Community-owned electricity networks face technology risk
Community-owned electricity networks at major risk from new technology, says English
By Pattrick Smellie and Suze Metherell
July 23 (BusinessDesk) - Communities
that believe their locally owned electricity networks will
remain as valuable as they are today risk discovering they
are not worth nearly as much when new electricity
technologies start replacing traditional methods of
distribution, Finance Minister Bill English says.
His comments came as the chair of the Commerce Commission, Mark Berry, said the commission will look hard at emerging electricity generation technologies that could reduce and perhaps replace existing networks as part of its review of the regime that controls pricing by regulated monopolies.
"Community-owned monopoly lines companies
now represent significant commercial risk and that’s not
quite how they see their role," said English. Emerging
technologies had the capacity to destroy community wealth,
where network companies remained community-owned. New
Zealand has some 29 regional electricity network operators,
the majority owned at least in part by community trusts and
local governments.
"These entities are believed by
their communities to be the holders of significant community
wealth," English said in his opening speech to the
commission's annual Competition Matters conference. "Now the
risk to that value is high. The government knows about this,
because we own a whole lot of assets whose value is being
destroyed by competition and technology. That’s slightly
unfortunate, but we own a rail company, a mail company, free
to air broadcasters – it’s not hard to imagine before
too long they’re going to be relics of a bygone
age.
Berry told the conference there would need to be
consideration of "the impact on network businesses we
regulate through things such as solar photovoltaics, battery
technology, electric vehicles and smart grids", which "could
potentially be significant."
"While the uptake of
these technologies is small, it is growing quickly," said
Berry. "We do not yet have a clear understanding of all the
specific challenges and issues that may result from a future
environment, but it is clear there will be challenges for
regulated networks as well as for generators and retailers
(of electricity)."
"We need to strike an appropriate
balance between making changes to the regime that are needed
to keep the regime relevant whilst maintaining regulatory
predictability."
The commission intends to complete its statutory review of the methodology for determining the input prices used to calculate regulated rates of return for network monopolies by the end of next year, a year earlier than required. The reviews are required at least every seven years and the last one became mired in court challenges that were resolved only late last year.
One of the prime movers in the objections to the outcomes of the last review was Vector, the Auckland electricity and gas network owner, which continues to argue that current regulatory settings do not allow sufficient return on investment in capital-hungry network assets to ensure sufficient reliability and modernisation. The advent of economically viable off-grid options such as home-mounted solar electricity production backed up by batteries, and consumers' expectation of being able to sell excess electricity back into the national grid can be expected to add to those pressures for existing regional electricity network owners and the national electricity grid owner, Transpower.
"The questions
that are arising include what the risks are around stranded
assets, how these risks need to be balanced between
businesses and consumers and what, if any, mechanisms can be
set up to accommodate rapid change," said Berry. "No foreign
regulatory body has attempted - yet - to resolve these
challenges."
The commission would engage not only with
existing industry players but with those producing the
emerging technologies as it considers the issues.
Also covered by the review are input pricing methodologies for gas networks, ports and airports.
The conference will also hear presentations on emerging regulatory issues relating to competition between unregulated mobile and regulated fixed-line telecommunications networks.
(BusinessDesk)