ComEd Unveils 2030 Roadmap for Equitable Transition to Cleaner Energy
10 Enero 2023 - 12:25PM
Business Wire
“ComEd 2030” priorities support customers and
Illinois’ Climate and Equitable Jobs Act goals
To outline ComEd’s vision for how it will advance a low-carbon
energy future that benefits all of its customers and communities in
northern Illinois, the electric company today released its “ComEd
2030” vision. ComEd 2030 identifies key trends and priorities for
how ComEd will meet customers’ quickly changing needs and
expectations for the rest of this decade and beyond.
“The ComEd electric grid will need to work in new ways to enable
millions of electric vehicles hitting the roads and plugging in.
Customers will need easy ways to connect the many thousands of
clean distributed energy resources that are coming online, such as
wind and solar power and battery storage. And ComEd’s service must
remain highly reliable and resilient for customers as climate
change challenges us with more severe weather events,” said ComEd
CEO Gil Quiniones.
ComEd 2030 sets out a vision of how the company’s investments in
its infrastructure and customer programs can advance critical
policy goals, including the goals of the landmark Climate and
Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA), which aims to decarbonize the state’s
power sector by 2045. And it is consistent with the formal Grid
Plan for the years 2023 through 2027 that ComEd will present to the
Illinois Commerce Commission in January 2023.
ComEd 2030 Priorities
ComEd 2030 introduces five pillars that will guide ComEd’s work
for customers and communities:
- Carbon-free: ComEd expects its grid will be capable of
delivering 100%, 24/7 carbon-free power in northern Illinois that
will enable increasingly electrified transportation, building and
industrial sectors. In support, ComEd has set a 2030 target of
being able to support up to 1.8 million electric vehicles on the
road in northern Illinois.
- Flexibility and resilience: ComEd will adapt to and help
mitigate the impacts of climate change and other threats by making
its infrastructure stronger, more dynamic and capable of
withstanding increasing weather and security risks through careful
planning and investments.
- Efficiency and affordability: ComEd will provide service
that is more reliable at the lowest practical cost to its customers
by using technology that optimizes operations and efficiency and
minimizes costs.
- Empowerment and equity: ComEd’s service will be a
catalyst for positive community outcomes, innovation and job
creation across the region and especially in historically
under-resourced communities. To support this pillar, ComEd has set
a 2030 target of helping customers access up to $1 billion of
cumulative energy assistance.
- Simple and intuitive energy choices: ComEd will enable
its customers to make cleaner energy choices easily and
intuitively, bringing confidence and security into low-carbon
energy transactions. Under this pillar, ComEd has set a 2030 target
of safely and reliably integrating distributed clean energy
resources serving approximately 400,000 customers.
ComEd 2030 is centered on the more than 9 million people who
call the company’s northern Illinois service territory home, and
consistent with the CEJA law, focuses on ensuring that
under-resourced communities are prioritized in the region’s clean
energy transition.
“Most important is our commitment to make sure the benefits of
the digital and decarbonized energy future flow equitably to
communities with the greatest need,” Quiniones said. “ComEd is one
of the very few entities in the region that serves everyone.
Because we are a company that operates in the public trust, we have
a very special focus on community well-being, justice and
opportunity for all.”
Harnessing Customer and Industry Trends
ComEd 2030 identifies five key trends for the changing customer
needs ComEd will need to meet and its opportunities to provide more
value for all of the communities it serves:
- Entire sectors of the economy – including transportation,
buildings and industry – are electrifying to reduce reliance on
fossil fuels and carbon emissions that contribute to climate change
and localized air pollution that threatens public health.
- Renewable energy such as solar and wind, as well as innovations
like battery storage, are expanding rapidly and require a more
decentralized approach to supplying and managing the flow of
power.
- Volatile weather driven by climate change and other external
forces present risks to the continued reliability and resilience of
the electric grid.
- Technology is enabling customers to become more sophisticated
energy consumers.
- Technology is enabling electric companies to become better
operators.
In addition to being consistent with ComEd’s 2023-2027 Grid
Plan, ComEd 2030 is also coordinated with parent company Exelon’s
“Path to Clean,” which sets goals to reduce operations-driven
emissions across the company’s businesses by 50% by 2030 and
achieve net-zero operations by 2050. In addition to reducing
company emissions, Path to Clean is focused on supporting customers
and communities in reaching their clean energy and emissions
reduction goals.
A Position of Strength
ComEd 2030 builds on significant performance improvements ComEd
has made in the last decade to deliver safe, reliable, clean and
affordable energy to the more than 9 million people who call
northern Illinois home.
“To prepare for the digital and decarbonized future, ComEd has
important work ahead,” Quiniones said. “But we start from a
position of strength. In the last decade, we have transformed our
network into a modern grid. The value delivered to our customers
and communities has been substantial.”
ComEd 2030 outlines those areas of improved performance that
ComEd will build on, including:
- Reliability. ComEd customers experienced fewer power
outages than customers of any comparable U.S. electric company for
a fifth year in a row in 2021, according to a company analysis of
25 peer companies with 1 million or more customers. And, when
outages did occur, service to ComEd’s customers was restored as
fast or faster than customers of other comparable utilities.
- Value. ComEd customers’ bills have remained low compared
to others’. The average monthly ComEd residential bill in fourth
quarter 2022 was lower than the statewide average in 47 out of 50
U.S. states in 2021, based on U.S. Energy Information
Administration data. In addition, ComEd has saved customers more
than $7 billion on their bills since 2008 by providing tools,
discounts and incentives that help them manage their energy
use.
- Clean energy. There’s enough carbon-free power in
ComEd’s region today to meet all of its customers’ demand for
electricity 94% of the time year-round. ComEd also has connected to
its grid over 330 megawatts (MW) of rooftop solar across northern
Illinois, in addition to other renewables such as community solar
projects and wind energy, and CEJA is expected to drive significant
further growth in renewables in the region.
- Customer satisfaction. ComEd’s customer satisfaction
increased 25% from 2011 to 2021 as measured by JD Power, and it
continues to increase. This is due to strides in reliability and
value, as well as significant investments in customer tools and
capabilities.
Read the full ComEd story here.
About ComEd
ComEd is a unit of Chicago-based Exelon Corporation (NASDAQ:
EXC), a Fortune 200 energy company with approximately 10 million
electricity and natural gas customers – the largest number of
customers in the U.S. ComEd powers the lives of more than 4 million
customers across northern Illinois, or 70 percent of the state’s
population. For more information visit ComEd.com and connect with
the company on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.
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