EUB punts rate hearing as NB Power studies $122M smart meter plan
EUB agrees to suspend hearing so it can deal first with NB Power's proposed $122M purchase of smart meters
By Robert Jones, Posted: Sep 26, 2017 6:00 AM ATThe EUB has agreed to consider an upcoming NB Power application to spend $122 million on new "smart meters" for homes and businesses first.
"The Board finds that the AMI (Advanced Metering Infrastructure) application should precede the rate design hearing and therefore it is in the public interest to grant an adjournment," ruled EUB chairman Raymond Gorman in a brief hearing last week.
But the utility has argued there is little room to make substantial changes like that until its entire inventory of power meters is upgraded.
"It is NB Power's submission that the rate design proceeding is … premature because it does contemplate discussion of rate design options that might not be available depending on … (smart meter) deployment," NB Power's senior legal counsel John Furey said during arguments for the suspension.
Tracking more frequent
Unlike current units that have to be physically visited to be read, smart meters will connect directly to NB Power computers, allowing individual customers to have electricity consumption tracked several times an hour instead of once a month.The utility says this will allow it to charge a variety of rates for electricity — more when consumption is higher, such as in the mornings, on weekends and during winter — and less when consumption is lower.
"We are going from reading a customer's meter once a month, so 12 times a year, up to 12 times an hour," former NB Power executive Neil Larlee said during testimony in front of the EUB last February.
Smart meters for $122M
But the new meters are expensive, an estimated $92 million to acquire one for each customer and another $30 million to have them installed and made operational.It's an expense that largely requires EUB approval, something the regulator is expected to hear evidence on this winter and rule on by next spring. NB Power said without that decision being made first, redesigning rates made little sense.
Because those who heat with electricity consume large amounts of power during high-demand cold snaps, the rate design process is generally expected to result in higher costs for that group.
However, NB Power has argued smart meters will allow for enough discount periods that electric heat customers who move activities such as laundry, dishwashing and showers into the evening will be able to offset some or all of the increases they experience.
NB Power is expected to formally apply to buy and install smart meters provincewide within the next two weeks as part of its next general rate increase application.
The rate design hearing will resume next fall.
Commenting is now closed for this story.
NB Power's smart meter program among plans under microscope at EUB hearing
A proposal to enact new surcharges to help pay for unexpected events will also be scrutinized
Smart meters
More than the rate increase, NB Power`s top priority has become winning approval for a $122.7-million plan to deploy Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI), including smart meters, around New Brunswick over the next three years.
The meters, one for each of NB Power`s 350,000 customers, are designed to connect directly to the utility`s computers and will open up opportunities to establish high and low rates during the day to try and steer electricity consumption away from peak hours.
The meters also allow for homeowners to install their own generation, like solar panels, or invest in large battery storage units to load up on low-cost nighttime power and sell what they don't need back to the utility.
"NB Power believes AMI and energy smart investments are essential for its customers and should be approved by the board," it said in its opening statement.
"Delay in making these investments, particularly in AMI delays progress in reaching all of the targets for reduction of energy and peak demand."
'It will be fully debated'
But at least two outside experts hired to evaluate NB Power's smart meter plan — and who will testify during the hearing — question the economics of the proposal."With increased likelihood that NB Power will be able to recover all costs associated with extraordinary events, there is less pressure on the Company to control those costs." - US energy consultant Synapse EnergyThat means there will be an intense examination of the smart meter issue in front of the board, according to Public Intervener Heather Black.
"It will be fully debated," said Black. "When there's such a big project at hand, questions come up. Has it been properly planned for are the costs and benefits properly and accurately estimated?"
Also drawing criticism is a proposal to allow NB Power to levy special surcharges when it is hit with unexpected expenses like storm damage — a so-called rate adjustment mechanism.
NB Power has missed profit targets by wide margins in five of the last six years in part because of an unprecedented series of weather events.
The utility estimates it paid $63.8 million to restore power and clean up after ice storms in December 2013, post-tropical storm Arthur in July 2014 and more ice storms in January 2017.
