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Utilities Moving Toward a Whole Building Approach with Rebates

May 23, 2019
Educational session explores rebate program trends among utilities.

Lightfair attendees at the “Evolving Opportunities in Utility Rebate Programs” session were treated to a lively discussion on trends in rebate programs. A major point of discussion was move to a whole building concept of rebates rather than focus on individual products.

In the past, many utilities offered rebates for LED replacement lamps, but Chris Wolgamott, senior product manager for commercial and residential lighting, Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance (NEEA), said that in the Pacific Northwest market area and throughout the United States he has seen more electric utilities develop rebate programs to incentivize customers to tie their commercial/industrial lighting systems to HVAC systems.

“LEDs are amazing, but once they are in, there is not much room for the utility to do,” he says. “We are going to system integration, networked lighting control, and a focus on comfort for occupants tied into other mechanical systems.”

Wolgamott said electric utilities in the Pacific Northwest are active with rebates because they want to reduce demand so they don’t have to build any large power plants.  In an ideal world, they would like their demand to be consistent, but the reality is there are constant peaks and valleys in the electrical load. Therefore, they’re always trying to “shave these peaks and fill the valleys” with more precise demand management. He added that utilities would like to be able to incentivize customers to reduce power on an extraordinarily local basis in real time, possibly even down to specific substation’s coverage areas, if they suddenly detect a surge in demand from that area.

Will Walker, senior manager, program strategy, Energy Solutions, helps utilities manage their rebate programs. He said many of today’s rebate programs are structured in three ways:

  • Individual applications for rebates by product type, which has evolved from mail-in rebate programs to online applications.
  • Upstream/midstream Programs where distributors often work with electrical contractors to get rebates for projects.
  • Direct install programs where utilities work directly with contractors who have access to a select amount of funds.

Several of the speakers said utility rebate programs present some definite business opportunities for electrical distributors who take the time to learn their details of their local utilities’ rebate programs.

Howard Merson is the business development and sales manager for VEIC, Burlington, VT, a company that helps utilities across the country administer rebate programs and works with businesses, associations, and other entities on their energy solutions. He has a unique perspective on the role distributors can play because his family’s business, Southern Electric Supply, Meridian, MS, was actually the first U.S. electrical distributor purchased by Rexel. Merson worked for Rexel for quite a few years before getting involved with utility rebate programs over the past few years and joining VEIC in 2018.

Merson said that one interesting trend in the rebate world is that the electrical contractors who have expanded into HVAC work are learning how to utilize rebate programs for a broader selection of products. He also said distributors should check with their local utilities about when rebates may be available for smart load centers. Rebates for electric vehicle charging stations are also becoming more common, he noted.

“Lighting programs are not going away but they are changing, said NEEA’s Chris Wolgamott. “We are going away from widgets and going to systems.”

About the Author

Jim Lucy | Editor-in-Chief, Electrical Wholesaling & Electrical Marketing

Over the past 40-plus years, hundreds of Jim’s articles have been published in Electrical Wholesaling, Electrical Marketing newsletter and Electrical Construction & Maintenance magazine on topics such as electric vehicles, solar and wind development, energy-efficient lighting and local market economics. In addition to his published work, Jim regularly gives presentations on these topics to C-suite executives, industry groups and investment analysts.

He launched a new subscription-based data product for Electrical Marketing that offers electrical sales potential estimates and related market data for more than 300 metropolitan areas. In 1999, he published his first book, “The Electrical Marketer’s Survival Guide” for electrical industry executives looking for an overview of key market trends.

While managing Electrical Wholesaling’s editorial operations, Jim and the publication’s staff won several Jesse H. Neal awards for editorial excellence, the highest honor in the business press, and numerous national and regional awards from the American Society of Business Press Editors. He has a master’s degree in communications and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Glassboro State College, Glassboro, N.J. (now Rowan University) and studied electrical design at New York University and graphic design at the School for Visual Arts.

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