Tag Archives: Smart Meters

A former PUC Commissioner’s take on smart meters

As a former California Public Utilities Commissioner (1999-2004), I would like to offer a few thoughts about smart meters.

“Smart” meters are devices that can remotely report electricity and gas usage readings as often as hourly to utilities without the need for human meter readers.  The justifications offered by proponents are twofold.  First, it is claimed that utilities can control electricity usage by sharply raising rates during hours of high system demand, thus discouraging consumption and reducing the need for additional generation capacity.  Second, customers can supposedly benefit by moving their usage to hours when demand and prices are low.

While most residential customers are skeptical, this analysis has tremendous appeal to energy producers and market-oriented economists and regulators, the same folks who brought us the electrical deregulation catastrophe in 2000-2001.  What is almost never part of the public discussion is the real motivation of smart meter proponents.

Utilities make their money in two ways: they are reimbursed through rates for their reasonably-incurred costs of providing service, such as paying their workers; and they are fully repaid plus  a “reasonable” rate of return for long-term capital investments in their systems (“rate base”).  Only the second adds to corporate profit, the bottom line.  Replacing functioning existing meters, which have already been partially or fully amortized and have a low rate base, with expensive new ones provides a guaranteed stream of profits for decades to come.  

For example, Southern California Gas Company’s new meters, recently approved by the PUC, add over $1 billion to rate base and will bring the shareholders hundreds of millions of dollars in profits over the next 26 years, even if they don’t work as advertised or become technologically obsolete during that time.  As 1000 union jobs are eliminated in Southern California, customers will lose the safety-related services provided by human meter readers, even though there is no net cost savings from the new technology.

Most residential and small business consumers cannot afford the expensive systems that would enable them to automatically control their consumption in response to hourly price changes.  The winners here will be large industrial and commercial consumers and perhaps some very wealthy homeowners.  Even if non-time-of-use rates are maintained as an option for small consumers, they will go up as large consumers escape regulation that apportions utility system costs among classes of consumers.  In fact, this outcome has always been a central goal of deregulation.

Despite opposition from consumer advocates, Schwarzenegger’s PUC has enthusiastically rubber-stamped every smart meter project that has come before it.  Whoever is elected Governor in November will be able immediately to appoint a majority of this powerful commission.  Progressives need to make sure that the issue becomes part of the election debate.

[Full disclosure: I represent Utility Workers Union of America, Local 132 in its opposition to smart gas meters at the PUC; and I am President of the Board of The Utility Reform Network (TURN), which is leading the campaign to disclose the failings of PG&E’s smart meters.  I am also the Democratic candidate in the 65th Assembly District.]

Breaking: PG&E ORDERED TO MAKE SMARTMETER RECORDS PUBLIC

This has been six months in the making and not for the work of Senator Dean Florez the public would be in the dark on the problems associated with SMARTMETERS and Overcharges/Guestimate Charges. Most certainly the type of support a voter should expect from a representative. Kudo’s to Senator Florez (California’s Consumer Advocate in the State Legislature).

Florez thanks CPUC for taking positive step toward increased transparency!

SACRAMENTO – Senate Majority Leader Dean Florez (D-Shafter), chairman of the Senate Select Committee on the Smart Grid and a key critic of PG&E’s flawed “Smart” Meter roll-out, today thanked the head of the utility’s regulatory body for taking a requested step toward increasing transparency in the process.

In an order issued Tuesday by Commissioner Michael Peevey, the California Public Utilities Commission stated that PG&E must make all of its reports on Smart Meter implementation – past and present – open to the public.  The order states that the move is necessary in order to have the full information needed to assess Smart Meter accuracy.

 

Florez, who called for the public release of these documents at last week’s hearing on Smart Meter billing estimations, called Tuesday’s order “a positive step toward restoring some semblance of public confidence in this long, drawn-out process.”

Since last fall, Florez has held hearings on reports of utility bills soaring after Smart Meter installation.  After months of blaming everything from the summer heat to old meters running “too slow,” PG&E recently admitted not only to estimating customers bills, but to adding months-worth of associated adjustments to one bill.

Under the new ruling, PG&E must provide a copy of its reports — or a link to a website where they are available — within two days to anyone making a request.

A copy of Peevey’s order is available at the following url: http://docs.cpuc.ca.gov/EFILE/…

Expect “Electrifying” Smart Grid Hearing Monday – PG&E Has KNOWN of Smart Meter Defects

For the last six months or so California Senator Dean Florez has held multiple hearings on PG&E Smart Meter accuracy and questionable “sky high” utility bills for many customers AFTER the new meters were installed. PG&E’s response each time they were asked to explain why bills suddenly doubled or tripled was always the pretty much the same — Some “version” of “There is nothing wrong with our Smart Meters and the customer is using too much electricity.”

