Regulators delay network saving proposals for another 5 years

Rules that could have reduced network bills have been delayed another five years, following fierce resistance from coal generators. The decision could mean higher bills, and more grid defections, as networks and retailers engage in a turf war over battery storage.

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New rules that could have encouraged electricity networks and to help consumers adopt technologies such as battery storage, solar PV and demand management controls have been delayed for another five years, potentially adding billions of dollars in unnecessary network costs and to the bills of electricity consumers.

In a decision labeled by consumer advocates as a “travesty”, the Australian Energy Market Commission has decided not to ask the Australian Energy Regulator to enforce the introduction of its long awaited Demand Management Incentive Scheme (DMIS) until late 2016.

This means it will not be implemented until the next five-year spending plans for networks are up for review in 2019 through to 2021. This is despite the AER having previously stated that it intended to “… introduce a revised DMIS a soon as practicable following the AEMC’s rule change process”

The AEMC’s 2012 Power of Choice Report estimated in that demand management in the Australian electricity system could deliver savings of $4–$12 billion by 2023. (These savings, if passed on to electricity consumers, could result in bill reductions of between $120 and $500.)

These savings are now very unlikely to be delivered given this delay in the DMIS. Analysts say it could add billions of dollars to network upgrades and also to consumer bills.

The delay in implementing these new rules for the running of Australia’s electricity markets is also a set-back for network-wide adoption of technologies such as rooftop solar, battery storage, and energy efficiency – and a victory for coal-fired generators fighting moves that would lower consumption from the grid.

“This is bad for demand management, distributed generation, solar PV, energy efficiency and customer-based battery storage,” said Chris Dunstan, from the Institute of Sustainable Futures.

Dunstan says that between $4 billion and $12 billion could be saved if networks looked to adopt solar, battery storage, and energy efficiency programs, rather than rely on the traditional method of making network upgrades, and building more poles and wires. “Savings delayed are savings denied.”

Solar Citizens says the AEMC’s own research shows household bills could be reduced by $120 to $500 a year by demand management.

“It is an unacceptable to delay a commonsense rule change that helps with the cost of living for both solar and other households alike,” said Dan Scaysbrook, Director of Campaigns and Organising at Solar Citizens.

The decision comes amid a whole range of appeals and rule-changes, including efforts by NSW government owned retailers to overturn an attempt to limit their spending over the next five years, and tariff changes that have seen big rises in fixed charges, and a push to hit solar households with high network tariffs.

The delays to DMIS have not been properly explained. But they appear to be the result of fierce resistance from coal-fired generators in particular, and also highlight a growing turf war between networks and electricity retailers over access to customers.

One of the most vocal opponents was Engie, the French-based owner of the ageing Hazelwood brown coal  generator in the Latrobe Valley.

The Total Environment Centre, one of the two key proponents of the rule change, noted that coal generators such as Engie stood to lose profits from lower peak pool prices and lower demand for its generation.

“In our view, the fact that a generator which makes most of its profit during high price peak events was opposed to the idea of a DM (demand management) incentive is a good indication of the benefits of an effective DMIS, and of the need to introduce one,” it wrote in its submission.

The TEC says the DMIS “could and should” have been developed before the regulatory periods that began in 2009/10, and resulted in more than $45 billion in network upgrades, and massive rises in consumer electricity bills.

“Had this been the case, consumers could have been spared some of the recent massive overinvestment in network infrastructure,” the TEC argued. “It would be a travesty if this rule change process becomes a pretext for further delay in this urgent and long overdue reform.”

Dunstan, from ISF, says it is also bad for for the value of network businesses in the long run, because they will be forced to focus on protecting the declining, traditional grid rather than supporting modern decentralised energy solutions that the market is demanding.

Dunstan says that introducing the DMIS now would have been a win-win, allowing networks to develop their business by supporting cost effective solar, battery storage, and energy efficiency programs and reducing bills for customers, rather than rely on the traditional method of making network upgrades, and building more poles and wires.

While to most it is clear that the grid will be dominated by decentralised energy – something even recognised by Engie – Dunstan argues that if there is no mechanism by which the networks can grow their businesses through demand management, then they will be unlikely encourage it.

As the TEC noted in its submission: “Rarely does the AEMC have such power to accelerate the pace of reform in the NEM so easily.”

By delaying the implementation, the AEMC “would expose the network businesses and especially their more vulnerable consumers to unnecessary risks, in particular as more flexible consumers engage in “load defection” by combining solar, batteries and energy management.”

But the rules have been caught up by the fierce resistance of some of the key brown coal generators, and an emerging turf war between network operators and electricity retailers.

The brown coal generators fear losing money. Morgan Stanley’s energy analyst Rob Koh this week highlighted just how sensitive the gentailers are to changes in market conditions. A cut of just two per cent in energy volumes per customer – due to energy efficiency and battery storage penetration, along with more competition in retail markets and more renewables in the wholesale markets, and declines in the oil and gas price, could cut the value of AGL Energy by one quarter.

But it is the turf war over how far the networks should be allowed to encroach on the customer base held – somewhat tenuously – by the retailers.

Some of the most progressive initiatives on battery storage and demand management have been introduced by Ergon Energy in Queensland, where it is virtually unique in Australia by being both a network operator and a retailer. That, says Ergon CEO Ian McLeod, makes it easier to find value in such solutions because they can operate and find value both at grid level, and “behind the meter”

But elsewhere, retailers and networks are separate entities, and the retailers are keen to keep it that way.


