SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

         Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.   )

         Filed by the Registrant   /x/
         Filed by a Party other than the Registrant --

         Check the appropriate box:

         /x/      Preliminary Proxy Statement
         -        Confidential, for Use of the Commission
                  Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
         -        Definitive Proxy Statement
         -        Definitive Additional Materials
         -        Soliciting Material Pursuant to [Section] 240.14a-12

                               Idaho Power Company
                (Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)

                       -----------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement,
                          if other than the Registrant)

         Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
         /x/      No fee required
         -        Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act
                  Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.

                  (1)      Title of each class of securities to which
                           transaction applies:
                           -------------------------
                  (2)      Aggregate number of securities to which
                           transaction applies:
                           -------------------------
                  (3)      Per unit price or other underlying value of
                           transaction computed pursuant to Exchange Act Rule
                           0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee
                           is calculated and state how it was determined):
                           -------------------------
                  (4)      Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
                           -------------------------
                  (5)      Total fee paid:
                           -------------------------
         -        Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.

         -        Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided
                  by Exchange Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing
                  for which the offsetting fee was paid previously.
                  Identify the previous filing by registration statement

                                       1




                  number, or the Form or Schedule and the date of its
                  filing.

                  (1)      Amount Previously Paid:
                           -------------------------
                  (2)      Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
                           -------------------------
                  (3)      Filing Party:
                           -------------------------
                  (4)      Date Filed:
                           -------------------------


                                       2




                 NOTICE OF JOINT ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
                          May 17, 2001, AT BOISE, IDAHO

                                                                   April 6, 2001

TO THE SHAREHOLDERS OF IDACORP, INC.  AND IDAHO POWER COMPANY:

Notice is hereby given that the Joint Annual Meeting of Shareholders of IDACORP,
Inc. ("IDACORP") and Idaho Power Company ("Idaho Power") will be held on May 17,
2001 at 10:00 a.m. local time at the Idaho Power  Corporate  Headquarters,  1221
West Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho, for the following purposes:

1.   to elect three Directors of IDACORP and Idaho Power for a three year term;

2.   to  amend  certain   Articles  of  Idaho  Power's   Restated   Articles  of
     Incorporation  to eliminate the mandatory  retirement age for Directors and
     to conform with the amended Bylaws of Idaho Power (Idaho Power shareholders
     only);

3.   to amend the IDACORP 2000  Long-Term  Incentive  and  Compensation  Plan to
     approve the authorization of additional shares subject to the Plan (IDACORP
     shareholders only);

4.   to amend the IDACORP 2000  Long-Term  Incentive  and  Compensation  Plan to
     increase Section 162(m) limits (IDACORP shareholders only);

5.   to ratify the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as independent auditor for
     IDACORP and Idaho Power for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2001; and

6.   to transact  such other  business that may properly come before the meeting
     and any adjournment or adjournments thereof.

All  shareholders  of  record  at the close of  business  on March 29,  2001 are
entitled to notice of the meeting.  Common shareholders of record of IDACORP and
Idaho  Power and  holders of Idaho Power 4%  Preferred  Stock and 7.68%  Series,
Serial Preferred Stock at the close of business on March 29,  2001, are entitled
to vote at the meeting.

All  shareholders  are cordially  invited to attend the Joint Annual  Meeting in
person. WHETHER OR NOT YOU PLAN TO ATTEND, PLEASE RETURN YOUR PROXY PROMPTLY. It
is important that your shares be represented at the meeting.  Please mark, sign,
date and return the accompanying proxy, regardless of the size of your holdings,
as promptly as possible.  A self-addressed  postage prepaid envelope is enclosed
for you to return the proxy  card.  Any  shareholder  returning a proxy card who
attends the meeting may vote in person by revoking that proxy prior to or at the
meeting.

                                     By Order of the Boards of Directors
                                     Robert W. Stahman
                                     Corporate Secretary


                                        1



     TO  SHAREHOLDERS  WHO RECEIVE  MULTIPLE  PROXIES IF YOU OWN IDACORP  COMMON
STOCK OR IDAHO POWER PREFERRED STOCK OTHER THAN THE SHARES SHOWN ON THE ENCLOSED
PROXY,  YOU WILL RECEIVE A PROXY IN A SEPARATE  ENVELOPE FOR EACH SUCH  HOLDING.
PLEASE EXECUTE AND RETURN EACH PROXY RECEIVED.

                                        2



                              JOINT PROXY STATEMENT
                                  IDACORP, Inc.
                               Idaho Power Company
                             1221 West Idaho Street
                                  P. O. Box 70
                             Boise, Idaho 83707-0070


INTRODUCTION

As a result of the holding company  formation on October 1, 1998,  IDACORP holds
100% of the issued and  outstanding  shares of common  stock of Idaho  Power and
approximately  92% of the total  voting power of Idaho  Power.  The  outstanding
shares of Idaho Power's  preferred  stock were unchanged by the holding  company
formation and continue to be  outstanding  shares.  Holders of voting  preferred
stock of Idaho Power hold  approximately  8% of Idaho Power's total  outstanding
voting power.

GENERAL INFORMATION

This Joint Proxy Statement and the accompanying form of proxy will first be sent
to shareholders  on or about April 6, 2001 and are provided to the  shareholders
of IDACORP and Idaho Power in  connection  with the  solicitation  of proxies on
behalf of the Boards of  Directors  of IDACORP  and Idaho Power for use at their
Joint Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders  and any  adjournments  or  postponements
thereof.  The Joint Annual  Meeting is scheduled to be held on May 17, 2001,  at
10:00 a.m.,  local time, at the Idaho Power  Corporate  Headquarters,  1221 West
Idaho Street, Boise, Idaho.

COST AND METHOD OF SOLICITATION

The cost of soliciting proxies will be paid by IDACORP and Idaho Power. In order
to be assured that a quorum of  outstanding  shares will be  represented  at the
meeting,  proxies may be solicited by officers and regular  employees of IDACORP
or Idaho Power,  personally  or by  telephone,  telegraph,  fax or mail or other
electronic means, without extra compensation.  In addition,  the solicitation of
proxies from brokers,  banks, nominees and institutional  investors will be made
by Corporate Investor  Communications,  Inc., at a cost of approximately  $4,000
plus  out-of-pocket  expenses.  IDACORP  and Idaho Power will  reimburse  banks,
brokerage  firms  and  other  custodians,  nominees  and  fiduciaries  for their
expenses in sending proxy materials to beneficial owners.


                                        1


MATTERS TO BE VOTED UPON

As of April 6, 2001,  the only known  business to be presented at the 2001 Joint
Annual Meeting of shareholders is as follows:  Shareholders of IDACORP will vote
on (1) the  election of three  Directors  of IDACORP,  (2) the  amendment of the
IDACORP 2000 Long-Term  Incentive and Compensation Plan to authorize  additional
shares  subject to the Plan;  (3) the  amendment of the IDACORP  2000  Long-Term
Incentive and Compensation  Plan to increase Section 162(m) limits;  and (4) the
ratification of the appointment of Deloitte & Touche LLP as independent auditors
of IDACORP.  Shareholders  of Idaho Power will vote on (1) the election of three
Directors of Idaho Power, (2) the amendment of Idaho Power's  Restated  Articles
of  Incorporation;  and (3) the  ratification  of the  appointment of Deloitte &
Touche LLP as independent auditors of Idaho Power. See "Other Business."

RECORD DATE

The  Boards  of  Directors  have  fixed  March  29,  2001,  as the  date for the
determination  of  shareholders of IDACORP and Idaho Power entitled to notice of
and to vote at the meeting. Only shareholders of record at the close of business
on March 29, 2001 will be entitled to vote at the meeting.

VOTING SECURITIES

The  outstanding  voting  securities  of IDACORP  as of the record  date for the
meeting are [___________] shares of common stock, no par value, each share being
entitled to one vote.

The outstanding  voting  securities of Idaho Power as of the record date for the
meeting are as follows: 37,612,351 shares of common stock, $2.50 par value, held
by IDACORP,  each share  being  entitled  to one vote;  __________  shares of 4%
Preferred Stock,  $100 par value, each share being entitled to twenty votes; and
150,000 shares of 7.68% Series,  Serial  Preferred Stock,  $100 par value,  each
share being  entitled to one vote.  The  aggregate  voting power of  outstanding
voting securities for Idaho Power is _____________ votes.

VOTING

Under the Idaho Business Corporation Act, a majority of the votes entitled to be
cast on a matter by a voting group constitutes a quorum of that voting group for
action  on that  matter.  Assuming  a quorum of each  company  is  present,  the
following  votes are required for approval of each  proposal at the Joint Annual
Meeting:

     (i)  Proposal  No. 1 - directors  of IDACORP and Idaho Power are elected by
the affirmative  vote of a plurality of the votes cast by the shares entitled to
vote in the election of directors for that  company.  Votes may be cast in favor
or withheld; votes that are withheld will have no effect on the results.

     (ii) Proposal No. 2 - the amendment of Idaho Power's  Restated  Articles of
Incorporation by Idaho Power shareholders is approved if the votes cast in favor
of the amendment exceed the votes cast opposing the amendment.  The voting group
consists of (i) the outstanding  common shares of Idaho Power,  all of which are
held by  IDACORP  and will be voted  for the  amendments  and  which  constitute
approximately  92% of the  shares  entitled  to vote at the  meeting,  (ii)  the
outstanding shares of 4% Preferred Stock, and (iii)

                                        2


the outstanding  shares of the 7.68% Series,  Serial Preferred Stock, all voting
as one group.  Abstentions and broker non-votes,  if any, will have no effect on
the results.

     (iii)  Proposal  No.  3 - the  amendment  of  the  IDACORP  2000  Long-Term
Incentive and Compensation  Plan to authorize  additional  shares subject to the
Plan by IDACORP shareholders, for New York Stock Exchange purposes, requires the
affirmative  vote of a majority of the IDACORP  votes  cast,  provided  that the
total votes cast represent  over 50% in interest of all  securities  entitled to
vote on the amendment.  Under the laws of the State of Idaho, the Plan amendment
is  approved if the votes cast in favor of the  amendment  exceed the votes cast
opposing the amendment.  Abstentions and broker non-votes,  if any, will have no
effect on the results,  provided that the total votes cast represent over 50% in
interest of all securities entitled to vote on the amendment.

     (iv) Proposal No. 4 - the amendment of the IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive
and Compensation Plan to increase Section 162(m) limits by IDACORP shareholders,
for Internal Revenue Code purposes,  requires the affirmative vote of a majority
of the  IDACORP  votes  cast.  Under the laws of the  State of  Idaho,  the Plan
amendment  is  approved if the votes cast in favor of the  amendment  exceed the
votes cast opposing the amendment.  Abstentions  and broker  non-votes,  if any,
will have no effect on the result.

     (v) Proposal No. 5 - the  ratification  of the selection of an  independent
auditor for IDACORP and Idaho Power is approved  where the votes cast within the
voting  group in favor  exceed the votes  cast  opposing  ratification  for that
company.

If no direction is given by a  shareholder,  proxies  received will be voted FOR
Proposal No. 1, election of  management's  nominees for Directors,  FOR Proposal
No. 2, amendment of the Idaho Power Restated  Articles of  Incorporation  (Idaho
Power  shareholders  only),  FOR Proposal  No. 3,  amendment of the IDACORP 2000
Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan to authorize additional shares subject
to the Plan (IDACORP  shareholders  only),  FOR Proposal No. 4, amendment of the
IDACORP 2000  Long-Term  Incentive  and  Compensation  Plan to increase  Section
162(m) limits (IDACORP  shareholders only); and FOR Proposal No. 5, ratification
of the selection of Deloitte & Touche LLP as independent  auditor for the fiscal
year 2001.

A proxy  may be  revoked  at any time  before  it is voted at the  meeting.  Any
shareholder  who attends the meeting and wishes to vote in person may revoke his
or her proxy by oral notice at that time. Otherwise,  revocation of a proxy must
be mailed to the  Secretary of IDACORP or Idaho Power at 1221 West Idaho Street,
Boise, Idaho 83702-5627, and received prior to the meeting.

SECRET BALLOT

It is the policy of IDACORP and Idaho Power that all proxy cards and ballots for
the Joint Annual Meeting that identify shareholders, including employees, are to
be kept secret,  and no such  document  shall be available for  examination  nor
shall the identity and vote of any  shareholder be disclosed to IDACORP or Idaho
Power  representatives  or to any third party.  Proxy cards shall be returned in
envelopes  addressed to the  independent  tabulator who  receives,  inspects and
tabulates the proxies.  Individual voted proxies and ballots are not seen by nor
reported to IDACORP or Idaho Power except (i) as  necessary  to meet  applicable
legal requirements, (ii) to allow the independent election inspectors to certify
the results of the shareholder vote, (iii) in the event

                                        3


of a matter of significance where there is a proxy solicitation in opposition to
the Board of Directors,  based upon an opposition proxy statement filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission,  or (iv) to respond to shareholders who have
written comments on their proxies.

                            1. ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

IDACORP's  and Idaho  Power's  Boards of  Directors  each consist of the same 10
members.  IDACORP's  Articles of  Incorporation,  as amended,  and Idaho Power's
Restated  Articles of  Incorporation,  as amended,  provide  that  Directors  be
elected  for  three-year  terms  with  approximately  one-third  of the Board of
Directors  to be  elected at each  annual  meeting  of  shareholders.  The three
Directors  standing  for  election  for the IDACORP  and Idaho  Power  Boards of
Directors at the 2001 Joint Annual Meeting are identified  below as nominees for
election  with  terms to expire in the year 2004.  All  nominees  are  currently
Directors  of IDACORP and Idaho Power.  Robert  Bolinder has reached age 70, the
mandatory retirement age under the Idaho Power charter, and is retiring from the
Board.  Mr.  Bolinder  has served as director  since 1980.  The Board thanks Mr.
Bolinder for his 21 years of distinguished service to IDACORP and Idaho Power.

Unless  otherwise  instructed,  proxies  received  will be voted in favor of the
election of the Director  nominees of the appropriate  company.  While it is not
expected  that any of the  nominees  will be  unable  to  qualify  for or accept
office, if for any reason one or more shall be unable to do so, the proxies will
be voted for nominees selected by the appropriate Board of Directors.

EACH BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY  RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR" ITS NOMINEES LISTED
BELOW.

                                        4


                             IDACORP AND IDAHO POWER
                              NOMINEES FOR ELECTION
                                TERMS EXPIRE 2004



ROTCHFORD L. BARKER

Director,  American Ecology Corporation (since 1996), Member and former director
Chicago Board of Trade; director of Idaho Power and IDACORP since 1999.
Age 64

JON H. MILLER

Chairman of the Board of IDACORP and Idaho Power since 1999;  Private  Investor;
formerly  President  and Chief  Operating  Officer  (1978-1990)  and a  director
(1977-1990)  of Boise Cascade  Corporation;  director of Fibermark  Corporation;
director  of  Ida-West  Energy  Company;  director of Idaho Power since 1988 and
IDACORP since 1998.
Age 63


ROBERT A. TINSTMAN

Former   President  and  Chief  Executive   Officer   (1995-1999)  and  director
(1995-1999) of Morrison Knudsen Corporation;  director of Home Federal Savings &
Loan; Chairman of  Contractorhub.com;  director of IDACORP  Technologies,  Inc.;
director of Idaho Power and IDACORP since 1999.
Age 54


                             IDACORP AND IDAHO POWER
                              CONTINUING DIRECTORS
                                TERMS EXPIRE 2003


PETER T. JOHNSON

Private Investor;  former  Administrator of the Bonneville Power  Administration
(1981-1986);  director of Standard Insurance  Company;  director and Chairman of
the Board of  Ida-West  Energy  Company;  director of Idaho Power since 1993 and
IDACORP since 1998.
Age 69

                                        5


PETER S. O'NEILL

President, O'Neill Enterprises Inc. (since 1990); director of Building Materials
Holding Corporation;  director of IDACORP Financial Services,  Inc.; director of
Idaho Power since 1995 and IDACORP since 1998.
Age 64


JAN B. PACKWOOD

President and Chief  Executive  Officer of Idaho Power and IDACORP (since 1999);
formerly  President and Chief  Operating  Officer  (1997-1999);  Executive  Vice
President  (1996-1997)  and Vice  President  - Bulk Power  (1989-1996)  of Idaho
Power;  director and President of Idaho Energy  Resources  Company;  director of
IDACORP Financial Services, Inc.; director of Ida-West Energy Company;  director
of IDACORP Services Co.; director of IDACORP Technologies, Inc; director of RMC,
Inc.; director of Idaho Power since 1997 and IDACORP since 1998.
Age 58

                             IDACORP AND IDAHO POWER
                              CONTINUING DIRECTORS
                                TERMS EXPIRE 2002


ROGER L. BREEZLEY

Private  Investor;  formerly  a  director  (1983-1995),  Chairman  of the  Board
(1987-1994) and Chief Executive Officer  (1987-1993) of U.S. Bancorp;  President
and director of IDACORP  Technologies,  Inc.; director of Idaho Power since 1993
and IDACORP since 1998.
Age 63


JOHN B. CARLEY

Former  director  of  Albertson's,  Inc;  formerly  Chairman  of  the  Executive
Committee of the Board of Directors  (1998-  1999),  President  (1984-1996)  and
Chief Operating  Officer  (1990-1996) of Albertson's,  Inc.;  former director of
Boise Cascade  Office  Products  Co.;  director of IDACORP  Technologies,  Inc.;
director of Idaho Power since 1990 and IDACORP since 1998.
Age 67


JACK K. LEMLEY

Director of Lemley & Associates, Inc. (since 1987), director and Chairman of the
Board and Chief  Executive  Officer of  American  Ecology  Corp.  (Since  1995);
director of IDACORP  Technologies,  Inc.; director of Idaho Power since 1995 and
IDACORP since 1998.
Age 66

                                        6



EVELYN LOVELESS

Chief Executive Officer (since 1992) and a director of Global, Inc.; director of
Farmers & Merchants  Bank  (since  1999);  formerly  President  of Global,  Inc.
(1989-1992); director of Idaho Power since 1987 and IDACORP since 1998.
Age 67


                                        7


                      MEETINGS OF THE BOARDS AND COMMITTEES


The IDACORP and Idaho Power Board of Directors  held seven meetings in 2000. The
average attendance during 2000 at all meetings of the Boards and all meetings of
the committees of the Boards was 97 percent.

