PRESIDENT’S POST
January 29, 2021
President's Post
Topics
SECC, 10 years, Industry Changes
Dear SECC members,
Much has changed in the energy industry in my 10 years as president of the Smart Energy Consumer Collaborative (SECC). As I step down from leadership, I would like to share my thoughts about the past decade and what I think the next decade will bring for SECC.
When I began my first day in January 2011, SECC was an unknown entity. Founded in March 2010, it was less than a year old with a mission to educate consumers on the concepts of grid modernization and understand consumer perspectives and awareness of the changing electric grid through foundational research. In 2011, the U.S. economy was struggling to recover from the Great Recession, and the federal government had passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to help stimulate the economy. The electricity industry received $4.6 billion, the majority of which was used to accelerate Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) deployments.
Unexpectedly, however, a backlash against smart meters occurred from some consumers who saw digital meters and their wireless transmission of data as threats to their health or privacy and from consumer advocates who viewed matching AMI investments as too much money for too little benefit. In response, SECC’s first two initiatives were developing a smart meter myth-busting video for consumers and completing research to understand consumer perspectives around grid modernization. SECC developed a residential segmentation framework (followed by SMB segmentation in 2018) that explains different motivations and attitudes consumers have around energy.
Now, 10 years later, SECC’s myth-busting work has mostly eliminated confusion and misinformation consumers had over the risks of wireless data transmission. We learned from our research that consumers embrace grid modernization and want more clean energy on the grid. Today, state regulators routinely require investor-owned utilities to include consumer education and major benefits for consumers before approving costly AMI investments.
What’s next? More changes at hand that are likely to be even bigger than those from the past decade. With the Biden administration’s plans to invest $40 billion in clean energy, Americans will likely hear more about clean energy in the next four years than in the past 40 years. Renewable energy is cheaper than most fossil fuels, energy innovation is accelerating, and, for the first time, the federal government will create a coordinated set of policies and investments to address climate change.
How will consumers respond? What do they want from these investments? And how can energy stakeholders assist them? These are important areas of focus next for SECC.
Independent of changes coming as a result of a new focus on climate change, the energy industry has seen tremendous growth in the past 10 years for rooftop solar, electric vehicles, battery storage, advanced lighting and the connected home. Decreasing prices and consumer comfort with technology mean these trends will continue. Beneficial electrification, which is critical for reducing carbon emissions and requires full consumer participation, is another area that will continue to grow, and SECC will follow last year’s study with a study on consumer barriers this year.
Societal changes must drive energy industry changes too, including a new focus on racial disparities in energy as a result of the shift in attitudes brought about by the Black Lives Matter movement. The widespread acknowledgement that inequities need to be addressed was seen in several industry studies and webinars, including a NARUC event in December on the intersection of COVID-19, the recession and race. I helped organize an important contribution to this area too – SECC will publish its first study, “Racial Disparities in Energy”, on February 17 with a briefing webinar the following day.
These are exciting times. As I step away, I am confident that my successor will lead SECC in these new directions and others yet to be identified. I know SECC’s mission to research and educate consumers is important, and it has been my honor to be part of a great organization.
Sincerely,
Patty Durand
About the President
Patty Durand
Smart Energy Consumer Collaborative President & CEO
I am the President & CEO of the Smart Energy Consumer Collaborative. Before coming to SECC, I worked for Georgia Tech, where I focused on smart grid research projects and helped to submit almost $10 million in grants to ARPA-E and DOE. Before that, I served as the Executive Director for the Georgia Chapter of the Sierra Club where I focused on energy policy and programs. I also served for two years on the Board of the Smart Grid Society for the Technology Association of Georgia.