Here is where it gets interesting! Senator Florez has learned some Smart Meters are apparently DEFECTIVE and is not transmitting the data needed to PG&E for proper billing. PG&E simply started estimating the customer bills each month while they try to determine the cause of the defected meter.  Based on the official line to Senator Florez and customers from PG&E, that there were no problems with the deployed Smart Meters, at the very time they were apparently aware that some meters were not working properly and put a process in place to deal with the defective meters sets the stage for the hearing on Monday: Smart Grid panel takes on PG&E bill “estimations

Utility giant admits failure of Smart Meters to transmit data led to practice in question



Senate Majority Leader Dean Florez (D-Shafter) will lead a hearing of the Senate Select Committee on the Smart Grid on Monday in Sacramento, investigating the recent revelation that some utility customers are getting “estimated” bills due to a “Smart” Meter defect.  The panel will look into the cost to customers from this practice.

With a much-anticipated public hearing on the horizon, the first signs of Smart Meter testing were reported last week, as PG&E reattached old meters alongside digital Smart Meters on about 150 homes in Kern County to compare the energy usage reported.

The start of testing, repeatedly delayed since it was first promised in October, comes on the heels of an admission by utility giant PG&E that some of its new meters are defective and fail to transmit data, leading to estimated bills for its customers.

Florez has been holding public hearings on Smart Meter installation since reports of skyrocketing bills flooded the Valley last year.  Some residents there reported bills that had so much as tripled, even when their homes were vacant.

PG&E Corporation’s President and CEO, Peter Darbee, has declined another opportunity to represent his company publicly on the issue of Smart Meter technology.  The company will instead be sending a senior vice president who is the chief customer officer.

“As much as I believe PG&E customers will not have confidence in their utility until they hear solid answers from the top, we won’t be deterred from asking the hard questions and getting to the bottom of this debacle,” Florez said.  “As long as these meters continue to be bolted to homes without test results that say they are accurate, I will continue to fight to give consumers a voice in this process.”

Also participating in Monday’s hearing will be representatives of the California Public Utilities Commission, Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric, Sacramento Municipal Utility District and the Division of the Ratepayer Advocates.

Monday’s hearing will be held at 9 a.m. in Room 3191 of the California State Capitol.

CA Senator Florez Establishes Committee; Promises Answers To Multiple PG&E SMART METER Issues

Given The PG&E Pubic Relation Track Record Lately I Am Sure Happy To See That Senator Florez Continues To  Looking Out For California Consumers. In all honesty, I hope the PG&E Smart Meter mess is fixed before they come knocking on my door with my Smart Meter! Much of the history of the PG&E Smart Meter mess I posted in the last three months on Calitics. Key Word Smart Meter should get you to the posts.

SACRAMENTO – Amid consumer concerns over the accuracy of so-called “Smart Meters” and ongoing delays in promised independent testing of the devices, the Senate Rules Committee has established a Select Committee on the Smart Grid to provide legislative oversight for implementation of the technology throughout California.

Senate Majority Leader Dean Florez (D-Shafter), who led a series of hearings on Smart Meters last fall as Valley residents’ PG&E bills soared inexplicably, will chair the new committee. Some of those who saw their bills triple had even installed energy efficient appliances or received increased bills for homes which were vacant.

Florez has continued to push for public recognition of problems with the meters, which ultimately are supposed to help residents monitor and adjust their energy usage to save money. He called for independent testing and a moratorium on further Smart Meter installations until such testing is complete.

The California Public Utilities Commission agreed to require PG&E to conduct independent testing of the digital meters, but declined to implement a moratorium. Meanwhile, PG&E is attempting to speed up installations while it delays testing.

PG&E indicated in a recent letter to Florez that it would prefer to meet in person rather than respond in writing to his concerns. To that end, Florez will soon hold a Sacramento hearing of the Select Committee on the Smart Grid to discuss the latest on Smart Meters.

This committee will finally put the tools at our disposal to compel PG&E and the CPUC to provide consumers with the answers they need and deserve,” said Florez. “It concerns me greatly that there is such a rush to install these meters while so many questions loom.

In a letter requesting the select committee, Florez indicated the body would “investigate and review the development of the Smart Grid throughout the state; the use of American recovery and Reinvestment Act funds for Smart Grid purposes; the integrity and reliability of new Smart Grid and Metering technologies; privacy and security standards for Smart Grid data; and the consumer protections in place with regards to utility billing, disconnection and real-time pricing.”

The newly formed select committee will include Senators Florez, Roy Ashburn (R-Bakersfield), Mark Leno (D-San Francisco/San Rafael) and Curren Price (D-Los Angeles).