For many of us, we get the
electric bill and just pay it, or worse still, it is set up for direct debit so
we never even think about it. It gets paid automatically and it’s off your
mind, until you get around to doing a cost cutting exercise, and you realise
it’s time to look at alternative suppliers.
Before you go comparison
shopping though, set yourself up for getting a better deal by knowing what
makes up your electricity bill.
The five components of your electric bill
1.
Wholesale. This is the raw
energy cost to the energy networks.
2.
Transportation. This
involves accounting for the network logistics such as the distribution and the
transmission to keep the electricity operational.
3.
Levies. This includes
environmental factors and the cost of social obligations and government
tariffs.
4.
Metering costs. These are
the suppliers’ operational costs.
5.
The supplier’s profit margin
What you see is only a
fraction of the above though because you only see two figures.
1.
A unit rate
2.
A standing charge
That’s it. Your electric
bill shows you the kilowatts you’ve used and the standard running charge that’s
applied to keep your electric supply switched on.
Understanding the real cost of each component
It’s easier to explain
using a round number for a working example. In this case, we’ll use the
notional amount of 10p/kWh per unit.
Using the first set of
data, we’re able to break down the constituent parts into four key elements.
Those four costs are:
1. Wholesale
This actually has a few
parts to it itself. It’s primarily the raw energy cost, which equates to 34%.
The other one percent extra that takes it up to 35% is accounting for the
losses as the electricity makes its way through the power lines into generators
to eventually reach the customer meter. It’s actually 35.1% as there’s also an
imbalance cost of 0.01p/kWh.
What the imbalance cost is
for is because the electricity industry is settled or balanced every half hour.
This is because electricity cannot be mass stored. It’s done a supply to demand
instantaneously. Not supply on demand – to demand.
It’s effectively known as
a type of insurance cost to compensate the network operators for balancing the
system, requiring increasing or decreasing volumes produced based on customer
usage.
2. Network
23% of the pricing goes
towards transporting electricity to your meter. Remember the 10p/kWh per unit
example; well that makes this 22.29p/kWh.
The network makes up the
most of this, as it equates to 17%. 5.2% is transmission costs. There are
various regional distribution networks, all of which are privately owned. Each
is required to publish their tariffs, which allows for suppliers to accurately
forecast expenditure and charge customers appropriately.
The transmission cost is
directly related to the length the electricity has to travel to reach the
customer meter. Despite various regional distribution networks being privately
owned, they all pay the same single entity the fees. That’s National Grid.
A third aspect creeps in
here, the same as it does in the wholesale cost and that’s the cost of
balancing. For the transmission, that’s equivalent to 0.9%.
3.
Environmental / Social
These types of government
initiatives account for 9.4% of your electric bill. These are labelled green
initiatives and all they seem to do is take the green from you.
a) First
you’ve a Renewables Obligation
This accounts for 6.1% of
the energy. It’s a payment to incentivise using generators with renewable
energy generation.
b) CfDs
– Contracts for Difference
This came into effect in
April last year and does the same as the levy above.
c)
ECO
It does cost to be ECO
friendly and it’s not price friendly, but that’s not what this is. ECO is an
acronym for yet another levy hiking up electric bills. It stands for The Electricity
Energy Companies Obligation. Using the 10p/kWh example, the ECO amount would be
0.25p/kWh. This goes towards those home improvements grants you see promoted
for loft insulation etc.
Consumers are paying for this as it’s built into the
tariffs.
d) FiT
– The Feed in Tariff
This is equal to 1.6% and
it’s yet another levy imposed to encourage renewable energy. This one focuses
on rewarding those using small generators.
e) The
higher distribution cost levy
This is applicable to all
areas and it’s designed to support the more remote locations, which would
otherwise be subjected to far higher electricity prices due to the cost of
transportation to reach the Northern parts of Scotland. To spread the cost,
everyone pays 1% towards the higher distribution cost of electricity to remote
areas.
4.
Operational overheads
This is the cost involved
in getting the electricity to the customer. 12.4% is the amount this adds to
your electric bill. This covers the cost of metering and the cost of getting
the data from the meters, which is done by third parties now, mostly private
firms.
Taking our working example
of 10p/kWh tariff, for an average customer using 30,000 kWh per year, would be
the equivalent of £372. That’s per customer per year on an electricity bill of
£3,000.
Remember back to the
environmental aspect? There are cost advantages to suppliers using renewable
energy sources so those profits could be higher.
What your electricity bill
is really paying for is…
·
35.1% to pay for
generators
·
29.7% is the governments
slice of the action
·
22.8% go to the energy
networks
·
12.4% go to energy
suppliers and within that is their profit
Some suppliers have higher
profit margins depending how efficiently they operate, but nevertheless,
suppliers are where to focus your attention on for better electricity
deals.
Now you know what really
goes into generating your electricity bills, use those stats to your advantage
to negotiate a fairer deal. Or call us - 0800 0193 244 -and we’ll do the
negotiating for you.
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