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The total electric portion of my bill was 173.90. The Retail Energy Rider was 98.68. Energy Rider was over 56% of my bill. This is crazy! Has anyone been able to sign up for another energy company and had much lower rider on their bill?
Retail energy rider is Duke’s cost of supply. If you look to the right where it says “cost to compare” they give you the per kWh cost you can compare to other suppliers. Other suppliers can be half the cost of Duke.
The RE rider is the primary energy generation charge from Duke. If you switch providers the RE rider goes away and is replaced by the generation charge (on a kWh basis) of your new supplier. Duke will still charge you the distribution fee (~0.039/kWh plus a fixed rider)
Net metering (or net energy metering, NEM) is an electricity billing mechanism that allows consumers who generate some or all of their own electricity to use that electricity anytime, instead of when it is generated.
30 wrz 2024 · The ACER-CEER 2024 Market Monitoring Report on energy retail and consumer protection emphasises that the clean energy transition will not occur without power system flexibility and the active participation of energy consumers. What are the key recommendations of the energy regulators’ report?
Power factor is defined as the ratio of real power (kW, demand) to total apparent power (kilovolt amperes, or kVa) supplied at any given point in time in an electrical circuit, and is usually expressed as a percentage. The power factor applies to Primary Distribution Service, Secondary Distribution Service and Service at Transmission Voltage.
In Nevada, consumer demand for renewable energy is driving the state to deregulate retail electricity. The Energy Choice Initiative bill, also known as “Question 3,” seeks to break up NV Energy’s monopoly and establish an “open, competitive retail electric energy market” (State of Nevada 2016).