Energy Taxes are Changing You can minimize their impact on your budget

Authors

  • Lindsay Audin President Energy-wiz, Inc.

Abstract

State and local governments receive significant revenue through
utilities, due both to taxes on power sales and on utility property.
When a state deregulates, it may alter how energy taxes are
charged, though such changes are not part of the deregulation
law. As a result, unsuspecting customers may find themselves
paying less for power and more for taxes.

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Author Biography

Lindsay Audin , President Energy-wiz, Inc.

Lindsay Audin (CEM, CLEP, CEP, IES), is the president of Energywiz, Inc., an energy consulting firm serving the competitive energy market, government agencies, large end users, and other consultants.

Audin has been named Energy Manager of the Year by three different national or regional organizations, most recently by the Association of Professional Energy Managers in 1995. In 1993, the Association of Energy Engineers (AEE) named him their International Energy Manager of the Year, and in 1996 inducted him into its Energy Manager’s Hall of Fame, the highest recognition in that field.

He served on the board of the New York Designer’s Lighting Forum, the Energy User News Technical Advisory Board, and an ASHRAE 90.1 technical committee. His column on lighting and energy issues has appeared quarterly in Architectural Record magazine since 1991, and his work appears frequently in energy-related publications and on such Web-based magazines as E-Source’s Power Tools.

Energywiz, Inc., One Everett Avenue, Ossining, NY 10562, 914-762- 4939, fax same; energywiz@aol.com; www.energywiz.com

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Published

2023-09-30

How to Cite

Audin , L. . (2023). Energy Taxes are Changing You can minimize their impact on your budget. Strategic Planning for Energy and the Environment, 20(3), 58–62. Retrieved from https://journals.riverpublishers.com/index.php/SPEE/article/view/20479

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Articles