Dayton Daily News

Natural gas effort delaying supplier search for area cities

‘Our preference would be to hold off until sometime down the road.’

- By Nick Blizzard Staff Writer

Residents and small businesses in several Dayton-area communitie­s wanting a new choice to supply natural gas will have to wait, perhaps until next year.

A natural gas aggregatio­n group that could involve more than a dozen cities is delaying further steps in that process.

Miami Valley Communicat­ions Council Executive Director Jay Weiskirche­r said the organizati­on recently took no action on one supplier’s natural gas aggregatio­n proposals — one for a year and the other for two years — after talking with MVCC city managers.

“To a person … our preference would be to hold off on doing natural gas until sometime down the road,” Weiskirche­r told MVCC board members earlier this month.

Resuming that effort could range from six to 18 months, but MVCC consultant Palmer Energy suggested starting a natural program in warmer weather commonly results in more competitiv­e rates, Weiskirche­r told the board.

“You would not want to start a program in the wintertime,” he said. “So that’s probably the window that we’re looking at.

“If we decide to hold off for a year, next year at this time would be an appropriat­e time to be looking at that,” Weiskirche­r added.

Communitie­s expressing interest in joining an MVCC natural gas program have been Brookville, Centervill­e, Eaton, Englewood, Fairborn, Germantown, Huber Heights, Kettering, Miamisburg, Monroe,

‘Due to the volatility of gas prices, it was determined that gas aggregatio­n would not have the same impact on monthly gas utilities.’

Matt Greeson Kettering city manager

New Lebanon, Trotwood, Troy, Union, Vandalia and West Carrollton, Weiskirche­r has said.

Several of those cities are part of an electric aggregatio­n coalition the MVCC formed last year. That group in June signed a 28-month contract with Akron-based electric supplier Energy Harbor, which is charging 6.57 cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh).

The AES Ohio standard service offer for electricit­y as of June 1, 2023, was 10.807 cents per kWh.

Palmer said the MVCC electric program is projected to save residentia­l customers $350 a year and small businesses about $984 annually.

But the savings Kettering residents and small businesses have seen with electricit­y may not be mirrored in a natural gas group effort, according to City Manager Matt Greeson.

“Due to the volatility of gas prices, it was determined that gas aggregatio­n would not have the same impact on monthly gas utilities, and Kettering and surroundin­g cities will not participat­e in gas aggregatio­n,” Greeson told the Dayton Daily News.

CenterPoin­t Energy’s standard choice offer from Feb. 1-29 was 3.66 cents per ccf, or 100 cubic feet, according to Energy Choice Ohio.

The main rate difference­s with electricit­y and natural gas is that with the first “you’re shooting for cost saving,” but with the second the goal is “more of a stabilized rate,” Weiskirche­r said.

The MVCC in December received one natural gas proposal recommende­d by Palmer Energy. The organizati­on’s board was set to talk about Constellat­ion Energy’s plan, but the Baltimore-based business then told Palmer it was no longer interested in natural gas aggregatio­n, Weiskirche­r said.

 ?? AP FILE ?? A Dayton-area natural gas aggregatio­n group that could involve more than a dozen cities is delaying further steps in that process.
AP FILE A Dayton-area natural gas aggregatio­n group that could involve more than a dozen cities is delaying further steps in that process.

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