Brownlee makes major electricity market shake-up
Brownlee delivers major electricity market shake-up
by Pattrick Smellie
Dec. 9 (BusinessWire) - Energy Minister Gerry Brownlee has adopted almost every major recommendation of the Electricity Technical Advisory Group, in a package of reforms for the electricity market that he describes as "putting the boot back on the consumer's foot".
Meridian Energy is the biggest loser in the electricity reforms announced today, ceding its two Tekapo hydro power stations to its North Island competitor, Genesis Energy, while being forced to pick up the diesel-fired Whirinaki power station, currently owned by the Crown and operated by Contact Energy.
The move will
effectively end Meridian's claim that it generates
electricity only from renewables resources, although
Brownlee said he had no concerns about destroying value in
the brand that Meridian has spent millions of dollars and
many years building up.
"If it's as valuable as they
claim, they should book it and pay a dividend against it,"
he said, referring to Meridian's recent lacklustre profit
performance.
While Brownlee holds Meridian
especially accountable for several winter power shortage
scares since 2001, the larger purpose of the reforms is to
stimulate more retail electricity competition in the North
and South Islands by giving the state-owned power companies
a greater mix of northern and southern assets.
Genesis and MightyRiverPower have no southern assets,
with MRP only seeking southern customers in the last 12 to
18 months, and Genesis having none because of the
potentially costly risk of having to supply customers in
another island, away from either company's own power
stations.
Under the shake-up announced today,
Meridian, Genesis and MRP will also be required to make a
"virtual asset swap" using a 15 year contract to ensure each
company's ability to provide increased competition in the
island where they currently have little to no generation
capacity.
In a further change that electricity
market players are likely to claim will raise power prices,
Brownlee announced a new system to make it compulsory for
every major electricity generator to offer 3000 Gigawatt
hours of uncommitted electricity available on standardised,
tradeable contracts into the future.
The system will
include a compulsory "market maker" concept, which will
require every player with more than 500 Megawatts of
installed generation capacity - including privately owned
Contact Energy and TrustPower - to participate. The Contact
share price slipped 0.3% to $5.88 after the announcement,
while TrustPower was unchanged at $7.30.
Similar
mandatory hedging proposals from the ETAG, to try and force
a more liquid and competitive wholesale electricity market,
was widely opposed by electricity generators. They will now
be under pressure to write their own rules for the new
arrangement or have them imposed by the Minister.
In
addition, electricity retailers will be required to
compensate customers if they trigger an emergency savings
campaign, such as occurred in the winters of 2001, 2003, and
2006, and was almost invoked in 2008.
The ETAG
report recommended a weekly $10 per customer payment if an
electricity savings campaign was ever required again - a
move intended to sharpen electricity suppliers' focus on
ensuring they have adequate supply arrangements in place
ahead of any hydro shortages emerging.
Brownlee said
he expected the reforms to moderate the galloping pace of
electricity price rises, which rose by 72% in the last 10
years, against inflation over the same period of 28%.
However, he did not expect prices to fall.
Electricity generators have warned previously that
mandatory hedging requirements and penalties for invoking
savings campaigns would lead to the electricity system being
run more conservatively, creating extra price pressure as a
result.
A further important move announced today is
an instruction to the country's 39 monopoly electricity
networks to standardise their tariffs and contracts, because
their current complexity is stifling retail competition.
Network companies will also have their current right to sell
retail electricity widened.
The reforms will be
introduced in an Electricity Industry Bill which will be
tabled in Parliament tomorrow, for First Reading in
Parliament next Tuesday. However, the Bill is not expected
to be law until next September or October.
Brownlee
also confirmed the abolition of the Electricity Commission,
and its replacement by an Electricity Authority, with a
Security and Reliability Council to monitor Transpower's
performance and advise on security of supply.
The
EC's responsibilities for energy efficiency will go to the
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority, while the
Commerce Commission will become the arbiter for Transpower's
grid investment proposals. The EC had "not been nimble and
responsive enough to meet industry needs", said Brownlee.
"The new Electricity Authority will have a clear mandate to
get on with the job of ensuring the market runs
efficiently."
(BusinessWire) 14:00:45