"With increased likelihood that NB Power will be able to recover all costs associated with extraordinary events, there is less pressure on the Company to control those costs," wrote US energy consultant Synapse Energy who was hired by the utilities board to evaluate NB Power's application.
"It will be a focus of the hearing certainly," Black said of the rate adjustment mechanism idea. "I think we'll have a healthy discussion about that."
The hearing begins Wednesday morning in Saint John
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/
NB Power's smart meter plan labelled a 'money loser' during EUB grilling
The utility estimated the total savings would fall short of the $122.7M price tag
By Robert Jones, CBC News Posted: Feb 08, 2018 6:00 AM AT
"Those projected costs are $122.7 million and the projected benefits are $121.4 million. Is that correct?" asked Christopher Stewart, a lawyer for J.D. Irving Ltd. during the opening day of NB Power's annual rate hearing.
"Yes. That's the life cycle costs of the project and the life cycle benefits of the project," responded NB Power senior vice president of operations Lori Clark.
"That's negative $1.3 million," observed Stewart. "It's a money loser."
Clark, along with two other NB Power senior vice presidents, Keith Cronkhite and Darren Murphy, fielded initial questions about the utility's smart meter plans in front of the Energy and Utilities Board as part of a 12-day review of a number of issues.
Greater benefits expected
The three vice presidents argued that smart meters are needed as a foundation for NB Power to implement a number of other modernization plans and suggested total financial benefits will likely be greater than the analysis it prepared for the hearing seemed to show.The meters will connect directly to the utility's computers and track consumption in real time. That will open up opportunities to establish high and low rates during the day to try and steer electricity consumption to off-peak hours.
The meters also allow for homeowners to install their own generation, like solar panels, or invest in large battery storage units to load up on low-cost nighttime power and sell what they don't need back to the utility.
"We did not take into account all of the potential upside benefits. We were very conservative in the calculation of our benefits," said Clark. "There are a number of projects that are enabled by our Advanced Metering Infrastructure that haven't been identified in the business case."
Stewart responded: "You say you've taken a conservative approach but its the approach you've chosen to bring forward."
Recent complaints
Clark said the multiple recent complaints the utility has received from people surprised by the size of their January power bills show the value of smart meter.But she assured Gerald Bourque, leader of New Brunswick's fledgling KISS N.B. Political Party and a hearing participant, that no one who objects to the device will be made to take one.
"When we are dealing with high bill complaints like we have been this last month, customers would actually be able to see their usage throughout the month and not be subject to receiving a final bill at the end of the month and being surprised by their consumption," she said.
"We will have an opt out policy."
Whether the meters pay for themselves or not, it is important the board not judge the proposal to buy them on that issue alone, Murphy said.
"It's more than just economics," he said. "It's about preparing for that future and modernizing the infrastructure."
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/eub-hearings-nb-power-smart-meters-1.4529640
Opting out smart meter program could cost NB Power customers
Power customers in British Columbia, Quebec have faced fees for refusing the installation of smart meters
By Robert Jones, CBC News Posted: Feb 10, 2018 8:00 AM AT
"It will be based on the principles of cost causation, but we have not gotten into the detail of what that fee would be at this point," said NB Power Senior Vice President of Operations Lori Clark at Energy and Utilities Board hearings on Friday.
In other jurisdictions that have already adopted smart meters, customers not wanting to participate have faced hundreds of dollars in extra charges.
In Quebec, smart meters were installed beginning in 2012. Customers who refused the devices were initially charged $98 to opt out plus a meter reading fee of $17 per month. That was eventually cut by Quebec's energy board in 2014 to a $15 refusal fee and a $5 per month meter reading surcharge.
NB Power said it may be a year or more before it settles on its own fee.
"The opt out policy will be developed and implemented as part of the roll out. It will be one of the last things we do," said Clark.
Customers need to be on board
NB Power is in front of the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board seeking permission to spend $122.7 million to install 350,000 smart meters province wide.The meters require near universal adoption by customers to maximize their financial benefit — like eliminating more than $20 million a year NB Power currently spends to read meters manually. The utility has said the switch will not succeed if too many customers opt out.
