Overview: Two local distribution companies (LDCs) in Montana, serving about 70 percent of the State's residential customers, have initiated customer choice pilot programs. Montana Power Company (doing business as Northwestern Corporation since March 2002) began its program in November 1998 and offered natural gas supplier choice to approximately 11,000 of its residential and small commercial customers. Energy West Resources began its program in October 1999, which is open to all of its residential and small commercial customers.
Although the Montana Public Service Commission does not collect specific information on participation levels, it estimates that fewer than 0.5 percent of residential and small commercial customers have signed up for alternative suppliers. The Natural Gas Restructuring and Customers Choice Act was passed in 1997. Under this act, gas utilities may voluntarily offer their customers a choice of supplier. Customers served by LDCs that have implemented customer choice programs were to choose a nonutility gas supplier by 2002, but the date has been extended to mid-2007. Currently, there are four marketers licensed as gas suppliers in the State.
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Regulatory and Legislative Actions
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Legislation |
5/97 |
Natural Gas Utility
Restructuring and Customer Choice Act, SB396. The 1997 Montana Legislature enacted the
"Natural Gas Utility Restructuring and Customer Choice
Act," which became effective
5/22/97 (Ch.
506, L. 1997).
The law allows competition for the supply of natural gas and electric
service and permits regulated utilities to file restructuring
plans. The Montana Public Service Commission (PSC) is to adopt
rules to implement the new laws. |
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Regulatory Action |
12/04 |
Approval of Energy West Montana's Interim Rates,
Gas Cost Tracking Procedures, and Elimination of Restriction on When
Customers Could Move to Choice (Docket D2003.6.75,
Order 6552a). PSC approved Energy West's request to separate its Great
Falls and West Yellowstone areas for cost tracking purposes and to remove
restriction that customers can select alternative suppliers only during an
open season period. Customers can move to a third-party supplier or return
to utility service at the start of the billing
period. |
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06/99 |
Rules Adopted re Customer Information and
Protection. Suppliers must obtain written authorization from
consumers and provide a contract specifying service terms before switching
suppliers. All contracts must have a "uniform information label" to allow
consumers to compare price and contract terms. Other rules cover service
disconnections, complaint procedures, billing, and supplier of last resort
provisions. |
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12/98 |
Approval of Great
Falls Gas Co. (now doing business as Energy West Montana)
Restructuring, Docket D98.3.68, Order 6064b, Final Order. The
PSC approved open access and customer choice on Great Falls' system. Full
choice for residential and small commercial customers is set to begin on
10/1/99, with open season starting 5/1/99. By the end of the second year
of choice, Great Falls is to file a plan for assigning customers who have
not chosen a supplier. |
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09/98 |
Hearing on Great
Falls Gas Co. Proposed Choice Program. In March 1998, Great Falls Gas Co. filed a
restructuring plan that would unbundle services for its residential and
small commercial customers. Customers would have until October 1999 to
choose a new gas supplier or continue traditional service with the
supplier selected by Great Falls Gas. Great Falls would stop selling gas
in October 1999 and offer only distribution and transportation services.
Stranded costs would be assigned to its affiliate Energy West, which would
provide management services for 5 years. |
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08/98 |
Approval of Montana
Power Company's
(MPC) Pilot Program
Application, Docket D98.2.28, Order
6061a. The PSC approved MPC's plans for a pilot choice program as
specified in PSC's final order on 10/97. The program will begin
November 1998 and offer natural gas supplier choice to approximately
11,000 residential and small commercial customers (up to 0.5 billion cubic
feet of MPC's annual load). All MPC customers are to choose gas suppliers
by July 1, 2002. |
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06/98 |
Natural Gas
Restructuring Rules. The PSC adopted rules to implement the Natural Gas
Utility Restructuring and Customer Choice Act. The rules cover utility restructuring, provider
conduct, supplier licensing, and universal system benefits programs. Gas
suppliers must be licensed by the PSC, maintain an electronic registration
with the PSC, and submit annual reports on services provided, quality and
reliability of service, and company organizational structure (affiliates,
etc). |
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10/97 |
Approval of Montana
Power Company's (MPC) Restructuring, Docket D96.2.22, Order 5898d, Final Order. The
PSC approved a settlement agreement between MPC, the Consumer Counsel, and
other parties, which phases in customer choice for MPC customers. The
minimum threshold for transportation service is reduced from 60,000 to
5,000 dekatherms/year. Residential rates will be frozen for 2 years and
MPC can recover about $60 million of stranded costs in the next 15 years.
The company is to submit plans (within 90 days) for a pilot choice program
for residential and small commercial customers for PSC approval. Six
months prior to the end of the 5-year transition period ending 7-1-02, MPC
is to file a plan with the PSC proposing a method of assigning customers
who have not chosen gas suppliers. The PSC will then determine whether
MPC's distribution entity should continue its merchant function of
providing supply for small commercial and residential customers based on
the development of competition for these
customers. |
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12/96 |
Proceedings
Suspended on MPC Restructuring. The PSC suspended proceedings on MPC's
comprehensive case until action is completed on proposed restructuring
legislation and to allow settlement negotiations to continue. Several
stipulations were subsequently presented to the PSC as a result of
settlement conferences. |
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07/96 |
MPC Restructuring
Plan. MPC filed a restructuring plan that would reduce
the threshold to qualify for gas transportation service, include pilot choice
programs for residential and commercial customers, remove the company's
production assets from the rate base, and provide a mechanism for
recovering stranded costs. Several parties intervened, including
the Montana
Consumer Counsel, the Montana Large Customer Group, certain Montana
marketers, the Montana Department of Environmental Quality, the Northern
Montana Oil and Gas Association, and others. The MPC filing also included
a revenue increase request and a gas tracker
update. |
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02/96 |
"Order Initiating
Proceeding." (Order No. 5898) directed Montana Power Company to
file a comprehensive case to resolve cost of service and rate design
issues and further unbundle its
system. |
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