California approves smart meter opt-out program for PG&E with one option: the legacy analog meter February 1, 2012
Posted by Russ Henderson in Utility Industry News.Tags: analog meters, California Public Utilities Commission, Central Maine Power, Chartwell, Chartwell research, CPUC, Maine Public Utilities Commission, opt out, Pacific Gas & Electric, PG&E, San Diego Gas & electric, SDG&E, smart grid, smart meter, smart meters, Southern California Edison
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The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) ruled unanimously today to require Pacific Gas & Electric to create a smart meter opt-out plan.
Many observers predicted earlier this week that the commission would create a program that included an option for customers to keep their legacy, analog meter, as well as the ability to choose a smart meter with its wireless capability turned off among other options. After all, that’s what the Maine Public Utility Commission did in May – required Central Maine Power to initiate an opt-out program with four options.
But what the California commission did today was initiate an opt-out program with analog as its only option.
Customers electing to retain or return to an analog meter will be assessed an initial fee of $75 and a monthly charge of $10. Customers enrolled in the CPUC’s low income program – California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE) – electing to opt-out will be assessed an initial fee of $10 and a monthly charge of $5.
The decision ends PG&E’s smart meter installation “delay list.” Customers on that list have about 30 days to ask to participate in the opt-out program or their analog meter will be replaced with a smart meter.
Today’s decision came during a somewhat verbally quarrelsome meeting this morning which started with a public comment period of about 90 minutes, during which 60 or so smart meter opponents voiced their disapproval of the devices. The proceedings were broadcast live on the internet here.
CPUC President Michael R. Peevey then began to speak about the benefits of smart meters, including their vital role in creating a nation of “fully empowered energy consumers.” As he spoke, many in the crowd erupted with shouts such as “Lies! Lies!” Peevy repeatedly asked the attendees to show the commission the same respect they had shown by quietly allowing complainants to speak about smart meters.
Peevey spoke about the study by California Council on Science and Technology (CCST) released early last year, which reported that smart meters “result in much smaller levels of radio frequency exposure than many common household electronic devices including cell phones and microwave ovens.”
“Wrong!” came the yells. “Why are you reading it to us? It’s wrong!”
Peevey said that the CPUC is “not a public health agency” and that it must rely on the judgment of agencies such as the CCST and the FCC. The commission in July adopted privacy and security rules regarding smart meters in response to customer concerns.
“And yet after all of this, some customers called for an opt-out program,” Peevey said. He then explained the fees that the program would entail and asked his fellow commissioners to vote on the issue. After long discussion, the commission voted in favor of the opt-out program.
Afterward, there were shouts of protests against the fees.
“This is a crime against humanity!” one person yelled.
In March, PG&E proposed an initial fee of $128 and a monthly charge of $10.69 for the “non-wireless” option, but the PUC rejected those figures. In a November preliminary ruling, the commission proposed that regular customers should be charged an initial fee of $90 and a monthly charge of $15. Meanwhile, customers enrolled in CARE would pay only a $5 monthly charge, with no initial fee.
While some utilities estimate that only about 1% of customers are likely to take advantage of an opt-out program, others – such as Southern California Edison – have said that fees must be set high in order to discourage participation.
In a filing made with the commission Dec. 19, PG&E announced that it now “supports approval of an analog meter option, in addition to the non-communicating radio-off option, in response to customers’ and parties’ continued requests for an analog meter alternative.”
The apparent general consensus among California utilities in recent months has been that whatever opt-out program the PUC ultimately approved for PG&E would provide a model for other utilities, including San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E) and Southern California Edison (SCE).
Among the aspects of the motion approved today, the commission ordered PG&E to:
- Establish procedures to inform customers that a smart meter opt-out option is available. A customer currently on the delay list will be informed that the customer will be scheduled to receive a wireless smart meter unless the customer elects to exercise the opt-out option.
- Establish new two-way electric and gas “modified smart meter memorandum accounts” to track revenues and costs associated with providing the opt-out program until a final decision on costs and cost allocation issues associated with providing an analog meter opt-out proposal is issued.
According to the decision, “residential customers may begin signing up to participate in the opt-out option 20 days after the effective date of this decision. PG&E shall have a dedicated phone number for customers to call and sign up for the opt-out option. This number shall be staffed by customer service representatives trained to explain the opt-out option and fees.”
Because customers may “opt-out for any reason, or no reason, PG&E may not require a customer to explain or state why they wish to participate in the opt-out program,” according to the decision. The commission is expected to revisit the issue and adjust fees after the true costs of the program become apparent.
