Tex. Utils. Code Section 39.107
Metering and Billing Services


(a)

On introduction of customer choice in a service area, metering services for the area shall continue to be provided by the transmission and distribution utility affiliate of the electric utility that was serving the area before the introduction of customer choice. Metering services provided to commercial and industrial customers that are required by the independent system operator to have an interval data recorder meter may be provided on a competitive basis.

(b)

Metering services provided to residential customers and to nonresidential customers other than those required by the independent system operator to have an interval data recorder meter shall continue to be provided by the transmission and distribution utility affiliate of the electric utility that was serving the area before the introduction of customer choice. Retail electric providers serving residential and nonresidential customers other than those required by the independent system operator to have an interval data recorder meter may request that the transmission and distribution utility provide specialized meters, meter features, or add-on accessories so long as they are technically feasible and generally available in the market and provided that the retail electric provider pays the differential cost of such a meter or accessory. Metering and billing services provided to residential customers shall be governed by the customer safeguards adopted by the commission under Section 39.101 (Customer Safeguards). All meter data, including all data generated, provided, or otherwise made available, by advanced meters and meter information networks, shall belong to a customer, including data used to calculate charges for service, historical load data, and any other proprietary customer information. A customer may authorize its data to be provided to one or more retail electric providers under rules and charges established by the commission.

(c)

Beginning on the date of introduction of customer choice in a service area, tenants of leased or rented property that is separately metered shall have the right to choose a retail electric provider, an electric cooperative offering customer choice, or a municipally owned utility offering customer choice, and the owner of the property must grant reasonable and nondiscriminatory access to transmission and distribution utilities, retail electric providers, electric cooperatives, and municipally owned utilities for metering purposes.

(d)

Beginning on the date of introduction of customer choice in a service area, a transmission and distribution utility, or an electric cooperative or municipally owned utility providing the customer’s energy requirements shall bill a customer’s retail electric provider for nonbypassable delivery charges as determined under Section 39.201 (Cost of Service Tariffs and Charges). The retail electric provider or the electric cooperative or municipally owned utility, as appropriate, must pay these charges.

(e)

A transmission and distribution utility may bill retail customers at the request of a retail electric provider or, if an electric cooperative or municipally owned utility is providing the customer’s energy requirements, at the request of the electric cooperative or municipally owned utility. A transmission and distribution utility that provides billing service on such request shall offer billing service on comparable terms and conditions to those of any such requesting retail electric provider or, as applicable, the electric cooperative or municipally owned utility providing energy requirements to a customer served by the transmission and distribution utility.

(f)

Beginning on the date of introduction of customer choice in a service area, any charges for metering and billing services shall comply with rules adopted by the commission relating to nondiscriminatory rates of service.

(g)

Metered electric service sold to residential customers on a prepaid basis may not be sold at a price that is higher than the price charged by the provider of last resort.

(h)

The commission shall establish a nonbypassable surcharge for an electric utility or transmission and distribution utility to use to recover reasonable and necessary costs incurred in deploying advanced metering and meter information networks to residential customers and nonresidential customers other than those required by the independent system operator to have an interval data recorder meter. The commission shall ensure that the nonbypassable surcharge reflects a deployment of advanced meters that is no more than one-third of the utility’s total meters over each calendar year and shall ensure that the nonbypassable surcharge does not result in the utility recovering more than its actual, fully allocated meter and meter information network costs. The expenses must be allocated to the customer classes receiving the services, based on the electric utility’s most recently approved tariffs.

(i)

Subject to the restrictions in Subsection (h), it is the intent of the legislature that net metering and advanced meter information networks be deployed as rapidly as possible to allow customers to better manage energy use and control costs, and to facilitate demand response initiatives.

(j)

Notwithstanding Subsection (b), a nonresidential customer may have a meter installed and metering services provided on a competitive basis as part of an energy savings performance contract.