The  Committees of each of IDACORP and Idaho Power are the Executive  Committee,
the Audit Committee,  the Compensation  Committee and the Investment  Committee.
The members of the  Committees  are the same  individuals  for both  IDACORP and
Idaho Power. In 2000,  IDACORP had one committee which Idaho Power does not have
- - the Committee of Outside Directors. Board committees,  their membership during
2000 and a brief  statement of their  principal  responsibilities  are presented
below.

Executive Committee
The Executive Committees act on behalf of the Boards of Directors of IDACORP and
Idaho  Power,  as  applicable,  when the  respective  Boards are not in session,
except on those matters which require action of the full Boards.  Members of the
Committee are Jan B. Packwood  (Chairman),  Robert D. Bolinder,  John B. Carley,
Jack K. Lemley and Jon H. Miller.  During 2000, the Executive  Committee met one
time.

Audit Committee
The Audit  Committees  of IDACORP and Idaho Power assist the Boards of Directors
in fulfilling oversight  responsibilities by reviewing the financial information
which will be provided to the shareholders  and others,  the systems of internal
controls which management and the Boards have established, the audit process and
services provided by the independent  auditors,  the plans and activities of the
Internal  Audit  Department  and the  conducting of business  under the Business
Conduct Guide. Members of the Committee are Jack K. Lemley (Chairman), Rotchford
L. Barker, Robert D. Bolinder and Peter T. Johnson. During 2000, the IDACORP and
Idaho Power Audit Committee met four times.

Compensation Committee
The  Compensation  Committees  of IDACORP and Idaho  Power  assist the Boards of
Directors in discharging duties and responsibilities regarding management of the
total  compensation  philosophy,  total  compensation  programs for  executives,
senior managers and employees, and all other compensation-related  matters which
properly  come  before the Boards of  Directors.  Members of the  Committee  are
John B.  Carley  (Chairman),  Peter T.  Johnson,  Evelyn  Loveless  and Peter S.
O'Neill.  During 2000,  the IDACORP and Idaho Power  Compensation  Committee met
five times.

Investment Committee
The  Investment  Committees  of  IDACORP  and Idaho  Power  assist the Boards of
Directors  in  fulfilling   oversight   responsibilities   to  participants  and
beneficiaries  under the Retirement  Plan and to  shareholders by reviewing Plan
design,   formulating  investment   philosophies  and  establishing   investment
policies,   establishing  performance  measurement  objectives  and  benchmarks,
monitoring  the  performance  of  investment  managers,  trustees,   independent
consultants and consulting actuaries to the Plan, reviewing  sufficiency of Plan
assets to cover  liabilities  and reviewing  compliance with all applicable laws
and regulations  pertaining to the Plan.  Members of the Committee are Robert D.
Bolinder  (Chairman),  Roger L.  Breezley,  Jon H. Miller,  Jan B.  Packwood and
Robert  A.  Tinstman.  During  2000,  the  IDACORP  and Idaho  Power  Investment
Committee met two times.

                                        8


Committee of Outside Directors

In September  1998,  the IDACORP Board formed a Committee of Outside  Directors.
The primary  function of the  Committee  of Outside  Directors  is to review and
evaluate  the  performance  of the  Chief  Executive  Officer  and to  establish
individual and corporate  goals and strategies  relating to the Chief  Executive
Officer.   It  also  acts  as  a   nominating   committee  to  review  and  make
recommendations to the Board of Directors for Director  candidates to fill Board
vacancies and considers shareholder nominees for the Board of Directors for whom
timely  written  resumes are received no earlier than 90 days, and no later than
60 days,  prior to the annual meeting.  Members of the Committee are all members
of the IDACORP  Board of  Directors  who are not officers or employees or former
officers of IDACORP or one of its  subsidiaries.  Members of the  Committee  are
Rotchford L. Barker,  Robert D.  Bolinder,  Roger L.  Breezley,  John B. Carley,
Peter T.  Johnson,  Jack K. Lemley,  Evelyn  Loveless,  Jon H. Miller,  Peter S.
O'Neill and Robert A. Tinstman.  During 2000, the Committee of Outside Directors
met six times.



                                        9


                          TRANSACTIONS WITH MANAGEMENT

See Compensation  Committee Interlocks and Insider  Participation for additional
information regarding Mr. O'Neill.


                           2. AMENDMENT OF IDAHO POWER
                       RESTATED ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION

     The Board of Directors of Idaho Power Company  unanimously  recommends that
the  shareholders  of Idaho Power Company  approve an amendment to the Company's
Restated Articles of Incorporation,  as amended (the "Charter") to eliminate the
mandatory  retirement  age for  directors.  The Board of  Directors  unanimously
approved  the Charter  amendment  at its meeting on March 15,  2001,  subject to
approval by the shareholders.

     The Charter amendment is as follows (additions are underlined and deletions
are in brackets):

          ARTICLE 4.  DIRECTORS.  (a) The number of directors  constituting  the
     Board of  Directors  of the  Corporation  shall be fixed  from time to time
     exclusively by the Board of Directors  pursuant to a resolution  adopted by
     affirmative  vote  of a  majority  of the  directors,  but  the  number  of
     directors  shall be no less than 9 and no  greater  than 15.  The number of
     directors may be increased or decreased, beyond the limits set forth above,
     only by an  amendment  to the  Restated  Articles of  Incorporation  of the
     Corporation   pursuant   to  Article  10  of  the   Restated   Articles  of
     Incorporation of the Corporation.

          The Board of Directors  shall be divided into three  classes as nearly
     equal in number as may be. The initial  term of office of each  director in
     the first class shall expire at the annual meeting of shareholders in 1990;
     the  initial  term of office of each  director  in the second  class  shall
     expire at the annual meeting of  shareholders in 1991; and the initial term
     of office of each  director in the third  class shall  expire at the annual
     meeting of shareholders in 1992. At each annual election  commencing at the
     annual  meeting of  shareholders  in 1990,  the  successors to the class of
     directors  whose term  expires at that time shall be elected to hold office
     for a term of three years to succeed those whose term expires,  so that the
     term of one class of directors  shall expire each year. Each director shall
     hold office for the term for which he is elected or  appointed or until his
     successor  shall be elected and  qualified or until his death,  or until he
     shall resign or be removed [;provided,  however, that no person who will be
     seventy (70) years of age or more on or before the annual  meeting shall be
     nominated to the Board of Directors, and any directors who reach the age of
     seventy (70) shall be automatically retired from the Board].

          In the event of any increase or decrease in the  authorized  number of
     directors,  (i) each  director  then  serving  as such  shall  nevertheless
     continue  as a  director  of the  class of which he is a member  until  the
     expiration of his current term,  or his earlier  resignation,  removal from
     office  or  death,  (ii) the  newly  created  or  eliminated  directorships
     resulting from such increase and decrease

                                        10


     shall be apportioned  by the Board of Directors  among the three classes of
     directors  so as to maintain  such classes as nearly equal in number as may
     be.

The remaining sections of Article 4 are unchanged.

Reasons for the Amendment

     The amendment to Article 4(a)  eliminates the mandatory  retirement age for
directors from the Charter and conforms the Charter to the IDACORP charter.  The
Idaho  Power  bylaws,  however,  which may be amended by the board of  directors
without a shareholder vote, retain this requirement.  Eliminating this provision
from the  Charter  will allow the Board in the future to keep a director  on the
Board who has reached age 70 simply by amending the bylaws.

             THE IDAHO POWER COMPANY BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY
       RECOMMENDS THAT IDAHO POWER SHAREHOLDERS VOTE "FOR" THIS PROPOSAL.

     Under the laws of the State of Idaho, the Charter  amendment is approved if
the votes cast in favor of the  amendment  exceed the votes  cast  opposing  the
amendment.  The voting group  consists of (i) the  outstanding  common shares of
Idaho  Power,  all of which  are  held by  IDACORP  and  will be  voted  for the
amendments and which constitute approximately 92% of the shares entitled to vote
at the meeting,  (ii) the outstanding shares of 4% Preferred Stock and (iii) the
outstanding  shares of the 7.68% Series,  Serial  Preferred Stock, all voting as
one group. An abstention or broker non-vote,  if any, will have no effect on the
results.  If a choice has been specified by a shareholder by means of the proxy,
the shares of stock will be vote  accordingly.  If no choice has been specified,
the shares will be voted "FOR" the proposal.


                           3. AMENDMENT OF THE IDACORP
                            2000 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE
                              AND COMPENSATION PLAN
                TO INCREASE NUMBER OF SHARES SUBJECT TO THE PLAN

     The IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan (the "Plan") was
approved by the shareholders at the 2000 Annual Meeting.

     The IDACORP Board of Directors  approved a 1,300,000 increase in the number
of shares  subject  to the Plan at the  January  18,  2001  meeting,  subject to
shareholder approval at the 2001 Annual Meeting.

     The  complete  text of the Plan is set forth as  Exhibit  "A"  hereto.  The
following is a summary of the material  features of the Plan and is qualified in
its entirety by reference to Exhibit "A".

                                        11



Purpose of the Plan

     The  purpose of the Plan is to promote the success and enhance the value of
IDACORP by linking  the  personal  interests  of  officers,  key  employees  and
directors to those of IDACORP's shareholders and customers.  The Plan is further
intended to assist  IDACORP in its ability to  motivate,  attract and retain the
services of participants  upon whose  judgment,  interest and special effort the
successful conduct of its operations is largely dependent.

Effective Date and Duration

     The Plan became  effective upon approval by shareholders at the 2000 Annual
Meeting,  and  shall  remain  in  effect,  subject  to the right of the Board of
Directors to  terminate  the Plan at any time,  until all shares  subject to the
Plan shall have been purchased or acquired.

Amendments

     The Board may, at any time and from time to time, alter, amend,  suspend or
terminate  the Plan in whole or in part,  subject  to  certain  restrictions  as
stated in the Plan.

Administration of the Plan

     The  Plan is  administered  by the  Compensation  Committee  or such  other
committee as the Board of Directors  shall  select  consisting  solely of two or
more members of the Board of Directors (the "Committee"). The Committee has full
power under the Plan to determine persons to receive awards,  the type of awards
and the terms thereof.  The Committee may amend outstanding  awards,  subject to
certain restrictions as stated in the Plan.

Shares Subject to the Plan

     Subject  to  approval  by  the  shareholders  at  this  meeting,  the  Plan
authorizes the grant of up to 2,050,000  shares of IDACORP,  Inc.  common stock.
Shares  underlying  awards that lapse or are forfeited or are not paid in shares
may be reused for  subsequent  awards.  Shares may be  authorized  but  unissued
shares of common stock,  treasury stock or shares  purchased on the open market.
The market  value of a share of IDACORP  common stock as of January 31, 2001 was
$41.19.

     If any  corporate  transaction  occurs  that  causes a change in the common
stock or  corporate  structure  of  IDACORP  affecting  the  common  stock,  the
Committee  shall make such  adjustments  to the number and/or class of shares of
stock that may be delivered under the Plan and the number and class and/or price
of shares of common stock  subject to  outstanding  awards under the Plan, as it
deems   appropriate  and  equitable  to  prevent   dilution  or  enlargement  of
participants'  rights. The Committee may not amend an outstanding option for the
sole purpose of reducing the exercise price thereof.

Eligibility and Participation

     Persons eligible to participate in the Plan include all officers, directors
and  key  employees  of  IDACORP  and its  subsidiaries,  as  determined  by the
Committee.  The  approximate  number of persons  who are  currently  eligible to
participate under the Plan is 40, which includes 9 non-employee directors.

                                        12


Grants Under the Plan

     Section 162(m). Stock options, SARs and performance  unit/performance share
awards are intended to qualify for  deductibility  under  Section  162(m) of the
Internal  Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code").  Dividend  equivalents,
restricted  stock,  restricted  stock  units and other  awards may  qualify  for
deductibility.

     Subject to approval by the  shareholders  at the 2001 Annual  Meeting,  the
total number of shares with  respect to which  options or SARs may be granted in
any calendar year to any covered employee under Section 162(m) of the Code shall
not exceed 250,000 shares;  (ii) the total number of shares of restricted  stock
or restricted stock units that are intended to qualify for deduction that may be
granted in any calendar year to any covered  employee  shall not exceed  250,000
shares or units,  as the case may be;  (iii)  the  total  number of  performance
shares or  performance  units that may be granted  in any  calendar  year to any
covered  employee shall not exceed 250,000 shares or units,  as the case may be;
(iv) the total  number of shares  that are  intended  to qualify  for  deduction
granted  pursuant to Article 10 of the Plan in any calendar  year to any covered
employee  shall not  exceed  250,000  shares;  (v) the total  cash award that is
intended to qualify for deduction that may be paid pursuant to Article 10 of the
Plan in any calendar year to any covered employee shall not exceed $500,000; and
(vi) the aggregate  number of dividend  equivalents that are intended to qualify
for deduction that a covered employee may receive in any calendar year shall not
exceed  1,000,000.  A covered employee means those persons  specified in Section
162(m) of the Code -  generally  the chief  executive  officer and the next four
most highly-compensated employees.

     Stock Options. The Committee may grant incentive stock options ("ISOs") and
nonqualified  stock options  ("NQSOs").  Options shall be  exercisable  for such
prices,  shall  expire  at such  times  and  shall  have  such  other  terms and
conditions  as the Committee may determine at the time of grant and as set forth
in the award agreement. Dividend equivalents may also be granted.

     The option  exercise price is payable in cash, in shares of common stock of
IDACORP  having a fair market  value equal to the  exercise  price,  by cashless
exercise or any combination of the foregoing.

     Stock Appreciation Rights. The Committee may grant SARs with such terms and
conditions  as the Committee may determine at the time of grant and as set forth
in the  award  agreement.  SARs  granted  under  the  Plan may be in the form of
freestanding  SARs or tandem SARs. The base value of a freestanding SAR shall be
equal to the  average  of the high and low  sale  prices  of a share of  IDACORP
common stock on the date of grant. The base value of a tandem SAR shall be equal
to the option exercise price of the related option.

     Freestanding  SARs may be exercised  upon such terms and  conditions as are
imposed by the Committee and as set forth in the SAR award  agreement.  A tandem
SAR may be exercised  only with respect to the shares of common stock of IDACORP
for which its related option is exercisable.

     Upon  exercise  of an SAR, a  participant  will  receive the product of the
excess of the fair market  value of a share of IDACORP  common stock on the date
of exercise over the base value  multiplied by the number of shares with respect
to which the SAR is exercised.  Payment due to the participant upon exercise may
be made in cash,  in shares of IDACORP  common  stock having a fair market value
equal to such cash amount,

                                        13


or in a  combination  of cash and shares,  as determined by the Committee at the
time of grant and as set forth in the award agreement.

     Restricted  Stock  and  Restricted   Stock  Units.   Restricted  stock  and
restricted  stock units may be granted in such amounts and subject to such terms
and  conditions  as  determined by the Committee at the time of grant and as set
forth in the award agreement.  The Committee may establish performance goals, as
described below, for restricted stock and restricted stock units.

     Participants  holding restricted stock may exercise full voting rights with
respect  to those  shares  during  the  restricted  period  and,  subject to the
Committee's  right to  determine  otherwise  at the time of grant,  will receive
regular  cash  dividends.  All  other  distributions  paid with  respect  to the
restricted  stock  shall  be  credited  subject  to  the  same  restrictions  on
transferability  and  forfeitability  as the  shares of  restricted  stock  with
respect to which they were paid.

