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In Ohio, you can (and should) select who generates your energy. If you don't choose a supplier, Duke Retail will be your supplier, also, your bill will look different. I have had both. A selected non-Duke supplier is called a "Choice Supplier" and has a single per kWh rate.
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.
For example, FirstEnergy’s Rider PIR pays debt service on fuel and purchased power that apparently were first acquired more than a decade ago. AEP Ohio’s customers also pay a Phase-In Recovery Rider for “ fuel that was consumed but not billed to customers from 2009 to 2011.”
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)
A unregulated "12 volt 1 amp" supply is probably designed to provide the rated 12 V at full output current and the lowest valid AC input voltage, like 110 V. It could be over 13 V at 110 V in at no load (0 amps out) alone, and then higher yet at higher input voltage.
22 sie 2023 · Also known as retail electric suppliers, these entities purchase electricity and/or natural gas from the wholesale market (bulk purchases) and then resell it to residential and business customers (retail market).
Rider RE (Retail Energy Rider) recovers the cost of energy purchased by Duke Energy Ohio in the Competitive Auctions. Rider AER-R (Alternative Energy Recovery Rider) recovers Duke Energy Ohio's costs of complying with the State of Ohio's Alternative Energy requirements.