"We certainly wouldn't be looking at making an investment of this size without having the customer with us," said Clark.
On Thursday, Kent County resident Daniel LeBlanc, who along with Roger Richard, is opposing the introduction of smart meters for health reasons, predicted a cool reception for the technology in many parts of the province.
"If one were to ask most of the people in the rural areas, I'm not sure you would get a lot of takers for this infrastructure," said LeBlanc, who is concerned with the long-term effect microwave frequencies used by the meters to transmit data may have on human health.
That issue is before the EUB next week.
Haven't tested the waters
NB Power acknowledged it has not measured public opinion on adopting smart meters but is confident it can convince customers it is a good idea for them and the utility."People don't understand what the smart meter is," said Clark. "We need to educate our customers first to allow them to make an informed decision so that will be part of the roll out plan."
Clark noted that smart meters, helped by stiff opting out penalties, were eventually accepted by 98 per cent of customers in British Columbia and by 97.4 per cent of customers in Quebec.
"We will check and adjust along the way if there are issues with customer uptake," said Clark.
"This is very similar to what has been done in other jurisdictions and they haven't had those challenges."
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/smart-meters-already-used-1.4558302
Smart meters already in use in New Brunswick
The meters NB Power wishes to install are already used by municipal utilities in Saint John, Perth-Andover
"We have 9,816 units installed currently," said Saint John Energy vice-president Marta Kelly told CBC News Thursday.
"They've been excellent for hard to reach routes."
The utility began installing smart meters 12 years ago and now more than a quarter of city residents have one, particularly those living on the city's outskirts.
Kelly says residents were informed by letter before meters were installed and complaints have been limited.
"In the unlikely event they want it removed they can have it removed but we have had very little of that."
Installed for several years
The units transmit power consumption information back to the utility on their own without having to be visited and read.
Kelly said placements in more remote parts of the city like Martinon helped the utility shave the most off its meter reading expenses. She said if NB Power wins approval to install its own meters, Saint John Energy will complete the entire city.
"We support the rollout of AMI (Advanced Metering Infrastructure). We think it's a fundamental basis for (other) initiatives we can all do in the future."
That has freed them up to do what they want when they want.
In Perth-Andover's case it installed smart meters with all but a couple of customers, about 900 in total, in 2010.
"We're a small utility. We can hire one guy to come in and do our whole system over in a couple of weeks."
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-power-smart-meters-experts-eub-1.4504618
NB Power's smart meters plan not so smart, 2 expert reviews find
$122M-plan is poorly thought out, should be rejected by EUB, separately commissioned reports conclude
By Robert Jones, CBC News Posted: Jan 26, 2018 6:00 AM AT
NB Power's plan to spend $122.7 million over three years to deploy smart meters for all its residential and commercial customers is poorly thought out and should be rejected by the Energy and Utilities Board at hearings next month, according to separate experts hired to review the strategy.
"As currently proposed, the AMI [advanced metering infrastructure] project could commit NB Power and its customers to a heavy cost burden without fully defining and quantifying the future benefits to be gained," wrote Edmund Finamore, a smart meter consultant from Pennsylvania commissioned by public intervener Heather Black to scrutinize the plan.
"It is not clear that NB Power has implemented sufficient project management controls methods to execute a firm plan, achieve firm project milestones and control project costs."
- EUB punts rate hearing as NB Power studies $122M smart meter plan
- Seasonal power rates could cause consumer backlash, says consultant
"NB Power has significantly understated the costs and overstated the benefits of its AMI proposal," says the analysis by a group of five authors working for Synapse Energy Economics out of Cambridge, Mass.
"We recommend that the board reject the company's AMI proposal."
'Essential' to cleaner, more reliable grid
NB Power has been working toward upgrading its distribution system to a "smart grid" over the past six years and the wholesale installation of smart meters and other AMI to serve every customer has long been a centrepiece of the utility's plan.Unlike current units that have to be physically visited to be read, smart meters will connect directly to NB Power computers, allowing individual customers to have electricity consumption tracked several times an hour instead of once a month.
