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"Give us your MPRN!"

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  • 05-06-2019 5:29pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 6,188 ✭✭✭


    We now find ourselves in the rather strange situation where at any one time there are the best part of a dozen companies running around the place vying to get their hands on that silly little number on your electricity bill. In order for them to send you a different colour bill for the same electricity that you have always been getting from the same place.

    Who came up with this nonsense? Surely the end result is just the granny who is with the ESB since rural electrification began cross subsidising the stingy person who can be bothered to switch provider every year since they all only do introductory offers. I can see why they would want to allow companies to supply power to the grid but why bother with the consumer side "switching" malarky at all and not charge everyone the same rate?


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 4,881 ✭✭✭TimeToShine


    The electricity market has been deregulated to incentivize competition which means more options for tax payers. If supply side electricity was sold to everyone at the same price these companies would have a monopoly over the generation side and generators would be shafted on their wholesale electricity prices.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    Its called competition. Why not just have just 1 company in every trade and industry and give the same rates


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,055 ✭✭✭JohnnyFlash


    The MPRN is an ESB Networks number. They run the electricity market in the background, so the supplier takes the MPRN and sends a message to ESB networks to change the supplier for the meter registered to that MPRN.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,188 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    The electricity market has been deregulated to incentivize competition which means more options for tax payers. If supply side electricity was sold to everyone at the same price these companies would have a monopoly over the generation side and generators would be shafted on their wholesale electricity prices.

    If the generators didn't like the price they wouldnt bother producing, possibly causing the price to rise. That shouldn't cause a problem if there are loads of different companies supplying. The whole consumer side switching provider thing seems like an awful waste of time


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,421 ✭✭✭SafeSurfer


    The electricity market has been deregulated to incentivize competition which means more options for tax payers. If supply side electricity was sold to everyone at the same price these companies would have a monopoly over the generation side and generators would be shafted on their wholesale electricity prices.

    It’s not just taxpayers who pay for electricity.

    Multo autem ad rem magis pertinet quallis tibi vide aris quam allis



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    If the generators didn't like the price they wouldnt bother producing, possibly causing the price to rise. That shouldn't cause a problem if there are loads of different companies supplying. The whole consumer side switching provider thing seems like an awful waste of time
    True, but the companies make a fortune out of getting you to switch, just look at the little industry that has been created out of nothing just so the consumer has a "choice".

    It's like going into a pub and the bar has five levers with different labels and prices, but they all go back to the same barrel.

    In reality if the "switching business" wasn't there, the cost to the end users should in theory be cheaper as an entire level of overhead is removed.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,660 ✭✭✭policarp


    SSE do a deal for a year. Give little bonuses like family membership for the zoo.
    Then if you dont renew you are back on the high tariff.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    True, but the companies make a fortune out of getting you to switch, just look at the little industry that has been created out of nothing just so the consumer has a "choice".

    It's like going into a pub and the bar has five levers with different labels and prices, but they all go back to the same barrel.

    In reality if the "switching business" wasn't there, the cost to the end users should in theory be cheaper as an entire level of overhead is removed.

    This "switching business" as you call it is why prices are low. What incentive would a company have of giving you the lowest price if a) it was the only 1 in town or b) you could not switch. This does not just happen with electricity/gas. You have insurance, petrol/diesel, oil. Hell even basic shopping for your groceries has a "switching business". The look what you can save from shopping with us as


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    This "switching business" as you call it is why prices are low. What incentive would a company have of giving you the lowest price if a) it was the only 1 in town or b) you could not switch. This does not just happen with electricity/gas. You have insurance, petrol/diesel, oil. Hell even basic shopping for your groceries has a "switching business". The look what you can save from shopping with us as

    Do you really believe that they compete to keep the prices down, it's only those who constantly switch who get the least highest price.
    They still have to pay for the additional costs involved in operating these companies.
    That extra layer isn't provided for free.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,188 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    Do you really believe that they compete to keep the prices down, it's only those who constantly switch who get the least highest price.
    They still have to pay for the additional costs involved in operating these companies.
    That extra layer isn't provided for free.

    True. All those TV advertising campaigns and door to door agents don't come cheap. Each electricity reseller needs its own billing systems and staff to run it.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    Do you really believe that they compete to keep the prices down, it's only those who constantly switch who get the least highest price.
    They still have to pay for the additional costs involved in operating these companies.
    That extra layer isn't provided for free.

    I know that but you can say about anyone who is looking for your business but you still haven't shown how having only 1 company will give you the low price what incentive do they have


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I know that but you can say about anyone who is looking for your business but you still haven't shown how having only 1 company will give you the low price what incentive do they have
    Depends on whether it's state owned or not, if its state owned, then the government department will already have a hand in to avoid unfair pricing.


    If privately owned with a contract to run the service, the government would step in and appoint another company to run the service.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    Talk to people when ESB and the telephone was state owned and asked would they like to go back. I suspect the answer would be no.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Talk to people when ESB and the telephone was state owned and asked would they like to go back. I suspect the answer would be no.
    The world has changed a lot since those days, the biggest difference is that now profits go to shareholders instead of to the state to reinvest in the country.


