Houston Chronicle

Some Texas power retailers caught short in face of freeze

- By Naureen S. Malik

Some retail power companies in Texas are making an unusual plea to their customers amid a deep freeze that has sent electricit­y prices skyrocketi­ng: Please, leave us.

One power supplier, Griddy, told all 29,000 of its customers that they should switch to another provider as spot electricit­y prices soared to as high as $9,000 a megawatt-hour. Griddy’s customers are fully exposed to the real-time swings in wholesale power markets, so those who don’t leave soon will face extraordin­arily high electricit­y bills.

“We made the unpreceden­ted decision to tell our customers — whom we worked really hard to get — that they are better off in the near term with another provider,” said Michael Fallquist, chief executive officer of Griddy. “We want what’s right by our consumers, so we are encouragin­g them to leave. We believe that transparen­cy and that honesty will bring them back” once prices return to normal.

Texas is home to the most competitiv­e electricit­y market in America. Homeowners and businesses churn power providers there like credit cards. In the face of such cutthroat competitio­n, retail power providers in the region have grown accustomed to offering new customers incredibly low rates, incentives and, at least in Griddy’s case, unusual plans that allow customers to pay wholesale power prices as opposed to fixed

ones.

The ruthless nature of the business has power traders speculatin­g over which firms might have been caught short this week in the most dramatic run-up in spot power prices they’ve ever seen.

Not all companies are asking customers to leave. Others are just pleading for them to cut back.

Pulse Power, based in The Woodlands, is offering customers a chance to win a Tesla Model 3, or free electricit­y for up to a year if they reduce their power usage by 10 percent in the coming days. Austin-based Bulb is offering $2 per kilowattsh­our, up to $200, for any energy customers save.

Griddy, however, is in a different position. Its service is simple — and controvers­ial.

Members pay a $9.99 monthly fee and then pay the cost of spot power traded on Texas’s power grid based on the time of day they use it. Earlier this month, that meant customers were saving money — and at times even getting paid — to use electricit­y at night. But in recent days, the cost of their power has soared from about 5 cents to 6 cents a kilowatt-hour to $1 or more. That’s when Fallquist knew it was time to urge his customers to leave.

“I can tell you it was probably one of the hardest decisions we’ve ever made,” he said. “Nobody ever wants to see customers go.”

Griddy isn’t the only one out there actively encouragin­g its customers to leave. People were posting similar pleas on Twitter over the

holiday weekend from other Texas retail power providers offering everything from $100 rebates to waived cancellati­on fees as incentives to switch.

Customers may not even be able to switch. Rizwan Nabi, president of energy consultanc­y Riz Energy in Houston, said several power providers in Texas have told him they aren’t accepting new customers due to this week’s volatile prices.

Hector Torres, an energy trader in Texas and a Griddy customer, said he tried to switch services over the long weekend but couldn’t find a company willing to take him until Wednesday, when the weather is forecast to turn warmer.

“I’ll find out in the next week if I’m getting a huge bill,” he said.

 ?? LM Otero / Associated Press ?? Raul Alonzo uses the light from a cellphone to arrange products at a grocery in Dallas. Some power retailers, like Griddy, are urging customers to leave.
LM Otero / Associated Press Raul Alonzo uses the light from a cellphone to arrange products at a grocery in Dallas. Some power retailers, like Griddy, are urging customers to leave.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States