Title: SPP Information Display Pilot Update
1SPP Information Display Pilot Update
- Working Group 3
- September 24, 2004
Mark S. Martinez Manager, Program Development
2Early SPP Research Questions (2003)
- Does more timely feedback on household energy use
increase the average level of peak energy
savings? - Dynamic rates may be difficult to understand, and
the price signals may not generate an adequate
response to the consequences of inaction are
there better treatments? - Awareness, understanding, and behavior
modification for the SPP are based on the
enrollment materials provided early, and the
feedback is limited to billing can we inform in
a more timely manner?
3Project Overview
- Information Display Pilot (IDP) was authorized in
2004 SPP budget decision, D.04-01-012, January 8,
2004 - Contingent on Advice Letter to the Energy
Division prior to commencement - Advice Letter 1790-E filed April 5, 2004 with
detailed plan included - IDP Approved April 23, 2004
- RFP issued to five service providers on May 14,
2004 - Responses were returned on May 25, 2004
- Contract awarded to Nexus in June, 2004
- IDP treatments began for customers July 2004
4IDP Project Mission
- Evaluate the effectiveness of and customer
perceptions of specific Statewide Pricing Pilot
features and materials, including enrollment and
educational material, bill formats, web
information, and tariff features to test the
usefulness of providing customers with various
types of energy information (or feedback) not
currently provided by the utilities
5Specific Treatment Investigations
- both in-home pricing/usage displays that will
either replace or accommodate an enhanced web
based information treatment, - possible diagnostic tools to identify the most
effective behavior changes for a particular
customer, - customer reactions to different types of
information or feedback choices, and - an assessment of the likelihood that residential
customers will choose to use and pay for these
additional feedback mechanisms to help manage
their energy usage.
6IDP Scope of Work
- Develop research plan to produce deliverables
- Perform Technology Assessment to determine
effective and useful treatments for deployment in
the IDP - Develop survey instruments to conduct customer
information about what forms of information
treatment customers want/will/use/pay for - Deploy the information treatments and install the
technologies on existing SPP participant
homes/meters - Review load data collected from participants and
estimate significant load impact changes - Document project info and collect database
information - Prepare draft and final study reports
- Present results to WG3 as scheduled
7Recent Activities
- SPP billing data received from all participants
- Information treatments designed and delivered to
the customers via email and newsletter - Customer focus groups completed at the end of
August for technology all three IOUs - In-home/business technologies (orbs) all
programmed and installed with CPP-V schedule - Enhanced treatments coincident with all August
and September SPP events (CPP-V) - Load data in the process of being requested for
impact analysis - Telephone surveys being prepared for gen pop
8SPP Events for 2004 all used up
9Information Treatments In Time
- Nexus developed interactive tool for customer
information to asses SPP performance - Push technology includes e-mail and on-line
analysis of SPP usage with recommendations - Bill analysis tool complete, with interactive
recommendations specific for each customer - Enhanced information (humanizing the bill)
approach with subscriber approach - Post-event reporting with specific billing
analysis was delivered to IDP participants during
summer - Load data still being collected to assess impacts
10IDP use of Integrated Electronic Newsletters for
Critical Peak
- In the Information Display Pilot, e-mails
provide homes and small business customers with
the following - Estimated cost of super peak by appliance for the
last month, based on survey. - Benchmarks on last months bill in relation to
norms associated with comparison analysis - Strategies for controlling the next months bill
in the context of the SPP rates - Interactive tools for determining best end-use
strategies for effective cost management
11Integrated Website provides drill-down support
12Audit tools incorporated into CPP rate analysis
that encourage behavioral and hardware measures
that reduce peak and costs
13Technology Assessment nearly complete
- Primen is reviewing technology treatments in
preparation of customer assessment of technology
and overall white paper - To date, no significant compatible systems
available for IDP deployment - Expanded quantitative assessment will focus on
customer preferences for technology - Several devices were examined by focus groups
- Simple technology seemed the most engaging, but
also some sort of system that displayed costs
inside also very useful
14Examples of Direct Feedback Meters
15In-Home Cost Display Assessment
- Focus group participants like the idea of a
device that displays energy use, especially one
with a monthly read that can be used to compare
utility billlike bringing your meter inside. - Participants want to see information displayed in
both kWh and dollars, but preferred . - Some participants mentioned that they liked that
these tools allowed you to be your own
consultant. - Participants like the simple, bigger display, and
generally favored something wall-mounted. - Participants like the idea of an audible beep if
can be shut off - In one group, participants suggested that the
device could show savings (compared to last year
during same month).
16Orb Placement with SPP IDP Customers
17TOU Active Price Signaling Device
- Using orb from Ambient Devices is comm.
available - Provides an alternative and non-intrusive
information display system for time of use price - Displays all prices for CPP-V schedule
- Off peak (blue)
- On-peak (green)
- Warning for super peak (flashing red) four hours
ahead - Super peak (solid red)
18Synchronized with CPP-V rate schedule
19Focus Group Transcripts available
- REACTIONS TO THE ORB
- Q Okay, Ive got some show and tell here.
Pretty neat? Anybody want to name what this is?
Because I cant. - F A mood
- M An orb. Its an orb.
- F It changes colors.
- M Its going to hypnotize us pretty soon.
- Q Anybody else want to give me a name?
- M What in the hell is it supposed to do?
- Q Alright, let me tell you what its supposed to
do. - M Its a mood ring.
- Q Its a gizmo.
- M Im feeling sleepy.
20Customers Are Engaged with Fun Tech
- REACTIONS TO GLOBE DEVICE
- Q A light thats 10 times the size, right?
- M Its a mood light.
- Q This is a potential option for notifying you
of the price. It would change colors. Right now
what its doing, its not getting a signal right
now and its cycling through all of the colors.
But what it could do is be green when youre in
off-peak and be yellow or whatever on on-peak and
then maybe before super peak it blinks and then
on super pink it turns red. - M And like when you go to blue its going to
explode? - Q Maybe. First of all, Ken, what would you call
this, for someone who cant see it? - M Mood light.
- Q Anybody else? Phyllis?
- F I was thinking about he mood rings, but he got
it. - M Designer light bulb.
- Q Anybody else? Name?
- M It looks like it would predict the future.
- M Fortune lamp.
21IDP Project Task Tracking
- Conduct Project Initiation Meeting -100
- Develop Research Plan to Produce Deliverables
100 - Perform Technology Assessment 90
- Develop survey design approach about what forms
of info treatment customers want/ will use/ will
pay for 100 - Deploy the information treatments and install the
technologies on existing SPP participant homes/
meters 85 - Review data collected from consumption of
participants and estimate load impact changes in
any versus a control group after 3 to 4 months
10 - Prepare Draft and Final Study Reports 0
- Project Documentation and Databases 0
- Project Management 60
- Deliver presentation(s) to SPP stakeholder
meetings 0
22Vision How Enhanced Information can support
Critical Peak Rate Implementation
- Using estimated appliance load estimates can help
the utility decide who to offer. - Value-add communications via web, e-mail and
contact center describe benefits, encourage
enrollments. - Support tools explain past, suggest future
strategies that may include technology - Support tools help set up appliance controls as
technology becomes enabled. - Customer-controlled software read rates on
internet, control loads.
23Please control my thermostat for me differently
on critical peak days and based on outside
temperature
24Pre-Attentive Processing the Internet - the
Future of Demand Response?