Pioneer Electric Board of Trustees Approve Feb. 2021 Storm Recovery Charge

On April 28th, the Pioneer Electric Board of Trustees voted to implement the proposed Feb. 2021 Storm Recovery Charge on members’ bills over a 36-month recovery period. The new charge will assist in recovering costs incurred to Pioneer Electric during February’s “Winter Storm Uri”. The average member will see a slight increase in the bill of approximately $8 (per 1,000 kWh of usage) per month. Costs are calculated with electricity used between February 1-28, 2021. Members’ usage may vary.

The new charge will be listed under the “Current Activity” portion of most members’ bills beginning in May. Members belonging to invoicing groups of 18+ services will see the charge listed under the “Misc. Charges”.

Additionally, members who wish to pay their total storm recovery charge in one payment may do so once billed. Please contact Pioneer Electric’s office to get your total storm recovery charge and make a payment.

Members with questions or concerns may visit our Winter Storm Uri FAQ page or call our office at 620-356-1211 or 1-800-794-9302 during regular business hours (M-F, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.)

 

Pioneer Electric Board to Vote on Storm Recovery Charge

After a review of the financial impact of market energy costs associated with Winter Storm Uri, the Pioneer Electric Cooperative, Inc. (“Pioneer Electric”) Board of Trustees directed management to present a rate (billing) adjustment to members. The proposed adjustment will cover costs Pioneer Electric incurred during February’s storm. The proposed adjustment will see an approximate $8 per 1,000 kWh of members’ February usage as a recovery charge on future billings. This charge would be in addition to members’ normal monthly bill. The board will discuss and vote on this adjustment during the regularly scheduled meeting on April 28, 2021. If passed, the recovery charge would be implemented in May of 2021 for a period of 36 months.

“Winter Storm Uri was a ‘perfect storm’,” said Steve Epperson, CEO of Pioneer Electric. “The frigid temperatures not only increased the demand for electricity but also significantly constrained the supply of natural gas from fields and pipelines; this gas is needed to fuel generation. Compounding that, wind generation was unavailable through most of the event.”

During the week of February 15, Pioneer Electric, and other utilities across the Midwest, experienced an increased energy demand coupled with severe constraints on available generation resources. These issues caused the market price for electricity to skyrocket. Pioneer Electric experienced a $17-20 million addition to its February power bill.

“The problems we faced during the storm were not unique to southwest Kansas,” said Epperson. “This was an event that had an effect on the Southwest Power Pool’s (SPP) entire footprint, which covers states from the Texas Panhandle to the Canadian border.”

The Southwest Power Pool (SPP) is a regional transmission organization that provides balancing and reliability coordination services, as well as implements the wholesale energy market.

“We understand members may have concerns regarding their upcoming electric bills,” said Epperson. “Our plan to amortize these costs over a 36-month period will help us stand between our members and high electric bills.”

To avoid passing expenses accumulated by Pioneer Electric to members in one large billing, Pioneer Electric’s management proposes to amortize (spread out) costs to members over a 36-month period. If approved by the board, the new billing adjustment will be reflected on members’ bills as a­ “Feb. 2021 Storm Recovery Charge”.

Any credit or additional expense towards the February event will be allocated to all members and reflected on subsequent bills. Members with questions or concerns regarding upcoming bills may contact Pioneer Electric’s office during regular business hours (Monday – Friday, 8 a.m. – 5 p.m.) at 620-356-1211.

Members Urged to Continue Conservation Efforts

This week’s unprecedented event, which created outages and significant price spikes across a 14-state region, will continue to impact electricity bills through the end of February. We are anticipating significantly and substantially higher electric bills through the remainder of the month. We would like to encourage all members to conserve electric consumption as much as they possibly can to lessen the economic impact on their bills.