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CFA 2017 Consumer Assembly John Howat

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1 CFA 2017 Consumer Assembly John Howat jhowat@nclc.org
Equity Policy Objectives and Utility Safety Net Components for the Evolving Energy System CFA 2017 Consumer Assembly John Howat

2 The Utility Industry in Transition: The more things change …
Generation and end-use technologies and economics Advanced communication capabilities Flat or declining electricity and natural gas sales in many regions Utility business model assumptions in flux Regulatory models and assumptions in flux Higher rates in the short term from new infrastructure investments and transition to lower carbon generation At this juncture it is hardly newsworthy that the utility and energy services industries and changing at breakneck speed.

3 … the more they stay the same
Home energy service remains a basic necessity of life End uses Heating and cooling Lighting Refrigeration Communication Uninterrupted access required to ensure health, safety, and effective societal participation Home energy costs and benefits are regressively distributed Access to energy efficiency, management, and distributed generation technologies is not an equal opportunity proposition

4 Energy Security Threat
Absent thoughtful rate design and implementation of the comprehensive set of safety net provisions, the evolving energy system will bring to lower income households higher utility rates and technologies that will exacerbate service disconnection problems. Grid modernization investments Advanced meters

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7 Racial Justice Emphasis

8 Low-income Home Energy Security Safety Net
Affordable Payments Consumer Protections Efficient Usage

9 Essential Safety Net Component: Affordable home energy payments
“Affordability” should be defined as a home energy burden in low-income households not exceeding the home energy burden in the median income household in a particular service territory. Bill payment assistance programs should be designed to achieve this affordability guideline. Reduced payments for current bills must be fully coordinated with “arrearage management” programs that allow a low-income customer to pay down outstanding back bills over time through timely payment of affordable current bills.

10 Essential Safety Net Component: Consumer Protections
No existing regulatory consumer protection should be degraded in the transition to a re-envisioned energy system. Secure notification of disconnection in person or by mail Disconnection protections Weather Vulnerable households Reasonable payment agreements Limited security deposits and late payment fees Rules applicable to unregulated or less-regulated energy suppliers, brokers and product vendors

11 Essential Safety Net Component: Low- and moderate-income home energy efficiency
Energy efficiency remains the premium marginal energy resource and a cornerstone low- and moderate- income home energy security. Low-income residential energy efficiency program design should incorporate a whole-house, deep retrofit approach with zero upfront payments or any financing obligations. No PACE Loans for low-income households! Low-income energy efficiency programming should be designed to maximize energy savings, participant cash flow, and household comfort.

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13 Utility Fixed Charge Rate Design: The intra-class cost shift and disproportionate harms
With declining sales, utilities seek to shift cost recovery from volumetric to monthly, fixed charges Undermines energy efficiency investment and program participation incentives Shifts costs within a rate class from high-volume consumers to low-volume consumers Data demonstrates that in nearly all regions of the US electricity usage is below the residential class average for Low-income households African-American, Latino and Asian-headed households Elder households

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17 Electricity Consumption Graphs and Tables
Website detailing electricity consumption by Income category Race of householder Age of householder communications/utility-rate-design.html or Google “NCLC rate design” U.S. Energy Information Administration – Residential Energy Consumption Survey 27 “Reportable Domains” Click on link to interactive map

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