December 14th, 2024

Power drops below provincial cap

By Collin Gallant on October 2, 2018.

Medicine Hat News

The cost of electricity will dip in October for city utility customers as the market rate falls below a price cap set by the provincial government.

Natural gas will rise slightly compared to September, but remains at near all-time lows, according to a schedule released Monday by the City of Medicine Hat utility department.

The commodity rate for local customers buying power will be 6.621 cents per kilowatt hour.

That’s about two-10ths of a cent lower than what appeared on last month’s bill, but 1.5 cents lower than a market calculation that enacted the rate cap in three months over the summer.

The market rate in September was 8.05-cents but customers were only charged the maximum of 6.8-cents; the difference paid from carbon levy funds.

Gas makes a slight rise at the start of colder weather, moving up seven-cents to $1.322 per gigajoule this month.

Local rates are based on the average commodity price charged across Alberta. For gas, Direct Energy had the high rate or $1.322 and AltaGas the low rate of $1.254.

Of four comparable power distributors, Direct was at 7.031-cents, folled by Epcor (Edmonton) at 6.577-cents, Epcor (rural) 6.463, and Enmax at 6.414-cents.

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