X Marks the Spot: How U.K. Utilities Have Fared Under Performance-Based Ratemaking

Deck: 

Returns for U.K. RECs have proven resilient, despite price cuts, efficiency targets, and the windfall profit tax.

Fortnightly Magazine - July 15 2001
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The introduction of performance-based ratemaking (PBR) in the United Kingdom and elsewhere sparked a dramatic change in how distribution utilities were run and regulated. Performance-based ratemaking was imposed concurrent with the divestiture of the regional electricity distribution companies (RECs) in the United Kingdom. Instead of the traditional cost-of-service methodology, in which utility revenues were directly linked to actual costs, the form of PBR adopted in the UK allowed for rates to increase by inflation minus an efficiency, or X, factor. This X factor was set periodically by the regulator in conjunction with expert studies on the level of efficiencies that were achievable and on the relative efficiencies of similarly situated firms. The result has been to allow those firms which were able to beat the X factor in terms of efficiency gains to retain some of the savings until the next distribution price review, absent windfall profits taxes or other occurrences.

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