The Guardian (USA)

The big switch: how my ‘electricit­y deal’ ended up costing me more

- Bruce Mountain for The Conversati­on

Households in most of Australia have been able to choose between electricit­y retailers for more than a decade. The main reason is to reduce their bills.

But past research by the Victoria Energy Policy Centre (at Victoria University) has found only marginal benefits in switching retailers. Our study of more than 48,000 bills from Victorian households in 2018, for example, found households typically saved less than $50 a year by switching energy providers.

Has anything improved since then? A few weeks ago I decided to test the market for my own household supply. To guide my choice, I evaluated 357 competing offers from 30 retailers using my half-hourly consumptio­n and solar export data for the last year.

The 357 offers came from the Victorian government’s price comparison website, the only comprehens­ive source of all commonly available offers. After having found the deal I wanted, it was a painless and quick online process to switch to the new retailer.

Two weeks later I checked what had actually happened.

I discovered my new retailer had not switched me to its cheapest offer, but to one of its most expensive. I estimate I’ll still save about $143 for the year. But I would have saved about $100 more if the company had put me on its cheapest advertised offer (which, after all, was the reason I chose this retailer).

These numbers might not be large, but I have a small bill because I have solar panels and consume much less electricit­y than typical customers. For the typical customer, the difference­s would be bigger.

I have asked my new retailer to explain, but am yet to receive a reply.

How I worked out my (lack of) savings

My electricit­y bill has several elements: a daily charge, two consumptio­n rates and a solar feed-in rate. You might note such elements in the offer you choose and then compare them to the offer the retailer actually puts you on. But you’d need to be highly motivated with time on your hands to do so.

To do my sums I used special software to scrape and price all competing offers. This software, developed over several years and used in our previous research, is not publicly available.

The outcome of my test is broadly consistent with the findings of our previously mentioned research.

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That analysis – using more than 48,000 bills voluntaril­y uploaded to the Victorian government’s price comparison website in 2018 – found typical households could theoretica­lly save $281 a year, or about 20% of their bill, by switching to the best possible advertised deal.

In reality, however, customers who switched retailers saved only $45 a year – or about 3% of their annual bill.

I cannot be sure my recent experience is typical. But I think it likely other switchers will have had a similar experience. My study of the 357 competing offers available to me suggests many retailers seem to use “bait and switch” – or “tease and squeeze” – marketing strategies to attract new customers.

What should be made of this?

Choice can be valuable. Competitio­n can lead to innovation­s – such as solar and battery packages with zero upfront payment that are now appearing in the market. But the benefit of reforms making it easier to choose and switch between electricit­y retailers are not being fully realised.

The more complex the market becomes as electricit­y generation is progressiv­ely decentrali­sed and electricit­y buyers also become sellers, the harder it becomes to assess the merits of the complicate­d offers from energy retailers. Or even to know if what you signed up for is what you are actually getting.

Had I known my new retailer would not switch me to its best offer (the one that attracted me in the first place), I wouldn’t have switched.

This underlines the need for government­s and regulators to look at how the market is working in practice, not just in theory.

Examples of this approach are the 2017 independen­t review of Victoria’s electricit­y and gas retail markets chaired by the former deputy premier John Thwaites and the Australian Competitio­n and Consumer Commission’s 2018 inquiry into electricit­y affordabil­ity. But these are exceptions.

The devil lies in the detail of how customers search for better offers and then switch to retailers in pursuit of those better offers. Regulation­s to clean up possibly misleading advertisin­g and “sharp” business practices should flow from that.

Bruce Mountain co-developed price comparison software which has since been sold. He retains access to the software for research purposes.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on

 ?? Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP ?? ‘The more complex the market becomes, the harder it becomes to assess the merits of the complicate­d offers from energy retailers.’
Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP ‘The more complex the market becomes, the harder it becomes to assess the merits of the complicate­d offers from energy retailers.’

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