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Manufacturers Reeling From Soaring Price of Natural Gas

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Investors and economists are watching anxiously for any hints of recession. But economic meltdown occurred already for Anaheim textile dyer Manny Kim when his natural gas bill arrived this month.

In December, Kim will pay $140,000 to stoke the boilers and dryers that color and treat his customers’ fabric. That’s more than triple the $40,000 he has paid in recent months. And he’s been warned that the gas bill for his Expo Dyeing and Finishing Inc. could top $190,000 in coming months. He sent letters to customers last week saying he may increase prices, but he knows that would be impractical.

“It just seems like highway robbery,” he said about his gas suppliers escalating prices.

All eyes have been on California’s fragile electric grid of late, but natural gas is the real shocker for manufacturers like Kim, whose 10-year-old business employs 160 people.

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Surging demand, low inventories and jam-packed pipelines have Californians paying the highest prices in the nation. Earlier this week, spot prices for natural gas at the California-Arizona border reached $60 per million British thermal units, compared with less than $3 per million BTUs a year ago. That’s the equivalent of oil costing more than $350 a barrel, according to energy analysts.

Kim has gone from paying $2.50 per million BTUs at the end of the summer to $14.60 now.

The spike is so severe that on Friday, Gov. Gray Davis asked state Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer to investigate possible price manipulation.

That’s welcome news for California’s vast industrial base, where heavy users are getting scorched by high prices and watching months of hard-earned profits go up in flames. From food processors and box makers to steel mills and flower growers, California’s work-a-day industries are alternating between disbelief and panic. Some are scrambling to lock in cheaper, long-term contracts. Others are considering a temporary switch to other fuels, not an easy task, given California’s tough environmental laws.

A few are even looking to mothball operations until gas prices stabilize, a perilous strategy, because customers might not return when they resume work. But companies such as Castaic Brick may not have a choice. The Santa Clarita Valley firm has seen its typical monthly natural gas bill rise from $36,000 to more than $300,000 to make bricks that it can’t sell for more than about 25 cents each.

Energy watchers predict that natural gas prices will dip to saner levels by spring. That’s small consolation to Castaic Brick, which is contemplating shutting down its kiln and furloughing 104 employees, said controller Dave Gottschalt.

The natural gas shock is a double whammy for local companies already reeling from California’s electricity crisis. Big energy users such as Fontana-based California Steel Industries Inc. have been so focused on filling customers’ orders in the midst of repeated electricity interruptions that natural gas prices have been a secondary concern. Until now.

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California Steel recently projected that its December natural gas bill could top $4 million--more than four times the normal average--if the plant were running at full capacity. Instead, the firm will shut its “hot strip mill,” the fiery heart of the operation, Dec. 24-31.

It’s the first time in the firm’s 16-year history that gas prices have derailed production. But in the topsy-turvy world of California energy, company officials say not producing steel makes more economic sense in the short run, enabling them to save on gas and take advantage of state air quality regulations that permit the company to sell excess emission credits.

“It’s a completely crazy way to run a business,” said Lourenco Goncalves, president and chief executive of California Steel. “. . . But we can’t afford to keep paying these outrageous prices.”

Helmut Ackermann will pay nearly $600,000 this month to stoke the massive machines needed to color and dry his customers’ fabric at L.A. Dye & Print Works Inc. in Los Angeles. That’s 2 1/2 times more than he paid just two months ago. And he’s been warned that his rates may double again in January.

Unable to pass along those costs, Ackermann already has shuttered one Los Angeles dye house and laid off 40 employees.

“This is not a soft or hard landing, this is a wipeout,” he said. “I’m losing money on every yard of fabric.”

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The rest of the country is feeling the pinch as well. Nationwide, natural gas prices have reached record levels, fed by tight supplies, cold weather and heavy demand from commercial users, particularly electric-generating plants.

But California is particularly vulnerable to market disruptions because it imports about 85% of its natural gas. Supplies were sharply reduced this summer after an explosion in one of the four major pipelines serving the state. That line is still operating below capacity, helping to boost already high prices here.

Still, with California’s industrial customers paying as much as six times more for their BTUs than their counterparts in other states recently, some observers say something besides the gas just doesn’t smell right.

“We’re businesspeople, so we understand markets can be fluid,” said Scott Edwards, president of the Assn. of Textile Dyers and Printers of Southern California. “But California is so out of whack, there has got to be something wrong.”

Edwards and other business leaders have begun lobbying politicians and policymakers in earnest, trying to widen the spotlight focused on California’s electric irregularities to include their problems with natural gas.

The California Public Utilities Commission has already filed a complaint with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, alleging anti-competitive tactics by a pipeline company and its marketing affiliate, while San Diego Gas & Electric has asked the federal commission to cap the transportation fees that gas marketers can charge to bring fuel into California.

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And Davis asked Lockyer Friday to begin investigating “anti-competitive practices . . . to determine whether the exorbitant price increases . . . are the result of activities that violate any state or federal laws.”

L.A.’s textile dyers just hope relief comes in time. A battle-hardened group, these entrepreneurs have repulsed waves of cheap imports with sophisticated technology and lightning speed. But the natural gas price rise is a predator the likes of which they’ve never seen.

Bill Tenenblatt, president of Antex Knitting Mills and Matchmasters Dying and Finishing, has watched his natural gas prices spiral sevenfold in a matter of months.

“When I first started seeing these numbers, I thought they were typos,” he said. “You know it’s enormous, but you still can’t quite believe what you’re seeing.”

Mired in an industry with razor-thin margins, Tenenblatt said he has virtually no wiggle room to make up such mammoth cost increases. His customers are apparel manufacturers whose prices are dictated to them by retailers. His equipment is cutting edge, so there’s little to be gained by way of conservation. And the big diesel tanks that used to serve as backup fuel for his boilers were pulled out five years ago to comply with California’s air quality standards.

Observers of L.A.’s diverse manufacturing scene fear the ripple effect of the widening energy crisis, which is already being felt in industries from food processing to furniture making. With more than 1 million people employed in manufacturing in Southern California, a lot is riding on the cost of a BTU and the ability of small industrial companies to hang on until prices head south.

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“They’re like the canary in the coal mine,” said Linda Wong of the Community Development Technologies Center, which assists small manufacturers in the region. “They might be the first to go, but they won’t be the last.”

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Times staff writer E. Scott Reckard contributed to this report.

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