     Performance Units and Performance Shares. Performance units and performance
shares may be granted in such  amounts and subject to such terms and  conditions
as  determined  by the  Committee at time of grant and as set forth in the award
agreement.  The Committee shall set performance goals,  which,  depending on the
extent to which they are met during the performance  periods  established by the
Committee,  will determine the number and/or value of  performance  units/shares
that will be paid out to participants.

     Participants shall receive payment of the value of performance units/shares
earned  after  the  end  of  the  performance  period.  Payment  of  performance
units/shares  shall be made in cash and/or  shares of common stock which have an
aggregate  fair  market  value  equal  to the  value of the  earned  performance
units/shares  at  the  end  of  the  applicable   performance  period,  in  such
combination as the Committee  determines.  Shares may be granted  subject to any
restrictions deemed appropriate by the Committee.

     Other  Awards.  The  Committee  may make other  awards  which may  include,
without limitation, the grant of shares of common stock based upon attainment of
performance  goals  established by the Committee as described below, the payment
of shares in lieu of cash or cash based on performance  goals and the payment of
shares in lieu of cash under other IDACORP incentive or bonus programs.

     Taxes. Share withholding for taxes is permitted.

     Performance  Goals.   Performance  goals,  which  are  established  by  the
Committee,  shall be based on one or more of the  following  measures:  sales or
revenues,  earnings  per share,  shareholder  return  and/or  value,  funds from
operations,  operating income,  gross income,  net income,  cash flow, return on
equity,  return on capital,  earnings before interest,  operating ratios,  stock
price,   customer   satisfaction,   accomplishment  of  mergers,   acquisitions,
dispositions or similar extraordinary business transactions,  profit returns and
margins,  financial return ratios and/or market  performance.  Performance goals
may be measured  solely on a corporate,  subsidiary or business unit basis, or a
combination  thereof.  Performance goals may reflect absolute entity performance
or a relative  comparison of entity  performance  to the  performance  of a peer
group of entities or other external measure.

                                        14


Termination of Employment or Board Service

     Each award agreement shall set forth the participant's  rights with respect
to each award  following  termination of employment with or service on the Board
of Directors of IDACORP.

Transferability

     Except as otherwise  determined  by the  Committee at the time of grant and
subject to the  provisions  of the Plan,  awards  may not be sold,  transferred,
pledged, assigned or otherwise alienated or hypothecated,  other than by will or
by the laws of descent and  distribution,  and a  participant's  rights shall be
exercisable only by the participant or the  participant's  legal  representative
during his or her lifetime.

Change in Control

     Upon a change in control, as defined below,

     (a)  Any and all  options  and SARs  granted  under the Plan  shall  become
          immediately vested and exercisable;

     (b)  Any restriction periods and restrictions  imposed on restricted stock,
          restricted  stock  units,  qualified  restricted  stock and  qualified
          restricted   stock  units  shall  be  deemed  to  have  expired;   any
          performance  goals  shall be  deemed  to have  been met at the  target
          level;  restricted  stock and qualified  restricted stock shall become
          immediately  vested in full and  restricted  stock units and qualified
          restricted stock units shall be paid out in cash; and

     (c)  The target payout opportunity  attainable under all outstanding awards
          of performance units and performance shares and any other awards shall
          be  deemed  to have  been  fully  earned  for the  entire  performance
          period(s)  as of the  effective  date of the  change in  control.  All
          awards shall become  immediately  vested.  All performance  shares and
          awards  denominated  in shares  shall be paid out in  shares,  and all
          performance units shall be paid out in cash.

     For  purposes  of the  above,  a change in  control  of  IDACORP  means the
earliest of the following  events to occur:  (i) the  acquisition  by a party or
certain  related parties of 20% or more of IDACORP's  outstanding  voting stock;
(ii) the  commencement  of a tender or exchange  offer  which would  result in a
person  owning 30% or more of  IDACORP's  outstanding  voting  stock;  (iii) the
announcement  of a transaction  required to be described under Item 6 (e) of the
proxy  rules;  (iv) a proposed  change in a majority  of the Board of  Directors
within a two-year  period  without the approval of two-thirds of the Board;  (v)
entry into a merger or similar  agreement,  after which  IDACORP's  shareholders
would  hold less than  two-thirds  of the  voting  securities  of the  surviving
entity;  (vi)  Board  approval  of a  plan  of  liquidation  or  sale  of all or
substantially all of IDACORP's  assets;  and (vii) any other event deemed by the
Executive Committee to be a change in control.

                                        16


Award Information

   Option Grants Under IDACORP 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation Plan




                                           Number of Securities
                                            Underlying Options            Exercise Price Per Share
Name & Position                                   Granted                             $                  Expiration Date
                                                                                                

Jan B. Packwood                                   100,000                         $35.8125               July 18, 2010
President & CEO
J. LaMont Keen                                    40,000                          $35.8125               July 18, 2010
Senior Vice President -
Administration and CFO
James C. Miller                                   40,000                          $35.8125               July 18, 2010
Senior Vice President -
Delivery
Richard Riazzi                                    40,000                          $35.8125               July 18, 2010
Senior Vice President -
Generation & Marketing
All current executive                             220,000                         $35.8125               July 18, 2010
officers as a group
All current directors who                            -                                -                            -
are not executive officers as
a group
Each nominee for election                            -                                -                            -
as a director
Each associate of such                               -                                -                            -
persons
Each other person who                                -                                -                            -
receives 5% of such options
All employees, including all                         -                                -                            -
current officers who are not
executive officers, as a
group



                                        16



Stock  options were  granted on July 19, 2000 to 4  employees.  The options vest
ratably (20% per year) over five years, have a 10-year term and have an exercise
price of  $35.8125,  the fair  market  value on the date of grant.  The  options
accelerate  upon a change  in  control.  Unvested  options  are  forfeited  upon
termination of employment. Vested options are exercisable at any time before the
earlier of the  expiration  date of the options and three months  following  the
termination of employment.


It is not possible to determine  awards that will be made in the future pursuant
to the Plan.

Federal Income Tax Consequences

     The  following  is a brief  summary  of the  principal  federal  income tax
consequences related to options awarded under the Plan. This summary is based on
IDACORP's  understanding of present federal income tax law and regulations.  The
summary  does not  purport  to be  complete  or  applicable  to  every  specific
situation.

     Capitalized terms not defined herein,  which are defined in the Plan, shall
have the meanings set forth in the Plan.

     Consequences to the Optionholder

     Grant.  There are no federal income tax  consequences  to the  optionholder
solely by reason of the grant of ISOs or NQSOs under the Plan.

     Exercise. The exercise of an ISO is not a taxable event for regular federal
income tax  purposes  if  certain  requirements  are  satisfied,  including  the
requirement that the optionholder  generally must exercise the ISO no later than
three months  following the  termination of the  optionholder's  employment with
IDACORP.  However,  such  exercise  may give  rise to  alternative  minimum  tax
liability (see "Alternative Minimum Tax" below).

     Upon the exercise of a NQSO,  the  optionholder  will  generally  recognize
ordinary income in an amount equal to the excess of the fair market value of the
shares of IDACORP  Common  Stock at the time of  exercise  over the amount  paid
therefor  by the  optionholder  as  the  exercise  price.  The  ordinary  income
recognized in connection  with the exercise by an optionholder of a NQSO will be
subject to both wage and employment tax withholding.

     The  optionholder's  tax  basis  in the  shares  acquired  pursuant  to the
exercise of an option will be the amount paid upon exercise plus, in the case of
a NQSO, the amount of ordinary  income,  if any,  recognized by the optionholder
upon exercise thereof.

                                        17


     Qualifying  Disposition.  If an optionholder  disposes of shares of IDACORP
common stock acquired upon exercise of an ISO in a taxable transaction, and such
disposition  occurs  more than two years  from the date on which the  option was
granted  and more  than one  year  after  the  date on  which  the  shares  were
transferred  to the  optionholder  pursuant  to the  exercise  of the  ISO,  the
optionholder  will  recognize  long-term  capital  gain  or  loss  equal  to the
difference   between  the  amount   realized  upon  such   disposition  and  the
optionholder's  adjusted  basis in such shares  (generally  the option  exercise
price).

     Disqualifying  Disposition.  If the  optionholder  disposes  of  shares  of
IDACORP common stock acquired upon the exercise of an ISO (other than in certain
tax-free  transactions)  within  two  years  from the date on which  the ISO was
granted  or within  one year after the  transfer  of shares to the  optionholder
pursuant to the exercise of the ISO, at the time of disposition the optionholder
will generally  recognize  ordinary income equal to the lesser of (i) the excess
of each such share's fair market value on the date of exercise over the exercise
price paid by the optionholder or (ii) the optionholder's actual gain (i.e., the
excess,  if any, of the amount  realized on the  disposition  over the  exercise
price  paid by the  optionholder).  If the total  amount  realized  on a taxable
disposition  (including  return of capital  and capital  gain)  exceeds the fair
market  value on the date of  exercise  of the  shares of IDACORP  common  stock
purchased by the optionholder  under the option, the optionholder will recognize
a capital gain in the amount of such excess.  If the optionholder  incurs a loss
on the disposition (i.e., if the total amount realized is less than the exercise
price paid by the optionholder), the loss will be a capital loss.

     Other Disposition.  If an optionholder disposes of shares of IDACORP common
stock  acquired  upon  exercise  of  a  NQSO  in  a  taxable  transaction,   the
optionholder  will  recognize  capital  gain or loss in an  amount  equal to the
difference between the  optionholder's  basis (as discussed above) in the shares
sold and the total amount  realized upon  disposition.  Any such capital gain or
loss (and any capital gain or loss recognized on a disqualifying  disposition of
shares of IDACORP  common  stock  acquired  upon  exercise of ISOs as  discussed
above)  will be  short-term  or  long-term  depending  on whether  the shares of
IDACORP  common stock were held for more than one year from the date such shares
were transferred to the optionholder.

     Alternative Minimum Tax.  Alternative minimum tax ("AMT") is payable if and
to the extent the amount thereof  exceeds the amount of the  taxpayer's  regular
tax liability, and any AMT paid generally may be credited against future regular
tax liability (but not future AMT liability). AMT applies to alternative minimum
taxable income; generally regular taxable income as adjusted for tax preferences
and other items is treated differently under the AMT.

     For AMT purposes,  the spread upon exercise of an ISO (but not a NQSO) will
be included in alternative minimum taxable income, and the taxpayer will receive
a tax basis equal to the fair market value of the shares of IDACORP common stock
at such time for subsequent AMT purposes.  However, if the optionholder disposes
of the ISO shares in the year of exercise, the AMT income cannot exceed the gain
recognized for regular tax purposes, provided that the disposition meets certain
third-party  requirements for limiting the gain on a disqualifying  disposition.
If  there  is a  disqualifying  disposition  in a year  other  than  the year of
exercise,  the  income  on  the  disqualifying  disposition  is  not  considered
alternative minimum taxable income.


                                        18


     Consequences to IDACORP

     There are no federal  income tax  consequences  to IDACORP by reason of the
grant of ISOs or NQSOs  or the  exercise  of an ISO  (other  than  disqualifying
dispositions).

     At the time the optionholder  recognizes  ordinary income from the exercise
of a NQSO,  IDACORP  will be entitled to a federal  income tax  deduction in the
amount of the ordinary income so recognized (as described above),  provided that
IDACORP satisfies its reporting  obligations  described below. To the extent the
optionholder recognizes ordinary income by reason of a disqualifying disposition
of the stock  acquired  upon  exercise of an ISO,  IDACORP will be entitled to a
corresponding deduction in the year in which the disposition occurs.

     IDACORP  will be required  to report to the  Internal  Revenue  Service any
ordinary  income  recognized by any  optionholder by reason of the exercise of a
NQSO.  IDACORP will be required to withhold income and employment taxes (and pay
the  employer's  share of  employment  taxes) with  respect to  ordinary  income
recognized by the optionholder upon the exercise of NQSOs.

     Other Tax Consequences

     The  foregoing  discussion  is not a complete  description  of the  federal
income  tax  aspects  of options  to be  granted  under the Plan.  In  addition,
administrative  and judicial  interpretations  of the application of the federal
income tax laws are subject to change.  Furthermore,  the  foregoing  discussion
does not address state or local tax consequences.

     THE  IDACORP  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  UNANIMOUSLY   RECOMMENDS  THAT  IDACORP
SHAREHOLDERS  VOTE "FOR" THIS  PROPOSAL.  Approval of the Plan amendment for New
York Stock Exchange  purposes requires the affirmative vote of a majority of the
votes cast, provided that the total votes cast represent over 50% in interest of
all securities entitled to vote on the amendment. Under the laws of the State of
Idaho,  the  Plan  amendment  is  approved  if the  votes  cast in  favor of the
amendment  exceed the votes cast opposing the amendment.  Abstentions and broker
non-votes,  if any, will have no effect on the results,  provided that the total
votes cast represent over 50% in interest of all securities  entitled to vote on
the  amendment.  If a choice has been specified by a shareholder by means of the
proxy,  the shares of common stock will be voted  accordingly.  If no choice has
been specified, the shares will be voted "FOR" the proposal.


                   4. AMENDMENT OF THE IDACORP 2000 LONG-TERM
                       INCENTIVE AND COMPENSATION PLAN TO
                         INCREASE SECTION 162(M) LIMITS

     The IDACORP  Board of Directors  approved an increase in the annual  limits
for grants to covered  employees under Section 162(m) of the Code at the January
18, 2001 meeting, subject to shareholder approval at the 2001 Annual Meeting.


                                        19


     Subject to approval by the  shareholders,  the total  number of shares with
respect to which  options or SARs may be  granted  in any  calendar  year to any
covered  employee  under  Section  162(m) of the Code shall not  exceed  250,000
shares;  (ii) the total number of shares of restricted stock or restricted stock
units that are  intended  to qualify  for  deduction  that may be granted in any
calendar year to any covered  employee shall not exceed 250,000 shares or units,
as the case may be; (iii) the total number of performance  shares or performance
units that may be granted in any calendar year to any covered employee shall not
exceed  250,000  shares or units,  as the case may be; (iv) the total  number of
shares that are intended to qualify for deduction granted pursuant to Article 10
of the Plan in any  calendar  year to any  covered  employee  shall  not  exceed
250,000  shares;  (v) the total  cash  award that is  intended  to  qualify  for
deduction  that may be paid  pursuant to Article 10 of the Plan in any  calendar
year to any covered employee shall not exceed  $500,000;  and (vi) the aggregate
number of dividend equivalents that are intended to qualify for deduction that a
covered employee may receive in any calendar year shall not exceed 1,000,000.  A
covered employee means those persons  specified in Section 162(m) of the Code --
generally the chief executive officer and the next four most  highly-compensated
employees.

     The prior limits were 100,000 for shares, $300,000 for cash and 400,000 for
dividend equivalents.

     The  complete  text of the Plan is set forth as Exhibit "A"  hereto.  Under
Item 3 above,  relating to an  amendment  to increase  the number of  authorized
shares for the Plan,  is a summary of the  material  features of the Plan;  that
summary is incorporated  herein and is qualified in its entirety by reference to
Exhibit "A".

     THE  IDACORP  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  UNANIMOUSLY   RECOMMENDS  THAT  IDACORP
SHAREHOLDERS  VOTE "FOR"  THIS  PROPOSAL.  Approval  of the Plan  amendment  for
Internal  Revenue Code purposes  requires the affirmative  vote of a majority of
votes cast. Under the laws of the State of Idaho, the Plan amendment is approved
if the votes cast in favor of the  amendment  exceed the votes cast opposing the
amendment.  If a choice  has been  specified  by a  shareholder  by means of the
proxy,  the shares of common stock will be voted  accordingly.  If no choice has
been specified, the shares will be voted "FOR" the proposal.


                        5. RATIFICATION OF APPOINTMENT OF
                               INDEPENDENT AUDITOR

At the Joint  Annual  Meeting,  the  shareholders  will be asked to  ratify  the
selection by the IDACORP and the Idaho Power  Boards of Directors of  Deloitte &
Touche LLP as the firm of independent  public accountants to audit the financial
statements  of IDACORP and Idaho  Power for the fiscal year 2001.  This firm has
conducted consolidated annual audits of Idaho Power for many years and is one of
the  world's  largest  firms of  independent  certified  public  accountants.  A
representative of Deloitte & Touche LLP is expected to be present at the meeting
and will have an  opportunity  to make a statement and to respond to appropriate
questions.


                                        20


           EACH BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS A VOTE "FOR"
                            DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP AS
                 INDEPENDENT AUDITOR OF IDACORP AND IDAHO POWER


                          REPORT OF THE AUDIT COMMITTEE
                            OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     The Audit Committee of the IDACORP,  Inc. and Idaho Power Company Boards of
Directors (the Committee) is composed of four independent directors,  as defined
in  Sections  303.01(B)(2)(a)  and  (3) of the  NYSE's  listing  standards,  and
operates  under a written  charter  adopted by each Board of Directors  (Exhibit
"B").  The  Committee  recommends  to  each  Board  of  Directors,   subject  to
shareholder ratification, the selection of the independent accountants.