The utility says this will allow it to charge a variety of rates for electricity — more when consumption is higher, such as in the mornings, on weekends and during winter — and less when consumption is lower.
That in turn will encourage consumers to shift demand to underutilized parts of the day, it says.
"We are going from reading a customer's meter once a month, so 12 times a year, up to 12 times an hour," former NB Power executive Neil Larlee said during testimony in front of the EUB last February.
The meters will also allow customers to sell electricity back to NB Power if they install solar or other power generating capability on their property and will give the utility instant information on outages, including the individual homes affected.
"This communication network along with the AMI meters is essential to a building smarter, cleaner, more reliable and efficient power grid and will lay the foundation for many of the long-term customer benefits that NB Power will deliver through its Energy Smart NB plan," said the utility in its application to the EUB to acquire the units.
Cost outweighs savings
But even NB Power acknowledges the cost of buying, installing and operating 355,000 new smart meters to blanket the province in a three-year rollout is high without enough savings to completely pay for it.The utility has detailed 15 ways the new meters will cut expenses but the combined benefits total just $121.4 million That's $1.3 million less than the program is budgeted to cost.
'Spending so much money on an initiative that is not essential and not cost effective is unwise.' - Synapse reportBoth Finnamore and Synapse Energy disputed the value of several of the claimed savings as inflated and Synapse further argued since NB Power's own numbers show the investment in smart meters will cost money in the long run the case is too weak to proceed.
"The company's own analysis suggests that the proposal is not cost effective and that analysis suffers from some fundamental flaws," concluded the Synapse report.
"Spending so much money on an initiative that is not essential and not cost effective is unwise."
Proposal needs refining
Both consultants suggested if properly handled, the introduction of smart meters could benefit both NB Power and its customers, but each separately concluded the utility's plan lacks detail and a convincing rationale.Both called for the application to be denied so the utility can offer a more refined proposal.
NB Power is facing a 12-day hearing in front of the Energy and Utilities Board beginning Feb. 8.
In addition to seeking permission to invest in smart meters, it is also attempting to win approval for an average two per cent rate increase it has proposed for April 1 and is asking for the flexibility to employ special rate increases when large unexpected weather or market events cause its costs to jump unexpectedly.
94 Comments
Commenting is now closed for this story.
David Amos
Methinks folks should start reading what I said within the transcripts of these matters N'esy Pas?
William Reed
The real scandal here is that
they have not indicated publicly how they could make profit with these
meters going forward. It's not true that these will not be worth the
effort. Many utilities are banking they will be hugely profitable in
ways not disclosed to customers yet.
Many utilities across NA have strategically placed themselves to be the
gatekeepers of information gathering and selling from the homes of their
customers. It's been described as as the holy grail of information
gathering that many companies have their eyes on. Within these meters
is the wireless functionality to collect and relay information from any
smart device in your home. In time this will represent a lot of
information and an important source of revenue in the information age.
You have to inform yourself as a consumer under legal contract (your
terms and conditions). They installed one on my house one day by simply
knocking on the door and asking me if they could shut the power off for
five minutes and do an upgrade. I realized after the fact that they had
installed a smart meter. Knowing about the legal issues that had been
stirred up in California, I fired off a letter to NB power asking how
my terms and conditions had changed and about the future intent to use
any functionality to sample information in my home to their benefit. I
was promised an answer by the legal team and never received one. That
was over two years ago.
It's not surprising that the auditors don't see the profit in the plan.
NB Power have purposely not shed light on the scope of what is possible
with these, IMHO. I don't think they have to because they are not using
this functionality now and can easily state that they are not
considering it yet. This is the thing that reporters should be looking
into.
Dianne MacPherson
How could NB Power install a smart meter
on your home when they haven't been approved
yet by the EUB ???
