✨ Electricity Network Pricing




20 OCTOBER NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE 3707

2.3 The charges for Trans Power have five components which are:

(a) Connection charge
(b) Capacity charge
(c) Network charge
(d) South Island differential charge
(e) Revenue neutral charge.

2.4 The above charges have been allocated across the consumers per each individual point of supply including Monowai where its costs have been allocated on the same basis as the Winton charges, as the existence of Monowai basically avoids extra Trans Power charges for Winton.

2.5 The method of allocation for the above charges is based on four consumer parameters as follows:

(a) The Winter kW Demand (June, July, August)
(b) The Winter Day kWhs (May to September inclusive)
(c) The Peak Day kWhs (May to September 0700-1100 and 1700-2100 each week day)
(d) Total annual kWh.

2.6 The Trans Power and Monowai points of supply charges are as shown in Table 1.

2.7 The electrical parameters for each point of supply were then determined and are shown in Table 2.

2.8 The charge components as described in section 2.3 for each point of supply were then apportioned on the basis of the parameters in section 2.5 and in accordance with the proportions shown in Table 3.

2.9 The component charges using the above parameters are shown in Table 4.

2.10 For the largest consumers the charges were individually assessed on their respective profiles, but for all the other consumers the charges were allocated on the basis of load group profiles.



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VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1995, No 118


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✨ LLM interpretation of page content

πŸ’° Trans Power Charges Allocation Methodology

πŸ’° Finance & Revenue
Electricity, Network Charges, Trans Power, Monowai, Pricing Methodology