Data points:
- Monthly minimum rate jumps from $5.50 to $10.64.
- Old plan: $5.50 minimum and 7.8 cents/kwh.
- New plan: $10.64 minimum and 7.6 cents/kwh.
- If I read that correctly, if your usage exceeds 140 kwh, you would be paying 7.6 cents/kwh. If your usage is less, your rate/kwh would be higher.
- But the article says the average user would pay almost $2.00 more a month.
- So I must be interpreting the article incorrectly (wouldn't be the first time).
- Under the new rate plan, a residential customer will pay a $10.64 minimum monthly charge and 7.6 cents per kilowatt-hour of electricity used. When the rate case was filed, customers were paying a $5.50 minimum and 7.8 cents per kwh.
- An average residential MDU customer who uses 750 kwh per month will pay almost $2 more a month for electricity than they were paying under the original rate structure, the commission said.
Apparently, some customers will pay more than $10.64 for the minimum monthly charge but all will pay 7.4 cents/kwh.
Wind power related costs
During the commission's debate on the rate increase, Cramer pushed to have the PSC's final order exclude two Montana-Dakota wind power projects near Baker, Mont., in southeastern Montana. The Diamond Willow projects cost $65 million to build and are capable of generating about 30 megawatts of electricity.
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