Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 11, December 11, 2024
Rule 199-20.14 - Flexible rates(1)Purpose. This subrule is intended to allow electric utility companies to offer, at their option, incentive or discount rates to their customers.(2)General criteria.a. Electric utility companies may offer discounts to individual customers, to selected groups of customers, or to an entire class of customers. However, discounted rates must be offered to all directly competing customers in the same service territory. Customers are direct competitors if they make the same end product (or offer the same service) for the same general group of customers. Customers that only produce component parts of the same end product are not directly competing customers.b. In deciding whether to offer a specific discount, the utility shall evaluate the individual customer's, group's, or class's situation and perform a cost-benefit analysis before offering the discount.c. Any discount offered should be such as to significantly affect the customer's or customers' decision to stay on the system or to increase consumption.d. The consequences of offering the discount should be beneficial to all customers and to the utility. Other customers should not be at risk of loss as a result of these discounts; in addition, the offering of discounts shall in no way lead to subsidization of the discounted rates by other customers in the same or different classes.(3)Tariff requirements. If a company elects to offer flexible rates, the utility shall file for review and approval tariff sheets specifying the general conditions for offering discounted rates. The tariff sheets shall include, at a minimum, the following criteria: a. The cost-benefit analysis must demonstrate that offering the discount will be more beneficial than not offering the discount.b. The ceiling for all discounted rates shall be the approved rate on file for the customer's rate class.c. The floor for the discount rate shall be equal to the energy costs and customer costs of serving the specific customer.d. No discount shall be offered for a period longer than five years, unless the board determines upon good cause shown that a longer period is warranted.e. Discounts should not be offered if they will encourage deterioration in the load characteristics of the customer receiving the discount.(4)Reporting requirements. Each rate-regulated electric utility electing to offer flexible rates shall file annual reports with the board within 30 days of the end of each 12 months. Reports shall include the following information: a. Section 1 of the report concerns discounts initiated in the last 12 months. For all discounts initiated in the last 12 months, the report shall include:(1) The identity of the new customers (by account number, if necessary);(2) The value of the discount offered;(3) The cost-benefit analysis results;(4) The end-use cost of alternate fuels or energy supplies available to the customer, if relevant;(5) The energy and demand components by month of the amount of electricity sold to the customer in the preceding 12 months.b. Section 2 of the report relates to overall program evaluation. Amount of electricity refers to both energy and demand components when the customer is billed for both elements. For all discounts currently being offered, the report shall include:(1) The identity of each customer (by account number, if necessary);(2) The amount of electricity sold in the last 12 months to each customer at discounted rates, by month;(3) The amount of electricity sold to each customer in the same 12 months of the preceding year, by month;(4) The dollar value of the discount in the last 12 months to each customer, by month; and(5) The dollar value of sales to each customer for each of the previous 12 months.c. Section 3 of the report concerns discounts denied or discounts terminated. For all customers specifically evaluated and denied or having a discount terminated in the last 12 months, the report shall include:(1) Customer identification (by account number, if necessary);(2) The amount of electricity sold in the last 12 months to each customer, by month;(3) The amount of electricity sold to each customer in the same 12 months of the preceding year, by month; and(4) The dollar value of sales to each customer for each of the past 12 months.d. No monthly report is required if the utility had no customers receiving a discount during the relevant period and had no customers which were evaluated for the discount and rejected during the relevant period.(5)Rate case treatment. In a rate case, 50 percent of any identifiable increase in net revenues will be used to reduce rates for all customers; the remaining 50 percent of the identifiable increase in net revenues may be kept by the utility. If there is a decrease in revenues due to the discount, the utility's test year revenues will be adjusted to remove the effects of the discount by assuming that all sales were made at full tariffed rates for the customer class. Determining the actual amount will be a factual determination to be made in the rate case.Iowa Admin. Code r. 199-20.14
Amended by IAB December 5, 2018/Volume XLI, Number 12, effective 1/9/2019