Navigating energy performance contracts: Lessons learned from the City of Jackson’s $90 million recovery for a failed water meter and billing system
As city and county governments face revenue shortfalls and budget cuts, many are turning to energy performance or energy savings contracts to update aging infrastructure. These agreements with contractors and service companies promise to finance the capital costs of infrastructure projects with “guaranteed” savings from improved energy efficiency and reduced operating expenses. Unfortunately, these contracts are often based on meaningless guarantees that do not deliver the promised savings.
In theory, such contracts are budget neutral, with the government entity’s capital costs recouped from savings generated by the project. But in practice, such savings may never materialize, leaving the government entity paying off expensive capital projects for years into the future with little or no cost savings.
Jackson, Miss., for example, signed a $90 million energy performance contract with Siemens for a new automated water meter and billing system. The agreement promised $120 million in “guaranteed” savings and increased revenue from the new water system.
Rather than delivering increased revenue and savings, however, the new system cost the city millions in lost revenue and increased operating costs. New water meters were installed incorrectly or never synced properly with the wireless network. This led to meter reading errors and transmission problems. The electronic billing system dramatically overcharged some residential customers, and it failed to issue any bills at all to some businesses and industrial water users. Despite the city’s efforts to correct the problems, the promised savings and revenue turned into a revenue disaster .
Jackson’s suit
As the water meter and billing system problems escalated, Jackson faced mounting pressure to take action. Local media coverage featured images of residents who received water bills for thousands of dollars. Other necessary infrastructure projects had to be put on hold, while the city faced looming bond payment deadlines for the new water system.
With the company claiming the problems were caused by the city using the system incorrectly, the city was forced to turn to the legal system.
Lawsuit recovered full cost of project
Jackson engaged legal counsel to evaluate the city’s claims against Siemens. The legal team spent more than six weeks laying the groundwork for a lawsuit, meeting with witnesses and performing a detailed review of the water meter system and the contract.
During their analysis, the city’s legal team discovered several technical deficiencies with the system, which, from the city’s perspective, doomed the project from the start. Despite the promise of increased revenue, the city’s legal team also found significant revenue shortfalls and increased costs of operating the complex new system. The contract itself failed to provide the financial protection contemplated by the governing statute because the guaranteed savings provisions did not reflect reality in the field. In fact, the city’s legal team questioned whether the water meter and billing system was even capable of providing greater energy efficiency and savings.
Based on these findings, Jackson filed a lawsuit. Among other things, the suit contended that the supposedly “guaranteed” savings were not possible and, as a result, the contract should be partially invalidated for its failure to comply with statutory requirements for energy performance contracts.
Six months after the city filed suit, the company agreed to settle for the full value of the contract. In addition to paying $89.8 million, the city was permitted to retain another $25 million in improvements to its wastewater treatment system completed as part of the project.
What cities and counties should consider before signing energy performance contracts
For the cities and counties across the country turning to energy performance contracts to update aging infrastructure, Jackson’s fight may provide some helpful lessons. Some tips for government officials considering such contracts include:
Avoid unnecessary scope items. Contractors may push to include items in the scope of work that are not priorities for the government entity. Be wary of expanding the project’s scope based on the contractor’s promise that the work will pay for itself.
Scrutinize “guaranteed savings” provisions. Guaranteed savings often have multiple components, including reduced energy and maintenance costs. However, the contract may not truly guarantee the recoupment of the specified dollar amounts. For example, certain savings may be “stipulated” in the contract. If those savings fail to materialize following the project, the government entity bears the burden of the shortfall. Benchmarks used to measure energy savings also may be skewed in favor of the contractor.
Beware of water meter system upgrades. Contracts to install new automated water meter systems often fail to guarantee actual savings or revenue. For these projects, the contractor may guarantee that an individual meter will accurately measure water consumption when tested in a lab. However, collecting revenue from water usage requires the transmission of accurate meter readings over the wireless network to the billing system. Without guaranteeing performance of the system as a whole, there is no real guarantee of revenue or “savings” of any kind.
Make the contractor pay for third-party verification. Ongoing measurement and verification of savings is critical for energy performance contracts. Rather than allowing a contractor to measure its own performance over a period of years, government entities should consider requiring the contractor to pay for independent testing of the project improvements to ensure savings are being realized.
No infrastructure project is immune to problems. However, when it comes to energy performance contracts, cities and counties should be wary of “guaranteed” projects that sound too good to be true.
John M. Johnson is a partner with Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC in Birmingham, Ala. Brian C. Boyle is a partner with Lightfoot, Franklin & White LLC in Houston, Texas. They represented the City of Jackson in its lawsuit.