(k)

The commission by rule shall prohibit an electric utility or transmission and distribution utility from selling, sharing, or disclosing information generated, provided, or otherwise collected from an advanced metering system or meter information network, including information used to calculate charges for service, historical load data, and any other customer information. The commission shall allow an electric utility or transmission and distribution utility to share information with an affiliated corporation, or other third-party entity, if the information is to be used only for the purpose of providing electric utility service to the customer or other customer-approved services.
Added by Acts 1999, 76th Leg., ch. 405, Sec. 39, eff. Sept. 1, 1999.
Amended by:
Acts 2005, 79th Leg., Ch. 1095 (H.B. 2129), Sec. 7, eff. September 1, 2005.
Acts 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., Ch. 527 (S.B. 831), Sec. 10, eff. June 16, 2007.
Acts 2007, 80th Leg., R.S., Ch. 939 (H.B. 3693), Sec. 20, eff. September 1, 2007.
Acts 2009, 81st Leg., R.S., Ch. 87 (S.B. 1969), Sec. 27.001(110), eff. September 1, 2009.
Acts 2013, 83rd Leg., R.S., Ch. 170 (H.B. 1600), Sec. 1.07, eff. September 1, 2013.

Source: Section 39.107 — Metering and Billing Services, https://statutes.­capitol.­texas.­gov/Docs/UT/htm/UT.­39.­htm#39.­107 (accessed Jun. 5, 2024).

