OPALCO explains the rate increase

Beginning in February, electric rates are going up. Residential members with average energy usage will see their OPALCO bill go up about $10 per month.

Submitted by OPALCO

Beginning in February, electric rates are going up. Residential members with average energy usage will see their OPALCO bill go up about $10 per month. The rate increase is based on a number of factors, primarily making sure our revenue is adequate to meet budgeted expenses and covering the cost of upcoming submarine cable replacements over the next 30 years – which boils down to our ability to make loan payments. A Cost of Service Study was conducted in 2014 to make sure each member pays their fair share. All member classes are affected by the rate increase, as shown right.

This new rate structure also changes how we meet the co-op’s fixed operational costs. Currently, a large percentage of our revenue requirements are met through energy (kWh) usage. Bonneville Power Administration charges us for the kilowatt hours of energy used.  This will stay relatively stable.   However, over the next five years, the facility costs at OPALCO are going up incrementally and will make up a larger share of our fixed costs.  Therefore, this shift in rate structure provides more revenue stability and predictability.

Go to www.opalco.com/finances to read the detailed 2015 Budget and Rate Report.  The full tariffs are also posted on our website.

Warmer temperatures impacted energy sales last year. A $1.4 million revenue shortfall in 2014 was minimized by belt-tightening throughout the year as the number of “Heating Degree Days” were tracked and revenue reductions predicted. Hiring scheduled for 2014 was delayed, as well as some projects that were not critical to maintaining service levels.

“OPALCO’s budgeting is based not only on projected system growth, but also on how average monthly ambient temperatures will affect usage,” explained System Engineer Joel Mietzner. “We build in an error margin of plus or minus 5 percent for weather. In 2014, temperatures hit a historical high – and we hit the outer range of our margin for error.”

A headline in “The New York Times” (Jan. 16, 2015) declared “2014 was the Warmest Year Ever Recorded on Earth,” citing the annals of climatology record that stretches back to 1880. Local scientist Russel Barsh of Kwiaht published results of a five-year monitoring study that tracked rising sea surface temperatures around Indian Island (Islands’ Sounder, Dec. 23, 2014) documenting a five-degree increase in water temperature.

Weather projections for 2015 follow this same pattern, and revenue expectations have been adjusted to reflect the trend. A true-up mechanism is currently in development to allow weather-related rate adjustments throughout the year to create greater revenue stability.

Following back-to-back “100-year storms” in 1989 and 1990, the board instituted the storm abatement program to get our electric distribution lines buried underground. For five years, all members paid a surcharge of 25 cents per kilowatt hour to fund the necessary infrastructure improvement.