SOCIAL EQUITY AND THE ELECTRICITY DEATH SPIRAL Ken Baldwin, Director ANU Energy Change Institute ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au The Problem Source: Pitt and Sherry (Nov 2014) 9% reduction ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Contributors to falling demand • Reduction in economic growth since the 2008 GFC • Structural change in industry towards services rather than manufacturing e.g. aluminium smelters • Industry/households becoming more energy efficient • Electricity price rises and negative demand elasticity • Affluent households reduce their grid dependence by installing: – – – – solar photovoltaic (PV) cells: >1.3 million solar rooftops solar hot water systems: >0.9 million systems installed insulation/double glazing/energy efficiency measures smart meters and building management systems ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Electricity Prices cents/kWh at 2012-13 prices Real residential electricity prices (representative Australia-wide price), 2000-2014 30.0 25.0 80% rise 20.0 15.0 10.0 Demand peaked 5.0 0.0 Sep-2000 Sep-2002 Sep-2004 Sep-2006 Sep-2008 Sep-2010 Sep-2012 Source: Pitt and Sherry (2014) ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Electricity Prices by State Real residential electricity prices, 2000-2014 30.0 25.0 20.0 15.0 Real residential electricity prices, 2000-2014 10.0 35.0 5.0 0.0 Sep-2000 Sep-2002 NSW Sep-2004 Sep-2006 Victoria Sep-2008 Sep-2010 Queensland ACT Sep-2012 cents/kWh at 2012-13 prices cents/kWh at 2012-13 prices 35.0 30.0 25.0 20.0 15.0 10.0 5.0 0.0 Source: Pitt and Sherry (2014) Sep-2000 Sep-2002 Sep-2004 SA ANU Energy Change Institute Sep-2006 Tasmania Sep-2008 WA energy.anu.edu.au Sep-2010 Sep-2012 The “Electricity Death Spiral” • Electricity demand is falling • Electricity prices rise to cover sunk costs • Affluent households reduce their grid dependence by installing more: • • “behind-the-meter” solar PV and solar hot water • Insulation and double glazing • Smart meters and building management systems • Energy efficient devices Low income households can’t do this – and are left paying the increasing costs of the grid, which they can’t afford • The result is – the so-called “electricity death spiral” ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Social inequity is here now Social inequity is already happening: • Air-conditioners, swimming pools, plasma screens, lavish appliances etc. contribute to peak demand • Peak demand users are being subsidised by off peak users due to the high peak electricity spot price (x 104) • Network costs (43% bills) are “gold-plated” to cope with peak demand, yet electricity bills are not demand-based • High prices cause affluent users to opt out and purchase: • “behind-the-meter” solar PV and solar hot water • Smart meters and building management systems • Insulation and double glazing • Energy efficient devices ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Household hardship Source: Simshauser and Nelson (2014) ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au ANU Energy Change Institute A wide spectrum of Energy research: – Technologies ►Artificial Photosynthesis ►Biofuels ►Energy Storage and Recovery ►Enhanced Oil and Gas/ CCS ►Fusion Power ►Nuclear Science ►Smart Grid ►Solar PV/ Thermal/ Nano – – – – – Technology and Policy neutral Economics and Policy Efficiency and Demand Management Energy-Water Nexus Regulation and Governance ~$100 M Energy Research Facilities Sociology and Risk ~200 Staff and Students ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au ANU Energy Change Institute A wide spectrum of Energy research: – Technologies ►Artificial Photosynthesis ►Biofuels ►Energy Storage and Recovery ►Enhanced Oil and Gas/ CCS ►Fusion Power ►Nuclear Science ►Smart Grid ►Solar PV/ Thermal/ Nano – – – – – Technology and Policy neutral ANIPP Economics and Policy Efficiency and Demand Management Energy-Water Nexus Regulation and Governance ~$100 M Energy Research Facilities Sociology and Risk ~200 Staff and Students ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au THE SOLAR ENERGY CONTRIBUTION SCHEME (SECS) Ken Baldwin and Bruce Chapman ANU Energy Change Institute ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Solar Energy Contribution Scheme • The Solar Energy Contribution Scheme (SECS) will not solve the “electricity death spiral” • Instead – it aims to address social equity AND expand the uptake of renewable energy by: – Enabling low income groups to access clean energy devices (solar, smart meters, insulation etc.) – Forcing the industry to address social needs Indeed, SECS may accelerate the “death spiral” and bring forward the need to change the electricity business model to one of satisfying customer energy needs – rather than selling electrons ! ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Income Contingent Loans (ICLs) Debt only starts being repaid once income reaches a set threshold. Advantages: • No one pays unless they can - protects the debtor • No defaults arising from temporary income loss • The tax office is an efficient collection agency • • Low transactions costs • Has all the necessary income records Implicit government subsidy can be built in: • The debt can be CPI adjusted (less than govt. bond rate) • An up front surcharge can be added to reduce the subsidy The ICL can therefore be designed to be low cost or revenue neutral for government ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au SECS Pilot Study • Government provides an Income Contingent Loan up to $10,000 for energy saving devices • We use a trial subset of borrowers (aged 25 – 55) : • Individual income $13K - $110K p.a. (not self employed) • Couples with total income below $150,000 p.a. • Who are not renters and not living with their parents • Income defined as wages, salaries and pensions, but not social security receipts • Repayment starts @ 2% income for $20 - 30K p.a. then +0.5% for each $5K p.a. thereafter • Debt linked to CPI (not govt. bond rate - subsidised) ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Comparing SECS with HECS • Repayment threshold $20K p.a., starts at 2% of income, rising to 4% @ $50K p.a., then as for HECS • HECS threshold ~$52K p.a., starts at 4% of income • Repayments are smaller - $400 p.a. @ $20K p.a. c.f. $2K @ $50K p.a. (average electricity bill ~$1700p.a.) • SECS has a 25% surcharge - c.f. 0% for HECS • Loan amount $10K - c.f. up to $100K+ for HECS • Income cap on SECS at $110K p.a. • HECS is a loan on human capital • SECS is a loan on a physical asset ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Modelling We use the HILDA data set for income profiles: We determine the implicit government subsidy assuming a 3% discount rate and equal take-up probabilities ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Results Overall subsidy rate of -4% (c.f. +15% for HECS) ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Next Steps • Extend the study to : o Include the self-employed and renters o Allow dynamic changes in income levels o Link the loan to the sale of the property o Include those with other ICLs e.g. HECS o Address selection through varying take-up probabilites o Offer an early repayment option (from lower energy bills) o Include rapid technology learning rate (delayed purchase) ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au National Electricity Market Reform To further address equity, NEM reform is needed: • Smart meters need to be installed AND • Electricity charges must reflect time-of-use and place a premium on peak demand usage AND • Should reflect no. of days at maximum load to relieve pressure to expand network capacity • A fixed network connection charge should be considered to reflect the cost of backup for behind-the-meter generation ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au Averting the “death spiral” Factors that increase demand: • Reduced electricity costs driven by these reforms • Economic growth • Electrification of the transport system (climate change) Structural changes to NEM charges: • Introduction of a network connection charge A change in the energy business model: • To satisfy customer energy needs broadly speaking: energy efficiency and energy generation, as well as energy use ANU Energy Change Institute energy.anu.edu.au ANU Energy Change Institute Thank you ! 21