CleanTechnica is the #1 cleantech-focused
website
 in the world. Subscribe today!


Consumer Technology electricity retailers

Published on July 6th, 2012 | by Giles Parkinson

13

Do We Really Need Electricity Retailers?

Share on Google+Share on RedditShare on StumbleUponTweet about this on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on FacebookPin on PinterestDigg thisShare on TumblrBuffer this pageEmail this to someone

July 6th, 2012 by  

 
People understand what a retailer is: it’s where you go to buy and collect stuff – shoes, clothes, groceries, petrol and other items. They are the points of sale between the manufacturers and wholesalers, and the consumers.

But what about electricity retailers? Is that where you go to buy and collect electricity? Well, actually, no. Electricity retailers don’t actually deliver you any electricity at all. As the diagram below – taken from a presentation by UNSW electricity expert Hugh Outhred – will tell you, that comes straight from the generators via the transmission network and the distributors. And now, some of you will get electricity from solar PV modules on your roof.

The electricity retailers are simply competing for the right to send you a bill, to package up a range of tariffs and lock you into a contract. They are the archetypal middle-man, and the question that is now being put is: Are they of any use?

The question arises because retailers have long been part of an economic model that relies on consumers buying more electricity. That means that retailers can sell more contracts, generators can build more power stations and distributors can build more poles and wires to transport the electrons. But that business model is now changing – demand is falling, energy efficiency is at a premium, more and more consumers (both residential and business) are producing their own energy – and the retailers, like some of the other parts of the value chain – are getting in the way.

One of the biggest problems for retailers is a basic one – they aren’t very good at what they do. They find it almost impossible to hold on to customers. Last year, the major electricity retailers reported that the “churn” rate for 2010/11 was nearly 25 per cent. That means, they lost nearly one in four of their clients, and then they had to go and pay to get them back again, and then bill you for it.

It may have something to do with the long-run inability of retailers to engage with their clients. International surveys show that electricity retailers have the worst relationship with their customers of just about any customer-facing group – their relationships are fleeting, and usually coloured by complaints about price hikes and connection problems.

Still, they make a profit. According to the most recent annual accounts for 2010/11 for the biggest retailers, their gross margin – the difference between the cost of electricity they pay the distributors and generators, and the cost of packaging up you bill and collecting money from customers – was between $150 to $200 per customer. The overall cost of retailers equates to around 15 per cent of your electricity bill, or around $350 a year, depending were you live. That’s nearly half the cost of generation.

But that’s not the end of it. Retailers are now being accused of pocketing hundreds of millions of dollars in profits from schemes that have supported the introduction of technologies such as rooftop solar. For instance, they are allowed by pricing regulators – with the exception of the ACT – to charge customers $40 for each small scale technology certificates (STCs), when the market price has rarely risen about $26. And there are about 45 million STCs washing around the system this year. That has grossly inflated the cost of the schemes, and the returns to retailers, even with their carrying costs.

And electricity retailers are also accused of picking up more profits from exports of excess electricity back to the grid from rooftop solar systems – for which they pay 6c/kWh (and in some cases nothing at all) and then sell it to the houses in the same street for up to five times as much. The retailers can do this because have managed to convince the pricing regulators that the difference is made up with fixed grid, billing and other costs. But the solar industry reckons they are profiting handsomely – hence the push for a “fair value” of solar.

One thing they do achieve is to manage pricing risk, and the rapid and often steep swings in wholesale electricity prices. They do this through a range of hedging policies and by being “vertically integrated”. That means they also own generators, so when the price moves one way, they make it up by increasing profits elsewhere. Unfortunately for customers, this has meant that few have enjoyed the benefits of the lowest wholesale electricity markets since the start of the NEM. Like banks, electricity retailers are slow to pass on the benefits of falling costs, but quicker to act when prices (or rates) go up.