     Management  is  responsible  for the internal  controls  and the  financial
reporting  process of IDACORP and Idaho Power.  The independent  accountants are
responsible for performing an independent  audit of the  consolidated  financial
statements  of IDACORP and Idaho Power in  accordance  with  generally  accepted
auditing standards and to issue a report thereon. The Committee's responsibility
is to monitor and oversee these processes.

     In this context, the Committee has met and held discussions with management
and the independent  accountants.  Management  represented to the Committee that
the consolidated  financial  statements of IDACORP and Idaho Power were prepared
in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles,  and the Committee
has reviewed and  discussed  the audited  consolidated  financial  statements of
IDACORP and Idaho Power Company with management and the independent accountants.
The Committee discussed with the independent  accountants matters required to be
discussed by Statement on Auditing  Standards No. 61  (Communication  with Audit
Committees).

     The  independent  accountants  also  provided to the  Committee the written
disclosures and the letter required by Independence Standards Board Standard No.
1 (Independence Discussions with Audit Committees),  and the Committee discussed
with the independent accountants that firm's independence.

     Finally, the Committee discussed with the independent accountants services,
other than audit services  (information  technology services and other non-audit
services)  which they have  provided to IDACORP  and Idaho Power and  determined
that the  providing  of and  payment  for such  services  has not  affected  the
independence of the independent accountants.

     Based on the  Committee's  review and  discussions  referred to above,  the
Committee  recommended to each Board of Directors that the audited  consolidated
financial  statements  of IDACORP and Idaho  Power be  included in the  combined
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended  December 31, 2000 for filing with
the Securities and Exchange Commission.

         Jack K. Lemley  (Chair)                     Rotchford L. Barker

         Robert D. Bolinder                          Peter T. Johnson

                                        21




                INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANT BILLINGS FOR THE YEAR 2000

The  following  table sets forth the fees billed or expected to be billed by the
independent accountants to IDACORP and Idaho Power for the year 2000.


Fees Billed

Audit Fees                                                        $142,000
Financial Information Systems Design and Implementation Fee       $129,748
All Other Fees                                                    $240,887


                                 OTHER BUSINESS

Neither  the  IDACORP nor the Idaho  Power  Board of  Directors  nor  management
intends to bring before the meeting any business other than the matters referred
to in the Notice of Meeting and this Joint Proxy Statement.  In addition,  other
than as explained in the next  sentence,  they have not been  informed  that any
other matter will be presented to the meeting by others. A shareholder submitted
a proposal  for  inclusion  in the proxy  statement,  which  IDACORP has omitted
pursuant to Rule 14a-8 of the Securities and Exchange  Commission's proxy rules.
If the shareholder  should present the proposal at the Joint Annual Meeting,  it
is the  intention  of the  persons  named  in the  proxy  to vote  against  such
proposal.  If any other business should properly come before the meeting, or any
adjournment  thereof,  the persons  named in the proxy will vote on such matters
according to their best judgment.

At the  meeting,  management  will  report on the  business of IDACORP and Idaho
Power, and shareholders will have an opportunity to ask questions.


                             PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

The following table presents certain information regarding  shareholders who are
known to  IDACORP  or Idaho  Power to be the  beneficial  owners  of more than 5
percent of any class of voting  securities of IDACORP or Idaho Power as of March
1, 2001:

                    NAME AND ADDRESS      AMOUNT AND NATURE OF       PERCENT
CLASS OF STOCK    OF BENEFICIAL OWNER     BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP       OF CLASS

Idaho Power       IDACORP, Inc.(1)             37,612,351              100
Common Stock      1221 W. Idaho Street
                  Boise, Idaho 83702

(1)  As a result of the  formation of the holding  company,  IDACORP  became the
     holder of all issued and outstanding  shares of Idaho Power common stock on
     October 1, 1998.

                                        22



             SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

The following  table sets forth the number of shares of IDACORP common stock and
Idaho  Power  preferred  stock  beneficially  owned  on  March 1,  2001,  by the
Directors  and  nominees,  by those  Executive  Officers  named  in the  Summary
Compensation  Table and by the Directors  and Executive  Officers of IDACORP and
Idaho Power as a group:

                                        23






                                                                                   Amount of                      Percent
 Title of Class                      Name of Beneficial Owner                 Beneficial Ownership(1)             of Class
                                                                                                         

Common Stock                          Rotchford L. Barker                                                              *
Common Stock                          Robert D. Bolinder                                                               *
Common Stock                          Roger L. Breezley                                                                *
Common Stock                          John B. Carley                                                                   *
Common Stock                          Peter T. Johnson                                                                 *
Common Stock                          Jack K. Lemley                                                                   *
Common Stock                          Evelyn Loveless                                                                  *
Common Stock                          Jon H. Miller                                                                    *
Common Stock                          Peter S. O'Neill                                                                 *
Common Stock                          Jan B. Packwood                                                                  *
Common Stock                          Robert A. Tinstman                                                               *
Common Stock                          J. LaMont Keen                                                                   *
Common Stock                          Richard Riazzi                                                                   *
Common Stock                          James C. Miller                                                                  *
Common Stock                          Robert W. Stahman                                                                *
Common Stock                          All Directors and Executive Officers
                                      of IDACORP as a group (15 persons)                                               *
Preferred Stock                       All Directors and Executive Officers
                                      of IDACORP as a group (15 persons)                                               *
Common Stock                          All Directors and Executive Officers
                                      of Idaho Power as a group (20 persons)                                           *
Preferred Stock                       All Directors and Executive Officers
                                      of Idaho Power as a group (20 persons)                                           *


*Less than 1 percent.

(1)Includes  shares of Common Stock subject to forfeiture  and  restrictions  on
transfer issued pursuant to the 1994 Restricted Stock Plan.

All Directors and Executive  Officers have sole voting and investment  power for
the shares held by them including shares owned through the Employee Savings Plan
and the Dividend Reinvestment and Stock Purchase Plan.

     SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

Based  solely  upon a review of IDACORP  and Idaho  Power  records and copies of
reports  on Forms 3, 4 and 5  furnished  to IDACORP  and Idaho  Power or written
representations that no reports on Form 5 were required, IDACORP and Idaho Power
believe that during 2000 all persons  subject to the reporting  requirements  of
Section 16(a)  of the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  as amended,  filed the
required  reports on a timely basis except Jack K. Lemley for whom a late Form 5
was filed and for the officers of IDACORP and Idaho Power for whom late Form 5's
related to grants and awards under the Restricted Stock Plan were filed.

                                        24



                COMPENSATION OF DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

                        REPORT OF COMPENSATION COMMITTEE
                            OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
                            ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

GENERAL

The IDACORP Board of Directors Compensation Committee,  which is the same as the
Idaho Power Compensation Committee,  ("Committee") established all components of
2000 compensation for the Executive  Officers of IDACORP and Idaho Power.  There
were no extra salary  adjustments  for the  Executive  Officers who serve in the
same positions at IDACORP and Idaho Power.

The Committee  administers  the IDACORP and Idaho Power  executive  compensation
program.  As  such,  the  Committee  is  responsible  for  recommending  (1) the
compensation  philosophy,  (2)  executive  compensation  plans that  support the
philosophy,  and  (3) the  appropriate  levels  of  compensation  for  Executive
Officers. The Committee is composed of four independent, non-employee Directors.
Following the development of recommendations by the Compensation Committee,  all
issues  related to executive  compensation  are  submitted to the full Boards of
Directors  of IDACORP and Idaho  Power  (which are the same) for  approval.  The
Boards   approved,    without   modification,    all   executive    compensation
recommendations of the Committee for 2000.

COMPENSATION PHILOSOPHY

The  compensation  philosophy for IDACORP and Idaho Power Executive  Officers is
consistent  with the  compensation  philosophy  Idaho  Power has adopted for all
employees,  except that for Executive Officers and senior managers the Committee
has aligned  short-term and long-term  incentive plans with corporate  financial
performance and increased the percentage of their total compensation which is at
risk. The Idaho Power compensation program is designed to:

1.   manage  employee   compensation  as  an  investment  with  the  expectation
     employees  will  contribute to Idaho  Power's  financial  performance,  its
     environmental record and public reputation;

2.   be competitive  with respect to those  companies in the markets in which we
     compete for  employees,  allowing Idaho Power to  successfully  attract and
     retain the qualified employees necessary for long- term success;

3.   recognize  individuals  for their  demonstrated  ability to  perform  their
     position responsibilities and create long-term shareholder value; and

4.   balance total compensation with Idaho Power's ability to pay.

                                        25



2000 BASE SALARIES

Salary ranges for Executive  Officers are reviewed annually and are supported by
salary comparisons with similar positions in electric  utilities  throughout the
United States with annual revenues ranging from $500 million to $1 billion.  The
competitive  point for  executive  compensation  for 2000 was targeted  near the
median of the salary levels for executive  officers of these  utilities.  Actual
compensation  of  individual  Executive  Officers is based upon their  levels of
responsibility,  experience in their  positions,  prior  experience,  breadth of
knowledge  and job  performance.  The  electric  utility  group  utilized by the
Committee to compare  Executive  Officer  salaries is different from the EEI 100
Electric  Utilities  Index group  utilized  by IDACORP to compare the  financial
performance  of IDACORP and Idaho Power with a  nationally  recognized  industry
standard.

In November of 1999,  the Committee  recommended  adjustments to the 2000 salary
ranges for the  Executive  Officer group based on the annual  Executive  Officer
compensation  review  referenced  above.  Salary  adjustments  for 2000 averaged
approximately 10 percent, to move them nearer (but slightly below) the median of
the comparison  group.  The Committee  considered each of the factors  discussed
above but did not assign a formal weighting for each factor.

SHORT-TERM INCENTIVE COMPENSATION

The Committee  implemented  the Idaho Power  Executive  Incentive Plan effective
January 1, 1998 (Executive  Incentive Plan). The Executive Incentive Plan ties a
portion of each executive's  annual  compensation to achieving certain financial
goals.  For 2000, the established  financial goals were in the areas of earnings
per share and return on common  equity.  Each goal is designed with a minimum or
threshold  level and a series of five levels above the threshold with each level
having a multiplier  which  increases as the performance  requirement  under the
goal  increases.  The threshold level for earnings per share was $2.39 per share
with a  multiplier  of .25;  the  maximum  level was $2.55 per share with a 1.00
multiplier.  In 2000,  IDACORP earned $3.72 per share.  The threshold  level for
return on common  equity was 11.65  percent  with a  multiplier  of .25 with the
highest level at 12.33 percent with a 1.00 multiplier. In 2000, IDACORP's return
on common equity was 17.04 percent.  The award opportunities vary by position as
a  percentage  of base  salary  with the award  opportunities  for the  officers
ranging from a minimum of 7.5 percent to a maximum of 50 percent.  The Executive
Incentive  Plan does not permit the  payment of awards if there is no payment of
awards under the Employee  Incentive  Plan. The  performance  levels within each
goal were  established  based upon the  performance  in previous  years with the
higher levels  requiring  achieving  goals in excess of  performance in previous
years in each goal. In 2000,  IDACORP  achieved the maximum level of performance
for each goal, and as a result,  Executive  Officers  received the maximum award
under  the  Incentive  Plan.  Awards  under  the  Executive  Incentive  Plan are
reflected in the bonus column of the Summary Compensation table.


                                        26



LONG-TERM INCENTIVE COMPENSATION

Long-term  incentive awards are intended to develop and retain strong management
through share ownership and incentive awards that recognize  future  performance
and  maximize  stockholder  value.  Restricted  Stock was the primary  long-term
incentive  granted to executive  officers and senior  managers in 2000. With the
adoption  by   shareholders   of  the  IDACORP  2000  Long-Term   Incentive  and
Compensation  Plan at the May 2000 Annual  Meeting,  the  Committee  now has the
ability to grant stock options.

When awarding long-term incentives, the Committee considers an executive's level
of responsibility, prior experience, individual performance criteria, as well as
the compensation practices of the peer group of companies used to evaluate total
compensation.  The relative  weight given to each of these factors  varies among
individuals at the Committee's discretion.

1. Restricted Stock Plan

The 1994  Restricted  Stock Plan ("Plan"),  approved by  shareholders at the May
1994  Annual  Meeting,  was  implemented  in  January  1995  as an  equity-based
long-term  incentive  plan. A new grant under the Plan was made in January 2000,
with a  three-year  restricted  period  beginning  January 1,  2000  and  ending
December 31,  2002,  with a  single  financial  performance  goal of  Cumulative
Earnings Per Share ("CEPS"). In January of 1998, a grant was made under the Plan
for a three year restricted period through December 31, 2000, with a target CEPS
of  $6.90.  The  total  CEPS for the  three  year  restricted  period  was $8.52
resulting  in  awards  earned  for  2000 at the  maximum  level  for  all  named
executives.  To receive a final share award each officer must be employed, as an
officer,  during the entire  restricted  period (with certain  exceptions),  and
IDACORP  must  achieve the CEPS  performance  goal  established  by the Board of
Directors.  The restricted  stock grant  percentage (a percentage of base salary
converted into shares of stock based upon the closing stock price for a share of
IDACORP  common stock on December 31 of the year  preceding the grant) varied by
position with the  percentages  for the Chief  Executive  Officer ranging from a
minimum  of 18  percent  to a maximum  of 53  percent.  For all other  Executive
Officers,  the percentage ranged from a minimum of 10 percent to a maximum of 45
percent.  The target grant  percentages for new grants are reviewed  annually as
part of the annual Executive  Officer  compensation  review referenced above and
the 2000  grants  were at a level  below  the  median  target  levels  among the
comparison group.

2. Stock Options

The  IDACORP  2000  Long-Term  Incentive  and  Compensation  Plan,  approved  by
shareholders  at the May 2000 Annual  Meeting was  implemented  in July 2000. In
July of 2000,  stock options with an exercise  price set at fair market value on
the date of grant  were made to four  executive  officers,  including  the Chief
Executive  Officer.  Because the exercise price of these options is equal to the
fair market  value of IDACORP's  common stock on the date of grant,  the options
have value only if the stock  price  appreciates  from the value on the date the
options were  granted.  The options vest ratably over five years (20% per year).
The size of each  award  was  determined  based  on the  criteria  for  awarding
long-term  incentives  stated above and ranged from 40,000  options each for the
three Senior Vice-Presidents to 100,000 options for the CEO.

                                        27



The 2000  compensation  paid to  IDACORP  and  Idaho  Power  executive  officers
qualified as fully deductible under federal tax laws. The Committee continues to
review the  impact of  federal  tax laws on  executive  compensation,  including
Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.

INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLANS - GOALS

Since 1995, the Committee has been adjusting  executive  compensation to place a
higher  percentage  of total  executive  compensation  at risk  with the at risk
portion  tied to  corporate  financial  performance.  This  adjustment  has been
accomplished  by aligning the  short-term  and  long-term  incentive  plans with
certain  financial  goals  and  making  the  plans a  larger  percentage  of the
executive's total  compensation.  To date, the Committee feels this approach has
proven successful and has presented high performance  expectations to management
in the past and for 2001 and beyond.  The Committee believes that a brief review
of the goals under the short-term and long-term  incentive  plans is appropriate
in this Report.

1.   Short Term Incentive Compensation

In January 1998, the Committee  adopted a new Executive  Incentive Plan which is
described in the Short- Term Incentive  Compensation section of this Report. The
1998  Plan had  purely  financial  goals and for the year  2000 was  limited  to
earnings per share and return on common  equity.  Since  adopting the Plan,  the
maximum  goal for  earnings  per share has gone from  $2.34 in 1998 to $2.55 for
2000 and for return on common equity, from 12.1 percent in 1998 to 12.33 percent
in 2000.  The Committee has continued to increase the target  percentage of base
salary and the  financial  goals in  connection  with awards under the Executive
Incentive Plan.

2. Long-Term Incentive Compensation

     a. Restricted Stock

The 1994 Restricted Stock Plan is a long-term equity based incentive plan with a
single financial performance goal of cumulative earnings per share (CEPS) over a
three year restricted  period.  Since  implementing  the plan, the CEPS goal has
gone from a target of $6.00 for the 1995-1997 restricted period to $6.90 for the
1998-2000  restricted  period. The Committee has continued to increase the grant
percentage (a percentage of base salary  converted into shares of stock) and the
financial goal (CEPS) in connection with grants under the Restricted Stock Plan.

     b. Stock Options

The IDACORP 2000 Long-Term  Incentive and  Compensation  Plan was implemented in
July of 2000 with grants to four  executive  officers with an exercise  price of
$35.8125  which was the fair market value of IDACORP's  common stock on the date
of the grant.

