Introducing the inaugural UtiliQ ranking of U.S. electric utilities – a list of the top 25 intelligent utilities based on a detailed analysis by IDC IDC Energy Insights and Intelligent Utility magazine. This ranking was developed in response to a number of issues and challenges in the rapidly evolving electric utility industry.
First, we wanted to separate the smart grid hype from reality. We defined an intelligent utility as a company that applies information to energy, maximizing its reliability, affordability and sustainability from generation to end users. Becoming a more intelligent utility requires more than just technology investments; it requires a real investment in people and processes, too.
Second, we wanted to provide a way for utilities to benchmark their intelligence and measure progress against their stated goals and objectives. We view the UtiliQ ranking as an ongoing effort that will evolve over time.
The current ranking is based on a company's performance using five quantifiable intelligence metrics:
- Productivity: An intelligent utility is an efficient utility (measured by revenue per employee).
- Renewable energy: An intelligent utility has a commitment to renewable energy as part of its resource portfolio (measured by renewable energy sales, renewable energy customers and renewable capacity).
- Smart initiatives: An intelligent utility makes investments in developing smarter grids (measured by smart meter deployments and other smart grid projects).
- Demand response/energy efficiency (DR/EE): An intelligent utility allows consumers to manage their energy usage and costs (measured by the availability of energy efficiency, demand response and load management programs).
- IT investment: An intelligent utility invests in information technology to enable business process improvement (measured by IT spending as a percent of revenue and on a per employee basis).
With the popularity of smart and intelligent themes, we couldn't resist providing the ranking in terms of a utility intelligence quotient (IQ). Taken together, the metrics are used to create a company's intelligence quotient. Companies with IQs over 120, in our analysis, exhibit very superior intelligence compared with other U.S. electric utilities. We believe that the few companies with IQs close to 140 are at near genius level compared with the rest of industry.
Looking Ahead
As the utility industry begins to move from the current energy economy, characterized by heavy reliance on fossil fuels, lack of energy security, high environmental impact, aging infrastructure and passive consumers, toward a new energy economy that includes increased use of renewable energy resources, less reliance on foreign oil, lower environmental impact, a smarter grid and active consumers, we expect these top 25 companies to lead the transition. Companies that want to make the list or improve their position should focus on these strategies and investments:
- Drive company cultural change: Becoming a more intelligent utility has a lot to do with people. Your employees need to understand your company's vision, your strategy for getting there, why it's important to all major stakeholders–including customers and regulators–and what this all means to your employees on a day-to-day basis.
- Improve processes for both "lean" and "green": For example, does a work order have to be 100 pages long and require a dozen approvals? Can waste energy be captured and used to create value? Efficient processes drive down the cost of maintaining the current environment and free up resources for innovation and growth.
- Make intelligent technology investments: Find ways to get the best return from your technology investments by ensuring that your spending on information, communications and energy technologies lines up with your enterprise strategies, enables process improvement, supports regulatory compliance and creates value for your customers.
UtiliQ ranking breakdown
| Company | Overall IQ | Productivity | Renewable energy | Smart initiatives | DR/EE | IT investment |
| Sempra Energy | 143 | 119 | 105 | 179 | 145 | 112 |
| Austin Energy | 141 | 118 | 110 | 179 | 150 | 135 |
| Edison International | 140 | 118 | 124 | 179 | 110 | 117 |
| Oncor | 139 | 117 | 100 | 179 | 130 | 119 |
| PG&E Corporation | 139 | 116 | 121 | 176 | 115 | 118 |
| CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | 137 | 130 | 100 | 176 | 110 | 118 |
| FPL Group, Inc. | 136 | 125 | 100 | 179 | 110 | 112 |
| American Electric Power Company, Inc. | 135 | 115 | 110 | 179 | 103 | 118 |
| Southern Company | 133 | 114 | 100 | 176 | 108 | 118 |
| Pepco Holdings, Inc. | 132 | 146 | 100 | 179 | 100 | 122 |
| Constellation Energy Group, Inc. | 130 | 144 | 100 | 176 | 110 | 121 |
| DTE Energy Company | 130 | 121 | 100 | 176 | 100 | 118 |
| IDACORP, Inc. | 130 | 111 | 102 | 176 | 128 | 132 |
| Xcel Energy Inc. | 128 | 123 | 165 | 103 | 114 | 123 |
| Alliant Energy Corporation | 126 | 116 | 110 | 176 | 115 | 112 |
| National Grid USA | 126 | 120 | 101 | 104 | 131 | 115 |
| Northeast Utilities | 126 | 122 | 100 | 151 | 128 | 118 |
| PPL Corporation | 126 | 117 | 100 | 179 | 105 | 119 |
| Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc. | 125 | 121 | 100 | 176 | 120 | 106 |
| Puget Energy, Inc. | 125 | 128 | 110 | 100 | 150 | 134 |
| Salt River Project | 125 | 114 | 100 | 124 | 110 | 140 |
| Bonneville Power Administration | 124 | 126 | 100 | 102 | 125 | 119 |
| Exelon Corporation | 124 | 122 | 108 | 125 | 110 | 118 |
| Pinnacle West Capital Corporation | 124 | 110 | 100 | 158 | 120 | 119 |
| Portland General Electric Company | 124 | 114 | 107 | 176 | 100 | 124 |
| Ratings | |
| 90-109 | Normal intelligence |
| 110-119 | Superior intelligence |
| 120-140 | Very superior intelligence |
| Over 140 | Near genius |
Note: Overall IQ is an average of the IQs for Productivity, Renewable energy, Smart initiatives, DR/EE and IT investment. Utilities participating in Top Knowledge Centers (listed in the March/April issue) received a bump up in their Overall IQ.
