Electric Utility Rates
Marginal Cost Electric Rates: Another Option for Large Customers
What Are Marginal Cost Electric Rates?
Understanding marginal electric costs is essential for pricing, economic efficiency, and energy policy decisions. The marginal cost of electricity is the additional cost incurred to generate one more unit of electricity — it represents the variable costs associated with producing and delivering electricity in the short term.
Marginal cost rates differ from traditional cost of service rates, which are designed to recover all fixed and variable costs of a utility. Marginal rates focus specifically on the incremental cost of the next unit of production, making them especially relevant for large load additions and deregulated market pricing.
Components of the Marginal Cost of Electricity
Fuel Costs
For coal, natural gas, or oil plants, marginal cost includes the cost of purchasing and burning additional fuel to produce more electricity.
Variable O&M Costs
Operations and maintenance costs that vary with production — labor, maintenance, and repair expenses of running the plant.
Generation Efficiency
More efficient plants have lower marginal costs because they require less fuel to produce the same amount of electricity.
Renewable Integration
Wind and solar have very low marginal costs once infrastructure is in place, but variability can require backup generation costs.
Market Conditions
In deregulated electricity markets, marginal costs fluctuate based on the impact of pricing on supply and demand.
Transmission Congestion
When transmission capacity is constrained, nodal prices rise — driving up costs in ways that cannot always be recovered.
Demand Response
Programs that reduce demand during peak periods can drive down marginal costs by reducing congestion charges.
Energy Storage
Storage technologies reduce marginal costs by shifting generation to off-peak times. This effect will grow as storage deployment increases.
Deepen Your Rate Design Knowledge
Explore on-demand courses covering cost of service, marginal cost pricing, rate design, and more — eligible for NASBA CPE credit.
Browse All Courses →Marginal Rates: One More Option to Match Rates to Changes in Electric Production
Marginal cost rates can be developed for large load additions to an electric cooperative or utility customer base. Once base load infrastructure costs have been covered by rates, the additional costs incurred by adding a larger customer load can be determined and added to the cost of service allocation for that customer.
The key distinction: Time-of-use rates are designed to alter customer behavior — but they may not forestall infrastructure needs. The marginal cost approach allows a transition between current resources and additions to the co-op or utility load curve, providing a rational basis for pricing incremental capacity.
This approach is particularly relevant as large industrial customers, data centers, and electric vehicle fleets seek to connect to utility systems. Rather than averaging their costs into the general rate base — potentially disadvantaging existing customers — marginal cost rates allow the utility to price the true incremental cost of adding that load.
When to Consider Marginal Cost Rates
- A large industrial customer is requesting a new or expanded service connection
- A data center or other high-load customer wants to locate in your service territory
- Infrastructure upgrades would be required specifically to serve a new large load
- The utility wants to price new load growth in a way that does not burden existing ratepayers
- The utility operates in a partially deregulated market where marginal pricing signals are relevant
About the Author
Russ Hissom, CPA is a principal of UtilityEducation.com , providing on-demand professional education classes in FERC, RUS, FASB, and GASB accounting, finance, ratemaking, artificial intelligence, and management for electric, gas, wastewater, and water utilities and electric cooperatives.
Contact Russ at [email protected]
The material in this article is for informational purposes only and should not be taken as legal or accounting advice provided b