So what would happen if we got rid of retailers? The biggest challenge would be managing the wholesale price risk – electricity is one of the biggest traded markets, bigger by a long shot than carbon. We would need interval metering throughout and, to provide financial risk management, we would also need a carefully designed derivatives market accessible to small players. Such a market was envisaged in the 1990s, but banks and other financial market players argued that this could have been a constraint on competition.

Outhred says perhaps the best answer is to turn them into service providers. “We need energy service companies instead of retailers,” he says. “Because of the way they operate, energy retailers mess-up efficient management of uncertainty and deter end-users from energy efficiency improvements, as well as pocket a fee for doing so.”

Evolving into a service provider, however, would require a massive cultural change. But it may be one that is forced upon them. If the electricity retailing business is about collecting data (metering) and sending out bills, then there is a host of competing organizations that are specialists in data management and IT that can take that role, and offer snappy new devices that offer in-house monitoring and controls. If it is about customer management, there are a host of customer service specialists that can do that better too; and now there are a host of technology providers that can offer alternatives to sourcing electricity from the grid. And now these specialists are recognising their are opportunities to work together. The best chance the retailers have of surviving – apart from regulatory protection – is to strike up some alliances or their own, and to get out of the way of progress. The sooner the better.

This post was originally published on REnew Economy. It has been reposted with permission.

Keep up to date with all the hottest cleantech news by subscribing to our (free) cleantech newsletter, or keep an eye on sector-specific news by getting our (also free) solar energy newsletter, electric vehicle newsletter, or wind energy newsletter.



Share on Google+Share on RedditShare on StumbleUponTweet about this on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on FacebookPin on PinterestDigg thisShare on TumblrBuffer this pageEmail this to someone

Tags: ,


About the Author

is the founding editor of RenewEconomy.com.au, an Australian-based website that provides news and analysis on cleantech, carbon, and climate issues. Giles is based in Sydney and is watching the (slow, but quickening) transformation of Australia's energy grid with great interest.



  • Dave2020

    This gives you the perfect example of how all utilities, which are natural-monopoly public services, should be structured – i.e. vertical integration, no mock market, no middlemen and no fat cats:

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/jun/13/welsh-water-dwr-cymru-investment

    For the provision of mains water and sewerage I pay £15.50 a month – a bargain.

    For telecoms the bill is £25. It should be less, but the land line is still not LLU.

    For electricity £26. They’ll be paying me when my solar is installed.

    Gas is £39. It was £33 last year, but the ‘retailer’ increased my direct debit without notifying me of the change. I worked in the gas industry for twenty years, the first ten under public ownership. By any criteria, privatization was a retrograde move, a massive cultural change in the wrong direction.

    Both gas and electricity are ‘supplied’ by SSE. Don’t make me laugh. This is a prime example of ‘free’ market failure, where profit always takes precedence over customer service. Hugh Outhred is right, because these so-called markets, in energy and finance, are not free in any sense of the word. The complexity of their structure is designed by the players, for the players.

    A functional, vertically integrated electricity industry would be able to plan. long-term, for the most efficient and logical provision of grid infrastructure and energy storage. Then the introduction of widely distributed renewables to displace (centralized) fossil fuels could be organized entirely on the basis of an evaluation of the most practical and appropriate science-led technology. Markets will never embrace R&D.

    • Dave2020

      Further to the above:-

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-18759520

      “most households pay £1 per day for an unlimited supply”

      On a metered supply, water costs me less than 20p a day.

      A spokesman for Welsh Water said the supplier was “investing heavily in protecting resources, replacing old pipes and mains, and greatly reducing leakage”.

      Not to mention fitting meters free on request.

      What’s not to like about the not-for-profit business model?

      • http://cleantechnica.com/ Zachary Shahan

        Nice. That is awesome!

  • http://twitter.com/vetxcl T. Lester

    Just maybe energy retailers will have the power to purchase advanced, and likely pricey storage systems, where other people will not.

    Maybe better to live in apartments/condos and pool resources to go off grid.

  • http://twitter.com/vetxcl T. Lester

    With enough heads up by the media, the electricity retailers will be prepared to make hay even when the sun doesn’t shine.

