how dregulation drives innovation

18
How Deregulation Drives Innovation How the Deregulated Energy Market and Customer Choice Push Technology Further

Upload: bounce-energy

Post on 12-Jun-2015

680 views

Category:

News & Politics


0 download

DESCRIPTION

How Texas electricity deregulation has paved the way for competition in the energy market.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

How DeregulationDrives Innovation

How the Deregulated Energy Market and Customer Choice

Push Technology Further

Page 2: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

More and more people are demanding more and more electrical power.

State regulated markets lack agility to tackle rapid growth.

• Building new power improvements is a slow, bureaucratic process.

• Power utilities & state regulators must negotiate to build new generators and transmission routes.

• They must wrestle with the means of how to pass the expense on to consumers --(aka: state taxpayers)

• Because regulators spend public money cautiously, innovations are often technologically out of date when deployed.

Page 3: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

In deregulated states, competition has been the answer to the problem of growth and expanding power demand.

• Competition removes the public's financial risk for investing in electrical generating plants and transfers it to private investors.

• When customers can choose between rival competitors in an industry, the most successful gives their customers what they want for the lowest price.

• Investors can effectively order their generating companies to cut costs by investing in new technologies, adopting best practices, and improving energy efficiency.

Page 4: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Market competition has been key in meeting the rising Texas electricity demand since deregulation began in 1999.

• Texas has the second largest population in America, growing to 50 million people by 2040.

• The Electricity Reliability Commission of Texas (ERCOT) estimates peak demand for Texas electricity increased at an annual rate of 2.5% from 1990 to 2006.

• Anticipated growth will require between 60,000 and 80,000 megawatts (MW) of new electricity generation capacity by 2030.

Page 5: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Houston at night from space showing a 60 mile wide area.Photo courtesy of NASA

Page 6: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

To supply demand, ERCOT has performed many improvements:

• ERCOT consolidated 10 different control centers into one central location.

• Increased staff and resources, created new transmission pricing and interconnection policies.

• Developed statewide planning expertise, and produced detailed annual reports identifying transmission constraints and needs throughout Texas.

Page 7: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

ERCOT reorganization streamlined policies, cut transmission/distribution bottlenecks.

• All transmission rates are "postage-stamp" rates — generating companies pay the same rate throughout the region.

• ERCOT is the central clearinghouse for price and policy — transmission companies rely on one organization with one price.

Page 8: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Investing in the Grid

• Since 1999, $5.8 billion has been invested in upgrading 69,000 volt lines (69 KV) to 138,000 volt lines (138 KV).

• Since 2008, ERCOT Transmission Service Providers (TSPs) completed 1,137 circuit miles of transmission improvement projects.

Page 9: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Investing in the Grid

• In 2013 alone, an estimated 2800 circuit miles of additional 345 kv lines are planned.

• Between years 2010 through 2015, an estimated $8.8 billion of improvements are planned.

Page 10: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Investment in Power Generation:

• Between 1990 and 1997, the state regulated system only added 6 gigawatts (GW; 1 GW= 1,000 megawatts) of electrical generating capacity.

• From 1998 through 2008, 36 GW of electrical generating capacity was added.

• 6.4 GW (most of it green renewable energy) added in 2008 alone.

Page 11: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Most investment in new generation capacity was in energy efficient generating technologies:• Low-polluting combined-cycle natural gas systems.

• Clean coal generation technologies now cut carbon emissions through Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS).

• Solar and wind power.

Page 12: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Texas leads the US with more operational wind turbines than Iowa and California combined.

• February 28, 2010: Texas wind turbines delivered a record 6,242 megawatts of power to Dallas, Austin and other population centers.

• 22% of all the electricity consumed in the Texas grid that day came from wind.

• ERCOT has now set the goal deploying 10,000 MW of renewable energy by 2025.

Page 13: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Smart Meters are the latest consumer innovation being deployed by TSPs and ERCOT.• Provide both retail and transmission companies with consumer power usage for

billing.

• Consumers can get an hourly breakdown of their usage history.

• Software companies are developing home systems for the consumer to monitor their electricity.

• Smart appliances will show consumers real-time usage and cost.

• Consumers can adjust their power usage to increase efficiency and save money.

Page 14: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Market competition has pushed companies to tailor electricity to customers’ needs.

• Generation is separate from retail.

• Retailers and their customers can choose where they buy power.

• Power generating companies must produce power more efficiently than their competitors.

Page 15: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

Retail Energy Providers build their success by getting the best deal on the Texas Electricity.

• They shape plans to meet consumers' needs.

• They offer consumer incentives that reward both consumer loyalty and paying their bill on time.

• They pass on their savings to their customers.

Page 16: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

In a regulated market, consumer loyalty oron-time bill payment rewards don't happen. Why?

The regulated power company is the only choice.

...or buying a case of candles.

Page 17: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

In a deregulated market, the consumer gets real choices.

• Consumers can choose the cheapest Texas electricity available or they can choose power made using 100% green, renewable technologies.

• They can choose a provider plan that follows monthly market prices or locked-in, fixed rates for up to five years.

• They can choose a provider that rewards customer loyalty and on-time bill paying.

Page 18: How Dregulation Drives Innovation

By competing to win, energy wholesalers and retailers will meet growing consumer demand for:

Better Plans Innovative Technologies Lower Cost

The quickest way consumers cansave money is by shopping around

for a better deal.

Check out www.PowerToChoose.org