and customer focus drive core
utility performance
Investments in prudent rate base assets drive earnings and dividend
growth
Work closely with regulators and customer groups to achieve fair
regulatory outcomes
New mechanisms for sharing power cost volatility with customers
enhance stability of PGE earnings
26


Dividends
Dividends
Current annualized dividend of 94 cents per share, increased on
May 2, 2007, from 90 cents per share
Current quarter’s dividend of 23.5 cents per share payable on
October 15, 2007, to shareholders of record as of September 25,
2007
Over the long term, we expect a target dividend payout ratio in the   
60 percent range
27


Strategy for Success
Portland General Electric is a well-capitalized, stable
company with on-going growth opportunities
Stability
Vertically integrated,
regulated business
Strong balance sheet/
credit ratings
Experienced
management team
Supportive regulatory
environment
Growth
Strong load and
customer growth
Necessary and prudent
regulated rate base
investment opportunities
Earnings and dividend
growth
28


Investor Relations Contact Information
William J. Valach
Director, Investor Relations
503.464.7395
William.Valach@pgn.com
Portland General Electric Company
121 SW Salmon Street
Suite 1WTC 0403
Portland, OR 97204
www.PortlandGeneral.com
29