                                        28


CEO SALARY - 2000


In January of 2000, Mr.  Packwood was granted a salary increase of 10.7 percent.
The competitiveness of Mr. Packwood's salary was reviewed based upon comparisons
with salaries of chief  executive  officers of comparable  utilities with annual
revenues ranging from $500 million to $1 billion.  The competitive point for Mr.
Packwood's  salary is targeted  near the median of this  comparison.  The actual
2000 salary  adjustment for Mr.  Packwood  placed him below the median of salary
levels for chief executive officers of the comparison utility group and is based
on the  level of his  responsibilities,  the  depth of his  experience,  his job
performance and the overall competitive level of his current  compensation based
on the annual  Executive  Officer  compensation  review  referenced  above.  The
Committee considered each of these factors but did not assign a formal weighting
for each factor.

Mr. Packwood is a participant in the Executive  Incentive Plan with a 2000 award
opportunity  ranging from a minimum of 6.5 percent to a maximum of 50 percent of
base salary.  This award level was established  based upon the Executive Officer
compensation  review referenced above. In 2000, the Company achieved the maximum
level of  performance  for each goal area,  and as a result,  Mr.  Packwood will
receive an award under the  Executive  Incentive  Plan of 50 percent of his base
salary.  Mr. Packwood is a participant in the Restricted Stock Plan as discussed
above. In January of 1998, a grant was made to Mr. Packwood under the Restricted
Stock Plan for a three year  restricted  period  through  December 31, 2000. The
Company  achieved the maximum level of performance for the three year restricted
period and as a result,  Mr. Packwood will receive an award at the maximum level
of 45 percent in 2000.  Mr.  Packwood  received a restricted  stock grant at the
target  level of 35 percent in 2000 and will  receive a final  share award after
the  restricted  period  ends in  December  2002 if he remains  employed  by the
Company  as an  officer  during  the  entire  restricted  period  (with  certain
exceptions) and IDACORP  achieves its CEPS  performance  goal established by the
Board of  Directors.  In  addition,  in July he received a stock option grant of
100,000 shares under the IDACORP 2000 Long-Term  Incentive and Compensation Plan
with an exercise price set at fair market value vesting ratably over a five year
period (20% per year) contingent upon Mr. Packwood's  continued  employment with
the  Corporation.  The incentive awards were intended to place a greater portion
of Mr. Packwood's total compensation for 2000 "at risk".


              John B. Carley, Chairman                    Evelyn Loveless
              Peter T. Johnson                            Peter S. O'Neill




                                        29



                             IDACORP AND IDAHO POWER
                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE





                                              ANNUAL
                                           COMPENSATION                 LONG-TERM COMPENSATION
                                           ------------                 ----------------------
                                                                                AWARDS
                                                                                ------

                                                                   RESTRICTED
                                                                      STOCK              SECURITIES                ALL OTHER
         NAME AND                        SALARY        BONUS       AWARD(S)(1)           UNDERLYING             COMPENSATION(2)
    PRINCIPAL POSITION        YEAR        ($)           ($)            ($)            STOCK OPTION/SARs               ($)
                                                                                             (#)
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------

                                                                                                   

Jan B. Packwood               2000      415,000      207,500        145,250               100,000                    6,800
   President and              1999      343,269      112,500         90,000                                          6,400
   Chief Executive Officer,   1998      250,000       75,000         75,000                                          6,400
   IDACORP and Idaho  Power

J. LaMont Keen                2000      250,000      100,000         75,000                40,000                    6,270
   Sr. Vice President -       1999      215,692       65,400         61,800                                          6,400
   Administration & Chief     1998      200,000       60,000         60,000                                          6,400
   Financial Officer,
   IDACORP and Idaho  Power

James C. Miller               2000      170,000       68,000         51,000                40,000                     -0-
   Sr. Vice President -       1999      146,923       42,000         35,000                                          4,867
   Delivery, Idaho Power      1998      128,000       38,400         32,000                                          4,095

Richard Riazzi                2000      250,000      100,000         75,000                40,000                    6,800
   Sr. Vice President -       1999      226,692       68,700         54,250                                          5,686
   Generation & Marketing,    1998      210,000       60,202         52,500                                          4,543
   IDACORP and Idaho Power

Robert W. Stahman             2000      165,000       49,500         41,250                  -                       6,800
   Vice President, General    1999      155,000       46,500         38,750                                          6,400
   Counsel and Secretary      1998      150,000       45,000         37,500                                          6,400
   IDACORP and Idaho Power


__________________

(1)  The  aggregate  restricted  stock  holdings as of December  31, 2000 are as
     follows: Mr. Packwood held 9,897 ($485,567) shares of restricted stock; Mr.
     Keen held 6,100  ($299,278)  shares of  restricted  stock;  Mr. Miller held
     3,719  ($182,462)  shares  of  restricted  stock;  Mr.  Riazzi  held  5,691
     ($279,212)  shares of restricted  stock;  Mr.  Stahman held 3,606 shares of
     restricted  stock  ($176,918).  Dividends are paid on restricted stock when
     and as paid on the IDACORP Common Stock.

(2)  Represents the Company's  contribution to the Employee  Savings Plan (401-k
     plan).


                                        30





                    OPTIONS / SAR GRANTS IN FISCAL YEAR 2000





                                                        % of Total
                             Number of Securities     Options / SARs
                                  Underlying            Granted to         Exercise or
                                Options / SARs         Employees in        Base Price                          Grant Date Value
            Name                  Granted(1) #          Fiscal 2000        ($ / Share)     Expiration Date          ($) (2)

                                                                                                 

Jan B. Packwood                     100,000               45.5%             $35.8125        July 18, 2010          $842,000

J. LaMont Keen                       40,000               18.2%             $35.8125        July 18, 2010          $336,800

James C. Miller                      40,000               18.2%             $35.8125        July 18, 2010          $336,800

Richard Riazzi                       40,000               18.2%             $35.8125        July 18, 2010          $336,800

Robert W. Stahman                       -                   -                  -                  -                    -



__________________

(1)  Options  were  granted  pursuant  to  the  2000  Long-Term   Incentive  and
     Compensation  Plan.  The options  vest 20% per year and  accelerate  upon a
     change in control.

(2)  The  grant  date  values  were  calculated  on the  basis  of the  Binomial
     option-pricing  model.  Options  were assumed to be exercised 7 years after
     the  date of  grant.  A  risk-free  interest  rate of  6.15%,  stock  price
     volatility  of  27%  and a  dividend  yield  of  5.19%  were  used  in  the
     calculation of the July option grants to Messrs. Packwood, Keen, Miller and
     Riazzi.  The actual value of the options will depend on the market value of
     the  Company's  Common  Stock on the dates the  options are  exercised.  No
     realization  of value from the options is  possible  without an increase in
     the  price  of  the  Company's  Common  Stock,   which  would  benefit  all
     stockholders commensurately.



               AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                      AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION/SAR VALUES






                                                                            Number of
                                  Shares                               securities underlying        Value of unexercised, in-the
                                 acquired            Value              unexercised options                money options
                                on exercise        realized            at fiscal year-end(1)             at fiscal year-end
                                    (#)               ($)                       (#)                              ($)
                                                                    Exercisable     Unexercisable    Exercisable    Unexercisable
                                                                                                  

Jan B. Packwood                                                                           100,000                  $1,081,250

J. LaMont Keen                                                                             40,000                  $  432,520

James C. Miller                                                                            40,000                  $  432,520

Richard Riazzi                                                                             40,000                  $  432,520

Robert W. Stahman                                                                               -                           -


__________________

(1)  Vesting is accelerated upon a change in control.

                                        31



                              DIRECTOR COMPENSATION

During  2000,  each  Director  who was not an employee of IDACORP or Idaho Power
received $800 for each Board meeting and for each  committee  meeting  attended.
Non-employee  Directors who are chairman of Board committees received $1,840 per
month; other non-employee Directors received $1,670 per month. In addition, each
Director  received an annual stock grant under the Director  Stock Grant Program
of IDACORP,  Inc., common stock equal to $8,000, or 228 shares, in June of 2000.
Mr. Miller was elected non-executive  Chairman of the Board of IDACORP and Idaho
Power effective June 1, 1999. His compensation consists of a monthly retainer of
$3,000 per month and the annual  stock  grant  under the  Director  Stock  Grant
Program of $8,000,  or 228 shares,  in 2000. Mr. Miller does not receive meeting
fees for  either  Board or  committee  meetings.  Directors  may  defer all or a
portion of any  retainers and meeting fees under a deferred  compensation  plan.
Under the plan,  at  retirement  Directors  may elect to  receive  one  lump-sum
payment of all amounts  deferred  with  interest,  or a series of up to 10 equal
annual payments,  depending upon the specific  deferral  arrangement.  A special
account is maintained on the books showing the amounts deferred and the interest
accrued  thereon.  The  Directors   participate  in  a  non-qualified   deferred
compensation  plan (a non-qualified  defined benefit plan for Directors) that is
financed by life insurance on the  participants  and provides,  upon  retirement
from the Idaho Power Board,  for the payment of $17,500 per year for a period of
15 years.

Since each director serves on both the IDACORP and Idaho Power Boards and on the
same committees of each Board,  the monthly  retainer applies to service on both
Boards as do the  meeting  fees for the Board  meetings  and for each  committee
which has a corresponding committee at both companies. The practice generally is
that  meetings  of the  IDACORP  and Idaho  Power  Boards and the  corresponding
committees are held in  conjunction  with each other and a single meeting fee is
paid to each  director for each set of meetings.  Separate  meeting fees will be
paid in the event a Board or committee meeting is not held in conjunction with a
meeting of the corresponding Board or committee and for those committee meetings
which do not have a corresponding committee.

                        COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS
                            AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

The members of the Compensation  Committees for 2000 were John B. Carley,  Peter
T. Johnson, Evelyn Loveless and Peter S. O'Neill. O'Neill Enterprises,  of which
Mr. O'Neill is President,  is the developer of the Surprise  Valley  Partnership
which is developing a residential  community in southeast Boise. In May of 1995,
Idaho Power  entered  into an  agreement  leasing  approximately  48.21 acres to
Surprise  Valley  Partnership  for 10 years at a monthly rate of $1,118.75.  The
lease  payments were based on an 8 percent  return on fair market value with the
fair market value of the leased land determined by independent appraisers. Idaho
Power's appraisal was provided by Nelson & Hastings,  Real Estate Appraisers and
Consultants,  with Brad Janoush  Appraisal  M.A.I.  providing  the appraisal for
Surprise Valley Partnership.

                                        32


                            EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND
                          CHANGE OF CONTROL AGREEMENTS


Idaho Power  entered into an employment  agreement in 1997 with Richard  Riazzi,
Vice  President - Marketing  and Sales,  for a three-year  term ending  December
1999, with automatic one year extensions  thereafter unless the parties agree to
terminate. The agreement provides for a minimum base salary of $191,000 per year
subject to annual  review,  a phantom stock award made in 1997,  plus annual and
long-term incentive compensation  opportunities.  In the event of termination of
employment following a change of control, which is defined as the acquisition of
beneficial  ownership of 20% of voting power,  certain  changes in the Board, or
approval  by  the  shareholders  of  the  liquidation,   of  certain  merger  or
consolidations  or of certain  transfers of assets,  Mr.  Riazzi will receive 18
months base salary plus the greater of two times the most recent annual bonus or
two times the average annual bonus for the three previous years,  subject to any
limitations provided by Section 280G of the Internal Revenue Code.

IDACORP  entered into Change of Control  Agreements  with the Named  Officers in
September 1999, which become effective for a three-year  period upon a change of
control of IDACORP.  If a change of control occurs,  the Agreements provide that
specified payments and benefits would be paid in the event of termination of the
Executive's   employment  (i)  by  IDACORP,  other  than  for  cause,  death  or
disability,  or (ii) by the Executive for constructive  discharge or retirement,
at any time when the Agreements are in effect.  In such event, each of the Named
Officers would receive  payment of an amount equal to two and one-half times his
annual  compensation,  which shall be the highest combined amount of base salary
and bonus  received by the Named Officer in any one of the five years  preceding
termination.  In addition,  under these  Agreements,  each of the Named Officers
would receive (i) the immediate vesting of restricted stock granted prior to the
change in  control;  (ii)  outplacement  services  for 12  months  not to exceed
$12,000;  and (iii) all  benefits  for a period of 24 months  under the  welfare
benefit plans.

For these purposes  "cause" means the Executive's  fraud or dishonesty which has
resulted  or is likely to result in  material  economic  damage to  IDACORP or a
subsidiary  of  IDACORP,  as  determined  in good  faith  by a vote of at  least
two-thirds of the non-employee directors of IDACORP at a meeting of the Board at
which the  Executive  is  provided  an  opportunity  to be heard.  "Constructive
discharge"  includes  material  failure by IDACORP to comply with the Agreement,
relocation, and certain reduction in compensation or benefits.

A "change of  control" is defined as (i) the  acquisition  by a party or certain
related parties of 20% or more of IDACORP's voting  securities;  (ii) a purchase
by a person  of 20% or more of the  outstanding  stock  pursuant  to a tender or
exchange offer;  (iii) shareholder  approval of a merger or similar  transaction
after  which  IDACORP's  shareholders  will  hold  50% or  less  of  the  voting
securities of the  surviving  entity or (iv) a change in a majority of the Board
of Directors  within a 24-month period without the approval of two-thirds of the
members of the Board.



                                        33



                                PERFORMANCE GRAPH

                 Source: Bloomberg and Edison Electric Institute

                     Comparison of Cumulative Total Return
                        $100 Invested December 31, 1995


                               [GRAPHIC OMITTED]


The table shows a Comparison of Five-Year  Cumulative Total  Shareholder  Return
for IDACORP Common Stock,  the S&P 500 Index and the Edison  Electric  Institute
(EEI) 100 Electric  Utilities  Index. The data assumes that $100 was invested on
December 31,  1995, with beginning-of-period weighting of the peer group indices
(based on market  capitalization)  and monthly  compounding  of  returns.  As of
October  1,  1998,  all  outstanding  shares of Idaho  Power  common  stock were
exchanged on a share-for-share basis for IDACORP common stock.

                                                                 EEI 100
                          IDACORP          S & P 500        Electric Utilities

         1995              $100.00             $100.00             $100.00
         1996               110.37              122.96              101.20
         1997               141.64              163.98              128.90
         1998               143.88              210.84              146.80
         1999               113.13              255.21              119.50
         2000               217.08              231.98              176.82

                               RETIREMENT BENEFITS

The following table sets forth the estimated annual retirement  benefits payable
under the Idaho Power Retirement Plan (a qualified  defined benefit pension plan
for all regular  employees)  and under the Idaho Power  Security Plan for Senior
Management Employees (a non-qualified defined benefit plan for senior management
employees). The plans cover employees of IDACORP and Idaho Power.

                                        34



                               PENSION PLAN TABLE





REMUNERATION                                                       YEARS OF SERVICE
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     15               20              25               30              35              40
                                                                                                  

       $ 75,000                   $45,000          $48,750          $52,500         $56,250         $56,250         $56,250
       $100,000                   $60,000          $65,000          $70,000         $75,000         $75,000         $75,000
       $125,000                   $75,000          $81,250          $87,500         $93,750         $93,750         $93,750
       $150,000                   $90,000          $97,500         $105,000        $112,500        $112,500        $112,500
       $175,000                  $105,000         $113,750         $122,500        $131,250        $131,250        $131,250
       $200,000                  $120,000         $130,000         $140,000        $150,000        $150,000        $150,000
       $225,000                  $135,000         $146,250         $157,500        $168,750        $168,750        $168,750
       $250,000                  $150,000         $162,500         $175,000        $187,500        $187,500        $187,500
       $275,000                  $165,000         $178,750         $192,500        $206,250        $206,250        $206,250
       $300,000                  $180,000         $195,000         $210,000        $225,000        $225,000        $225,000
       $325,000                  $195,000         $211,250         $227,500        $243,750        $243,750        $243,750
       $350,000                  $210,000         $227,500         $245,000        $262,500        $262,500        $262,500
       $375,000                  $225,000         $243,750         $262,500        $281,250        $281,250        $281,250
       $400,000                  $240,000         $260,000         $280,000        $300,000        $300,000        $300,000
       $450,000                  $270,000         $292,500         $315,000        $337,500        $337,500        $337,500
       $500,000                  $300,000         $325,000         $350,000        $375,000        $375,000        $375,000



Benefits under the  Retirement  Plan for senior  management  employees at normal
retirement age are calculated on years of credited  service using the average of
the  highest  five  consecutive  years'  salary  plus bonus (as  reported in the
Summary Compensation Table) in the last 10 years before retirement.