The industry keeps getting smarter and smarter: Hot topics at DistribuTECH January 31, 2012
Posted by Dennis Smith in Utility Industry News.Tags: Chartwell, Chartwell Blog, customer engagement, Customer service automation, demand response, DistribuTECH, electric vehicle, electric vehicles, energy conservation, energy usage, meter data, mobile apps, online energy information, plug-in electric vehicle, smart grid, smart meter, smart meters, utilities, utility, utility communications
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Analytics, metrics, meters, home automation gadgets, bucket trucks, plug-in electric cars, dog bite repellent and some remote control vehicle that looked like the Mars lander. Even Hooter’s girls. Yes, the 2012 DistribuTECH had something for just about everyone last week in San Antonio.
Once again, the exhibit hall was extensive, or, as one attendee quipped, “big enough to land a [Boeing] 747 on.” We at Chartwell couldn’t cover it all. So we stayed focused. What was there to improve the utility customer experience? And the answer: still plenty. Here’s a recap (more…)
Deconstructing disaster: deadly Alabama tornadoes teach AMI outage lessons November 15, 2011
Posted by Russ Henderson in Utility Industry News.Tags: AMI, AMR, cell phones, Chartwell, Chartwell reports, Chartwell research, disasters, distribution meters, outage communications, smart grid, smart meter, tornadoes, transformers, Webinar
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Tragic disasters can provide valuable lessons.
Perhaps few understand this better than the leaders of Alabama Power Company, which faced the devastation of hurricanes Ivan and Katrina several years before tornadoes took more than 250 lives and left 400,000 without power in the state earlier this year.
“We’ve had more customers out – nearly 700,000 didn’t have power after Katrina – but as far as damage goes, this storm was the most damage we’ve had in the history of our company,” Derl Rhoades, AMI network supervisor at Alabama Power, said during a recent Chartwell webinar. Rhoades was one of three utility leaders who shared lessons learned about using AMI to respond to power outages.
During the April tornadoes, Alabama Power lost 7,500 distribution poles and two substations, 400 transmission towers damaged or destroyed and workers replaced nearly 5 million feet of conductor line, Rhoades said.
It took 7,825 total personnel – 5,715 of them provided by other power companies or contractors – seven days to restore power to all of those customers, he said. What did Alabama Power learn about AMI outage response in the process?
- It is important to have redundant communications paths to all of an AMI system’s towers.
“We were fortunate this time. The top 40 feet of one TGB (tower gateway base) got bent over and it kept working,” Rhoades said. Had the tornadoes taken out several of the system’s towers, the AMI system would have been severely compromised and the response effort would have been hindered, he said.
- When possible, all AMI towers should have generator backup power in addition to battery backup.
- Develop portable communications towers. After Katrina in 2005, Alabama Power decided to create a 100-foot tower that could be hauled around on a trailer. The TGB on a trailer, or TOT, was completed in 2008 to respond to hurricanes but became useful in this year’s tornado response. The company has also developed smaller portable towers.
- Develop an alternative to the cellular backhaul in case cell towers are knocked out. Alabama Power is in the process of selecting a satellite phone technology as a backup to the cell backhaul.
“We’ve got to know what’s happening as soon as possible to get the power back on,” Rhoades said.
Distribution wasn’t the only department that used outage data during and after the storm, he said. Customer service wanted the information because they would need to handle the connection and disconnection orders after the storm, and the sales department wanted updates on major customers who had lost power.
Alabama Power’s AMI system proved an invaluable tool for graphically tracking the locations of outages and trends in restoration in real time, he said.
Chartwell will cover issues similar to this topic at our Outage Communications Summit today and tomorrow in San Diego, as well as during future Webinars.
Panelists share recipes for successful customer engagement with demand response October 3, 2011
Posted by Scott Johnson in Utility Industry News.Tags: Chartwell, Chartwell Blog, Chartwell research, customer engagement, demand response, energy efficiency, energy usage, market research, smart grid, smart meter, utilities, utility, utility customer engagement, utility customer service
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Consumers’ fears about smart meters have generated more than their share of headlines over the last few years. The resulting misinformation and noise has made it harder to hear the success stories that continue to define the majority of smart meter deployments. (more…)
It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s … the new world of utility customer contact? September 22, 2011
Posted by Allison Herdic in Utility Industry News.Tags: Chartwell, CSRs as Energy Advisors, customer contact, customer service, EMACS 2011, energy efficient behaviors, mobile applications, satisfaction, smart meter, utility, web-based portal, websites
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If you have a leadership role in utility customer contact, there’s probably more than enough in your world to keep you up at night. Today’s contact center is rapidly morphing from what was already a busy channel for utilities into a new era of customer service air traffic control.
