Melbourne electricity retailer launches fixed-price, 'all you can eat' offer

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A Victorian electricity retailer is offering Melbourne households unlimited electricity supply for 12 months at one fixed price, in a bid to eradicate what it describes as consumers’ “biggest gripe” with energy companies – bill shock.
The year-old company, Sumo Power, said in a media release on Tuesday that its newly launched ‘All You Can Eat’ product was a first of its kind to be launched to the general public, enabling both new and existing customers to use uncapped power.

Origin Energy launched a similar product in March covering both gas and electricity – it’s fixed price “Predictable Plan” – however, the offer is exclusive to existing Origin Energy customers.
Not unlike Origin, Sumo decides on an annual fixed price for a customer by looking at their recent electricity usage, asking “a few simple questions”, and using this information to forecast future usage over a 12 month period.
As well as targeting “bill shock”, the Sumo product also claims to “eradicate” bills altogether, replacing them with one “statement” which can be paid for either annually, biannually or quarterly.
Both the Origin and Sumo offers are part of a shifting approach to billing by retailers, built around the recognition that customers are feeling angry about constantly rising electricity prices and powerless to do anything about it.
Indeed, Sumo’s founder Domenic Capomolla says his company was “born through a shared distaste of current energy providers and a need to align with customer’s wants and needs.”
“We started Sumo Power because we hate electricity companies too and feel the Australian energy sector needed a good shake up – a company prepared to give real customer service and offer products that customers want,” he said.
But the fixed price approach to this problem has been criticised by some in the industry as failing to address the real issues behind Australia’s soaring electricity prices, and for sending the wrong message to consumers about consumption.
Capomolla has a different view: “Bill shock is the single biggest customer gripe in the electricity market. In the vast majority of occasions the bills are correct, but people are just so busy they don’t realise they’re using more power,” he said.
“At the helm of Sumo Power is a group of energy experts who have been in the industry for a long time; they had big corporate gigs but weren’t satisfied and wanted to do something different, so we’re all really excited to be launching a product like this.
“Offering unlimited power will of course come with risks and we have measures in place to mitigate these risks but ultimately, people’s behaviour won’t change just because they have unlimited power,” he said.
Sumo says it will also begin rolling out ‘green’ initiatives over the coming months, including halogen down light replacement and rooftop solar installation, in a bid to educate home owners about energy usage as well.

This post was published on May 10, 2016 1:31 pm

View Comments

  • Wow, that's like saying my behaviour would not change if I had access to unlimited chocolate!

  • Another way for a power company to fight solar PV.
    With such a flat rate, energy savings by solar PV are worth nothing, zero!
    Can I start a domestic aluminium smelter on that tariff or at least charge all electric cars of the neighborhood?

    • Well, they need a solution to keep people consuming; anything else means declining profits, so it paying a few Cents for exported energy.

    • I tried looking at their fair use policy but the link is broken. Seems fine to me.

  • This proposal values the provision of power at 100% and the consumption of power at 0%.
    Therefore there is no incentive to find lower cost power, and the suppliers may use the lowest cost supplier for the commodity.
    Tactically its a great move to seize control of the industry.
    The game then becomes competitive offers for fixed supply quotes.
    It also puts a value on the distribution system according to the fixed supply income.
    They will of course monitor our actual consumption and promptly reject people who use more than the supplier would like.
    I think the end game would be to sell the distribution system to some doddering old gentleman like me before the wheel falls off.

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