Energy retailers and data – confusion is profit

This week I bit the bullet and, responding to my electricity retailer’s TV advertising, signed up for their on-line monitoring program. I figured it was worth taking a look at what they were offering and how it would “help me understand my energy use and costs””

Well, I’m sorry to say (Energy Australia) that I’m pretty disappointed. Your eWise program should really be called eSales.

The good

Now to be fair there were some things I did like. Being able to see my historical consumption, compare to other homes and how it relates to temperature is great, and I could export some of the data to excel which is excellent.

In itself, the single best thing is that my intuitive  sense that we use more depending on how cold it is was borne out by a nice graph. Being in an old home with huge windows is great but it leaks like a sieve. I pretty much knew this, but seeing the quantum will help me to “negotiate” at home with the primary power users…

I’ve extrapolated the data and shown it below.

cons v temp

Secondly, I was delighted to get through to the call centre quickly and got to intelligent, well trained, helpful and interested staff. Very well done on that score, Optus could sure take a few lessons from them on that one.

I spoke to a couple of folks (actually, thoroughly interrogated would be a better term) got some clarifications and gave them some feedback and they were genuinely interested in what I had to say it seemed. One kind chap I spoke to even offered to get some additional granularity and send me an email to answer some questions for me between calls. He also highlighted that the system is a work in progress and feedback was very welcome so they could improve it- which I think he regretted saying by the time I was done with him.

I also liked the fact that I could compare my usage to other similar homes in the area which was theoretically based on similar consumption and behaviour styles. It showed that we were better than the average home all year round (almost 50% better in some months!) and even better than an energy efficient home in the summer months (but not winter). I felt all warm and fuzzy.

The bad

However, I must admit that after taking a real good look around and getting some back ground on Energy Australia’s system, I am not convinced that helping me or being transparent about what my bill is made up of is their main aim at all. In fact, I’d go so far as saying what they are showing is carefully manipulated to avoid showing me several things that would scare the bejesus out of Joe public and irritated the hell out of me. I was left with the distinct impression that the whole aim is to show me a small amount if information and upsell me on a whole heap of other things. eSales.

Firstly, there was the costs analysis. This is profoundly lacking in detail. I am on Time of Use and it does not break down my consumption so I can’t see how I might alter my demand profile which is the single largest factor in my cost structure.  They know it, I know it and hiding it is deceptive. You have the data Energy Australia and you sure as hell bill me at a TOU rate, show you might want to fix this.

Secondly, there was the “cost”. Apart from concealing my demand profile charges, it also conveniently left off daily charges which add a substantial amount to my monthly bill. In fact a  quick analysis showed that it currently makes up around 30% of my typical bill which I can do almost nothing about (which I’m sure is the reason they don’t show me).  However, I’d really like to know what I can affect and how they relate and how they are changing over time (which I’m sure is the reason they don’t show me).  So once again, they are hiding what really makes up my energy costs and preventing me from seeing how this has changed over time which would make them look bad.

Additionally, it doesn’t mention my rates. Anywhere.At All. So I can’t see how electricity prices have changed over time or how my costs are affected by rate changes.

It might just be me, but frankly I am increasingly jacked off by companies thinking its perfectly ok to charge me for products or services and then disguise what they are charging me for! Is it just me or is this increasingly common trend just completely outrageous?  I am boggled at the number of offers that I waste time on trying to understand what I’m being charged for or in the case of Telco’s, being charged for services I don’t even use because of “rounding” (eg data time bundles).

Thirdly, I’m one of several hundred thousand folks in NSW with a solar system. I got it to help reduce my bill and reduce my consumption. And yet, Energy Australia don’t provide this information as part of the analysis! I know they collect the data and it would show how PV has helped make a huge difference to my costs and how I might optimise my generation to consumption behaviour. By not showing that, they are offending my personal investment, hiding the benefits that I know are real and preventing me from making decisions based on enhanced information.

