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Page 1: Expanding and Enhancing Customer-Level...Expanding and Enhancing Customer-Level Billing Analysis: Non-Residential Customer Sales Profiles and Resilient Pricing Structures and Modeled

http://efc.sog.unc.edu

@EFCatUNC

Expanding and Enhancing Customer-Level Billing

Analysis: Non-Residential Customer Sales Profiles and

Resilient Pricing Structures and Modeled

Shadi Eskaf and Jeff Hughes

Environmental Finance Center at UNC School of Government

Presentation to the UWC – September 4, 2015

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Two Analyses: One Project

Non-Residential Sales Profile

• OWASA

• Fayetteville PWC

• Greensboro Water

• Town of Cary

Alternative Rate Models for

Residential Customers

• OWASA

• Fayetteville PWC

• Town of Cary

• Charlotte Water

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Acknowledgements

3

North Carolina

Urban Water Consortium

Cary, Charlotte Water, Fayetteville PWC, Greensboro, OWASA

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NON-RESIDENTIAL* SALES PROFILES * INCLUDING MASTER-METERED MULTI-FAMILY CUSTOMERS

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Approach and Outputs

• 4 utilities, individually:

– Meetings and discussions; input into the analysis

– Interactive historical sales profile

– Interactive historical top ten customers profile

– Analysis (and list) of customers that significantly changed LT demands

• Report to the UWC with cross-utility takeaways:

– How do utilities treat non-residential customers differently?

– Why it is important to understand non-residential customers?

– How can utilities better understand their non-residential customers?

Report will also be published by Journal AWWA in January 2016

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Utilities can Profile their Non-Residential

Customers by Water Usage Metrics

Demonstration of Utility-Specific “Non-Residential Dynamic Dashboard”

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Number of Non-Residential Customer Classes

OWASA: 14 (unique for UNC)

Fayetteville PWC: ~10 (unique for PWC operations)

Cary: >20

Greensboro: 3 (use meter size instead)

Consolidated into fewer rate classes

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Non-Residential Customers Use a Lot of Water

(and pay a lot for water)

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Big Data Can Assist Efforts in Resource and

Financial Planning and Customer Service

• “Key Accounts”

• Plateau Analysis

• Meter Right-Sizing

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Key Accounts: Top 1% of customers pay ~25% of total charges

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Interactive “Top Ten” Customers Dashboard

Mete

r num

be

rs (

hid

den

)

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Customer Plateau Analysis

While fewer non-residential customers down-plateaued than up-plateaued,

they reduced water use significantly more

Identifying which customers significantly increased LT water demand (up-plateaued) or

significantly decreased LT water demand (down-plateaued)

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Meter Right-Sizing

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Takeaways for the UWC:

Billing Data – a Gold Mine of Information!

• Mining the customers’ billing data individually can assist

efforts in water resource management, financial planning,

customer service, and outreach

• Identifying and working with key accounts

• Understanding why and how non-residential customers

are changing demand patterns

• Detecting anomalies to investigate billing errors or better-

sizing of meters

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Possible Areas of Future Work

• Integration of customer profiling with the billing system

• Development of new considerations for rates analyses

– E.g.: proportions of use and charges by customers with certain water-using behaviors (peakers, hidden irrigators, plateauers, etc.)

• Detailed analysis of specific types of customers

– Cooling towers

– Multi-family residential customers

– Customers that sub-meter and charge beyond the meter

– Down-plateauing non-residential customers

• Analysis of customer types by customer characteristics using NAICS codes, GIS, parcel type, or other supplemental data

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ALTERATIVE RATE MODELS FOR

RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMERS

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Why New Rate Models?

Because the Status Quo Does Not Work for Everyone

• Traditional rate structures create a paradoxical

relationship between conservation and financial health

• Water utility variability does not match utility cost

variability

• There is a large national infrastructure gap

• Weather is becoming less predictable

• It is much easier to create individualized rates

20

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True or False

• Meters are a reliable predictor of the cost impact a

customer has on their utility?

• Costs vary significantly with the amount of water you sell?

• Customers understand their rates?

• You are confident that you understand what drives

customer behavior?

• There are many utilities that rely on historic usage rather

than current monthly usage to determine monthly bill

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Research Shows…..

• All residential 5/8” meters are not created equal (Boyle et al, 2011)

• Total bill amount has a bigger impact on customer consumption than billing frequency or rate structure (Wichman, 2015)

• Alternative rate structures are arising in the face of big infrastructure projects (Spang et al, 2015)

• Individualized, tailored rates can provide greater customer equity, more stable revenue, and send more accurate price signals to promote conservation. (Teodoro, 2002)

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Research Objectives of Alternative Rate Models

• Increase revenue resiliency in the wake of declining

demands (increase proportion of revenues

obtained from fixed charges)

• Incentivize conservation and peak-shaving

• Address affordability and fairness

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Alternative Rate Modeling for Residential

Customers with UWC Members

• Step 1: Conducted Preliminary Analysis of Four Alternative Rate Models

• Step 2: Reviewed Preliminary Analysis with Utility Staff and Select One

• Step 3: Conducted deep dive into one alternative rate model and its impact on utility and customer finances in one year

– Compared existing rates to alternative rates: effects on utility revenues, effects on customer bills, who pays less or more

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Benefits and Challenges of Alternative Rate Models

Benefits

• Increased revenue stability

• Targets peaking customers

• Reduces bills for low-

peaking/low-users

• More steady bills for

customers

• Potential integration with AMI

technology

Challenges

• Billing software capability

• Customer understanding and

acceptance

• Detrimental impact of leaks

• Dealing with transient

community

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Possible Areas of Future Work

• Research into communication and customer understanding (and acceptance) of alternative rate structures

• Research into current billing feasibility and implementation ease

• Modeling alternative rates with non-residential customers

• Utility pilot programs

• Survey of customers on billing and preferences: how they pay, perceptions, understanding of rates, reactions to financial incentives, their value of water, other utility-selected questions for their customers. Statistically representative.

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http://efc.sog.unc.edu

@EFCatUNC

Environmental Finance Center at UNC School of Government

Jeff Hughes: [email protected]

Shadi Eskaf: [email protected]


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