  • Thor Russell

    I think you will see some very “interesting times” in this regard when energy storage becomes cheaper, particularly in places where there aren’t large national/continent wide grids to share electricity.
    If solar panels/storage becomes common, there may be a time when the  grid will only be required in winter or when there has been a week of little sun. However the companies will want to be paid to maintain the grid so they could try to charge large prices for those times when it is needed. Also in the middle of summer there will be excess electricity and it will be pretty much free. You may see retailers trying to discourage solar power by selling electricity very cheaply when the sun is shining but expensive when it isn’t making the business case for installing further panels diminish. The “free market” solution to the changing situation could be quite unstable. Add to that political lobbying and you may find some very strange new rules coming into play.

  • Energy4all

    There is very little doubt that an energy retailer will only add to the cost of the service overall. This is probably an additional expense that will fall away from the managerial heirarchy as most electric suppliers bill customers directly anyway and will simply solicit PPAs and Energy Certificates from green producers via RFIs as they have been doing. Customer satisfaction and purchasing power is what keeps utilities in business. If they get dissatisfied with prices or service they look into powering their own homes or facilities in part or completely.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Shecky-Vegas/1380703171 Shecky Vegas

    You can also go completely off-grid and tell the utilities to shove it.

    • Matt

      When storage prices drop, I think you will see a big flight off the grid.

      Look at you Energy Bill (I’ll use mine as a example)
      My gas and electric are delivered by Duke.
      Gas: We cook and heat with gas so I include summer and winter
      Fixed Delivery charge $25.33
      Delivery Riders $8.65
      Usage-Based charge (delivery) $0.59 (18 CCF)   $1.64 (50 CCF)
      Gas Recovery (gas cost)             $7.54 (18 CCF) $18.80 (50 CCF)
      Notice how even if I don’t use the gas, I still pay ~$34/month

      Electric (I use Dominion as my providor)
      Duke Delivery Fixed ~$14
      Distribution $0.002212/kWh 
      Distribution Riders ~12 for 900kWh ~22 for 1700kWh
      Cost of power $0.0564/kWh
       
      So distribution is about over 40% of the cost for electric and even more for gas. And that doesn’t count the cost of running the lines to my home, that is hidden in the home cost.

      Yes I know 900-1700kWh/month the house is a pig 

  • http://twitter.com/mduchesn Marc Duchesne

    Very accurate status of the actual landscape of Energy Providers. Same question obviously must apply to the Telecoms Networks Providers : do we still need them ? At least, do we need Telcos as they exist today ?…

    • http://cleantechnica.com/ Zachary Shahan

      yep, good point.

    • Ross

      I’d say the one certainty is that telcos as they exist today will not be as they exist in future.  

      There are strong parallels with telecoms but also differences.

      Video traffic over the Internet (e.g. youtube, netflix, peer to peer) is what is driving investment and evolution in telecoms networks. Bandwidth demand continues to grow by about 50% per year.  Telcos are trying to deliver more bits where energy providers despite what they might like are not trying to deliver ever more power. The energy per bit is declining but not rapidly enough.

      Over the top Internet services is the main threat and engine of innovation. 

      There’ll be a continued separation between services and the physical infrastructure used to provide them. This is driven by competition and regulation. It’s easier to separate in telecoms.

      The core parts of telcos that run the physical infrastructure are likely to evolve in a more predictable fashion, continually putting in higher bandwidth equipment and rolling out more fiber. They will become more wholesale orientated. Their retail arms if they retain them will increasingly create their products based on the wholesale offerings.

      Driven by the need for cost savings Mobile operators will share their access networks and separate deeper into the core to the retail brands. Mobile and fixed operators will also share their core networks better.

      I wouldn’t bet on telephone numbers dying just yet but the technology will transform.

    • Hephaestus42

      For all purposes they are already dumb TCP/IP pipes. The current issue (in the US) is that the service providers are doing everything to prevent Voice over IP, and outside video on demand. 

Back to Top ↑