State and Future of Power: Erik Larson

Deck: 

Guidehouse

Fortnightly Magazine - June 15 2020

Are utilities well-equipped for next generation Energy Cloud business models? What is your view on the industry's readiness? What can utilities do now to be ready? 

Next generation Energy Cloud business models are quickly gaining traction. Increasingly, customers seek choice, control, convenience, and cost-effective solutions that embrace a more sustainable, decarbonized future. 

Although policy and regulatory reform is an important driver of transformation, customer demand and technology innovation are relentless instigators of disruption.

Few utilities are at the forefront of disruption. Only one in four major utilities in the U.S. have made meaningful progress in developing future-oriented business models, according to Guidehouse analysis.

Only one in ten have done so proactively with little outside pressure from regulators, customers, or competition. The utility industry is behind on the business model innovation curve. 

That is precisely why our industry has become a ripe target for disruption from a diverse set of emerging non-utility competitors taking aim with equally giant ambitions.

Utility executives need to adopt an agile, dual-track approach to innovation. In the short-term, they must play defense by optimizing the current business model (commodity sales) and play offense by aggressively pursuing new business models.

There is opportunity in scaling new and improved customer journeys, new platforms to enable Vehicle-to-Grid and Building-to-Grid applications that decarbonize and digitize whole new systems, and new ways to drive energy efficiency, resiliency, and sustainability more effectively with less investment.

Utilities should tactically invest in disruptive platforms, partner with customers and innovative companies to codevelop better solutions, push for regulatory structures to maximize customer value, and encourage a startup culture of agility and innovation that makes transformation and reinvention the norm.

 

PUF posed a baker's dozen questions about power's future to a similar number of the thought leaders at Guidehouse:

  • Dan Hahn — You have a short elevator ride alone with the CEO of a major utility. What would you want to tell him or her?
  • Karin Corfee — What major changes have we seen over the last year to the key opportunities and threats utilities are facing? What can utilities do to be better prepared for these changes?
  • Erik Larson — Are utilities well-equipped for next generation Energy Cloud business models? What is your view on the industry's readiness? What can utilities do now to be ready?
  • Dan Bradley — How will utilities' relationships with their customers change over the next decade? How can utilities get ahead of this?
  • Ted Walker — We all hear of "as a service" offerings across many other industries. What does this mean for utilities? What does energy as a service look like?
  • Shannon Graham — How are European energy companies positioning themselves in a quickly decarbonizing market? What lessons can be learned from them for U.S. utilities? 
  • Derek Jones — Approximately one-third of energy use in the U.S. is for transportation. How can utilities tap into this market in a significant way?
  • David O'Brien — What are the major regulatory changes you see in the next decade?  What is needed from regulators to optimize outcomes for all stakeholders?
  • Margot Everett — What are the major changes to how utilities should approach rate design over the next decade to deal with challenging industry dynamics?
  • Michelle Fay — What will the utility of the future look like in 2030? How will it be different from today's utility?
  • Rick Rodman — How has risk management changed for utilities? What can utilities learn from other industries?
  • Jenny Hampton — How can utilities use design thinking to develop game-changing innovations? What lessons can be learned from other industries?
  • Danielle Vitoff — What role can utilities take in their customers' quest to decarbonize? How have we seen utilities shifting more decarbonization choices to their clients?