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New England Electricity Restructuring Roundtable The Electric Utility of the (Near?) Future. David R. McHale EVP, Chief Administrative Officer Northeast Utilities June 27, 2014. NU Overview. NU serves 525 cities & towns throughout New England; Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire
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New England ElectricityRestructuring RoundtableThe Electric Utility of the (Near?) Future David R. McHale EVP, Chief Administrative Officer Northeast Utilities June 27, 2014
NU Overview • NU serves 525 cities & towns throughout New England; Massachusetts, Connecticut and New Hampshire • Providing reliable electric and natural gas service to 3.6 million electric and natural gas customers • Comprised of: • Four electric companies • Two natural gas companies • One three-state electric transmission business
Current State Delivering Reliable Energy Superior Customer Service
Utility of the Future The “utility of the future” will evolve to support an environment of clean energy, an integrated grid and customer engagement Cleaner, more sustainable energy Distributed energy resources Energy security and independence Competitively priced Generation More resilient Smarter Integrated The Grid Knowledgeable Empowered Self-reliant Customers Business Model More sustainable Decoupled and repriced Incentivized
Utility of the Future Drivers Utility of the future is driven by a convergence of energy policies, market shifts, technology advancements and rising customer expectations Increasing customer expectations “Utility of the Future” Drivers Emerging disruptive technologies and digital strategies Shifting end-user consumption patterns Market changes that will require a “two-way” modern grid Rising energy prices and delivery constraints Clean energy mandates and subsidies
U.S. Electricity Demand Trends One key driver is the projected low growth in electricity consumption in New England and the rest of the US U.S. Electricity Demand — Rate of Growth Source: EIA Annual Energy Outlook
The Quest for Cleaner Generation The quest for low-carbon and renewable energy resources is driving significant change throughout New England power markets CT & MA Greenhouse Gas Emission TargetsMillions of tons of CO2 • Massachusetts and Connecticut have statutes which call for a reduction in carbon emissions of 80% by 2050 (from 1990 baseline) • Equally, the States have aggressive renewable portfolio standards; 22.1% by 2020 for MA and 27% by 2020 for CT • There exists a significant gap between installed renewables in the region and longer term requirements 125 75% reduction 111 20% reduction 28 CT MA
Attributes of the Modern Grid Development of a modern grid will require investments to make it resilient, smart and integrated Resilient Smart Integrated • Asset hardening to protected against weather-related events, particularly flooding and severe winds • Pro-active vegetation management and tree clearing • Protected from physical and cyber threats • Self-healing, line and substation automation • Situational awareness during outages and “blue sky” events • Enterprise-wide outage management capabilities • GIS asset and locational mapping; mobile workforce technology solutions • Two-way power flows • Distributed energy resources and micro-grids • Advanced metering capability • Electric vehicles • New products, services, market entrants Underlying goal of increasing system and capital investment efficiency
Engaging and Empowering Customers Increased Energy Efficiency Program Participation Continuous Customer Engagement and Satisfaction Leading-edge customer engagement capabilities through tailored solutions, data analytics and digital/social media channels The Launch of New Customer Engagement Platforms Generate Actionable Customer Insights Personalize Inbound Customer Interactions Personalize Outbound Communications Resulting in… “Personalized Ways to Save” and an Improved Customer Experience
Regulation of the Future The “utility of the future” will require “regulation of the future” to ensure alignment among policy makers, customers and investors “Utility of the Future” “Regulation of the Future” Modern Grid Operating Environment Re-examine cost allocation, subsidies, rate-making principles Rate design and pricing Metering policies Cost recovery Performance incentives and metrics Alignment • Modest sales growth • Price pressures • Higher reliability demands • Increasing expectations • New market entrants • Grid independence • Security threats Smart Technologies Integrated Solutions Customer Centric
NU’s Solutions for the Future (and Today) Investments in additional transmission capacity to enable low-carbon and clean energy sources Investment in additional gas pipeline capacity and related infrastructure Advance and modernize the electric grid to drive reliability and situational awareness Continued investment in energy efficiency with emphasis on innovation, financing and tailored customer solutions Engage and empower customers through innovative partnering, tools, analytics and social media Explore new regulatory business models and approaches, including pricing alternatives Future State Mission – Reliable Energy and Superior Customer Service