Its a small wonder that NB Power and the NBEUB barred me as an Intervener after I raised Hell in the 357 Matter
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/eub-hearing-nb-power-rate-design-smart-meters-1.4305685
EUB punts rate hearing as NB Power studies $122M smart meter plan
EUB agrees to suspend hearing so it can deal first with NB Power's proposed $122M purchase of smart meters
By Robert Jones, Posted: Sep 26, 2017 6:00 AM AT
FYI Here is some old news from CBC about NB Power that caused Bernie Lord to fire the old board.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-power-has-too-much-freedom-pub-boss-1.572378
NB Power has too much freedom: PUB boss
CBC News Posted: Feb 15, 2006 9:30 AM AT Last
The man in charge of the Public Utilities Board says huge financial losses at NB Power are a direct result of too much freedom and he wants the company to open its books to public scrutiny more often.
The utility wants to raise rates by an average of 11.6 per cent for residential and industrial users on April 1 to make up for projected losses next year.
FROM FEB. 14, 2006: NB Power guesses tax bill, ignores law
But at hearings into that request on Tuesday, PUB chairman David Nicholson blamed the company's poor performance on a lack of supervision and suggested more regulation could have stopped hundreds of millions of dollars from going out the door.
Roland Godin
We could buy and plug with Massachusetts, even with a mark up it would still cost less than adding to the already huge debt and would satisfy the must not buy from Québec whoevers...et voilà.
Check Wikipedia
"In 2002, NB Power, with support from the Government and opposition, pushed for refurbishment. However, the New Brunswick Energy and Utilities Board ruled that "there is no significant economic advantage to the proposed refurbishment" of Point Lepreau and that "it is not in the public interest".[20]
In April 2004, a report[21] authored by former British Energy chairman Robin Jeffrey estimated the plant's refurbishment would cost $1.36 billion instead of the C$935 million figure quoted at the time by the provincial utility. Jeffrey's report made no recommendations on whether to undertake the plant's overhaul or not but advised New Brunswick decision makers to seek competitive bids for new fossil-fuel fired generation capacity.[22]
Despite being denied a federal grant to fund the project,[23] NB Power announced on July 29, 2005 that it was awarding Atomic Energy of Canada Limited a $1.4 billion (CAD) contract for refurbishing the generating station.[24]"
@David Amos BTW Need I say it was a small wonder to me that Harper appointed this NB Power lawyer to be a Judge?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-power-dismissed-reactor-compensation-in-2002-1.879389
"When NB Power was in front of the Public Utilities Board, the precursor to the Energy and Utilities Board, eight years ago, NB Power's lawyers and executives were asked whether the utility would be entitled to compensation if the massive refurbishment project went behind schedule.
"In the real world no one, no one covers those kinds of costs," said Terrence Morrison, NB Power's lawyer, in transcripts from the board.
"I am suggesting that in order to accept that argument the board pick out some rose-coloured glasses and put them on."
Ben Haroldson/Samuel Porter
Ross Piercey
Ever since these smart meters came out all I've heard is they caues fires.
David Amos
@Ross Piercey You are not alone in hearing that
Paul Krumm
NB save money? Dump the excess managers (about 100 compared to other
utilities) at a cost of about $200,000 each per year (wages, admin,
overhead etc) bingo already $20 million saved with no negative effect
except a spike in the unemployment rate.
David Amos
@Paul Krumm I concur NB Power appears to be a retirement abode for old politicians and their cohorts
Robert Dazleus
Sounds like just the kind of investment we're all used to In This Place.
David Amos
@Robert Dazleus I agree
Robert Dazleus
So they're also seeking to increase rates AND permission to bypass the
EUB and increase rates when they feel it's justified. Get ready to pay
pay pay
David Amos
@Robert Dazleus You have been doing that for years Best get ready to pay more more more
Chantal LeBouthi
As many as 1.7 million Hydro-Quebec customers have made the switch to
smart meters – but the devices have many critics complaining about
skyrocketing bills.
In some cases, customers say their bills have doubled or tripled since smart meters were installed.
Similar smart meter overbilling concerns have been raised in Ontario, where its ombudsman is investigating some 8000 complaints.
