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Case No. PAC-E-18-07
Final Order No.: 34224
Contact: Matt Evans
Office: (208) 334-0339
Cell: (208) 520-4763
matt.evans@puc.idaho.gov
Regulators OK Rocky Mountain Power expenses
tied to efficiency programs
BOISE (Jan. 7, 2019) – State regulators have approved Rocky Mountain Power’s $8.5 million investment in
efficiency programs in 2016 and 2017.
The decision by the Idaho Public Utilities Commission does not impact rates. Instead, it allows the utility to
recover the expenses related to its efficiency programs through funds generated by an efficiency rider
paid by Rocky Mountain Power customers.
The rider appears on bills as “Customer Efficiency Services” and is set at 2.7 percent of the monthly bill
amount, although, in a separate case before the Commission, Rocky Mountain Power has proposed
lowering the rider’s collection rate to 2.25 percent.
Costs deemed ineffective are borne by the company’s shareholders rather than customers.
Rocky Mountain Power, a division of Pacificorp, provides electric service to approximately 77,000
customers in eastern Idaho.
The utility offers a host of efficiency programs, also referred to as Demand Side Management or DSM
since they target the demand for energy rather than the supply.
In addition to reducing power supply expenses for all customers and eliminating or postponing the need to
build new generation, DSM programs provide incentives to encourage participating customers to lower
their power bills by either using less energy or shifting their usage to off-peak times.
The programs, which include Low Income Weatherization, Home Energy Saver and Non-Residential Energy
Efficiency/wattsmart Business, are subjected to a battery of tests designed to determine whether the
savings they realize is greater than their cost. The utility also must demonstrate that the programs benefit
all customers, not just those that participate in them.
Rocky Mountain contends its DSM programs saved 15,830 megawatt-hours (MWh) in 2017 and 19,450
MWh in 2016.
Its DSM-related expenses totaled $4,038,931 in 2017, and $4,500,332 in 2016.
The Commission’s order and all other documents filed in the case can be found on the Commission’s web
site, here. Or go to www.puc.idaho.gov, click on “Open Cases” under the “Electric” heading and scroll
down to case number PAC-E-18-07.