    Most people are not old enough to remember the state services anyway and the old equipment they had to work with.
    What can be achieved today by a few seconds of keyboard bashing and mouse clicks would have taken a phone engineering team several days back in the 1970s, because it would have needed physically going to several different locations and moving jumper wires.

    It really depends on whose pocket you want the profit to go into?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,598 ✭✭✭rizzodun



    It's like going into a pub and the bar has five levers with different labels and prices, but they all go back to the same barrel.

    I would've thought it would be like 5 different barrels all going through the same line to same lever... No?


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    Reinvest in what. The state will run everything and own it what shareholders. Competition is good. Why would a company compete for 1 job to have the job they would need the tools, people and if they lose what do they have. You will have 1 company and 1 price and it will not be the best. If you dont want to do the switching then do not i don't. Do not answer the door tell them no. People want choice


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    rizzodun wrote: »
    I would've thought it would be like 5 different barrels all going through the same line to same lever... No?
    No, the electricity that is flowing in the grid is already "blended" the customer is choosing which lever the barman pulls to supply the beer.

    You could also say there are five barrels going to one pipe (in the cellar) that splits out to five levers in the bar if you want, and that would also be correct, but the end user never knows or can control what happens at the start of the supply chain.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,188 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    Would d'EU give out to us if we tried to get rid of the switching business?


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    Would d'EU give out to us if we tried to get rid of the switching business?

    Yep competition rules. In fairness every industry has a switching business. We see and hear it everyday in ads. Supermarkets telling you how much you can save a shop, loans and mortgages with low low rates, car dealerships with finance deals etc and of course fuel at the pumps. Its not like electricity gas and oil are any different.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,188 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    Yep competition rules. In fairness every industry has a switching business. We see and hear it everyday in ads. Supermarkets telling you how much you can save a shop, loans and mortgages with low low rates, car dealerships with finance deals etc and of course fuel at the pumps. Its not like electricity gas and oil are any different.


    You are really getting it from the same place so in this case it's only pretend.



    A lot of the fixed line broadband switching business is only pretend as well. Switch from Sky to the almighty Vode and you're doing feck all really


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  • Registered Users Posts: 10,700 ✭✭✭✭martingriff


    You are really getting it from the same place so in this case it's only pretend.



    A lot of the fixed line broadband switching business is only pretend as well. Switch from Sky to the almighty Vode and you're doing feck all really

    Not broadband I have had a few broadband providers from dongles to Virgin and I can say they are not the same. Also you paying for the service provider and they also can be very different


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,188 ✭✭✭Ubbquittious


    Not broadband I have had a few broadband providers from dongles to Virgin and I can say they are not the same. Also you paying for the service provider and they also can be very different


    Not those. There's a bunch of the fixed line providers pigging off of BT Ireland which uses Telecom Eireann's network.



    I wonder would one be allowed to create their own grid. If you had a bunch of houses willing to sign up and a means of generating electricity would it be possible to bypass eirgrid?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,200 ✭✭✭Keith186


    SafeSurfer wrote: »
    It’s not just taxpayers who pay for electricity.

    I wish my electricity bill had no tax on it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,292 ✭✭✭0lddog


    You are really getting it from the same place so in this case it's only pretend.

    A lot of the fixed line broadband switching business is only pretend as well. Switch from Sky to the almighty Vode and you're doing feck all really

    From the suppliers point of view its not pretend, its an excuse to charge some people more.

    You should understand that much of EU regulation ( and expenditure ) exists due to corporate lobbying. ( the list is endless e.g. where carbon credits were gifted, the underwriting of the A380 development, wind turbine manufacture or Alcatel trams for almost every major EU city ......)


  • Registered Users Posts: 18,075 ✭✭✭✭namloc1980


    We now find ourselves in the rather strange situation where at any one time there are the best part of a dozen companies running around the place vying to get their hands on that silly little number on your electricity bill. In order for them to send you a different colour bill for the same electricity that you have always been getting from the same place.

    Who came up with this nonsense? Surely the end result is just the granny who is with the ESB since rural electrification began cross subsidising the stingy person who can be bothered to switch provider every year since they all only do introductory offers. I can see why they would want to allow companies to supply power to the grid but why bother with the consumer side "switching" malarky at all and not charge everyone the same rate?

    What could possibly go wrong with a monopoly.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    I love it when the state breaks up a hugely profitable state company, whose profits were being returned to the Irish people, and gives it to some private businessmen under the guise of encouraging "competition".

    With the acceptance of this rightwing "privatise everything" ideology, one of the greatest ways of redistributing wealth to the needy in our society becomes one of the greatest ways of redistributing wealth to a parasitic private enterprise class. No wonder inequality in the western world has, in fact, rocketed since the 1970s. Corporate welfare, everywhere. But, this being After Hours, let's focus on social welfare and ignore all these colossal handouts to "rightwing" businesses.

    Because, apparently, privatisation is more efficient - whether it's building hospitals on budget, broadband networks or motorways where the state guarantees a minimum income to the brave free marketeer. And of course if it goes belly up spectacularly you can be sure the taxpayer will be forced to come in and bail the great, efficient private business out. Such great risktakers we now have.


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