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Where do you
buy your electricity?
If you don't have a choice now, you will soon
Twenty
years ago most Americans got their telephone service from Ma Bell (a.k.a.
American Telephone and Telegraph) and their power from the local electric
company. Today consumers can pick from among AT&T and roughly a zillion
other telecommunications companies -- but most people still buy their
electricity from a local utility.
Shocking,
really. But that situation isn't going to last much longer. As the telecom
industry did in the 1980s, the U.S. electricity industry is now undergoing
deregulation. State utility commissions are unplugging their tight control
on rates and allowing a range of new energy providers to enter the field.
For consumers
the process hasn't been uniformly smooth. This past summer electricity
users in San Diego and New York City were stung by price spikes after
regulators removed long-standing rate caps as part of the deregulation
process. Still, within five years, 90% of U.S. consumers will be able
to choose where and how they buy their watts and volts, according to the
Yankee Group, a research and consulting firm in Boston.
As you
might expect, the Internet is making things interesting by providing brand-new
ways for energy providers to reach consumers. And investors have certainly
recognized an opportunity: venture-capital funding in energy-related companies
rose from $150 million in 1999 to an estimated $300 million in 2000, according
to Venture Economics, a research company. Deregulation appears to be sparking
a whole new wave of start-ups.
Power
to the people
Newly empowered consumers in New York City, for instance, can now buy
electricity from SmartEnergy.com, which was founded in 1999 by a team
that includes five former energy traders from the New York Mercantile
Exchange. "We figured that there was a huge market in electricity
and natural gas at the retail level," says SmartEnergy president
and CEO Gautam Chandra. Someday, he says, Americans may buy their energy
from familiar retailers like Wal-Mart or the Home Depot.
But it's
likely that those retailers don't know much about the complex supply chain
in the energy market. That's where SmartEnergy comes in. "We think
of ourselves as a distributor," Chandra says. That means supplying
retailers with the electricity and natural gas that they will in turn
sell to consumers. SmartEnergy, based in Woburn, Mass., doesn't actually
generate power. Instead, the company buys it directly from independent
producers and is banking on its energy-trading expertise to save consumers
at least 10%. (The energy is delivered to customers over existing infrastructure
maintained by formerly monopolistic utilities.) So far, SmartEnergy isn't
selling to retailers like Wal-Mart or the Home Depot, but it has struck
up partnerships with newly emerging Internet energy retailers such as
Essential.com and Energyguide.com.
Consumers
can also buy directly from SmartEnergy, and the company offers features
that it hopes will distinguish its product from that of traditional utilities.
Call it commodity branding. "Customer service has been fairly nonexistent
in the energy space," says chief marketing officer Jon Sorenson.
With SmartEnergy, customers can use the Internet to sign up for service,
reach customer-service agents, and pay their bills with a credit card.
They can choose from different service plans -- such as one that lets
them buy power at a fixed rate for 12 months and one that offers a rebate
that rewards them for saving energy. They can even earn frequent-flier
miles on United Airlines: 500 miles for signing up and one mile for every
dollar spent thereafter.
SmartEnergy
rolled out in New York in February and aims to be in five more states,
including New Jersey and Pennsylvania, by the end of the year. Funded
originally by its founders, SmartEnergy has since raised more than $10
million from outside investors. The company expects to be profitable in
the third quarter of 2001.
SmartEnergy
and other upstart providers still have a long way to go to make a dent
in the market. As of June, only 2.2% of residential customers and 4.8%
of business customers in New York State had switched from their old utility.
And now, as the Yankee Group analyst Karl Jessen points out, SmartEnergy
and its ilk are facing serious competition -- namely, from the NewPower
Co., a potential Goliath energy provider that is funded by energy giant
Enron.
On the
plus side, this past summer's price volatility -- which temporarily raised
electricity bills in New York City by as much as 30% -- gave SmartEnergy
a bit of boost. While traditional utility customers were paying wildly
varying market rates, SmartEnergy offered consumers a chance to lock in
a favorable rate that would remain in place for a year.
A conduit
for savings
For a lot of consumers, having to comparison shop for a commodity they've
long taken for granted could prove to be quite a jolt. Or so Harvey Michaels
figured when he and two cofounders started Nexus Energy Software Inc.,
based in Newton, Mass., three years ago. "The company's starting
thesis was that consumers of energy don't know what's ahead, and that
what's ahead is going to be reasonably complex," says Michaels. "But
consumers' decisions are going to have a big impact on household budgets
or the bottom line of small businesses." After all, he points out,
energy can cost a homeowner $3,000 or more a year. "We're addressing
a very large cost that people don't really think about" -- yet.
In his
former life as president of energy-consulting firm Xenergy Inc., Michaels
helped Fortune 500 companies analyze and reduce their energy consumption
and save money. "If you're a homeowner or a small business, you can't
afford to hire someone to do this," he says. "We saw software
on the Internet as a great enabler, helping consumers to make smart energy
choices." The result was Energyguide, which is the name Nexus Energy
now goes under. At the company's Web site, homeowners or small-business
owners can get an analysis of their energy costs by answering an online
questionnaire. Based on their data, they receive suggestions on how to
reduce those costs. Consumers can compare the energy providers available
in their area, sign up for service, and buy products (ranging from fluorescent
lightbulbs to energy-efficient space heaters) from Energyguide partners.
The company collects a fee for everything sold through the site.
The company's
earliest revenues have come from strategic partners, deregulated utilities
that were suddenly in the position of having to court their old customers.
For them, Energyguide is a service that they can offer as a goodwill-generating
freebie to their customers. About 20 utilities pay the company a licensing
fee to put the Energyguide software on their own Web sites or to distribute
it on CDs. Energyguide also shares in any revenues it generates for the
utilities. That solid partner base helped the company rack up revenues
of just under $5 million last year. Recently, Energyguide has also broadened
its partnerships to include about 20 nonutilities, such as personal-finance
Web site Quicken.com.
Michaels
estimates that the retail-energy market on the Internet could total $40
billion to $50 billion within the next five years. Energyguide is aiming
for a tiny sliver of that. "We're a long way from nailing down what
our share ultimately will be," says Michaels. "Probably in the
hundreds of millions." But to get there, Energyguide will have to
fight off challenges from rivals in the consumer-information niche, including
ChooseEnergy Inc. In March, Energyguide raised $7 million from a group
of investors led by GE Equity, primarily to increase sales staff and develop
more partnerships with energy providers. "Going forward it's going
to be a little more interesting," says Michaels.
Emily Barker
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