Find your Baseline Allowance. How can you stay within the Baseline Allowance? Learn ways to conserve energy and save money all year. Get tips to save energy and costs every day Learn about and sign up for Energy Alerts.
What is the rate for usage over the Baseline Allowance? Tier 1 - Baseline usage, billed at your lowest baseline price Tier 2 - Gas use beyond your baseline allowance, billed at a higher price Gas customers are billed at the lowest price for all gas usage up to their baseline allowance. Review how gas charges appear on your monthly statement under Details of Gas Charges: View a sample energy statement Learn about gas rate options.
Find the amount of your Baseline Allowance. Choose View. Baseline Allowance Table The table below provides the daily amounts of energy allotted for the Baseline Allowance. Compare rates. Understanding Baseline Allowance. Energy used within your Baseline Allowance is billed at the lowest price. Energy used above the Baseline Allowance is considered Tier 2 and is billed at a higher price.
If your energy use exceeds four times the Baseline Allowance during your monthly billing cycle, a High Usage Surcharge will be applied.
Find your baseline allowance. How the plan works. The price for energy changes only when you exceed your Baseline Allowance and go into Tier 2 during the monthly billing cycle. On this plan the summer and winter rates and peak hours are set up similarly to the standard business time-of-use plans. In addition to breaking down your energy use throughout the billing period, this page also shows you your rate and the various additional charges you may have paid during this time.
For time-of-use customers, these charts are even more detailed, as they will show you when your energy use occurred during peak hours. Keep in mind that in addition to your use of electricity at the current energy rates, there are other monthly charges. This can include taxes enforced by state and local governments, grid access charges, and so on. By compiling a series of bills, you can see what your energy usage looks like on a month-to-month basis.
By analyzing this information, you can not only tell if your current rate plan is right for your current usage, you can use that data to help determine how large of a solar power system you need. A well-planned and properly implemented solar system can help take the bite out of the peak hour charges you face under time-of-use plans.
Your electricity use is going to start in the middle of peak billing hours. Solar customers gain energy credits that are shown in their monthly net energy metering statements.
The remaining 26 percent of users, or ,, use more than percent of baseline. First, locate your zone on the map, then use the charts at bottom right to find your baseline quantity and rate tiers. The sample bill at right is for Zone T, with a winter base-line quantity of kilowatt-hours per month.
Summer baseline quantities take effect starting May 1. These sample amounts are highlighted on chart and in calculations below. STEP Determine your billing cycle. Baseline quantities in the charts are averages based on a day billing cycle.
Using the sample bill, the baseline quantity of Multiplying that number by 30 produces an average monthly baseline of , corresponding with Zone T for winter electricity customers.
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