MGE requests higher customer rates in 2017

By The Wisconsin State Journal


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Madison Gas & Electric is asking state regulators for permission to raise its rates in 2017.

The Madison utility company wants to increase electric rates by 1.7 percent and natural gas rates by 3.7 percent.

If the state Public Service Commission PSC approves the proposal as is, it would add about $1.50 a month to the average residential customer's electric bill, raising it from the current $91.17 a month to $92.67.

For the average residential natural gas customer who pays about $624.42 a year, it would cost about $20.45 more, for a total of $644.87 a year, MGE spokesman Steve Schultz said.

The higher charges will help finance continuing improvements to the transmission grid that carries electricity around the area as well as to the natural gas distribution system, MGE said.

"The primary reason for the rate request is continued reliability," the utility said in a news release.

Fixed charges for residential and small business electric customers would not change in 2017 under the plan, but the kilowatt-hour charges -- that rise or fall depending on a customer's use of power -- would increase.

Fixed rates for larger commercial and industrial customers have not yet been determined and will be considered as part of the rate design process, Schultz said.

"We're happy to see that they're not proposing any increase to the fixed charge. We're still evaluating the remainder of the proposal," said Kurt Runzler, acting executive director of the Wisconsin Citizens Utility Board CUB.

Another citizens group, RePower Madison, also said it was glad to see the fixed rate would not rise for residential customers.

"RePower Madison would really like to see MGE actually reduce the fixed fee as many customers asked during the community energy conversations," spokesman Mitch Brey said.

Two years ago, MGE proposed a dramatic change in its rate structure that would have hiked the fixed rate from $10.50 a month to $67 a month by 2017. It involved shifting costs for generating power and sending it to a customer's home from the kilowatt-hour portion of the bill to the fixed monthly charge.

But a storm of opposition from citizens, local governments and interest groups resulted in a modified plan, under an agreement between MGE and CUB. It raised fixed charges to $19 a month, as of 2015, and froze the fixed charges for 2016, while inching down the kilowatt-hour rate. MGE also began a yearlong effort to communicate with local residents through a series of meetings it called "community conversations." The PSC will take written comments on MGE's request and a public hearing is likely to be held in the fall, Schultz said.

The three-member commission is expected to act on the proposal in late 2016.

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Frameworks that cut emissions via renewables, EVs, efficiency, cleaner marine fuels, and EU policy roadmaps.

✅ Renewables scale as wind and solar outcompete new coal and gas.

✅ Electrification of transport grows as EV costs fall and charging expands.

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Are we doing enough to save the planet? Silly question. The latest prognosis from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change made for gloomy reading. Fundamental to the Paris Agreement is the target of keeping global average temperatures from rising beyond 2°C. The UN argues that radical measures are needed, and investment incentives for clean electricity are seen as critical by many leaders to accelerate progress to meet that target.

Renewable power and electrification of transport are the pillars of decarbonization. It’s well underway in renewables - the collapse in costs make wind and solar generation competitive with new build coal and gas.

Renewables’ share of the global power market will triple by 2040 from its current level of 6% according to our forecasts.

The consumption side is slower, awaiting technological breakthrough and informed by efforts in countries such as New Zealand’s electricity transition to replace fossil fuels with electricity. The lower battery costs needed for electric vehicles (EVs) to compete head on and displace internal combustion engine (ICE)  cars are some years away. These forces only start to have a significant impact on global carbon intensity in the 2030s. Our forecasts fall well short of the 2°C target, as does the IEA’s base case scenario.

Yet we can’t just wait for new technology to come to the rescue. There are encouraging signs that society sees the need to deal with a deteriorating environment. Three areas of focus came out in discussion during Wood Mackenzie’s London Energy Forum - unrelated, different in scope and scale, each pointing the way forward.

First, clean air in cities.  China has shown how to clean up a local environment quickly. The government reacted to poor air quality in Beijing and other major cities by closing older coal power plants and forcing energy intensive industry and the residential sector to shift away from coal. The country’s return on investment will include a substantial future health care dividend.

European cities are introducing restrictions on diesel cars to improve air quality. London’s 2017 “toxicity charge” is a precursor of an Ultra-Low Emission Zone in 2019, and aligns with UK net-zero policy changes that affect transport planning, to be extended across much of the city by 2020. Paris wants to ban diesel cars from the city centre by 2025 and ICE vehicles by 2030. Barcelona, Madrid, Hamburg and Stuttgart are hatching similar plans.

 

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Third, Europe’s radical decarbonisation plans. Already in the vanguard of emissions reductions policy, the European Commission is proposing to reduce carbon emissions for new cars and vans by 30% by 2030 versus 2020. The targets come with incentives for car manufacturers linked to the uptake of EVs.

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Near zero-energy buildings and homes might be possible with energy efficiency improvements, renewables and heat pumps. Electrification, recycling and bioenergy could reduce fossil fuel use in energy intensive sectors like steel and aluminium, and Europe’s oil majors going electric illustrates how incumbents are adapting. Some sectors will cite the risk decarbonisation poses to Europe’s global competitiveness. If change is to come, industry will need to build new partnerships with society to meet these targets.

The 2050 roadmap signals the ambition and will be game changing for Europe if it is adopted. It would provide a template for a global roll out that would go a long way toward meeting UN’s concerns.

 

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Hydro-Quebec shocks cottage owner with $5,300 in retroactive charges

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Key Points

Hydro-Quebec back-billing recovers underbilled electricity from analogue meter errors or prolonged estimated use.

✅ Triggered by inaccurate analogue meters or missed readings

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A relaxing lakefront cottage has become a powerful source of stress for an Ottawa woman who Hydro-Quebec is charging $5,300 to cover what it says are years of undercharging for electricity usage.

The utility said an old analogue power meter is to blame for years of inaccurate electricity bills for the summer getaway near Gatineau, Que.

Separate from individual billing issues, Hydro-Quebec has also reported pandemic-related losses earlier this year.

Owner Jan Hodgins does not think she should be held responsible for the mistake, nor does she understand how her usage could have surged over the years.

“I’m very hydro conscious, because I was raised that way. When you left a room, you always turned the light out,” she told CTV Montreal on Wednesday, relating her shock after receiving some hefty bills from Hydro-Quebec on Sept. 22.

Hodgins said she mainly uses the cottage on weekends, does not heat the place when she is not there, and does not use a washer or dryer, to keep her energy footprint as small as possible. She’s owned the cottage for 14 years, during which she says her monthly bill has hovered around $40.

Hydro-Quebec said it has not had an accurate reading of her usage for several years, relying instead on consumption estimates to determine what she pays. The company recently reviewed her energy consumption back to 2014, and found their estimates were not accurate.

“In the past, she was consuming about 10 to 15 kilowatt hours per day. This summer she was more around 40 kilowatt hours per day,” Marc-Antoine Pouliot with Hydro-Quebec told CTV Ottawa.

Hodgins said that means her regular bill will now be more than twice the $200 her neighbours are paying for hydro each month, even with peak hydro rates in place.

Hydro-Quebec said it will correct the bill if its technicians discover that someone is illegally diverting power nearby.

Hodgins said it’s not her fault that technicians did not check her meter in person, and chose to rely on inaccurate estimates. Pouliot argues that reaching her cottage was too difficult.

“There was too much snow. There were conditions during the winter disconnection ban period, and the consequence was that people, our workers, were not able to reach the meter,” he said.

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“I’m on a fixed income. I don’t have that kind of money. I’m completely distraught,” she said. “I don’t know what I’m going to do.”

 

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