STATE SCORECARD ON
UTILITY AND PUBLIC BENEFITS ENERGY EFFICIENCY PROGRAMS: AN UPDATE
Dan York,
Ph.D., and Martin Kushler, Ph. D.
February 2003
Executive
Summary
In 2000, ACEEE
published the report State Scorecard on Utility Energy Efficiency
Programs (Nadel, Kubo, and Geller 2000). This report analyzed
utility spending on energy efficiency programs in each state, which
included scoring and ranking states based on the following four
parameters:
1. energy
efficiency expenditures as a percentage of utility revenues;
2. electricity savings as a percentage of electricity sales;
3. changes in expenditures as a percentage of revenues between
1993 and 1998; and
4. changes in savings as percentage of sales between 1993 and
1998.
The 2000 scorecard
report was based on data available through 1998. This 2002 update
includes data through 2000, which is the most recent official data
available. This update tracks selected data and derived indicators
of energy efficiency program activity from 1993 through 2000, namely:
1. energy
efficiency expenditures as a percentage of utility revenues;
2. energy efficiency expenditures per capita; and
3. electricity savings as a percentage of electricity sales.
In this update,
we report the above data and derived indicators directly for each
state. We also track these data and indicators over time using the
database developed for the 2000 scorecard. (However, we do not replicate
the scoring scheme used in the scorecard to develop a single score
and associated ranking of states.) We also track total spending
on energy efficiency programs for the United States as a whole.
Key Findings
- Total spending
(utility-reported demand-side management [DSM] combined with public
benefits spending) has increased modestly since 1997—from $918
million to $1.10 billion in 2000.
- Public benefits
funding has increased rapidly since 1997 and has become a large
share of total funding for energy efficiency programs.
- Public benefits
spending is expected to continue to increase, as indicated by
the total amount of funding authorized by states enacting such
programs. Public benefits spending in 2000 in many states was
not fully “ramped up” to the full amounts of authorized budgets.
- Generally,
most states that have been actively engaged in providing energy
efficiency services have continued to fund and implement energy
efficiency programs, although the funding mechanisms and structure
of programs in many cases are changing.
- The states
most actively providing publicly supported energy efficiency programs
continue to be primarily in the Northeast (including New England
and the Mid- Atlantic region), the Pacific Northwest, and certain
parts of the Midwest, as well as the states of Florida and California.
- A number
of states are notable for increasing their commitment to energy
efficiency from the late 1990s, although in most of these cases
(New York, Wisconsin, Texas, and Vermont), spending levels in
2000 were still lower than 1993. A few states (notably Connecticut
and New Jersey) increased spending from the late 1990s and also
are at higher levels than they were in 1993.
- There is
great variability in funding levels for energy efficiency programs.
About one-third of the states (16) account for 86% of total U.S.
spending on energy efficiency programs. One-half of the states
(25) account for essentially all (95%) of total spending on efficiency
programs. Even within this top half of states, there is great
variability, as the spending per capita ranges from $1.16 to $19.48—a
factor of about 17 from lowest to highest.
The overall
trend in energy efficiency activity reflects a growing recognition
among states that energy efficiency programs provide important economic
and environmental benefits. Whether funded through traditional utility
DSM or emerging public benefits programs, many individual states
are showing renewed commitment to ensuring that energy efficiency
is a strategic element in meeting present and future energy demand.
View the entire
report for free in PDF or click
to order in hard copy.
36 pp., 2003,
$17.00, U023
|