Sunday Star-Times

Tariffs dilemma as Govt ponders a major power switch

Household energy bills could change dramatical­ly under changes due to be phased in next year, but the Government has environmen­tal and political factors to consider first. Tom Pullar-Strecker reports.

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Households should find out in the next month or two whether they will be paying hundreds of dollars more or less for electricit­y in the years ahead.

The Government is close to deciding whether to gradually phase out the requiremen­t for power firms to offer ‘‘lowuser’’ electricit­y tariffs to consumers that cap daily fixed charges at 30 cents plus GST.

Households on higher-usage plans typically pay a fixed daily charge of about $2 plus GST for power.

If the Government does approve a phase-out, it now looks likely there will be alternativ­e concession­s for people who have invested in solar power, and people on low incomes who also use little electricit­y.

But it would be a brave person who bet on the Government’s decision.

Electricit­y Retailers’ Associatio­n chief executive Cameron Burrows says power companies would like a decision in time for them to introduce new pricing from next April if a change is approved.

“Before this happens there are significan­t processes that need to be undertaken – developing the new prices, consulting with customers and other industry participan­ts, and implementi­ng new pricing systems,” he says.

“To allow this to happen a decision on the removal of the regulation­s needs to happen in mid-2021, but there’s no ‘one date’ deadline for when the decision needs to be taken.”

Power firms compensate for the lower fixed charge by requiring people on lowuser plans to pay a higher per-kilowattho­ur price for the electricit­y they use than customers on “standard” plans.

But electricit­y companies say that because fixed daily charges don’t cover all their fixed costs, the effect of removing the plans would be that daily charges would average out at a higher rate, and the perkilowat­t price of electricit­y would average out at a lower rate, across all their customers.

Low-user plans benefit people who use less than 8000 kilowatt-hours of electricit­y a year, which is the slight majority of households, sometimes by hundreds of dollars a year.

They typically include households that use woodburner­s, gas or solar systems to heat their homes or their water, and people living in flats or small or wellinsula­ted homes.

The Electricit­y Price Review recommende­d scrapping the requiremen­t to offer the tariffs, arguing the people who benefited from them were in effect being subsidised by customers who used more power, including large families living in poverty in poorly insulated homes.

Philosophi­cally, Energy Minister Megan Woods appears on the same page.

“If you think about myself, I represent a multicultu­ral electorate with a large stock of state houses, many built in the 1940s and 1960s with six or seven people living in them,” she said in April.

“But I live in a less than 10-year-old townhouse that is double-glazed with all the insulation that goes along with that. I pay a lower rate for my electricit­y than those constituen­ts.”

But that is only a couple of stereotype­s of Kiwi households, and there are reasons to believe the Government might be thinking twice about implementi­ng the review team’s recommenda­tion.

One is environmen­tal. Electricit­y tariffs with a low daily charge and higher per-kilowatt charge will tend to encourage power conservati­on.

That is why the Green Party successful­ly argued for the introducti­on of low-user tariffs in the first place in 2004.

That considerat­ion may be higher in Woods’ mind now, with electricit­y generation in short supply, coal burning at Huntly, and wholesale electricit­y prices continuing to sit at several times their historical levels.

Conserving electricit­y can be either good or bad, depending on the circumstan­ces.

It might involve someone chucking on a jumper instead of turning up the heater a notch, sticking a bit more insulation in

their loft, or turning the lights off when they leave a room.

But it can also mean families shivering rather than risking turning on the fire.

It could also mean some households choosing not to replace their petrol car with an electric one.

In general though, incentives to conserve power might on balance appear a good thing, especially now.

The second considerat­ion is more political.

In theory, the winners and losers from abolishing low-user tariffs should roughly cancel out, but that doesn’t mean people’s perception­s of the impact will have similar balance.

At least according to Stuff’s (non-scientific) reader poll in April, the mood appears strongly against a phase-out, with about 87 per cent of readers opposed.

One reason may be a concern power companies would pocket some of the higher daily fees they could charge low-user customers, rather than passing them all on by cutting the average per-kilowatt price for power.

It’s hard for consumers to see the prices charged by the major electricit­y companies from their websites, so it would perhaps not be surprising if trust in them was weak.

In November, Consumer NZ accused power firms of making it unnecessar­ily complicate­d for people to compare prices.

The fact that power companies themselves seem so strongly in favour of the policy change is only likely to heighten suspicions that the net effect might be an increase in the average price of electricit­y.

Unfortunat­ely, there seems no easy way that the Government could monitor and enforce pass-through.

The Government might see a middle ground in gradually phasing out the tariffs while shielding some groups from the impact, as appeared to be Woods’ thinking in April.

In descending order of likelihood, it could provide alternativ­e relief for people with solar power, people on low incomes with low power usage, such as superannui­tants, people with woodburner­s, and gas users.

But the further it went down that list, the less the benefit there might be on the other side of the ledger for those large families in hard-to-heat homes, and the more fiddly its interventi­ons would get.

It would be a bitter pill for power companies if the Government got cold feet about abolishing the low-user tariff requiremen­t.

But are the stars in alignment to push through a policy such as this? It looks like a tough call.

 ??  ?? People who have invested in solar systems would be among the losers if low-user electricit­y tariffs were phased out without alternativ­e relief.
People who have invested in solar systems would be among the losers if low-user electricit­y tariffs were phased out without alternativ­e relief.
 ?? DAVID UNWIN/STUFF ?? Energy Minister Megan Woods points out that under current settings, she pays a lower rate for power than some of her constituen­ts in state houses.
DAVID UNWIN/STUFF Energy Minister Megan Woods points out that under current settings, she pays a lower rate for power than some of her constituen­ts in state houses.

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