Similar smart meter overbilling concerns have been raised in Ontario, where its ombudsman is investigating some 8000 complaints.
Worst of all, the smart meters haven’t worked (sometimes literally:
812,000, or about 1/6 of all smart meters, have never transmitted to the
provincial data center at all): power use hasn’t dropped during peak
periods; it has actually increased slightly. The Auditor General noted
that “projected net benefits of at approximately $600 million over 15
years were significantly overstated by at least $512 million.” Add in
the massive cost overrun, and taxpayers are still out nearly a billion
dollars for a project that by any empirical measure has been a complete
disaster.
—————————————————-
It’s was a big fiasco in Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan
Will be here too
David Amos
@Chantal LeBouthi "Similar smart meter overbilling concerns have been
raised in Ontario, where its ombudsman is investigating some 8000
complaint"
Methinks the lawyer Chucky Murray may be quite busy in the near future N'esy Pas?
Michael G. L. Geraldson
I left rural Ontario because my hydro bill doubled after the
installation of a smart meter. Then, I spent two years arguing with them
about it. Even though my rates are still too high here, they are
nothing like they were when I lived in Ontario.
David Amos
@Michael G. L. Geraldson "I left rural Ontario because my hydro bill doubled after the installation of a smart meter."
You know what political party to thank for that smart meter nonsense correct?
Chantal LeBouthi
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has seen a surge in 'smart
meter hacks' which allow consumers to cut expensive power bills from 50
to 75 percent -- providing they're careful about it.
It doesn't take knowing someone in the industry or power tools --
instead, consumers use a low-cost magnet to disrupt readings. Due to the
digital nature of smart meters, there have also been cases of hackers
being hired to cheat the system for a modest fee.
————————————
Hope nb power know about this because is going to be costly
David Amos
@Chantal LeBouthi "The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has seen a
surge in 'smart meter hacks' which allow consumers to cut expensive
power bills from 50 to 75 percent -- providing they're careful about
it."
Oh My My Should we consider this good news from the FBI for a change?
Ian Scott
If you work, its pretty hard to change when you have breakfast, and get
kids ready for school etc.Same thing at night. NB Power using excuse to
target peak times with higher rates. And if you cannot verify when to
turn the dryer on(that a low peak time in place) its unlikely you will
save a penny. This NB Power in cahoots with Siemens in power grid
changes? this is the great incentive, save so we can can charge you more
. Consumer tries to be good and help and gets dinged. Typical.
David Amos
@Ian Scott "If you work, its pretty hard to change when you have
breakfast, and get kids ready for school etc.Same thing at night. NB
Power using excuse to target peak times with higher rates."
That is what I have been pointing out for quite some time now
Shawn McShane
Will NB Power follow the advice or will they pull a Victor Boudreau who
went against advice and removed NBers security over Atcon costing
taxpayers $70 million???
David Amos
@Shawn McShane Remember when Bernie Lord decided to refurbish Lepreau
against the advice of the PUB? Well he fired them and created the EUB
just before he lost the election in 2006. Since then the Liberals and
the Conservatives have been using the EUB against us.
Roland Godin
While on smart meters, could we have a report on smart politicians
artificial intelligent capability of pushing the OFF and ON switch for
the consumed preference of their political colours...et voilà.
David Amos
@Roland Godin Methinks thou doth jest too much N'esy Pas?
Paul Bourgoin
As for an experimental beginning to these new smart electrical meters
for efficiency in reading electrical consumption and cost analysis, NB
POWER should install them in all Commercial Customers first, whose
consumption is greater than that of Joe Public. Then Government could
establish if it is a worthy money saving experiment for all New
Brunswick Residents or a costly indebted experiment for New Brunswick
Tax Payers!
David Amos
@Paul Bourgoin "NB POWER should install them in all Commercial Customers
first, whose consumption is greater than that of Joe Public."
NB Power to too busy writing the biggest Commercial Customer of them corporate welfare cheques
Joel MacKenzie
The article says that the new meters will cost $122.7M over three years.
