Auckland's electricity network owner Vector has come out swinging at the Electricity Authority's latest proposals to shift the cost of the national grid to those areas benefitting most from investment in upgrades, saying the revamped proposals released this week change nothing of substance while introducing "huge risk" to the process.
The EA this week released proposals that would preserve its hotly contested desire to shift the so-called Transmission Pricing Methodology (TPM) to those that benefit from them by having the reforms coincide in 2020 with Commerce Commission decisions on the weighted average cost of capital that network companies like Vector can earn on their monopoly assets.
Included in the rejigged proposals, which were subject to furious lobbying by the Auckland Employers and Manufacturers Association and major industrial consumers in the upper North Island, is a mechanism to prevent any consumer experiencing more than a 3.5 per cent annual increase in network charges.
However, Vector chief executive Simon Mackenzie said in a statement today that "nothing has changed" in the latest proposals, which "will mean a 33 per cent per annum increase in Auckland's transmission grid charges".
"It's hard to reconcile how the EA can continue to support a system where large generators, who benefit significantly from the grid, only pay less than 10 per cent of the costs. It basically leaves everyday users across the country bearing an even heavier burden while the generators make windfall gains," said Mackenzie.