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An Editorial
Review
Hon Max Bradford, Former Minister of Energy
15 October 2001
The 1998/99
Electricity Reforms
It has been
2½ years since the last major stage of the New Zealand reforms
to introduce competition into the electricity market were implemented.
As they have been elsewhere in the world, the last stage was perhaps
the most controversial, so it is timely to review whether the objectives
of the reforms have been delivered.
The Overall
Reform Process
The process
of introducing competition to the New Zealand electricity market
began in 1986. They have been complex and often controversial, over
the life of 3 governments and 5 Ministers of Energy.
The early stages
of the reforms, in the early 1990s, were designed to introduce more
effectiveness and efficiency into the electricity generation, transmission,
distribution and retail supply sectors of the electricity industry.
The full chronology and explanation is set out in www.med.govt.nz,
or in the Electricity Reform Chronology document on the www.maxbradford.co.nz
website.
The objectives
of the last stage were clear: to deliver choice (of electricity
company) and lower electricity prices (both wholesale and retail)
to consumers.
Proof of the
promised results for consumers is now clearly available from official
sources. Nevertheless, there was a very difficult period for many
people as companies and consumers adjusted to the new competitive
market in the months after implementation on 1 April 1999.
The National
Government expected some difficulty as the major changes bedded
down, but I think it would be fair to say that everyone, including
me, was caught by surprise at the extent of the disruption for some
parts of the country.
In part, this
was because some companies did not support the reforms. Some in
the industry suspect a few companies of unnecessarily complicating
and delaying the customer switching processes. Consumers who wished
to switch power companies were subjected to behaviour quite at odds
with what you would expect from service-oriented, customer-focussed
companies.
In addition,
many power companies discovered that their back-office billing systems
could not cope with the volume of switching which occurred, and
some companies had difficulty in integrating different customer
billing systems as the new structure of the industry bedded down.
In retrospect,
I regret that we did not allow a longer period for the introduction
of the major changes. We acted on the best advice at the time, which
in hindsight, proved to be wrong. For that I have to accept responsibility
and I do so, unreservedly, as I have said publicly on a number of
occasions.
We promised consumers choice and lower power prices. Well over 90
percent of New Zealanders are enjoying the promise. Some areas of
New Zealand have yet to get full choice and some people are paying
more for their power for a variety of reasons.
But we never promised 100 percent to 100 percent. Compared to the
years before the reforms, most people - by far - are better off.
Our experience
is at least as good as, if not better than, the benefits which have
accrued to millions of electricity consumers in other countries
where competitive electricity markets have been introduced.
More Choice
of Electricity Supplier
With respect
to choice, New Zealand has one of the highest switching rates of
OECD countries which have introduced competition into their electricity
markets. This is the clearest measure of consumers exercising choice,
where they want to switch from one company to another to supply
their electricity.
Over 450,000 New Zealanders have chosen to change their electricity
supplier at least once since the reforms became effective on 1 April
1999. The vast bulk of these people clearly have had a satisfactory
experience. Not everybody has, but that is hardly surprising given
the behaviour of some companies towards their customers when competition
was first introduced. Thankfully, this behaviour is rare now and
the industry has penalties for non-compliance with quite strict
switching rules.
Lower Electricity
Prices
On the price
side, the charts enclosed show that for a wide array of consumer
categories, nominal prices have either fallen quite steeply or,
in the case of households, the rate of increase has consistently
flattened off for the first time ever. If we adjust for inflation,
in every case electricity prices have fallen, in some cases quite
steeply. In fact the picture is better than these statistics, as
the rebates paid by many lines companies are not reflected in the
prices measured.
But for the
Labour/Alliance/New Zealand First/ ACT blocking of the regulation
of monopoly lines companies introduced into Parliament in July 1999,
prices would have fallen even further, especially for households.
Recent academic research has shown that consumers are paying something
like $200 million more in lines charges than they should be.
We should not
forget that many communities around New Zealand have got a windfall
benefit from the change to the structure of the industry. Local
power companies were required to split into two companies, one which
retailed electricity to customers, and the other into the local
monopoly lines company.
Most chose to sell the retail customer base and take a healthy profit
on the value of their local electricity consumers. The decision
to sell was not a requirement of the reforms, but the choice taken
by locally elected boards. It was possible for local power companies
to split into two locally owned trusts, one for retail, one for
lines, providing they were quite separate in management and governance
control. This would have kept the power companies in local hands.
