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Update on Electricity Customer Choice In Ohio: Competition Continues to Outperform Traditional Monopoly Regulation (Full Report)
All Maxine Goodman Levin School of Urban Affairs Publications
  • Andrew R. Thomas, Cleveland State University
  • William M. Bowen, Cleveland State University
  • Mark Henning, Cleveland State University
  • Edward W Hill, Ohio State University
  • Adam Kanter, Ohio State Univerity
Document Type
Report
Publication Date
8-1-2019
Abstract

The purpose of this study is to provide an update to the research team’s 2016 report “Electricity Customer Choice in Ohio: How Competition Has Outperformed Traditional Monopoly Regulation” using data for 2016 through 2018.

Key Findings:

1. Since 2011, Ohio consumers have saved $23.9 billion because of deregulation.

2. Competition has driven down average electricity prices in deregulated Midwestern states (Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois), while their regulated peers (Indiana, Michigan, Wisconsin) have seen a steady increase in price of generated electricity.

3. The Study Team anticipates that savings will continue for the near term to be around $3 billion per year. However, these savings may be lost, in whole or in part, if deregulated energy markets continue to be undermined by cross subsidies of uncompetitive Investor Owned Utility (IOU) generation through Electric Distribution Utility (EDU) riders and surcharges, or through legislatively-mandated, above market Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) and subsidies.

Citation Information
Andrew R. Thomas, William M. Bowen, Mark Henning, Edward W Hill, et al.. "Update on Electricity Customer Choice In Ohio: Competition Continues to Outperform Traditional Monopoly Regulation (Full Report)" (2019) p. 1 - 40
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/andrew_thomas1/121/