Solar is great, but don't trust Australia's energy cartel

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Ben Burge understands the attraction of solar PV. The CEO of upstart online electricity retailer PowerShop is well aware of the booming uptake of rooftop solar by Australian households and businesses, and the potential for battery storage to follow suit.
But he has his own views on why this shift is happening. And his own concerns about how it will play out. The role of the incumbents, he says, is a critical piece of the jigsaw.

Burge’s solar Trojan Horse

“The hatred of power companies, both networks and retailers, is so palpable,” Burge told RenewEconomy’s Disruption and the Energy Industry conference on Tuesday – an audience populated by senior executives from said networks and retailers. “There is a deep satisfaction the customer will get by shifting the power base.”
It is the attempt to tap into the same desire of customers to take the power back, quite literally, that has underpinned Powershop’s business model, and its success in Australia since it was launched by New Zealand renewables group Meridian Energy in February this year.
Powershop’s open communication, mostly via an easy to use App which allows customers to buy electricity from their mobile phones according to which deals or sources appeal most, has won over energy consumers who wish to have more control over their bills and usage.

Burge insists it’s not a particularly new or “disruptive” approach, but just a response to what increasingly frustrated and distrustful customers want, and do not get, from established power companies – otherwise described by Burge  as Australia’s “energy cartel” (a title he uses “just for convenience”, he says).
“It’s ‘here’s how much you’re using while you’re using it’, nothing ground-breaking about that.”
The broader plan, he says, is to help customers save money, while “driving an undercurrent of unconscious conservation.”
It is this same desire – to save money, and stick it to the incumbents – that is driving people to shift to solar, and to consider batteries even before they are economically viable, says Burge, but he has some serious concerns about how the solar revolution will play out.
For decades, says Burge, the incumbent energy companies have been using hidden fees, confusing tariffs, loyalty penalties and other such strategies to “enslave” the customer, by keeping them at arms length from information.
Now that the gentailers are finally accepting that solar is a thing, Burge is worried PV panels and batteries will become the “need breed of horse for the thoroughbred sport of ripping off the customer.”
“I’m worried about the sales machine that will see people run the risk of buying the wrong product at the wrong time for the wrong reasons,” he says, and for “anaemic financial returns.”
So how does the consumer avoid falling into this trap?
“It’s very easy,” Burge says. “Just take their money. Switch to another company… and on the way out, let the cartel know why you’re leaving.
“This sector’s been riddled with lies and deception for so long.  … The customer doesn’t know the good from the bad, and shouldn’t have to care.
“Go to Facebook, check the page of an energy company, see what the customers are saying. If they don’t have a Facebook page, that’s probably a red flag.”
“Our objective is not to drive fear into the customer, but to drive fear into the competitor,” he said.
“The average 20-something has no prior experience. Their customer expectations are being driven by their experience on Facebook.
“It’s all about instantaneous, personalised, real-time customer service, software, backed up with a human service.
This is scary for the incumbents, he says, because all the customer interactions they have traditionally conducted behind closed doors, are now going to be broadcast in real time.

This post was published on September 9, 2015 12:30 am

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  • Exactly why Enova Community Energy It's YOUR Energy Company, the first Australian community owned renewable energy retailer - with 100% transparency is a disruption. Enova explains exactly how pricing works and what they will do to provide better value, to the consumer of green energy, to those with feed in tariff and eventually community power generation. They offer explanations as to how the network and regulations work and what they will try to do to improve them.

  • With Powershop now. Definitely don't buy your solar from one of the cartel, buy from a reputable small business, that will assess your situation and needs. The cartel will just sell you anything whether it works or not, as they did for me with my solar Hot Water. By the time I got to solar PV I was smarter and better informed. If you are with the cartel you are being ripped off.

    • Once I had my 6.4kW PV array installed, I actually switched TO one of the 'cartel' offerings (AGL Solar Saver with a 20c Feed in Tariff). After entering all the ToU (Time of Use) rates into a spreadsheet, for me, it was a no brainer, even when paying 47c/kWh during peak times. The 20c FiT gives me enough credits to completely wipe out not only the cost of the power purchased from the grid, but also the daily $1.19 service fee. The just goes to show you that not all the cartels offerings are bad... (Origin also have the same rate).

  • Gee, who proof reads this stuff? "and the potential for batter storage to follow suit." batter storage.... Really?
    Anyway, I'm with Powershop too but their pricing is on par or slightly worse than one of the local encubants in Vic and try getting an answer from their helpdesk/customer service, USELESS, may as well be talking to Telstra or buying something at Bunnings and
    as we all know, no customer service at Bunnings whatsoever.
    So why do I stay? Purely for their App. If the other encumbents catch onto the Poweshops business model, they will be toast too!
    The last time I checked Powershops overall price (daily charge and kWh charge, it had increased by over 20% and that was not that long ago.
    After the Carbon Tax was removed, there was a slight price decrease.
    So ATM IMO I'm not really winning.

  • How about donating to CORENA to fund their Big Win community-owned not-for-profit solar thermal plant with storage? Profits would fund additional capacity.
    How much risk is there for grid generators given rooftop solar PV + storage will presumably be cheaper than grid within the next 5 years? Could grid generators end up losing money?
    Would donating to CORENA's Quick Win projects be a better idea (lend money interest-free to small-scale rooftop community solar PV, repaid loan funds future projects)?

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