The benefits are estimated at $121.4M. I didn't see a time frame for
that, Is that over the same three year period? I think a return like
that over only three years is pretty good. That's $404M over 10 years.
Am I missing something? What's the problem?
Chris Rouse
@Joel MacKenzie https://newclearfreesolutions.files.wordpress.com/2018/01/new-clear-free-solutions-matter-375-evidence-web.pdf
David Amos
@Chris Rouse Interesting that you offer your two bits here but won't speak to me in person
Chantal LeBouthi
Smart meters have already sparked controversy across Canada they set to
use digital smart meters as a way of doubling the cost of power when
families need it Most
It’s a money grab machine nothing to do with energy saving
It’s total bull,,,,,
David Amos
@Chantal LeBouthi Everybody knows that but the Liberals and NB Power
Chantal LeBouthi
consultant hired by NB Power is warning of significant consumer
"backlash" if the utility is made to establish seasonal rates for
electricity.
The consultant's report even suggests customers might have to read their
own power meters at midnight twice a year — on April Fool's and
Halloween — to make the system work.
"Virtually all bills will have errors ... billing disputes can be
expected to increase, possibly dramatically, and there will be no means
of resolving disputes in a satisfactory way," reads a report
—————————————
So nb power intent to screw us and we want be able to fight it
David Amos
@Chantal LeBouthi FYI April Fool's and Halloween are two of my favourite days when dealing with NB Power's lawyers. No joke.
Shawn McShane
NB Power is asking for the flexibility to employ special rate increases
when large unexpected weather or market events cause its costs to jump
unexpectedly.
Its winter the cold, snow, freezing is expected. If it gets sub-zero in
the summer that is unexpected. The markets have a glut of cheap
electricity and NB rate payers never catch a break. The Pembina
Institute's Sara Hastings-Simon says prices are likely to continue to
fall (but not for us).
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/energy-electricity-cost-1.4428048
David Amos
@Shawn McShane "The markets have a glut of cheap electricity and NB rate payers never catch a break."
Methinks you should ask your MLA why that is before the next election N'esy Pas?
Greg Miller
Does anyone out there really believe that homeowners ,etc are not
already using "smart meters" (i.e. their intelligence) to control their
expenditure on ever increasing electrical costs? What we need is a SMART
Government and SMART innovators to find better ways of meeting our
power needs--not gimmicks!
David Amos
@Greg Miller "What we need is a SMART Government and SMART innovators to
find better ways of meeting our power needs--not gimmicks"
We also need smart voters
Brian Robertson
Those most likely to not benefit from this plan would be New Brunswickers.
NB Power seems to be chasing technology without giving any thought to
how it impacts it's customers. Sure, there are a few goodies involved
like quick analysis and diagnosis of outages. But, when the utility
talks of charging different rates based upon network demand, they aren't
talking about discounted power at off-peak times. They are setting the
case for surcharges at times when demand is high.
The net effect to consumers, is the price will be going up.
Does that surprise anyone?
David Amos
@Brian Robertson "The net effect to consumers, is the price will be going up. Does that surprise anyone?"
Not me
Chantal LeBouthi
CBC we know that smart meter are health hazards and fires hazards
Can you check with assurance companies in nb
If a fires is cause by smart meter to a home are they going to sue nb
power for the damage and it Rae’s might go up do to the fire risk
Thanks
David Amos
@Chantal LeBouthi "If a fires is cause by smart meter to a home are they
going to sue nb power for the damage and it Rate’s might go up do to
the fire risk"
Good point
Tim Nason
We get billed once a month. The meter gets read every 4 or 5 months. The system works. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
David Amos
@Tim Nason Exactly. However common sense is a rare thing to find within Crown Corporations
Jon White
NB Power wants to spend 122.7 million when they are already sinking fast
in debt! Looks like NB Power is taking advice from Ontario
Hydro....Just look at the mess Ontario is in with their hydro rates and
debt. Then again this dysfunctional NB Power will just pass the mess
down to rate payers.
David Amos
@Jon White "NB Power wants to spend 122.7 million when they are already sinking fast in debt!"
