2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.tej.2018.09.004
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Revisiting Bonbright’s principles of public utility rates in a DER world

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Utility costs to be recovered typically include the cost of wholesale energy procurement; costs for building or contracting electricity generation capacity; costs for building and maintaining energy delivery infrastructure; account administration and metering costs; and various other costs required by regulation, including, in the California context, energy-efficiency programs, low-income subsidy programs, and wildfire mitigation efforts. Recently, some authors have revisited these historical rate-design principles in light of the rapid expansion of DERs and VRE generation (Lazar and Gonzales 2015;Rábago and Valova 2018). High VRE penetration can lead to dramatic time variation in the cost of delivering electricity to customers and in the value of DERs; in this situation, fairly compensating DER owners while incentivizing efficient consumption leads straightforwardly to consideration of timedifferentiated electricity pricing.…”
Section: Background On Dynamic Electricity Pricingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Utility costs to be recovered typically include the cost of wholesale energy procurement; costs for building or contracting electricity generation capacity; costs for building and maintaining energy delivery infrastructure; account administration and metering costs; and various other costs required by regulation, including, in the California context, energy-efficiency programs, low-income subsidy programs, and wildfire mitigation efforts. Recently, some authors have revisited these historical rate-design principles in light of the rapid expansion of DERs and VRE generation (Lazar and Gonzales 2015;Rábago and Valova 2018). High VRE penetration can lead to dramatic time variation in the cost of delivering electricity to customers and in the value of DERs; in this situation, fairly compensating DER owners while incentivizing efficient consumption leads straightforwardly to consideration of timedifferentiated electricity pricing.…”
Section: Background On Dynamic Electricity Pricingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2019, around 10 million retail electricity customers were enrolled in some form of time-variant rate structure (Burns, Bialecki et al 2020). A few states and utilities have created more complex rates designed specifically for DPV adopters (Rábago andValova 2018, O'Shaughnessy andArdani 2020).…”
Section: Utility Rate and Business Model Reformmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fuentes-Cortés, Flores-Tlacuahuac, and Ponce-Ortega (2019) studied the pricing of housing and utilities services for end consumer, taking into account the subsidies and the effect of social, energy, and economic policy. New approaches to calculating the tariffs on housing and utilities services were also analyzed by Rábago and Valova (2018).…”
Section: Theoretical Basismentioning
confidence: 99%