The Worlds Hottest Retail Energy Markets by Chris Trayhorn, Publisher of mThink Blue Book, May 15, 2006 The number of retail energy markets open to competition grows year-on-year and research carried out by Peace Software and VaasaEmg has provided for the first time an apples for apples comparison of customer switching across competitive retail energy markets around the world. Great Britain and the state of Victoria in Australia are revealed to be by far the most active retail energy markets, at times exceeding the rate of 20 percent customer switching per year. Customer switch rates in more than 30 competitive retail energy markets have been monitored on an ongoing basis by the Peace Software and VaasaEmg Utility Customer Switching Research Project team. Peace Software is a developer of utility customer information software for regulated utilities and competitive energy retailers and VaasaEmg is a university-based research center that specializes in electricity, gas and related utilities marketing to end customers. Customer switch rates are an important metric of retail energy market competitiveness and have the advantage of being objective, measurable and comparable between markets. Eric Cody, retail energy markets consultant and former vice president at National Grid, said: Regulators will find this comparative customer switch rate information essential for benchmarking the success of their own retail competition initiatives, and energy retailers can apply the insights to their customer acquisition and retention strategies. The research projects customer switch rate metric is calculated by dividing the number of customers that switched suppliers in a given period by the total number of customers in the market, and the result is then converted to an annual rate. For example, if 1 percent of customers switch suppliers in a given month, that month has a 12 percent annualized customer switch rate. This approach has substantial advantages over commonly reported switch rates that measure the cumulative market share of regulated utility providers versus competitive providers. The comparative switch rate research has enabled the classification of markets into four categories: Hot, Active, Slow and Dormant. Hot markets demonstrate annualized switch rates of 15 percent or higher; Active is at least 5 percent; Slow is below 5 percent; and Dormant markets exhibit less than 1 percent switching per year. Figure 1 compares customer switching trends in a selection of markets across these categories. Hot MarketsGreat Britain has consistently been at the forefront of utility customer switching activity since full market opening in 1999. Rising energy retail prices in recent years motivated British utility customers to switch supplier and led the incumbent utilityaffiliated suppliers to ramp up customer win-back campaigns. Price hikes have especially impacted British Gas, which reputedly lost approximately 800,000 gas accounts between August 2004 and August 2005. The principal market share beneficiaries at this time are thought to have been Scottish Power and Scottish and Southern Energy. It is believed that Scottish Power achieved a net gain of around 1 million energy customers between January 2004 and August 2005. Meanwhile, down under in Australia, the state of Victoria has fast become a hot spot of energy retail competition. Victoria introduced full retail competition for electricity and gas in 2002 and it has exhibited increased customer switching year-on-year, peaking at over 20 percent in 2005. Strong competition from out-of-state incumbents and new start-up energy retailers have contributed to this dramatic level of switch activity, along with the introduction of lifestyle products cleverly targeted at niche customer segments. Active MarketsActive markets include Flanders, the Netherlands, New South Wales, New Zealand, South Australia, Sweden, Norway and Texas. In Belgium, only the Flanders region is open to full electricity and gas retail competition. The other Belgian regions of Wallonia and Brussels are introducing full retail competition starting July 2007. The rate of customer switching in Flanders slowed to around 5 percent in 2005 after hitting peaks of over 10 percent in 2004. The Netherlands introduced full retail competition for both electricity and gas in July 2004 and today it is one of the most active European retail energy markets. In the initial months after full market opening, most customer switching activity related to electricity rather than gas. New South Wales in Australia has exhibited a steady increase in customer switching levels since full market opening in 2002. Customer switch rates in 2005 hovered just above 5 percent, much lower than its neighboring states, but clearly active. New Zealand has the longest history of full energy retail competition of any country, dating back to 1994. As is often characteristic of a mature energy retail market, New Zealand experienced extremely high peaks of customer switching early on around 30 percent per year in mid-2001 before easing and stabilizing in later years. In 2005, New Zealand exhibited customer switching around the 8 percent level. South Australia opened its doors to full retail electricity competition in 2003 and customer switch rates quickly soared. Principal reasons behind this rapid acceleration include the divestment of the retail customer base by the state government that removed the incumbent brand advantage, the granting of switching credits to a portion of the customer base and rising retail prices that motivated customers to shop around. Customer switching in South Australia eased in 2005 to an estimated 11 percent rate. Customer switch rates in Sweden have increased year-on-year since full market opening in 1999, reaching 10 percent in 2004 before falling back to 6 to 7 percent in 2005. A winter 2005 survey published by market research agency TEMO highlighted that a cumulative 32 percent of Swedish energy consumers have switched supplier at least once. Norway was one of the most active energy retail markets in the world in 2003 with customer switching around the 20 percent level, following a temporary but massive hike in wholesale prices and extensive utility marketing activity. Customer switching levels have since stabilized at the 7 to 10 percent level. The Texas electricity market opened to full retail competition in January 2002 and is widely considered the most competitive North American retail energy market. It stands alone in U.S. markets for having separated its utility retail operations from distribution, a market structure that has more in common with competitive retail markets in Australia and Europe than with other U.S. states, most of which employ a hybrid coexistence of regulated and competitive utility operations. In 2005, Texas exhibited customer switching around the 7 percent level. The Texas market is notable for the sheer number of participants, with over 40 energy retailers actively competing for customers. Slow MarketsIn the Slow category for 2005 are the markets of Finland, Denmark and Spain, with switching levels of less than 5 percent. Switching in Finland has historically been inhibited by low customer awareness, and a sheer lack of aggressive acquisition marketing. Denmark suffers from small savings potential, and in Spain the incumbent utilities remain the dominant force with little incentive for customers to switch. Dormant MarketsDormant markets are those in which all customers are able to choose their retail energy supplier, but which do not exhibit significant levels of customer switching. More than half of all markets monitored by the research project remain Dormant, with switching levels below 1 percent per year. This includes a number of European markets, such as Germany, which lack a consistent method for switching and a centralized market registry infrastructure. Almost all North American markets are classified as Dormant, including New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and Ohio. Their market structures inhibit healthy competition through the continued role of the regulated utility as last resort supplier and issuer of the customer bill within their respective distribution territories. The research project provides a consistent and objective basis for benchmarking the competitiveness of retail energy markets around the world. Leading markets have sustained active levels of competition for many years and this should be viewed as proof that retail energy competition can thrive in new markets provided they are appropriately structured. Filed under: White Papers Tagged under: Utilities About the Author Chris Trayhorn, Publisher of mThink Blue Book Chris Trayhorn is the Chairman of the Performance Marketing Industry Blue Ribbon Panel and the CEO of mThink.com, a leading online and content marketing agency. He has founded four successful marketing companies in London and San Francisco in the last 15 years, and is currently the founder and publisher of Revenue+Performance magazine, the magazine of the performance marketing industry since 2002.