Benefits under the Security Plan for Senior Management  Employees are based upon
a similar average of the highest five consecutive  years of salary plus bonus in
the last 10 years before retirement,  a normal retirement age of 62 years, years
of  participation  as a senior  management  employee,  and are payable  over the
participant's lifetime. Generally, total retirement benefits from the Retirement
Plan and  Security  Plan for  Senior  Management  Employees  will  range from 60
percent to 75  percent of the  participant's  average  salary  plus bonus in the
highest five consecutive years in the last 10 years of employment.  The Security
Plan is financed by life insurance on the  participants  and is designed so that
if  assumptions  made as to mortality  expectation,  policy  dividends and other
factors are realized,  Idaho Power will recover the cost of this plan. Effective
August 1, 1996, Idaho Power terminated its Supplemental Employee Retirement Plan
(a  non-qualified  plan that provided  benefits that would  otherwise  have been
denied  participants by reason of certain  Internal  Revenue Code limitations on
qualified plan  benefits).  Benefits  payable from the  Retirement  Plan and the
Security  Plan are  included in the table  above.  Benefits  shown above are not
subject to any deduction for Social Security benefits or other offset amounts.

As of December 31, 2000, the final five-year average salary plus bonus under the
retirement  plans as referred to above for the Executive  Officers  named in the
Summary Compensation Table are: Mr. Packwood,  $330,943; Mr. Keen, $241,816; Mr.
Riazzi,  $254,783;  Mr. Miller,  $153,949; and Mr. Stahman,  $180,584.  Years of
credited  service  under the  Retirement  Plan and years of  participation  as a
senior management employee are,  respectively:  Mr. Packwood,  30, 24; Mr. Keen,
27, 18; Mr. Miller 24, 13; and Mr.  Stahman 23, 18. Mr. Riazzi has four years of
credited service, but has not vested in the plan.


                                        35



                                  ANNUAL REPORT

IDACORP's 2000 annual report to shareholders, including financial statements for
1998,  1999 and 2000, was mailed on or about April 6, 2001, to all  shareholders
of record.  Idaho Power financial statements for 1998, 1999 and 2000 included in
the joint Annual Report on Form 10-K were mailed to Idaho Power  shareholders of
record on or about April 6, 2001.

IDACORP hereby undertakes to deliver promptly,  upon written or oral request,  a
separate  copy of the annual  report to  shareholders,  or proxy  statement,  as
applicable, to an IDACORP shareholder at a shared address to which a single copy
of the  document  was  delivered.  Idaho  Power  hereby  undertakes  to  deliver
promptly,  upon  written or oral  request,  a separate  copy of the Idaho  Power
financial  statements,  or proxy  statement,  as  applicable,  to an Idaho Power
shareholder  at a shared  address  to which a single  copy of the  document  was
delivered.  Requests should be addressed to Corporate Secretary, 1221 West Idaho
Street, Boise, ID 83702, 208-388-2200.


                    2001 JOINT ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

Nominations  for  Director  may be made only by the Board of  Directors  or by a
shareholder  entitled to vote who has delivered  written notice to the Secretary
of IDACORP or Idaho Power, as the case may be, not earlier than 90 days, and not
later than 60 days, prior to the first anniversary of this annual meeting.

Rule 14a-4 of the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission's  proxy rules allows a
company to use  discretionary  voting authority to vote on matters coming before
an annual  meeting of  shareholders,  if the company does not have notice of the
matter at least 45 days before the date  corresponding  to the date on which the
company  first mailed its proxy  materials  for prior year's  annual  meeting of
shareholders  or the  date  specified  by an  advance  notice  provision  in the
company's bylaws.  The Bylaws of IDACORP and Idaho Power contain such an advance
notice provision.  Under the Bylaws, no business may be brought before an annual
meeting of the shareholders  except as specified in the notice of the meeting or
as otherwise  properly  brought before the meeting by or at the direction of the
Board or by a shareholder  entitled to vote who has delivered  written notice to
the Secretary of IDACORP or Idaho Power, as the case may be, not earlier than 90
days, and not later than 60 days, prior to the first  anniversary of this annual
meeting.

For the 2002 Joint Annual  Meeting of  Shareholders,  expected to be held on May
16, 2002,  IDACORP and Idaho Power  shareholders must submit such nominations or
proposals to the  Secretary  of IDACORP or Idaho  Power,  as the case may be, no
earlier than February 14, 2002 and no later than March 18, 2002.

The  requirements  referred to above are separate and apart from the  Securities
and Exchange Commission's  requirements that a shareholder must meet in order to
have a shareholder  proposal  included in the proxy  statement under Rule 14a-8.
For the 2002 Joint Annual Meeting of Shareholders expected to be held on May 16,
2002, any shareholder who wishes to submit a proposal for inclusion in the joint
proxy  materials  pursuant  to Rule  14a-8  must  submit  such  proposal  to the
Secretary of IDACORP or Idaho Power,  as the case may be, on or before  December
7, 2001.

                                        36



It is requested that each  shareholder who cannot attend the meeting send in his
or her proxy or proxies without delay.

                                        37



                                                                       Exhibit A

                                  IDACORP, INC.
                 2000 LONG-TERM INCENTIVE AND COMPENSATION PLAN


Article 1. Establishment, Purpose and Duration

     1.1  Establishment  of  the  Plan.  IDACORP,  Inc.,  an  Idaho  corporation
(hereinafter referred to as the "Company"),  hereby establishes an incentive and
compensation plan for officers, key employees and directors,  to be known as the
"IDACORP,  Inc. 2000 Long-Term  Incentive and  Compensation  Plan"  (hereinafter
referred to as the "Plan"), as set forth in this document.  The Plan permits the
grant of nonqualified stock options (NQSO), incentive stock options (ISO), stock
appreciation rights (SAR), restricted stock, restricted stock units, performance
units, performance shares and other awards.

     The Plan shall become  effective when approved by the  shareholders  at the
2000 Annual Meeting of Shareholders  (the "Effective  Date") and shall remain in
effect as provided in Section 1.3 herein.

     1.2 Purpose of the Plan.  The purpose of the Plan is to promote the success
and  enhance  the value of the  Company by linking  the  personal  interests  of
Participants to those of Company shareholders and customers.

     The Plan is further  intended to provide  flexibility to the Company in its
ability to motivate,  attract and retain the services of Participants upon whose
judgment,  interest and special effort the successful  conduct of its operations
is largely dependent.

     1.3 Duration of the Plan. The Plan shall commence on the Effective Date, as
described  in Section 1.1  herein,  and shall  remain in effect,  subject to the
right of the Board of Directors to  terminate  the Plan at any time  pursuant to
Article 15 herein,  until all Shares  subject to it shall have been purchased or
acquired according to the Plan's provisions.

Article 2. Definitions

     Whenever used in the Plan, the following  terms shall have the meanings set
forth below and, when such meaning is intended,  the initial  letter of the word
is capitalized:

     2.1 Award means,  individually or  collectively,  a grant under the Plan of
NQSOs, ISOs, SARs, Restricted Stock, Restricted Stock Units,  Performance Units,
Performance  Shares or any other type of award permitted under Article 10 of the
Plan.

     2.2 Award Agreement means an agreement entered into by each Participant and
the  Company,  setting  forth the terms and  provisions  applicable  to an Award
granted to a Participant under the Plan.

                                        1



     2.3 Base Value of an SAR shall have the  meaning  set forth in Section  7.1
herein.

     2.4  Board  or Board of  Directors  means  the  Board of  Directors  of the
Company.

     2.5 Change in Control means the earliest of the following to occur:

     (a) the public  announcement  by the Company or by any person  (which shall
not include the Company,  any subsidiary of the Company or any employee  benefit
plan of the Company or of any  subsidiary of the Company)  ("Person")  that such
Person,  who or which,  together with all Affiliates and Associates  (within the
meanings  ascribed  to such  terms in Rule  12b-2 of the  Exchange  Act) of such
Person,  shall be the  beneficial  owner of twenty  percent (20%) or more of the
voting stock then outstanding;

     (b) the  commencement  of, or after the first  public  announcement  of any
Person to commence,  a tender or exchange offer the  consummation of which would
result in any Person becoming the beneficial  owner of voting stock  aggregating
thirty percent (30%) or more of the then outstanding voting stock;

     (c) the announcement of any transaction relating to the Company required to
be  described  pursuant  to the  requirements  of Item 6(e) of  Schedule  14A of
Regulation 14A of the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Exchange Act;

     (d) a proposed change in the  constituency  of the Board such that,  during
any period of two (2)  consecutive  years,  individuals  who at the beginning of
such period  constitute  the Board cease for any reason to constitute at least a
majority  thereof,  unless  the  election  or  nomination  for  election  by the
shareholders  of the Company of each new  director  was approved by a vote of at
least two-thirds (2/3) of the directors then still in office who were members of
the Board at the beginning of the period;

     (e) the Company  enters into an agreement of merger,  consolidation,  share
exchange  or  similar  transaction  with  any  other  corporation  other  than a
transaction  which  would  result  in the  Company's  voting  stock  outstanding
immediately  prior  to  the  consummation  of  such  transaction  continuing  to
represent  (either by remaining  outstanding  or by being  converted into voting
stock of the surviving  entity) at least two-thirds of the combined voting power
of the Company's or such surviving entity's outstanding voting stock immediately
after such transaction;

     (f) the Board  approves a plan of liquidation or dissolution of the Company
or an agreement for the sale or disposition  by the Company (in one  transaction
or a series of transactions) of all or substantially all of the Company's assets
to a person or entity  which is not an  affiliate  of the  Company  other than a
transaction(s)  for the purpose of dividing the  Company's  assets into separate
distribution,  transmission or generation entities or such other entities as the
Company may determine; or

     (g) any other event  which  shall be deemed by a majority of the  Executive
Committee of the Board to constitute a "Change in Control."


                                        2



     2.6 Code means the Internal  Revenue Code of 1986,  as amended from time to
time.

     2.7 Committee means the committee,  as specified in Article 3, appointed by
the Board to administer the Plan with respect to Awards.

     2.8 Company means  IDACORP,  Inc., an Idaho  corporation,  or any successor
thereto as provided in Article 17 herein.

     2.9  Covered  Employee  means any  Participant  who would be  considered  a
"covered employee" for purposes of Section 162(m) of the Code.

     2.10  Director  means  any  individual  who is a  member  of the  Board  of
Directors of the Company.

     2.11 Disability  means the continuous  inability of an Employee  because of
illness or injury to engage in any  occupation or employment  for wage or profit
with the Company or any other employer (including  self-employment) for which he
is reasonably qualified by education,  training or experience.  An Employee will
not be considered disabled during any period unless he is under the regular care
and attendance of a duly qualified physician.

     2.12 Dividend Equivalent means, with respect to Shares subject to an Award,
a right to be paid an amount equal to  dividends  declared on an equal number of
outstanding Shares.

     2.13 Eligible  Person means a Person who is eligible to  participate in the
Plan, as set forth in Section 5.1 herein.

     2.14 Employee means an individual who is paid on the payroll of the Company
or of  the  Company's  Subsidiaries,  who  is  not  covered  by  any  collective
bargaining agreement to which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries is a party,
and is classified  in the payroll  system as a regular  full-time,  part-time or
temporary  employee.  For  purposes  of the Plan,  transfer of  employment  of a
Participant  between  the Company  and any one of its  Subsidiaries  (or between
Subsidiaries) shall not be deemed a termination of employment.

     2.15  Exchange Act means the  Securities  Exchange Act of 1934,  as amended
from time to time, or any successor act thereto.

     2.16  Exercise  Period  means the period  during  which an SAR or Option is
exercisable, as set forth in the related Award Agreement.

     2.17 Fair Market Value means the average of the high and low sale prices as
reported in the consolidated  transaction  reporting system, or, if there was no
such sale on the relevant  date,  then on the last  previous day on which a sale
was reported.

     2.18 Freestanding SAR means an SAR that is not a Tandem SAR.

                                        3



     2.19  Incentive  Stock  Option or ISO means an option to  purchase  Shares,
granted under Article 6 herein, which is designated as an Incentive Stock Option
and satisfies the requirements of Section 422 of the Code.

     2.20 Nonqualified  Stock Option or NQSO means an option to purchase Shares,
granted under Article 6 herein,  which is not intended to be an Incentive  Stock
Option under Section 422 of the Code.

     2.21 Option means an Incentive Stock Option or a Nonqualified Stock Option.

     2.22  Option  Exercise  Price  means  the  price  at  which a Share  may be
purchased by a Participant pursuant to an Option, as determined by the Committee
and set forth in the Option Award Agreement.

     2.23  Participant  means an Eligible  Person who has  outstanding  an Award
granted under the Plan.

     2.24  Performance  Goals means the  performance  goals  established  by the
Committee,  which shall be based on one or more of the following measures: sales
or revenues,  earnings per share,  shareholder  return and/or value,  funds from
operations,  operating income,  gross income,  net income,  cash flow, return on
equity,  return on capital,  earnings before interest,  operating ratios,  stock
price,   customer   satisfaction,   accomplishment  of  mergers,   acquisitions,
dispositions or similar extraordinary business transactions,  profit returns and
margins,  financial return ratios and/or market  performance.  Performance goals
may be measured  solely on a corporate,  subsidiary or business unit basis, or a
combination  thereof.  Performance goals may reflect absolute entity performance
or a relative  comparison of entity  performance  to the  performance  of a peer
group of entities or other external measure.

     2.25  Performance  Period means the time period  during  which  Performance
Unit/Performance Share Performance Goals must be met.

     2.26 Performance Share means an Award described in Article 9 herein.

     2.27 Performance Unit means an Award described in Article 9 herein.

     2.28 Period of  Restriction  means the period  during which the transfer of
Restricted Stock is limited in some way, as provided in Article 8 herein.

     2.29 Person shall have the meaning ascribed to such term in Section 3(a)(9)
of the  Exchange  Act, as used in Sections  13(d) and 14(d)  thereof,  including
usage in the definition of a "group" in Section 13(d) thereof.

     2.30 Plan means the IDACORP, Inc. 2000 Long-Term Incentive and Compensation
Plan.


                                        4



     2.31  Qualified  Restricted  Stock  means  an  Award  of  Restricted  Stock
designated as Qualified  Restricted  Stock by the Committee at the time of grant
and intended to qualify for the exemption from the  limitation on  deductibility
imposed by Section 162(m) of the Code that is set forth in Section 162(m)(4)(C).

     2.32  Qualified  Restricted  Stock Unit means an Award of Restricted  Stock
Units  designated  as Qualified  Restricted  Stock Units by the Committee at the
time of grant and intended to qualify for the exemption  from the  limitation on
deductibility imposed by Section 162(m) of the Code that is set forth in Section
162(m)(4)(C).

     2.33 Restricted Stock means an Award described in Article 8 herein.

     2.34 Restricted Stock Unit means an Award described in Article 8 herein.

     2.35 Retirement means a Participant's  termination from employment with the
Company or a Subsidiary at the Participant's Early or Normal Retirement Date, as
applicable.

     (a)  Early  Retirement  Date -- shall mean the date on which a  Participant
          terminates  employment,  if such  termination  date occurs on or after
          Participant's   attainment  of  age  fifty-five   (55)  but  prior  to
          Participant's Normal Retirement Date.

     (b)  Normal Retirement Date -- shall mean the date on which the Participant
          terminates employment, if such termination date occurs on or after the
          Participant attains age sixty-two (62).

     2.36 Securities Act means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

     2.37 Shares means the shares of common stock, no par value, of the Company.

     2.38 Stock  Appreciation  Right or SAR means a right,  granted  alone or in
connection with a related Option,  designated as an SAR, to receive a payment on
the day the right is exercised,  pursuant to the terms of Article 7 herein. Each
SAR shall be denominated in terms of one Share.

     2.39  Subsidiary  means any  corporation  (other  than the  Company)  in an
unbroken  chain  of  corporations  beginning  with  the  Company  if each of the
corporations  other than the last  corporation  in the unbroken chain owns stock
possessing 50 percent or more of the total combined  voting power of all classes
of stock in one of the other corporations in such chain.

     2.40 Tandem SAR means an SAR that is granted in  connection  with a related
Option,  the exercise of which shall require forfeiture of the right to purchase
a Share  under  the  related  Option  (and when a Share is  purchased  under the
Option, the Tandem SAR shall be similarly canceled).


                                        5



Article 3. Administration

     3.1 The  Committee.  The Plan  shall be  administered  by the  Compensation
Committee or such other  committee (the  "Committee")  as the Board of Directors
shall select  consisting solely of two or more members of the Board. The members
of the Committee shall be appointed from time to time by, and shall serve at the
discretion of, the Board of Directors.

     3.2 Authority of the Committee.  The Committee shall have full power except
as limited by law, the Articles of  Incorporation  or the Bylaws of the Company,
subject to such other restricting limitations or directions as may be imposed by
the Board and  subject to the  provisions  herein,  to  determine  the  Eligible
Persons  to  receive  Awards;  to  determine  the size and types of  Awards;  to
determine the terms and conditions of such Awards; to construe and interpret the
Plan and any agreement or instrument  entered into under the Plan; to establish,
amend or waive rules and regulations for the Plan's administration; and (subject
to the provisions of Article 15 herein) to amend the terms and conditions of any
outstanding Award.  Further,  the Committee shall make all other  determinations
which may be necessary  or  advisable  for the  administration  of the Plan.  As
permitted by law, the  Committee  may delegate  its  authorities  as  identified
hereunder.