Given the level of responsibility and on-the-job challenges, managing air traffic is frequently cited as one of today’s most stressful job functions. While utility customer contact professionals aren’t literally overseeing the comings-and-goings of busy airports, their environment is evolving into a changing landscape that can look different from one moment to the next. And, like the airline industry, utility customers’ needs and expectations are changing and increasing. (more…)
Answering the $64,000 question: customer engagement in energy usage data July 14, 2011
Posted by Stacey Bailey in Utility Industry News.Tags: biggest energy saver, Chartwell, Chartwell Blog, EMACS, energy, energy efficiency, energy usage, Google PowerMeter, Grid 21, Microsoft Hohm, online energy information, smart grid, smart meter, utility customer engagement, Utility Market Research Summit
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The exit of Google and Microsoft from the smart meter arena a few weeks ago was big news in our industry. Citing “inability to scale” (Google) and “slow overall market adoption,” (Microsoft) these technology giants were unable to engage customers in sufficient numbers to justify continuing these projects.
The ongoing mission to discover what makes customers want to manage their energy usage continues…
An interesting approach to this mission was announced at the Grid Modernization event hosted by the White House in mid-June – the launch of Grid 21, a nonprofit off-shoot of GridWise Alliance. Founding Grid 21 partners are utilities Oncor, CenterPoint and San Diego Gas and Electric as well asIBM, Landis+Gyr, Itron and GE. Grid 21 states its purpose as, “engaging electricity customers in using a new generation of tools and technologies to better manage their electricity consumption.” (more…)
Home energy management and customer engagement: Sprinters should avoid this marathon July 12, 2011
Posted by Scott Johnson in Utility Industry News.Tags: Chartwell, Chartwell Blog, Chartwell research, customer service, energy conservation, energy usage, Google PowerMeter, market research, meter data, online energy information, smart grid, smart meter, utility customer engagement
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Google and Microsoft’s low-key exit from the home energy management market after just two years underscores what many electric utilities are learning and Chartwell research shows – convincing large numbers of consumers to pay more attention to their energy use and act on that information will be a long, uphill journey. (more…)
The energy industry is quite complex, as some of the customer-oriented tech companies are learning June 15, 2011
Posted by Darren Epps in Utility Industry News.Tags: Apple, Chartwell research, customer communications, demand response, EMACS, energy conservation, energy usage, Google PowerMeter, in-home displays, Microsoft Hohm, online energy information, Oracle, Siemens, smart meter, Tendril, utilities, utility communications
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San Diego Gas & Electric is running a pilot this summer that will include in-home displays like this one and programmable communicating thermostats.
Many people are conditioned to believe that, due to all their resources and innovations, giants like Google and Microsoft can immerse themselves into any industry, exploit the current products, improve them and cash the large check. It’s like the kids in high school who could effortlessly dominate every sport. That would be the script, some thought, for customer engagement in energy management. Here come the jocks. Everyone move aside. (more…)
Consumer advocate provides smart-meter reality check to utilities at Chartwell summit May 27, 2011
Posted by Scott Johnson in Utility Industry News.Tags: Chartwell, Chartwell Blog, Chartwell research, customer communications, energy usage, market research, meter data, privacy, security, smart grid, smart meter, utilities, utility communications, utility customer engagement, utility customer service, utility market research
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Arizona’s advocate for residential utility consumers delivered a clear message to industry leaders attending Chartwell’s Smart Grid Customer Education Summit in Phoenix late last month: Increased outreach and education can only improve customers’ perceptions of smart meters and smart grid.
Jodi Jerich, director of the state’s Residential Utility Consumer Office, which represents the interests of residential ratepayers before the Arizona Corporation Commission, noted that public understanding of smart grid technologies is low. She backed this up by citing research from several firms and as I noted previously on this blog, Chartwell research shows about 40% of consumers familiar with their home energy costs say they have not heard of smart meters; about three in four say they have not heard of smart grid. (more…)
One utility is getting the picture on customer engagement May 6, 2011
Posted by Darren Epps in Utility Industry News.Tags: CEIVO, Chartwell, customer communications, demand response, energy efficiency, energy usage, Glendale Water and Power, in-home display, marketing, online energy information, smart grid, smart meter, utility communications, utility customer engagement, utility customer service
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The effort to engage customers in their energy usage is prompting utilities to test web portals, direct mail inserts, in-home displays and other dashboards to determine the most effective strategies.
Glendale Water and Power, a California municipal serving 84,500 electric and 32,500 water customers, presented a different idea at Chartwell’s Smart Grid Customer Education Summit in Phoenix last week – coupling utility messaging with pictures of Mom. (more…)

