How pay-as-you-go electricity
can save you money By
Melanie Chambers Bankrate.comClyde
Blackburn, of Grand Prairie, Alberta, was skeptical about how much money he could
save by using a pay-as-you-go electricity meter. The ATCO Electric employee says
he was already a penny pincher when it came to turning lights off and conserving
energy in his home. But after using the meter for about
six months now, as part of his company's pilot program, he's changed his tune.
Although he can't yet say exactly how much he's saving, as he has yet to compare
last year's energy purchases to this year's, he says he's much more aware of how
much energy costs now, thanks to the meter. For example, he
estimates that by turning off his computer every night instead of letting it run
24 hours a day, he saves 25 cents of electricity a night. "I
was wasting money for no good reason -- the computer wasn't doing anything but
running, and over time that saves money," he says. "We've changed our
habits and now turn off the computer every night."
Although 25 cents a night might
not seem like much, it does add up over the course of a year. Although pay-as-you-go
electricity is not available everywhere just yet, it's slowly being rolled out
across the country. To find out how pay-as-you-go electricity could save you money,
read on. Buy energy like you buy
gasoline Woodstock Hydro, in Ontario, was the first electricity provider
in Canada to roll out the pay-as-you-go program in 1988, offering customers an
alternative to regularly billed electricity. Today, the program saves customers
an average of 15 to 20 percent a year. Last year, Natural
Resources Canada, ATCO Electric Ltd. and Info Energy launched a 12-month pilot
project in Drumheller and Grand Prairie, Alberta, to test the technology and see
if consumers could learn to manage their usage better. The
idea behind pay-as-you-go electricity is simple: what if you could buy electricity
like you buy gas for your car? A meter could show you exactly how much you've
used and when you need to buy more. By the same reasoning, you could tell how
much it costs to turn up an air conditioner a few degrees. In
Woodstock, 2,700 people -- about 25 percent of all residential customers -- now
use pay-as-you-go meters. And about a year ago, when the company ran out of stock
for the meters, there was a 300-person waiting list. "People were getting
a little but upset with us," says Jay Heaman, manager of business development
for Woodstock Hydro. "We had to stop and shake our heads -- it's not a case
of us trying to jam this technology down anyone's throat." And
they have good reason to like it. Using our current technology, it's hard to tell
how much electricity we use by reading the meter outside. If the round dial is
spinning quickly, we're using a lot -- but we can't tell how much we're spending.
A pay-as-you-go smart meter, on the other hand, shows
how much you've used and how much you are paying per hour for a
kilowatt of electricity.
How
it works You need three pieces of equipment to use the pay-as-you-go
system. First, there is an outdoor electronic meter. Then, there's an in-home
display unit, which resembles a thermostat and plugs into any electrical outlet.
The in-home display unit communicates constantly with the
outside meter, relaying how much energy you're using at the moment. For example,
if you have the washing machine, dishwasher and dryer running at the same time,
the meter might read 25 cents an hour, as opposed to late at night, when nothing
is running, when the meter shows lower rate of eight cents an hour. Lastly,
there is the smart card. Like a prepaid phone card, users go to select stores
and purchase electricity on their card. At home, you swipe the card through the
in-house meter to keep the electricity flowing.
The in-home meter tells you how much money you have
left on your card and will start to beep when it's running out and
is time to fill 'er up.
Rates per kilowatt hour vary. When the rate has changes,
the utility company downloads that information to the store computer,
so you always pay the going rate.
There
are other fees to pay besides the electricity fee. In Woodstock, there's a $50
unit deposit and a $7.50 monthly user fee, which is amortized onto your smart
card. Savings come from a better understanding
of usage Blackburn says the minute he puts a pot on the stove and turns
the burner on high, the cost per kilowatt per hour jumps on his in-home display,
which is easy to spot next to his stove. This knowledge has opened his eyes. "We're
far more conscious whether things are running in our house. If it's running at
seven or eight cents, then I know the house is pretty quiet. But if it's running
more than that, I start to wonder what else in the house is running and if it's
supposed to be or not." Blackburn says about $100 of energy
on his smart card lasts him more than a month. "It's
trying to put more control and more information in front of the costumer,"
says Carl Kelly, manager of business development for Info Energy, the company
that provides the smart meters to Woodstock Hydro and the pilot programs in Alberta.
"It means people are taking responsibility for their
energy, and it allows the customer to have a choice, which we don't have at this
stage." The future of electricity
Unless you live in Woodstock, simply buying yourself a smart meter
isn't an option -- yet. More and more energy providers are testing
the pay-as-you-go system across the country, so it may be coming
to your neighbourhood soon.
This
September, Manitoba Hydro will roll out the meters in a pilot program, as will
Brant County Power in Paris, Ontario. Kelly says the East Coast is their next
target. Melanie Chambers is a freelance
writer based in London, Ontario.
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