Thats their plan
Trevor Boone Helm
The whole thing is ridiculous. The more you conserve, the less money the
power company makes. Consumption goes down therefore revenue goes down.
Which means rates go up to cover the drop in revenue. This is what
happened to Ontario in the 80's when we had the boom and they were
building power plants (especially nuclear plants) like there was no
tomorrow. Coupled with a highly successful campaign to conserve
electricity, costs went up, revenue went down. Then the boom went bust
and the rate payers were left holding a monumental debt.
We should have been lighting our homes like we were playing indoor baseball.
David Amos
@Trevor Boone Helm Check the news in Newfoundland lately. Now there is a tale of woe when it comes to power generation and sales
Trevor Boone Helm
"That in turn will encourage consumers to shift demand to underutilized parts of the day, it says."
Right. Like you can wait to cook supper at midnight when the rates are down.
Ask anyone in Ontario about smart meters.They cost twice as much to
implement as proposed, they never changed usage patterns to any degree,
and may heaven help you if you think the thing isn't calibrated
properly. (You have call Measurements Canada who will come and test the
meter and that costs $600, payable if it's OK. But you won't know if
it's OK unless you get it tested. Sort of a "catch 22".)
David Amos
Content disabled.Then unblocked about an hour later
@Trevor Boone Helm "Right. Like you can wait to cook supper at midnight when the rates are down."
I have been doing that for years but not to save money on a power bill.
David Amos
Content disabled.
@David Amos Interesting that CBC blocked that comment N'esy Pas?
David Amos
@David Amos Oh My Blocked twice in a row
SarahRose Werner
I need to turn more lights on when the sun goes down and there's not as
much light coming in through the windows. A "smart meter" is not going
to change that.
David Amos
@SarahRose Werner I have the same problem
Shawn McShane
NP Power already got into trouble with their insurance companies for "not following expert advice" at Pt. Lepreau. Now they are being "expertly advised" by two separate independent reports to scrap the smart meter program. In other jurisdictions smart meters have caused home fires. How will that effect insurance: GTA homeower liable for damages after smart meter catches fire.
http://toronto.citynews.ca/video/2017/01/12/video-gta-homeowner-liable-for-damage-after-smart-meter-catches-fire/
https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2014/08/08/smart_meters_linked_to_13_fires_in_ontario_fire_marshal_says.html
David Amos
@Shawn McShane "NP Power already got into trouble with their insurance companies for "not following expert advice" at Pt. Lepreau"
SHHH Methinks that lawsuit is still before the court N'esy Pas?
Ross Piercey
Well I guess they didn’t install this one correctly, it runs off the panel from the garage.
Thanks Sean, I will be following up with NB power on that, thanks again.
Thomas Imber
Not much but his puppet masters expect him to follow orders and put the right spin on their malicious nonsense.
Mac Isaac
My one and only "want" is that power is there when I want it! PERIOD!!
I don't give a fiddler's damn about "peak" hours or all that other
technical gobblygook...just fix the damned system so it's not always
going down...ESPECIALLY in the extremes of weather, i.e. extreme cold or
extreme heat & humidity...just FIX it!!
David Amos
@Mac Isaac "I don't give a fiddler's damn about "peak" hours or all that other technical gobblygook"
Most folks don't until their power bill goes up.
William Reed
@Mac Isaac You forgot to mention you want it for nothing too. You can't get what
you want. No one can. Flawless service would mean bigger costs and
higher prices.
Perhaps you should attend the upcoming hearings and advise NB Power's lawyers on how to argue my testimony?
Mario Doucet
Why are companies allowed to build windfarms in NB then sell the power in the US? This is wrong, where are the carbon tax promoters on this issue? Why are we being nailed with carbon taxes by Trudeau when this is being allowed?
David Amos
@Mario Doucet Methinks you can answer those questions yourself N'esy Pas?
That's the private sector. What don't you understand?
Jeff Peel
http://nationalpost.com/news/canada/astonishing-hydro-one-pulling-plug-on-36000-rural-smart-meters-after-years-of-complaints
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