Title: Small Customers at the End of Standard Offer
1Small Customers at the End of Standard Offer
- Frank Gorke
- Energy Advocate
- Massachusetts Public Interest Research Group
2To summarize it all in one sentence I am
confident that the smaller customers will
ultimately begin to reap the benefits of
competitive wholesale and retail markets long
before the Red Sox ever win another World Series.
- William Flynn, Chair, NYPSC, 10/7/04
3Why do we care?
- Wallet, pocketbook
- Air and water
- Economic development
- Global warming
4Toward a Consumer-Oriented Electricity System
- National Association of State PIRGs
- July 2004
http//www.newenergyfuture.com/newenergy.asp?id21
3959
5Findings 10 yrs of restructuring
- Few benefits for majority of consumers
- 1993-2002 residential rates declined consistent
w/ trends - Factors other than choice
- Lower energy prices and mandatory rate
reductions/deferrals - 2001 and 2003 first year-to-year increases in
nearly two decades
6Findings 10 years of restructuring
- Use up, efficiency down
- Rates down 18, bills only down 10
- 1993-2000 efficiency spending down 38
7Findings 10 years of restructuring
- Degraded reliability, increased volatility
- Double the disturbances
- Natural gas expansion
8Findings 10 years of restructuring
- Costs on the way
- Deferred rates
- Massive transmission system expansions
- Natural gas dependency
- Financial instability, greater risk ? higher costs
9Findings 10 years of restructuring
- Among states that have deregulated retail sales
there currently is only minimal active
competition for the business of residential
customers.
10There is little reason to think that the
restructuring experiment will produce improved
results in the future. The problems with the
current regime are systematic. we recommend
total abandonment of restructuring and a more
thoroughgoing embrace of markets than
contemplated in current restructuring
initiatives. But we recognize that such reforms
are politically difficult to achieve. A
second-best alternative would be for those states
that have already embraced restructuring to
return to an updated version of the old,
vertically integrated, regulated status quo.
- Rethinking Electricity Restructuring Van Doren
and Taylor, Cato Institute 11/30/2004 (emphasis
added)
11Small customers sometimes have benefited from
rate guarantees in restructuring legislation, but
they have received little direct benefit from
retail competition itself. Retail distribution
should remain a responsibility of utilities under
state and local regulation, along with electric
energy resource portfolio management for
residential and small business customers. By
electric resource portfolio management the
commission means assembling a diversified mix of
short- and long-term resource commitments and
other risk management tools, in order to sustain
the economical and reliable electricity services
that a healthy economy requires.
- Reviving the Electricity Sector
- National Commission on Energy Policy, August 2003
- Co-chaired by John Rowe, CEO of Exelon and former
CEO, NEES
12Where do we go from here?
- Toward a Consumer-Oriented Electricity System
- National Association of State PIRGs
- July 2004
http//www.newenergyfuture.com/newenergy.asp?id21
3959
13Small consumers deserve
- A reasonably and stably priced, regulated
electricity product, and - The ability to aggregate and negotiate for
electric service
14Massachusetts context
- DTE Proceeding, DS principles
- Legislatures Renewable Energy Standard
- Governors Climate Protection Plan
- Regional power sector carbon caps
15Where do we go from here?
- Protect consumers basic rights
- Portfolio management
- Aggressive energy efficiency policies
- Long term contracts for renewable power
16Protect consumers rights
- Access to electricity at equitable, just,
reasonable rates - Low-income assistance
- No slamming
- No above-market rates for sake of market
- Aggregation
17Portfolio Management
- Market doesnt just mean short-term
- Irresponsible not to use available tools to get
best result - Contract term diversity
- Biewald et al, Portfolio Management, 2003
- Manage for customer migration and market
volatility
18Aggressive Energy Efficiency PoliciesNEEP 11/2004
19Renewables and Efficiency Lower Gas Prices
- 2005 Lawrence Berkeley Lab study (Wiser,
Bolinger, St. Clair) - 1 demand reduction ? .8-2 wellhead price
reduction - NE RES ? 34 85 million NPV regionally
- NE RES ? 625 million 1.6 billion national
consumer benefits
20Sweet spots
- No downside to efficiency major downsides to
waste - Long term contracts for renewables make much more
sense than current practice - High capital, low operating
- 50? Or 30?