     3.3  Restrictions  on  Distribution  of Shares  and Share  Transferability.
Notwithstanding  any other  provision  of the Plan,  the  Company  shall have no
liability to deliver any Shares or benefits  under the Plan unless such delivery
would  comply with all  applicable  laws  (including,  without  limitation,  the
Securities  Act) and  applicable  requirements  of any  securities  exchange  or
similar entity and unless the  Participant's tax obligations have been satisfied
as set forth in Article 16. The  Committee may impose such  restrictions  on any
Shares  acquired  pursuant  to Awards  under the Plan as it may deem  advisable,
including,  without  limitation,  restrictions to comply with applicable Federal
securities  laws,  with the  requirements  of any stock  exchange or market upon
which such Shares are then listed  and/or  traded and with any blue sky or state
securities laws applicable to such Shares.

     3.4  Decisions  Binding.  All  determinations  and  decisions  made  by the
Committee  pursuant  to the  provisions  of the Plan and all  related  orders or
resolutions of the Board shall be final,  conclusive and binding on all persons,
including  the  Company,   its  shareholders,   Eligible   Persons,   Employees,
Participants and their estates and beneficiaries.

     3.5 Costs. The Company shall pay all costs of administration of the Plan.

Article 4. Shares Subject to the Plan

     4.1 Number of Shares.  Subject to Section 4.2 herein, the maximum number of
Shares available for grant under the Plan shall be 2,050,000.  Shares underlying
lapsed or forfeited Awards, or Awards that are not paid in Shares, may be reused
for other Awards; if the Option Exercise Price is satisfied by tendering Shares,
only the  number of Shares  issued net of the  Shares  tendered  shall be deemed
issued under the Plan. Shares granted pursuant to the Plan may be (i) authorized
but  unissued  Shares  of common  stock,  (ii) treasury  shares or  (iii) Shares
purchased on the open market.


                                        6



     4.2  Adjustments  in  Authorized  Shares  and  Awards.  In the event of any
merger,  reorganization,  consolidation,  recapitalization,  liquidation,  stock
dividend,   split-up,   spin-off,   stock  split,  reverse  stock  split,  share
combination,  share  exchange or other change in the corporate  structure of the
Company  affecting the Shares,  such adjustment shall be made in the outstanding
Awards,  the number and class of Shares which may be  delivered  under the Plan,
and in the number  and class of and/or  price of Shares  subject to  outstanding
Awards  granted  under the Plan,  as may be  determined  to be  appropriate  and
equitable  by the  Committee,  in its sole  discretion,  to prevent  dilution or
enlargement of rights.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,  (i) each such adjustment
with respect to an Incentive Stock Option shall comply with the rules of Section
424(a) of the Code and (ii) in no event shall any adjustment be made which would
render  any  Incentive  Stock  Option  granted  hereunder  to be  other  than an
incentive  stock  option for  purposes of Section  422 of the Code.  In no event
shall the Committee have the right to amend an outstanding  Option Award for the
sole purpose of reducing the exercise price thereof.

     4.3  Individual  Limitations.  Subject to Section 4.2 above,  (i) the total
number of Shares  with  respect  to which  Options or SARs may be granted in any
calendar year to any Covered Employee shall not exceed 250,000 Shares;  (ii) the
total number of Qualified  Restricted Stock Shares or Qualified Restricted Stock
Units that may be granted in any calendar year to any Covered Employee shall not
exceed  250,000  Shares or Units,  as the case may be; (iii) the total number of
Performance Shares or Performance Units that may be granted in any calendar year
to any Covered  Employee shall not exceed  250,000 Shares or Units,  as the case
may be;  (iv) the total  number of  Shares  that are  intended  to  qualify  for
deduction under Section 162(m) of the Code granted pursuant to Article 10 herein
in any calendar year to any Covered  Employee shall not exceed  250,000  Shares;
(v) the total cash Award that is intended to qualify for deduction under Section
162(m)  of the Code  that may be paid  pursuant  to  Article  10  herein  in any
calendar year to any Covered  Employee shall not exceed  $500,000;  and (vi) the
aggregate  number of  Dividend  Equivalents  that are  intended  to qualify  for
deduction  under Section 162(m) of the Code that a Covered  Employee may receive
in any calendar year shall not exceed 1,000,000.

Article 5.        Eligibility and Participation

     5.1  Eligibility.  Persons  eligible to participate in the Plan  ("Eligible
Persons")  include all officers,  key employees and directors of the Company and
its Subsidiaries, as determined by the Committee.

     5.2  Actual  Participation.  Subject  to the  provisions  of the Plan,  the
Committee may, from time to time, select from all Eligible Persons those to whom
Awards shall be granted.

Article 6. Stock Options

     6.1 Grant of  Options.  Subject  to the terms and  conditions  of the Plan,
Options may be granted to an Eligible  Person at any time and from time to time,
as shall be determined by the Committee.

     The Committee  shall have complete  discretion in determining the number of
Shares subject to Options  granted to each Eligible Person (subject to Article 4
herein) and, consistent with the

                                        7



provisions of the Plan, in determining  the terms and  conditions  pertaining to
such Options. The Committee may grant ISOs, NQSOs or a combination thereof.

     6.2 Option  Award  Agreement.  Each Option  grant shall be  evidenced by an
Option Award Agreement that shall specify the Option Exercise Price, the term of
the  Option,  the number of Shares to which the Option  pertains,  the  Exercise
Period and such other provisions as the Committee shall determine, including but
not limited to any rights to Dividend  Equivalents.  The Option Award  Agreement
shall also specify whether the Option is intended to be an ISO or a NQSO.

     6.3 Exercise of and Payment for  Options.  Options  granted  under the Plan
shall be exercisable at such times and shall be subject to such restrictions and
conditions as the Committee shall in each instance approve.

     A  Participant  may  exercise  an Option at any time  during  the  Exercise
Period.  Options  shall be  exercised  by the  delivery  of a written  notice of
exercise to the  Company,  setting  forth the number of Shares  with  respect to
which the Option is to be exercised,  accompanied  by provision for full payment
for the Shares.

     The Option Exercise Price shall be payable:  (a) in cash or its equivalent,
(b) by  tendering  previously  acquired  Shares having an aggregate  Fair Market
Value at the time of exercise equal to the total Option Exercise  Price,  (c) by
broker-assisted  cashless  exercise or (d) by a  combination  of (a), (b) and/or
(c).

     6.4 Termination.  Each Option Award Agreement shall set forth the extent to
which the  Participant  shall have the right to  exercise  the Option  following
termination of the Participant's  employment with or service on the Board of the
Company and its  Subsidiaries.  Such provisions  shall be determined in the sole
discretion of the Committee  (subject to applicable  law),  shall be included in
the Option Award Agreement entered into with  Participants,  need not be uniform
among all Options  granted  pursuant to the Plan or among  Participants  and may
reflect distinctions based on the reasons for termination.

     6.5  Transferability  of Options.  Except as  otherwise  determined  by the
Committee,  all  Options  granted  to a  Participant  under  the  Plan  shall be
exercisable  during his or her lifetime only by such Participant,  and no Option
granted under the Plan may be sold, transferred, pledged, assigned, or otherwise
alienated  or  hypothecated,  other than by will or by the laws of  descent  and
distribution.  ISOs are not  transferable  other  than by will or by the laws of
descent and distribution.

Article 7. Stock Appreciation Rights

     7.1 Grant of SARs.  Subject to the terms and conditions of the Plan, an SAR
may be granted to an Eligible  Person at any time and from time to time as shall
be determined by the  Committee.  The  Committee  may grant  Freestanding  SARs,
Tandem SARs or any combination of these forms of SARs.


                                        8



     The Committee  shall have complete  discretion in determining the number of
SARs  granted  to each  Eligible  Person  (subject  to  Article 4  herein)  and,
consistent  with the  provisions  of the  Plan,  in  determining  the  terms and
conditions pertaining to such SARs.

     The Base Value of a Freestanding SAR shall equal the Fair Market Value of a
Share on the date of grant of the SAR. The Base Value of Tandem SARs shall equal
the Option Exercise Price of the related Option.

     7.2 SAR Award Agreement.  Each SAR grant shall be evidenced by an SAR Award
Agreement  that shall  specify the number of SARs granted,  the Base Value,  the
term of the SAR, the Exercise Period and such other  provisions as the Committee
shall determine.

     7.3 Exercise and Payment of SARs.  Tandem SARs may be exercised  for all or
part of the Shares subject to the related Option upon the surrender of the right
to exercise the equivalent  portion of the related  Option.  A Tandem SAR may be
exercised  only with respect to the Shares for which its related  Option is then
exercisable.

     Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of the Plan to the  contrary,  with
respect to a Tandem SAR granted in connection  with an ISO:  (i) the  Tandem SAR
will expire no later than the expiration of the underlying  ISO;  (ii) the value
of the payout with respect to the Tandem SAR may be for no more than one hundred
percent  (100%) of the  difference  between  the  Option  Exercise  Price of the
underlying ISO and the Fair Market Value of the Shares subject to the underlying
ISO at the time the Tandem SAR is  exercised;  and  (iii) the  Tandem SAR may be
exercised  only when the Fair  Market  Value of the  Shares  subject  to the ISO
exceeds the Option Exercise Price of the ISO.

     Freestanding  SARs may be exercised  upon whatever terms and conditions the
Committee, in its sole discretion, imposes upon them.

     A Participant  may exercise an SAR at any time during the Exercise  Period.
SARs shall be exercised  by the delivery of a written  notice of exercise to the
Company,  setting forth the number of SARs being exercised.  Upon exercise of an
SAR, a Participant  shall be entitled to receive  payment from the Company in an
amount equal to the product of:

     i.   the  excess  of (i) the  Fair  Market  Value of a Share on the date of
          exercise over (ii) the Base Value multiplied by

     ii.  the number of Shares with respect to which the SAR is exercised.

     At the sole  discretion of the  Committee,  the payment to the  Participant
upon SAR  exercise  may be in cash,  in  Shares of  equivalent  value or in some
combination thereof.

     7.4  Termination.  Each SAR Award  Agreement  shall set forth the extent to
which  the  Participant  shall  have the  right to  exercise  the SAR  following
termination of the Participant's  employment with or service on the Board of the
Company and its  Subsidiaries.  Such provisions  shall be determined in the sole
discretion of the Committee, shall be included in the SAR Award


                                        9


Agreement  entered into with  Participants,  need not be uniform  among all SARs
granted pursuant to the Plan or among Participants and may reflect  distinctions
based on the reasons for termination.

     7.5  Transferability  of  SARs.  Except  as  otherwise  determined  by  the
Committee, all SARs granted to a Participant under the Plan shall be exercisable
during  his or  her  lifetime  only  by  such  Participant  or his or her  legal
representative,  and no SAR  granted  under  the Plan may be sold,  transferred,
pledged, assigned, or otherwise alienated or hypothecated, other than by will or
by the laws of descent and distribution.

Article 8. Restricted Stock and Restricted Stock Units

     8.1 Grant of Restricted  Stock and Restricted  Stock Units.  Subject to the
terms and conditions of the Plan, Restricted Stock and/or Restricted Stock Units
may be granted to an Eligible Person at any time and from time to time, as shall
be determined by the Committee.

     The Committee  shall have complete  discretion in determining the number of
shares of  Restricted  Stock  and/or  Restricted  Stock  Units  granted  to each
Eligible  Person  (subject  to  Article  4  herein)  and,  consistent  with  the
provisions of the Plan, in determining  the terms and  conditions  pertaining to
such Awards.

     In addition, the Committee may, prior to or at the time of grant, designate
an Award of Restricted Stock or Restricted  Stock Units as Qualified  Restricted
Stock or Qualified Restricted Stock Units, as the case may be, in which event it
will condition the grant or vesting, as applicable, of such Qualified Restricted
Stock  or  Qualified  Restricted  Stock  Units,  as the  case  may be,  upon the
attainment of the Performance Goals selected by the Committee.

     8.2 Restricted  Stock/Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement.  Each grant of
Restricted  Stock  and/or  Restricted  Stock Units grant shall be evidenced by a
Restricted Stock and/or Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement that shall specify
the number of shares of Restricted Stock and/or  Restricted Stock Units granted,
the initial value (if  applicable),  the Period or Periods of  Restriction,  and
such other provisions as the Committee shall determine.

     8.3  Transferability.  Restricted  Stock and Restricted Stock Units granted
hereunder  may  not  be  sold,  transferred,  pledged,  assigned,  or  otherwise
alienated or hypothecated  until the end of the applicable Period of Restriction
established  by the Committee and specified in the Award  Agreement.  During the
applicable  Period of  Restriction,  all rights with  respect to the  Restricted
Stock and Restricted  Stock Units granted to a Participant  under the Plan shall
be available  during his or her lifetime only to such  Participant or his or her
legal representative.

     8.4 Certificates.  No certificates representing Stock shall be issued until
such time as all restrictions applicable to such Shares have been satisfied.

     8.5  Removal  of   Restrictions.   Restricted  Stock  shall  become  freely
transferable by the Participant  after the last day of the Period of Restriction
applicable thereto. Once Restricted Stock is released from the restrictions, the
Participant shall be entitled to receive a certificate. Payment


                                        10


of  Restricted  Stock  Units  shall be made  after the last day of the Period of
Restriction applicable thereto. The Committee,  in its sole discretion,  may pay
Restricted Stock Units in cash or in Shares (or in a combination thereof), which
have an aggregate Fair Market Value equal to the value of the  Restricted  Stock
Units.

     8.6  Voting  Rights.  During the Period of  Restriction,  Participants  may
exercise full voting rights with respect to the Restricted Stock.

     8.7 Dividends and Other Distributions.  Subject to the Committee's right to
determine  otherwise  at the time of grant,  during the  Period of  Restriction,
Participants  shall receive all regular cash  dividends paid with respect to the
Shares while they are so held. All other distributions paid with respect to such
Restricted  Stock  shall  be  credited  to  Participants  subject  to  the  same
restrictions on transferability  and forfeitability as the Restricted Stock with
respect  to which they were paid and shall be paid to the  Participant  promptly
after the full  vesting  of the  Restricted  Stock  with  respect  to which such
distributions were made.

     Rights, if any, to Dividend  Equivalents on Restricted Stock Units shall be
established  by the  Committee  at the time of grant  and set forth in the Award
Agreement.

     8.8  Termination.   Each  Restricted   Stock/Restricted  Stock  Unit  Award
Agreement  shall set forth the  extent to which the  Participant  shall have the
right to  receive  Restricted  Stock  and/or a  Restricted  Stock  Unit  payment
following  termination of the  Participant's  employment  with or service on the
Board of the Company and its  Subsidiaries.  Such provisions shall be determined
in the  sole  discretion  of the  Committee,  shall  be  included  in the  Award
Agreement entered into with  Participants,  need not be uniform among all grants
of Restricted Stock/Restricted Stock Units or among Participants and may reflect
distinctions based on the reasons for termination.

Article 9. Performance Units and Performance Shares

     9.1 Grant of Performance Units and Performance Shares. Subject to the terms
and conditions of the Plan,  Performance Units and/or  Performance Shares may be
granted  to an  Eligible  Person at any time and from time to time,  as shall be
determined by the Committee.

     The Committee  shall have complete  discretion in determining the number of
Performance  Units and/or  Performance  Shares  granted to each Eligible  Person
(subject to Article 4 herein) and,  consistent  with the provisions of the Plan,
in determining the terms and conditions pertaining to such Awards.

     9.2  Performance  Unit/Performance  Share  Award  Agreement.  Each grant of
Performance Units and/or  Performance Shares shall be evidenced by a Performance
Unit and/or  Performance  Share Award Agreement that shall specify the number of
Performance  Units and/or  Performance  Shares  granted,  the initial  value (if
applicable),  the  Performance  Period,  the  Performance  Goals and such  other
provisions as the Committee  shall  determine,  including but not limited to any
rights to Dividend Equivalents.


                                        11


     9.3 Value of Performance  Units/Performance  Shares.  Each Performance Unit
shall have an initial value that is  established by the Committee at the time of
grant. The value of a Performance  Share shall be equal to the Fair Market Value
of a Share. The Committee shall set Performance  Goals in its discretion  which,
depending on the extent to which they are met, will  determine the number and/or
value  of  Performance  Units/Performance  Shares  that  will be paid out to the
Participants.

     9.4 Earning of Performance  Units/Performance  Shares. After the applicable
Performance  Period has ended,  the  Participant  shall be entitled to receive a
payout with respect to the  Performance  Units/Performance  Shares earned by the
Participant over the Performance  Period,  to be determined as a function of the
extent to which the corresponding Performance Goals have been achieved.

