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Up to 1994, the New Zealand Electricity Market had a system of monopoly providers of generation, transmission, distribution and retailing. Since then, a step-by-step process of industry reform has led to the separation of the monopoly elements from the contestable elements to create competition in energy generation and electricity retailing. The industry is a mixture of state-owned enterprises, Trust Owned Companies and Public Companies. The wholesale market for electricity is administered by M-co (http://www.nzelectricity.co.nz/) on behalf of the New Zealand Electricity Commission. The main participants are the seven generator/retailers who trade at 244 nodes across the transmission grid. The generators offer their plant at grid injection points and retailers bid for electricity offtake at grid exit points. There is a Reconciliation Manager who reconciles all metered quantities, a Pricing Manager (M-co) who determines the prices at each node, a Clearing and Settlement Manager (M-co) who pays generators for their generation at the market clearing price and invoices all retailers for their offtake. Prices and quantities are determined half-hourly at each node. The transmission system is owned and operated by a state-owned enterprise, Transpower which performs the functions of Grid Owner, Grid Operator, Scheduler and Dispatcher for the wholesale market. Distribution of electricity from the grid exit points to the end consumers' premises is the responsibility of 28 distributors who have monopoly control of the lines services on their networks. Ownership of distributors, also known as lines companies, is through Trust Owned Companies or Public Companies. Consumers can choose from up to seven electricity retailers, who are also generators, for their energy supply. Competition for retail customers varies across the country but since 1999, when full retail competition was introduced, customers have switched at a rate of about 12% per annum. Regulation of the electricity market started in a light-handed fashion but there has been an increasing trend towards more heavy-handed regulation. Light-handed regulation is based on the Threat of Regulation providing an incentive on companies with market power to exercise self-regulation. The normal regulatory legislation such as the Companies Act, Electricity Act, Resource Management Act 1991, the Commerce Act 1986, and the Fair Trading Act 1986 provide the framework, for regulating normal commercial and environmental transactions. The government has increased the extent of intervention through the Electricity Industry Reform Act 1998, which forced power companies to divest either their energy or their lines business, and the Electricity Amendment Act 2001. The latter led to another round of industry reform concentrating on achieving better governance of the electricity market and tighter control of monopoly functions. The "Threat of Regulation" was extended to the production of a set of regulations that would be brought into effect if the industry's self-regulation did not meet the Government's criteria. On May 16 2003 the result of a referendum by industry participants and customer representatives on a proposed set of self-regulating rules was announced:
As there was not a substantial majority of all classes in favour of the proposal it was not implemented. The result put paid to the prospect of a multilateral agreement on the governance and operational arrangements for the electricity market. The New Zealand government invoked the regulations already prepared to meet this contingency. The "Threat of Regulation" had been insufficient to stave off regulation. On July 2 2003 a draft set of Electricity Governance Regulations and Rules was issued on behalf of the Minister of Energy by the Electricity Commission Establishment Unit (ECEU). This set was for consultation purposes and after submissions were received and reviewed, a set of regulations and rules was recommended to the Governor-General. In September 2003 a revised set of draft rules and regulations was issued by the ECEU for submissions by the end of October. The set did not include proposed transmission regulations, which were still being drafted. Also in September the Minister of Energy announced the chair and members of the Electricity Commission. Roy Hemmingway, whose most recent position was chairperson of the Oregon Public Utility Commission in the USA, will chair the Commission. The final set of Electricity Governance Regulations and Rules (excluding rules for transmission) became effective on 1 March 2004. The final chapter of the Electricity Governance Rules, on transmission, was gazetted on 28 April to become effective on 28 May 2004.
History of reformThe major milestones in the reform process in New Zealand between 1993 and 2004 were:
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