In its submission, Engie complained that the proposed DMIS “blurs the boundaries between the competitive market entities (retailers) and regulated entities (network operators). It said such rules will “interfere with functioning of the wholesale market (signals to consumers), and depending on the specific implementation, also retailer and customer relationships.”

AGL Energy pursued a similar tack, saying that “regulated network businesses should only provide demand management services at the grid level” and “demand management services behind the meter should be excluded from any regulatory incentive schemes.”

This is likely to be a huge battle in the future, and it will be largely fought at the regulatory level, over who has the right to pass on charges to consumers, who can deal with them, and who can identify and offer savings.

As South Australian Power Networks said last year, the emergence of decentralised generation and micro-grids will likely signal the decline of centralised generation and retailers.

But they won’t be going without a fight, and the networks are also intent on protecting their revenue streams, even to the point of making grid costs compulsory to all, even if they don’t use them.

Some analysts suggest that the rule changes proposed by the AEMC are redundant anyway, and that networks are so stuck in their ways that they only way they will change is when they recognise a ‘real and perceived threat’.

“This delay in DMIS makes it even more important to get the Rules right to allow third party access (to provide alternatives to networks), as well as providing the right price signals – ie. cost-reflective pricing,” says Rob Passey, from UNSW and the Australian PV Institute.
“It was the private sector embarking on solar PPAs etc that made the incumbents (Origin, AGL etc) move into the PV/storage/PPA area themselves. In the same way, it’ll be third party alternatives to networks (PV/batteries/DSM) that encourage networks to move into those areas and take them seriously.”
Muriel Watt, from IT Power said: “We really need to get away from thinking (and regulating) networks as ‘natural monopolies’.  We have a whole range of new options available to customers now and we need a competitive market to allow them to compete with the incumbents.”Trying to create more and more rules just so that the incumbents can deal with new technologies or new supply/demand options will just result in more unnecessary complexity.”
The biggest risk for consumers is that they will again be the victim as the big players fight over the rules and seek to protect their own turf.

Comments

11 responses to “Regulators delay network saving proposals for another 5 years”

  1. Bruce E Avatar
    Bruce E

    Interesting in Remote installations in NZ the Lines Company won the right to remove the Retailer, as the customer became their own energy supplier with a RAPS unit. The Lines company provided the RAPS unit and the fixed cost of up keep – rolled into DUOS. The customer paid for any diesel the unit used if the sun didn’t shine.

  2. DogzOwn Avatar
    DogzOwn

    Privatisation sure does get big, foreign corporations the best regulation they can buy, But don’t our leaders keep pummelling the pulpit about delivering de-regulation?

    1. Ana Milosevic Avatar
      Ana Milosevic

      You meant ‘Our leader’

    2. Blair Donaldson Avatar
      Blair Donaldson

      Only when it suits apparently. Sir Pository doesn’t bite the hand that feeds him/pays for his political propaganda.

  3. JustThink4Once Avatar
    JustThink4Once

    The more they fight the more people will take flight…..

  4. Peter Grant Avatar
    Peter Grant

    ‘Open for business’, ‘Removing red tape’ – Bah. It is not just electricity consumers who will lose from this but a there is a massive productivity dividend that will be
    foregone by delay. The artificial wholesale electricity (energy) market is failing everywhere including Australia – propping it up with skewed rules, perverse tariff design and even more grid over investment will delay and worsen the reckoning.

    A significantly delay in reform for DSM runs the risk of locking in of our
    grids wasteful and inefficient ancillary services provision for the medium term by polishing the turd. Centralized coal generators profit from providing grid inertia, centralized gas generators profit by providing capacity – the current market rules privilege incumbency and suppress competition from consumers and new technology.

    A real risk here is driving new investment in capital that may only be useful in the context of the particularities of our century old centralized frequency controlled distribution system. This new investment may be with us for decades after most of today’s coal fleet has been written off and shut down.

  5. MaxG Avatar
    MaxG

    Two words: rotten bastards!

  6. Chris Fraser Avatar
    Chris Fraser

    I can understand demand management is different to efficiency, but both mean income losses to retailers. The NSW Energy Savings Scheme target is 16 TWh p.a. Given that it’s just one State, that amount is huge. If the the savings were to be 33 TWh, would the incumbents be running off to complain to Tony ?

  7. Ian Avatar
    Ian

    Damn fine article, full of jargon , as it is said in the classics ” bullsh-t baffles brains”, thanks Giles, you have really cloudified the issue for me today.

  8. john Avatar
    john

    If Network operators put in back up battery storage they will be able to supply power at a cheaper rate to the users when there is high demand.
    Hang on they are not in the loop to smooth demand and price.
    So the retailers are out of the loop because they put a profit margin on what they get.
    The generators are defiantly not going to provide backup storage because they make their profit out of high demand periods.
    The poor dumb consumer is the person who pays for this situation.
    Welcome to privatisation where the end user pays more and should not.
    What should be happening is storage and end of grid production and storage should be utilised.
    On average selling price of power is between 3.3 and 4 cents a KwH however when a shortage of supply and demand is high this spirals very quickly to huge costs for the retailer.
    Perhaps the retailer should be proactive and install storage or sell it to the customers so they can mitigate the cost to them and pass it on to the clients.
    I do not expect a truthful explanation as to why backup storage can not be utilised any time shortly.

  9. Les Johnston Avatar
    Les Johnston

    Another good example of bad regulation. Market inefficiencies are a major inhibitor of a progressive economy with jobs, jobs and more jobs not being created.

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