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  1. Jul 4, 2024 · The company supplies gas to some 2.4 million households and also serves an additional 478,000 non-domestic customers. SSE held a domestic energy supply market share of between 13 and 12 percent...

    • Overview
    • Electricity Supply
    • Electricity Demand
    • Electricity Prices

    Download the data used to create this reportfrom the Ontario open data catalogue. Ontario Grid-Connected Peak Demand (Q3) 22,986 (MW) (Set on August 24, 2021, 5:00 pm EST) Source: IESO Ontario Grid-Connected Peak Demand (YTD) 22,986 (MW) (Set August 24, 2021, 5:00 pm EST) Source: IESO Source: IESO Source: IESO

    Monthly energy grid output by fuel type

    Ontario’s bulk electricity grid has a diverse supply mix, featuring baseload generators that provide energy around the clock, intermittent generators that generate when they are able (primarily wind and solar), and flexible generators that can change their output quickly (primarily natural gas). The data shown above is sourced from a report developed by the IESO. The report uses settlement data to provide information for all self-schedulers, intermittent and dispatchable Ontario generators re...

    Imports and exports

    Ontario is connected to a large, stable network of transmission systems across North America, which supports system reliability and economic efficiency. Imports compete against domestic generation to provide energy at the best possible price and to support the province’s needs during periods of high demand. Ontario also exports energy when it is economic, which helps to bring in revenue to offset other system and infrastructure costs and maintain system reliability during times of surplus gen...

    Installed capacity connected to transmission grid

    Changes to installed transmission grid capacity in this quarter highlight the continuing process of renewal in Ontario’s electricity sector. While nuclear, hydroelectric and natural gas resources accounted for the vast majority of system capacity, new wind, biofuel and solar generators continued to connect to the transmission grid. The IESO Active Generation Contract List provides the status of individual contracted electricity supply projects within different IESO procurement programs. The l...

    Electricity demand is generally shaped by several factors that have differing impacts – those that increase demand (population growth, economic change), those that reduce demand on the grid (conservation, embedded generation) and those that shift demand (time-of-use rates, the Industrial Conservation Initiative). The impact of each of these factors...

    Commodity cost

    Commodity cost comprises two components, the wholesale price (the Hourly Ontario Energy Price) and the Global Adjustment. The commodity cost is only a portion of the total energy bill. Source: IESO Source: IESO Note: Amounts do not reflect Global Adjustment Deferral or Deferral Recovery. Values may not add up to the total due to dollar values that are rounded down to cents. Related reports can be found at http://reports.ieso.ca/public/PriceHOEPAverage and http://reports.ieso.ca/public/GlobalA...

    Monthly wholesale electricity prices

    The wholesale electricity price fluctuates by the hour. This chart shows the average wholesale prices for each month. The monthly price varies depending on factors in the electricity market that shift the energy price higher or lower. A higher average monthly price exerts a downward pressure on costs that needs to be recovered through Global Adjustment.

    Time-of-use and tiered pricing under the Regulated Price Plan

    In accordance with the mandate provided under the Ontario Energy Board Act, 1998, the OEB developed the Regulated Price Plan (RPP), which provides residential and small business consumers with stable and predictable electricity pricing and encourages conservation. The plan has been in place since 2005. RPP consumers with eligible time-of-use (or "smart") meters that can determine when electricity is consumed during the day pay RPPprices under a time-of-use or tiered price structure. The price...

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  2. www.sse.com › about-us › our-businessesSSE Airtricity

    SSE Airtricity is the retail subsidiary of SSE plc, supplying green electricity, natural gas and energy-related services to homes and businesses in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.

  3. From 1 July 2024, eligible customers with Microgen will receive a standard clean export tariff of 19.5 cent per kWh, payable twice yearly. *Tariff discounts against SSE Airtricity standard electricity unit rates.

  4. SSE Airtricity is a subsidiary of SSE Business Energy and the third-largest utility in Ireland that delivers electricity to domestic customers who have standard credit meters, Economy 7, and prepayment meters. They offer tariffs that give customers discounts on their standard electricity tariffs.

  5. How many units of electricity or gas you used can be found on your bill. On the 'Details of Charges' page in the ‘Units’ column, next to your rate type/s; On the 'Usage Details' page, in the ‘Usage’ column

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  7. Apr 1, 2015 · SSE Airtricity are Northern Ireland’s biggest energy provider, supplying both natural gas and ‘greener’ electricity to over 300,000 homes and businesses.