39.001
Legislative Policy and Purpose
39.002
Applicability
39.003
Contested Cases
39.051
Unbundling
39.052
Freeze on Existing Retail Base Rate Tariffs
39.053
Cost Recovery Adjustments
39.054
Retail Electric Service During Freeze Period
39.055
Force Majeure
39.101
Customer Safeguards
39.102
Retail Customer Choice
39.103
Commission Authority to Delay Competition and Set New Rates
39.104
Customer Choice Pilot Projects
39.105
Limitation on Sale of Electricity
39.106
Provider of Last Resort
39.107
Metering and Billing Services
39.108
Contractual Obligations
39.109
New Owner or Successor
39.110
Wholesale Indexed Products Prohibited
39.112
Notice of Expiration and Price Change
39.151
Essential Organizations
39.152
Qualifying Power Regions
39.153
Capacity Auction
39.154
Limitation of Ownership of Installed Capacity
39.155
Commission Assessment of Market Power
39.156
Market Power Mitigation Plan
39.157
Commission Authority to Address Market Power
39.158
Mergers and Consolidations
39.159
Power Region Reliability and Dispatchable Generation
39.160
Wholesale Pricing Procedures
39.161
Charges for Certain Market Participants
39.162
Default of Market Participant
39.163
Amounts Owed to Independent Organization by Market Participants
39.164
Audit of Independent Organization Certified for Ercot Power Region
39.165
Grid Reliability Assessment
39.166
Reliability Plan for Regions with Rapid Electrical Load Growth
39.167
Reliability Plan for Permian Basin
39.168
Retail Sales Report
39.201
Cost of Service Tariffs and Charges
39.202
Price to Beat
39.203
Transmission and Distribution Service
39.204
Tariffs for Open Access
39.205
Regulation of Costs Following Freeze Period
39.206
Nuclear Generating Unit Decommissioning Cost Plan
39.251
Definitions
39.252
Right to Recover Stranded Costs
39.253
Allocation of Stranded Costs
39.254
Use of Revenues for Utilities with Stranded Costs
39.255
Use of Revenues for Utilities with No Stranded Costs
39.256
Option to Redirect Depreciation
39.257
Annual Report
39.258
Annual Report: Determination of Annual Costs
39.259
Annual Report: Determination of Invested Capital
39.260
Use of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
39.261
Review of Annual Report
39.262
True-up Proceeding
39.263
Stranded Cost Recovery of Environmental Cleanup Costs
39.265
Rights Not Affected
39.301
Purpose
39.302
Definitions
39.303
Financing Orders
39.304
Property Rights
39.305
No Setoff
39.306
No Bypass
39.307
True-up
39.308
True Sale
39.309
Security Interests
39.310
Pledge of State
39.311
Tax Exemption
39.312
Not Public Utility
39.313
Severability
39.351
Registration of Power Generation Companies
39.352
Certification of Retail Electric Providers
39.353
Registration of Aggregators
39.354
Registration of Municipal Aggregators
39.355
Registration of Power Marketers
39.356
Revocation of Certification
39.357
Administrative Penalty
39.358
Local Registration of Retail Electric Provider
39.359
Bill Payment Assistance for Burned Veterans
39.360
Transactions with Certain Foreign-owned Companies in Connection with Critical Infrastructure
39.401
Applicability
39.402
Regulation of Utility and Transition to Competition
39.407
Customer Choice and Relevant Market and Related Matters
39.408
Hiring Assistance for Federal Proceedings
39.409
Recoupment of Transition to Competition Costs
39.410
Contractual Obligations
39.451
Applicability
39.452
Regulation of Utility and Transition to Competition
39.453
Customer Choice and Relevant Market and Related Matters
39.454
Recoupment of Transition to Competition Costs
39.455
Recovery of Incremental Capacity Costs
39.456
Franchise Agreements
39.457
Contractual Rights
39.461
Nonbypassable Charges
39.462
Determination of Hurricane Reconstruction Costs
39.463
Severability
39.501
Applicability
39.502
Cost-of-service Regulation
39.503
Transition to Competition
39.504
Hiring Assistance for Federal Proceedings
39.551
Applicability
39.552
Cost-of-service Regulation
39.553
Transition to Competition
39.554
Interconnection of Distributed Renewable Generation
39.555
Marketing of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Programs
39.601
Purpose
39.602
Definitions
39.603
Debt Obligation Order
39.604
Commission-authorized Financing
39.605
Default Charges Nonbypassable
39.606
True-up Mechanism
39.607
Tax Exemption
39.608
Property Rights
39.609
Pledge of State
39.651
Purpose
39.652
Definitions
39.653
Debt Obligation Order
39.654
Commission-authorized Financing
39.655
Other Financial Mechanism
39.656
Uplift Charges Nonbypassable
39.657
True-up
39.658
Tax Exemption
39.659
Severability
39.660
Customer Charges
39.661
Enforcement
39.662
Property Rights
39.663
Pledge of State
39.664
Legal Actions Involving Pricing or Uplift Actions
39.902
Customer Education
39.903
System Benefit Fund
39.905
Goal for Energy Efficiency
39.906
Displaced Workers
39.908
Effect of Sunset Provision
39.909
Plan and Report of Workforce Diversity and Other Business Practices
39.910
Incentive Program and Goal for Energy Efficiency for Military Bases
39.911
Alternative Funding for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Systems
39.912
Report on Combined Heating and Power Technology
39.913
Combining Certain Reports
39.914
Credit for Surplus Solar Generation by Public Schools
39.915
Consideration and Approval of Certain Transactions
39.916
Interconnection of Distributed Renewable Generation
39.917
Texas Electric Grid Security Council
39.918
Utility Facilities for Power Restoration After Significant Power Outage
39.919
Average Total Residential Load Reduction Goals
39.1025
Limitations on Telephone Solicitation
39.1511
Public Meetings of the Governing Body of an Independent Organization
39.1512
Disclosure of Interest in Matter Before Independent Organization’s Governing Body
39.1513
Ercot Board Selection Committee
39.1514
Commission Directives to Independent Organization
39.1515
Wholesale Electric Market Monitor
39.1516
Cybersecurity Monitor
39.1591
Report on Dispatchable and Non-dispatchable Generation Facilities
39.1592
Generation Reliability Requirements
39.1593
Cost Allocation of Reliability Services
39.1594
Reliability Program
39.1595
Grid Reliability Legislative Oversight Committee
39.3515
Aggregate Distributed Energy Resources
39.3535
Military Bases Aggregators
39.3545
Registration of Political Subdivision Aggregators
39.3555
Registration of Brokers
39.4525
Hiring Assistance for Federal Proceedings
39.5021
Metering
39.5521
Metering
39.9016
Nuclear Safety Fee
39.9025
Home Electric Energy Reports
39.9044
Goal for Natural Gas
39.9048
Natural Gas Fuel
39.9051
Energy Efficiency for Municipally Owned Utilities
39.9052
Energy Efficiency for Electric Cooperatives
39.9054
Energy Efficiency Plans and Reports
39.9055
Examination of Demand Response Potential of Seawater Desalination Projects
39.9111
Rules Related to Renewable Power Facilities
39.9112
Report on Transmission and Generation Capacity
39.9113
Renewable Energy Credits
39.9165
Distributed Generation Facility Reporting

Accessed:
Jun. 5, 2024

§ 39.107’s source at texas​.gov