     9.5 Form and  Timing of Payment of  Performance  Units/Performance  Shares.
Payment of earned Performance  Units/Performance  Shares shall be made following
the close of the  applicable  Performance  Period.  The  Committee,  in its sole
discretion,  may pay earned Performance Units/Shares in cash or in Shares (or in
a combination  thereof),  which have an aggregate Fair Market Value equal to the
value of the  earned  Performance  Units/Shares  at the close of the  applicable
Performance  Period.  Such  Shares  may be granted  subject to any  restrictions
deemed appropriate by the Committee.

     9.6 Termination.  Each Performance  Unit/Performance  Share Award Agreement
shall set forth the  extent  to which the  Participant  shall  have the right to
receive a Performance  Unit/Performance  Share payment following  termination of
the Participant's employment with or service on the Board of the Company and its
Subsidiaries during a Performance Period. Such provisions shall be determined in
the sole  discretion of the Committee,  shall be included in the Award Agreement
entered  into  with  Participants,  need not be  uniform  among  all  grants  of
Performance  Units/Performance  Shares  or among  Participants  and may  reflect
distinctions based on reasons for termination.

     9.7  Transferability.  Except as otherwise  determined by the Committee,  a
Participant's  rights  with  respect  to  Performance  Units/Performance  Shares
granted under the Plan shall be available during the Participant's lifetime only
to such Participant or the Participant's  legal  representative  and Performance
Units/Performance  Shares may not be sold,  transferred,  pledged,  assigned  or
otherwise  alienated  or  hypothecated,  other  than by  will or by the  laws of
descent and distribution.

Article 10. Other Awards

     The Committee shall have the right to grant other Awards which may include,
without limitation, the grant of Shares based on attainment of Performance Goals
established  by the  Committee,  the  payment  of Shares in lieu of cash or cash
based on attainment of Performance Goals  established by the Committee,  and the
payment  of  Shares  in lieu of cash  under  other  Company  incentive  or bonus
programs.  Payment  under or settlement of any such Awards shall be made in such
manner and at such times as the Committee may determine.


                                        12


Article 11.       Beneficiary Designation

     Each  Participant  under  the  Plan  may,  from  time  to  time,  name  any
beneficiary or beneficiaries  (who may be named contingently or successively) to
whom any benefit under the Plan is to be paid in case of the Participant's death
before  the  Participant  receives  any  or  all  of  such  benefit.  Each  such
designation shall revoke all prior  designations by the same Participant,  shall
be in a form  prescribed by the Company and will be effective only when filed by
the Participant in writing with the Company during the  Participant's  lifetime.
In the  absence  of any  such  designation,  benefits  remaining  unpaid  at the
Participant's death shall be paid to the Participant's estate.

     The  spouse of a married  Participant  domiciled  in a  community  property
jurisdiction shall join in any designation of beneficiary or beneficiaries other
than the spouse.

Article 12. Deferrals

     The Committee may permit a Participant to defer the  Participant's  receipt
of the payment of cash or the delivery of Shares that would  otherwise be due to
such Participant under the Plan. If any such deferral election is permitted, the
Committee shall, in its sole discretion, establish rules and procedures for such
payment deferrals.

Article 13. Rights of Participants

     13.1 Termination.  Nothing in the Plan shall interfere with or limit in any
way the right of the Company or any  Subsidiary to terminate  any  Participant's
employment or other relationship with the Company or any Subsidiary at any time,
for  any  reason  or no  reason  in  the  Company's  or  the  Subsidiary's  sole
discretion,  nor confer upon any Participant any right to continue in the employ
of, or otherwise in any relationship with, the Company or any Subsidiary.

     13.2 Participation.  No Eligible Person shall have the right to be selected
to receive an Award under the Plan, or, having been so selected,  to be selected
to receive a future Award.

     13.3  Limitation of Implied  Rights.  Neither a  Participant  nor any other
Person  shall,  by  reason  of the  Plan,  acquire  any right in or title to any
assets,  funds  or  property  of  the  Company  or  any  Subsidiary  whatsoever,
including,  without  limitation,  any specific  funds,  assets or other property
which the Company or any Subsidiary, in their sole discretion,  may set aside in
anticipation  of a liability  under the Plan.  A  Participant  shall have only a
contractual  right to the Shares or  amounts,  if any,  payable  under the Plan,
unsecured by any assets of the Company or any Subsidiary.  Nothing  contained in
the Plan shall constitute a guarantee that the assets of such companies shall be
sufficient to pay any benefits to any Person.

     Except as  otherwise  provided  in the Plan,  no Award under the Plan shall
confer upon the holder  thereof any right as a shareholder  of the Company prior
to the date on which the individual  fulfills all conditions for receipt of such
rights.


                                        13


Article 14. Change in Control

     The terms of this Article 14 shall immediately  become  operative,  without
further action or consent by any person or entity, upon a Change in Control, and
once  operative  shall  supersede and take control over any other  provisions of
this Plan.

     Upon a Change in Control

     (a)  Any  and  all  Options  and  SARs  granted   hereunder   shall  become
          immediately vested and exercisable;

     (b)  Any restriction periods and restrictions  imposed on Restricted Stock,
          Restricted  Stock  Units,  Qualified  Restricted  Stock  or  Qualified
          Restricted   Stock  Units  shall  be  deemed  to  have  expired;   any
          Performance  Goals  shall be  deemed  to have  been met at the  target
          level;  such  Restricted  Stock and Qualified  Restricted  Stock shall
          become immediately vested in full, and such Restricted Stock Units and
          Qualified Restricted Stock Units shall be paid out in cash; and

     (c)  The target payout opportunity  attainable under all outstanding Awards
          of Performance Units and Performance Shares and any other Awards shall
          be  deemed  to have  been  fully  earned  for the  entire  Performance
          Period(s)  as of the  effective  date of the  Change in  Control.  All
          Awards shall become  immediately  vested.  All Performance  Shares and
          other Awards  denominated  in Shares shall be paid out in Shares,  and
          all Performance Units and other Awards shall be paid out in cash.

Article 15. Amendment, Modification and Termination

     15.1 Amendment,  Modification and  Termination.  The Board may, at any time
and from time to time, alter,  amend,  suspend or terminate the Plan in whole or
in part.

     15.2 Awards Previously Granted.  No termination,  amendment or modification
of the Plan shall  adversely  affect in any  material  way any Award  previously
granted under the Plan without the written  consent of the  Participant  holding
such Award,  unless such  termination,  modification or amendment is required by
applicable law and except as otherwise provided herein.

Article 16. Withholding

     16.1 Tax  Withholding.  The  Company  shall have the power and the right to
deduct or withhold,  or require a Participant to remit to the Company, an amount
(including any Shares withheld as provided below) sufficient to satisfy Federal,
state and local taxes (including the Participant's FICA obligation)  required by
law to be withheld with respect to an Award made under the Plan.

     16.2 Share Withholding.  With respect to tax withholding  required upon the
exercise of Options or SARs, upon the lapse of restrictions on Restricted Stock,
or upon any other taxable


                                        14


event arising out of or as a result of Awards  granted  hereunder,  Participants
may  elect to  satisfy  the  withholding  requirement,  in whole or in part,  by
tendering  Shares  held by the  Participant  or by having the  Company  withhold
Shares having a Fair Market Value equal to the minimum statutory total tax which
could be imposed on the transaction. All elections shall be irrevocable, made in
writing and signed by the Participant.

Article 17. Successors

     All  obligations  of the  Company  under the Plan,  with  respect to Awards
granted hereunder, shall be binding on any successor to the Company, whether the
existence  of such  successor  is the result of a direct or  indirect  purchase,
merger,  consolidation or otherwise of all or substantially  all of the business
and/or assets of the Company.

Article 18. Legal Construction

     18.1 Gender and Number.  Except where  otherwise  indicated by the context,
any masculine term used herein also shall include the feminine, the plural shall
include the singular and the singular shall include the plural.

     18.2  Severability.  In the event any  provision  of the Plan shall be held
illegal or invalid for any reason, the illegality or invalidity shall not affect
the remaining parts of the Plan, and the Plan shall be construed and enforced as
if the illegal or invalid provision had not been included.

     18.3 Requirements of Law. The granting of Awards and the issuance of Shares
under the Plan shall be subject to all applicable  laws,  rules and regulations,
and to such  approvals  by any  governmental  agencies  or  national  securities
exchanges as may be required.

     18.4  Governing  Law. To the extent not preempted by Federal law, the Plan,
and all  agreements  hereunder,  shall be  construed  in  accordance  with,  and
governed by, the laws of the State of Idaho.




Adopted by the Board on January 20, 1999
Approved by the Shareholders May 11, 2000
Amended by the Board January 18, 2001
Approved by the Shareholders on ________________


                                        15



                                                                       Exhibit B


                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

                    For IDACORP, Inc. and Idaho Power Company


I. PURPOSE

     The  primary  function  of the Audit  Committee  is to assist  the Board of
Directors  in  fulfilling  its  oversight   responsibilities  by  reviewing  the
financial  information  provided to the shareholders and others,  the systems of
internal  controls and  compliance  programs that  management and the Board have
established,  the  audit  process  and  services  provided  by  the  independent
auditors, and the Internal Auditing Department activities.

     II.  COMPOSITION  The Audit  Committee  shall be  composed of three or four
Directors,  one of whom shall serve as Chairperson,  who have no relationship to
the Company  that may  interfere  with the exercise of their  independence  from
management  and the  Corporation.  Each member of the Audit  Committee  shall be
financially  literate,  as such  qualification  is  interpreted  by the Board of
Directors.  At least one member of the Audit  Committee must have  accounting or
related financial  management  expertise,  as the Board of Directors  interprets
such  qualification in its business  judgement.  Any further  requirements as to
members,  as established by the New York Stock Exchange,  Inc., shall apply. The
Committee and the Chairperson shall be nominated by the Executive  Committee and
elected at the Board's regularly scheduled July meeting.


                                        1


III. DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

     A.   Financial Reporting

               Review,  prior to the release to shareholders  and the Securities
          and Exchange  Commission  (SEC),  with  management and the independent
          auditors the  financial  statements  contained in the annual report to
          shareholders and Form 10-K. Regarding quarterly financial reports, the
          Committee,  prior to release to shareholders and the SEC, shall review
          the  financial  statements  and  be  made  aware  of  any  item  which
          materially affects the quarterly  financial results.  The Chair of the
          Committee or its  designee  may  represent  the entire  Committee  for
          purposes of this review.

               Review with  management any  accounting  and financial  reporting
          changes proposed and/or adopted by the Financial  Accounting Standards
          Board, the American  Institute of Certified Public Accountants and the
          Internal Revenue Service.

     B.   Independent Auditors

               Review and  recommend to the Board of Directors  the selection of
          the  independent  auditors to be ratified by shareholders to audit the
          financial reports of the Company and its subsidiaries. The independent
          auditors for the Corporation  are ultimately  accountable to the Board
          of Directors  and the Audit  Committee.  The Audit  Committee  and the
          Board of Directors have the ultimate  authority and  responsibility to
          select,  evaluate  and,  where  appropriate,  replace the  independent
          auditors and/or  nominate the independent  auditors to be proposed for
          shareholder approval in any proxy statement. The Committee's review of
          the  independent  auditors  shall  include  the annual  audit  process
          including the scope,  fees and audit  procedures  to be utilized,  the
          results of the annual audit including financial statements and related
          footnotes,  significant  changes  in the  scope of the  audit or audit
          procedures,  difficulties  encountered  with management and conduct of
          the audit under  generally  accepted  accounting  principles,  and the
          independence of the independent auditor. The Audit


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          Committee is responsible  for ensuring that the  independent  auditors
          submit on an  annual  basis to the Audit  Committee  a formal  written
          statement   delineating  all  relationships  between  the  independent
          auditors and the Company, consistent with Independence Standards Board
          Standard  No. 1. The  Audit  Committee  is  responsible  for  actively
          engaging in a dialogue with the  independent  auditors with respect to
          any   disclosed   relationships   or  services  that  may  impact  the
          objectivity  and  independence  of the  independent  auditors  and for
          recommending  that the Board of Directors take  appropriate  action in
          response to the independent  auditors' report to satisfy itself of the
          independent auditors' independence.

     C.   Internal Controls

               Review the adequacy and effectiveness of the Corporation's system
          of  internal  controls  regarding  finance,  accounting,   information
          systems, legal compliance,  ethics and the safeguarding of assets with
          the independent auditors and internal audit. The Committee's review of
          the system of internal  controls  shall  include  annual  reports from
          internal  audit and the  independent  auditor  concerning  significant
          findings and recommendations and management's response thereto.

     D.   Legal and Regulatory Compliance

               Review  Corporate  compliance  policies  and programs and related
          legal and regulatory  matters.  Review with the Corporation's  General
          Counsel material litigation and other legal matters as appropriate.

     E.   Internal Audit

               Annually review the Corporate Internal Audit Department  function
          including its organization and qualifications, the proposed audit plan
          for the coming year and the  Internal  Audit  Department  coordination
          efforts with the independent auditors.


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          The  Committee's  on-going review of internal audit  activities  shall
          include  significant   findings  during  the  year,  any  difficulties
          experienced  including access  restriction,  changes in the audit plan
          and the independence of internal audit. The Committee shall review and
          concur in the appointment or removal of the manager of internal audit.

     F.   Business Ethics and Conduct Guide

               Review  the  Corporation's  Business  Ethics  and  Conduct  Guide
          (Guide)   and  monitor   with  the  Manager  of  Internal   Audit  the
          Corporation's  compliance  efforts  under the Guide.  The  Committee's
          review  shall  include a report on inquiries  made and  investigations
          conducted  under the terms of the Guide and executive  perquisites and
          expense accounts.

     G.   Other Duties and Responsibilities

                  The Committee shall:

                    -    Review  and  assess  the  adequacy  of the  Committee's
                         charter annually;

                    -    Provide an open  avenue of  communications  between the
                         internal auditors,  independent  auditors and the Board
                         of Directors;

                    -    Inquire  about  the  existence  and  substance  of  any
                         significant accounting accrual, reserves, estimates, or
                         contingent  liabilities  made by management  that had a
                         material impact on the financial statements;

                    -    Review significant  findings of regulatory  authorities
                         or agencies in the areas of tax or accounting matters;

                    -    Meet  with  the  manager  of  internal  auditing,   the
                         independent   auditor   and   management   in  separate
                         individual  executive  sessions  to discuss any matters
                         that the  Committee or these groups  believe  should be
                         discussed privately with the Audit Committee;


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                    -    Conduct or  authorize  investigations  into any matters
                         within the Committee's scope of  responsibilities.  The
                         Committee  shall be  empowered  to  retain  independent
                         counsel,  accountants  or  others  to  assist it in the
                         conduct of any investigation;

                    -    Prepare the Audit Committee Report, as required by Item
                         306 of Reg. S-K;

                    -    Perform  such other  functions  as assigned by law, the
                         Company's   charter  or   by-laws,   or  the  Board  of
                         Directors.

IV. PROCEDURES

          A.   Meetings

                    The Committee  shall review and approve the annual report to
               shareholders  in  February  and shall meet four times per year in
               conjunction  with the regular Board  meetings and otherwise  from
               time to time at the call of its Chairperson.  The Committee shall
               meet in separate executive sessions with the independent  auditor
               and with the manager of internal  auditing at the March  meeting,
               and  separately  at  other  times,  if  in  the  opinion  of  the
               Committee,  separate meetings are deemed necessary. Meetings may,
               at the  discretion  of the Audit  Committee,  include  members of
               management,  independent  auditors and such other  persons as the
               Committee shall  determine.  The Committee may meet privately for
               advice  and  counsel in  discharging  its  responsibilities  with
               independent auditors, counsel or with any other person, including
               associates  of the Company,  knowledgeable  in the matters  under
               consideration by the Committee.


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          B.   Action

                    A majority of the members of the Committee shall  constitute
               a quorum.  The Committee shall act on the  affirmative  vote of a
               majority  of  members  present  at a meeting at which a quorum is
               present.  Without a meeting,  the  Committee may act by unanimous
               written consent of all members.

          C.   Rules

                    The Committee  shall determine its own rules and procedures,
               including designation of a Chairperson pro tem, in the absence of
               a Chairperson and designation of a Secretary.

          D.   Chairperson Responsibilities

                    The  Chairperson of the Committee  shall report to the Board
               on  matters  set  forth  in  this  Charter  at the  Board's  next
               regularly scheduled meeting.

          E.   Committee Secretary Responsibilities

                    The Secretary  shall be designated by the Committee and need
               not be a member of the  Committee.  The  Secretary  shall  attend
               meetings and draft minutes.

          F.   Fees

                    For each meeting attended, each member shall be paid the fee
               set by the Board of  Directors.  The  Chairperson  and  Committee
               members shall receive a retainer set by the Board.


         Approved
         --------------------------------
         Audit Committee Chairman

         --------------------------------
         Date

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