The result of
these sales was that there is now something like $2 billion sitting
in a variety of community trusts and local power company trusts
around New Zealand which are used either for rebating the profits
of the lines companies, or for charitable purposes in their communities.
Often this has
been to the disadvantage of electricity consumers in their regions.
The price paid for customers by the retail electricity companies,
and demanded by the locally elected boards was, in my view, excessive.
This has helped contribute to the fact that household electricity
prices have remained higher than they should be in some parts of
New Zealand, even given the existence of the newly competitive markets.
Sale of Assets
The National
Government has sometimes been accused of selling locally owned power
companies. This is utterly untrue.
Supply authorities
(ESAs) or local government owned these companies. Therefore, central
government was not in a position to sell them. Any decisions to
sell were made by local body politicians or locally-elected ESA
members.
The only electricity
asset sold by central government was Contact Energy, which was floated
to New Zealanders as well as to a cornerstone shareholder, and a
small electricity company in the South Island, which was sold to
the local community.
All other state-owned
assets that made up the old ECNZ (Transpower, Meridian Energy, Genesis
Energy and the Mighty River Power Company) remain in government
hands.
Is New Zealand
the odd-man out in creating a Competitive Electricity Market?
The answer is
no. We are mainstream.
You might be
interested in the summary pages of this recent document published
by the OECD , which has examined the comparative performance of
electricity reform across the OECD countries.
There is nothing remarkable about the reform process we engaged
in - a process, which has been under way over the last 15 years,
long before I became Minister of Energy.
The stage we
undertook in 1998-99 was the last substantial change necessary to
achieve a fully competitive market, with one exception - the regulation
of monopoly lines companies.
After stopping
it in 1999, the Labour/Alliance Government is now dragging the chain
on the regulatory process for monopoly lines companies, which we
wanted to do in 1999. That has cost consumers about $200 million
so far, as I have noted already.
Perhaps this
quote from the OECD document might put our reforms into context:
-
"Virtually
all OECD countries have decided to open up their electricity markets,
at least to their big industrial users. In many countries electricity
markets will be open to all users, including households. This is
already the case in Finland, Germany, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden,
England and Wales in the UK, and several states in the US and Australia.
By the year 2006, more than 500 million people (and all large industrial
users) in the OECD area will be entitled to choose their electricity
supplier. This accounts for nearly 50% of the population of OECD
countries."
The conclusion
drawn from the OECD publication is that New Zealand has undertaken
a best international practice electricity reform package. As with
many other countries, there were stages of the reforms that were
pretty rough for some parties, but the end result is much better
for consumers, as compared to the monopoly electricity system it
replaced.
As uncomfortable
as that transition process was for some, the larger, and long-term,
benefit of choice and lower prices has been achieved. I would be
the first to admit the wide consumer perception in the New Zealand
public is that the introduction of a competitive electricity market
has been disruptive and, some might say, has not worked. That is
a perception that will be gradually replaced by the facts. To return
to the old central/local government monopoly days would be folly
and a tragedy for consumers.
Of course, the
perception has been made more acute by the recent hydro "crisis"
which many claim was caused by the reforms. If there was a crisis,
it was caused by a lack of water, not the reforms. In fact the competitive
market coped better than in 1992 when we last had a hydro crisis.
Some companies were exposed to the spot market and did face some
weeks of very high prices: these prices have now come back to pre-hydro
crisis levels. The higher prices had the effect of reducing demand,
and therefore keeping the lakes at sustainable levels. That is how
markets are supposed to work, and is infinitely better than the
old system when bureaucrats, or politicians, invariably made the
wrong decisions.
It is slowly
seeping through, after all the criticism that Labour and the Alliance
hurled at National in 1998 and 1999 when we were formulating the
last stages of the reforms, the present Government does not intend
to abandon the competitive electricity market at all. Indeed, Clark
and Hodgson have made it clear that the competitive electricity
market is here to stay with only minor tweaking, most of which we
would support. Is this political hypocrisy, or facing up to reality?
You make the decision.
If you want
to find out the up-to-the-minute state of electricity market, try
this excellent website www.comitfree.co.nz, a free service provided
by the NZ Electricity Market.
Also you might
want to check out the best electricity prices in your region. You
can get a free estimate from the Consumers Institute at www.consumer.org.nz/powerswitch/
.
I hope that
helps put things in context for you. If have any queries, do not
hesitate to write or call. My e-mail address is max.bradford@parliament.govt.nz.
Hon Max Bradford MP
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