Off Peak

Deck: 
Why do U.S. electric bills continue to climb, when other liberalized Western countries are seeing reductions?
Fortnightly Magazine - October 1 2000
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Off Peak

October 1, 2000

Dereg Dilemma

Why do U.S. electric bills continue to climb, when other liberalized Western countries are seeing reductions?

Report - Grid Investment for Medium & Heavy Duty EVs

Electric deregulation in the United States isn't slashing consumer bills the way it has in other countries. Despite continuing restructuring, the price of U.S. electricity ranked second-highest in an April survey of 14 major Western economies.

"What we notice is that when [other countries polled] deregulate, prices tend to drop," says David Brown, vice president of National Utility Service Inc., the utility cost-management firm that conducted the annual survey. "In the United States, if there's been a drop, it's because they've mandated tariff reductions. However, when full market-based pricing comes online-and so far the only area in the States that's done that is San Diego-prices increase."

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