Seems a little harsh? Well I tried their energy tips section and you know what? Solar is not listed as an option or a suggestion. Anywhere. At all. That’s offensive to a solar user. Here’s a tip Energy Australia – there are now 1 Million solar users in Australia and its still growing, you might want to rethink that strategy.

Fourth, the ability to export and play with the data in different was there through an excel export function but again it limited what i could see- so didn’t end up being much use.  All the data is there, so sure, sanitise it for the web site if you must, but dumping it into a database and letting me go wild would cost little if anything more.

Last and most annoyingly there was the “energy reduction tips”. Sure, there were some good tips for Joe public. However, they were all pretty basic and common sense based and I would suggest that anyone who goes to the trouble of looking at graphs and data would be well aware of them already. I was also surprised to see that Energy Audits didn’t make the list. I did get excited when I saw an in house display listed as being a  great way to reduce consumption but when quizzed, it turned out Energy Australia don’t actually provide them or offer advice on them.

What the!?

I’m excited about the possibility of information helping me to control my demand and keep costs under control and at first I thought Energy Australia might be going to help me. Pilot trials, reports and studies all show that information is a key to helping consumers in this way.

However, what I found was a data set that didn’t tell the full story, disguised the costs, ignored my existing efforts and was too dumbed down to be much use.

It also demonstrated a lack of willingness from Energy Australia to actually provide solutions (beyond tariffs and loyalty deals) and this is the really important bit. For utilities to evolve, they have to learn how to sell energy savings, not just energy. It may just be that this is stage one of a platform that will enable them to do just that but for now, the message seems to be pretty consistent – “confusion is profit”.energy comparo

Nigel Morris is director of Solar Business Services. This article reproduced with permission. 

Comments

6 responses to “Energy retailers and data – confusion is profit”

  1. Sean Avatar
    Sean

    Nigel,

    if you want more information – just ask.

    A friend of mine wanted more information out of his TOU meter, and asked Energy Aust.
    a few weeks later in an a4 envelope and about 100pages long was a complete history of his useage for the last 6 months, down to 30min blocks.

    1. Don't believe it Avatar
      Don’t believe it

      I’ve made two online requests to Origin to get my energy use data, received two replies that the data would be provided “within four weeks” and still haven’t seen it (6 months later). What is the use of 100 pages of paper? Retailers or distributors should made data available in CSV or the Green Button format (energy.gov/data/green-button).

      1. Sean Avatar
        Sean

        I totally agree with the amount of paper – its almost as if they that if they are trying to make it as hard as possible to get the info. Most amusingly – most of the energy meters installed nowdays have ports on them for in-premises monitoring BUT you have to get access to the port which has been security tagged.

        If you are still having difficulties ask them next time your contract is up… they may be more willing to hand it over then

  2. Bob Avatar
    Bob

    What I found most useless about the whole website is that it just lists what’s on your bill. “You used 500kWh’s in the last 90 days”… Wow… Thanks Energy Australia… So informative!! How about you tell me the daily use, the daily exported use, the 30min breakdown use, on top of all your points Nigel. Useless. The myEnergyHome.com.au site from SP AusNet is eye melting and from the 90’s but it at least contains data.

  3. PV believer Avatar
    PV believer

    United Energy via the Energy Easy portal
    (https://energyeasy.ue.com.au/) allows the South East Victorian users to
    monitor their 30 min generation and usage data. The online graphics are
    useful in tracking usage as they are generated using your input tariffs
    (including feed in rates for any PV panels). So the display and downloads are quite useful. A pity they don’t have an “overall bill display” that includes the daily supply charges.

  4. Warwick Avatar
    Warwick

    Nigel, you’ve found the perfect business opportunity. If the retailers are so bad and causing such confusion, it sounds like we all need a white knight such as yourself to step up to the plate, reduce confusion and lower profits so we can all benefit. Please tell us when you’re launching your retail offer…

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