Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative Corporation Rate Selection Guide

Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative Corporation (AVECC) is a member-owned rural electric cooperative serving roughly 63,000 customers across western Arkansas and eastern Oklahoma. It runs the NISC SmartHub portal with Green Button Download My Data and is mid-rollout of Itron Gen5 Riva advanced meters with 15-minute interval capability.

Arkansas · Electric Cooperative·Regulated market·Fully supported by Nectar·Last updated June 4, 2026

Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative Corporation Rate Schedule Comparison

ScheduleTypeRateBest For
Small Commercial / General ServiceCommercialBasic charge + per-kWh energy + ECA (figures on APSC tariff)Small offices, shops, and light commercial loads without large demand.
Large Commercial / Demand ServiceCommercialBasic + per-kWh energy + per-kW demand + ECAMid-size commercial facilities with metered demand.
Large Power ServiceIndustrialBasic + per-kWh energy + seasonal per-kW demand + ECAIndustrial and high-demand facilities.
01

Market Overview

AVECC operates in Arkansas's non-deregulated market as a member-owned distribution cooperative under Arkansas PSC jurisdiction, with wholesale power from AECC. Members do not choose a competitive supplier; rates are set through the cooperative and APSC tariff process.

Market Type
Partially Deregulated
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative Corporation Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

AVECC rates are set by the cooperative and filed with the Arkansas PSC. The structures below reflect AVECC's published rate classes; specific commercial and large-power per-kWh energy and per-kW demand charges are not published as exact figures online and must be confirmed from the current APSC tariff sheets. Verified figures: the 2023 rate filing raised the single-phase residential Service Availability Charge from $21.00 to $28.50 and increased overall system revenue by 8.5% (effective April 2023). EIA reports an average delivered residential price of 13.32 cents/kWh for 2024.

Effective: April 1, 2023 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
Small Commercial / General ServicecommercialSmall commercial and general-service business accounts.Monthly service availability (basic) charge plus energy charge per kWh and Energy Cost Adjustment. Exact per-kWh figure on file with APSC; confirm current tariff sheet.
Large Commercial / Demand ServicecommercialLarger commercial accounts that exceed demand thresholds.Monthly basic charge plus energy charge per kWh and a monthly demand charge per kW, with Energy Cost Adjustment. Exact energy and demand figures on file with APSC; confirm current tariff sheet.
Large Power ServiceindustrialIndustrial and large-power accounts with substantial demand.Basic charge, energy charge per kWh, and seasonal/coincident demand charges per kW plus Energy Cost Adjustment. Exact figures on file with APSC; confirm current tariff sheet.
Irrigation / Agricultural ServiceagriculturalAgricultural irrigation accounts.Seasonal basic charge plus energy charge per kWh and demand charges; seasonal availability. Exact figures on file with APSC; confirm current tariff sheet.

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

🏢

Multi-site C&I energy manager

Centralize AVECC accounts and standardize data collection across sites.

Recommended:
Large Commercial / Demand ServiceLarge Power Service

AVECC has no aggregator API, so the practical path is consolidating sites under one MyAVECC login and routinely exporting Green Button usage per location.

Tips:
  • Link all locations under a single MyAVECC business login
  • Export Green Button XML monthly per site
  • Pull current C&I tariff sheets from APSC for accurate cost modeling
Est. monthly: Depends on demand and usage; confirm per-kW and per-kWh charges from APSC tariff.
📊

Energy consultant / auditor

Gather verified usage without a formal data program.

Recommended:
Large Commercial / Demand Service

Customer-mediated Green Button export is faster and more reliable than a utility data request, which can take 2-4 weeks.

Tips:
  • Have the client export up to 14 months of Green Button XML
  • Confirm meter type for interval granularity
  • Use a written authorization only when direct utility release is required
Est. monthly: N/A (advisory).
🔌

Data aggregator / SaaS platform

Evaluate integration feasibility before committing.

Recommended:
Large Power Service

There is no public API or CMD; integration requires a negotiated agreement with AVECC and NISC and is best justified by account volume.

Tips:
  • Support Green Button XML uploads as the baseline
  • Contact AVECC business development and NISC early
  • Scope a custom integration only with sufficient C&I volume
Est. monthly: N/A (platform-dependent).
🏭

High-demand industrial facility

Prioritize demand-charge control.

Recommended:
Large Power Service

Seasonal/coincident per-kW demand charges drive large-account bills more than energy volume.

Tips:
  • Model coincident peak against the current APSC demand rate
  • Shift flexible loads off peak windows
  • Use interval data to validate demand-reduction measures
Est. monthly: Driven by per-kW demand; confirm current APSC figures.

04

Historical Rate Trends

AVECC files rate changes with the Arkansas PSC. The most recent documented change was a system-wide increase effective April 2023.

April 1, 2023

System-wide rate change aligning rates with incurred costs; single-phase residential Service Availability Charge raised from $21.00 to $28.50.

+8.5%

Overall trend: Upward, driven by alignment of rates with incurred costs and rising wholesale power costs.

Next expected change: Not announced publicly as of June 2026; monitor APSC filings and AVECC news. Smart-meter modernization may influence future rate design.


05

Cost Optimization Strategies

Because AVECC C&I bills include a per-kW demand charge and an ECA pass-through, the main savings levers for commercial and industrial members are demand management, load shifting, and interval-data-driven monitoring.

Demand (kW) management

For: Demand-metered C&I accounts

Varies; demand charges are a major bill component for large accounts.

Stagger large equipment starts and use controls to cap coincident peak demand, directly reducing the monthly per-kW demand charge on Large Commercial and Large Power schedules.

Interval-data monitoring (Green Button)

For: All C&I customers

Indirect; enables targeted efficiency and demand actions.

Export Green Button usage and analyze 15-minute/hourly interval data to identify peaks, base-load creep, and off-hours waste.

Verify upgraded metering

For: C&I in upgraded areas

Indirect; improves analysis accuracy.

Confirm facilities are on Itron Gen5 Riva meters to access 15-minute interval data for more precise demand and energy analysis.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Arkansas Valley Electric Cooperative Corporation interval data →


06

Frequently Asked Questions

How can a C&I customer or energy consultant get AVECC interval data?

The most reliable path today is customer-mediated Green Button export. The customer downloads up to 14 months of ESPI XML usage from MyAVECC and shares it with the consultant. Where granularity matters, confirm the meter has been upgraded to an Itron Gen5 Riva (15-minute) unit; otherwise data is typically hourly. For named-party release, the customer can authorize AVECC to send data directly (allow 2-4 weeks).

Does AVECC offer Green Button Connect My Data or a third-party API?

No. AVECC supports Green Button Download My Data (manual export) but has not implemented Connect My Data automated authorization, and it does not publish a third-party API. Aggregators must negotiate a custom integration directly with AVECC and NISC.

Can a third party manage multiple commercial sites in one place?

Yes, within MyAVECC a business customer can link multiple service locations under a single login. A consultant typically operates under the customer's account or receives exports per location; there is no separate aggregator portal.

Is EDI available for commercial billing exchange?

No. Arkansas is a non-deregulated state and AVECC, as a regulated cooperative under the Arkansas PSC, does not maintain an EDI trading-partner program. Automated exchange for C&I customers must be arranged as a custom integration.

Who regulates AVECC's rates and where are tariffs published?

AVECC is regulated by the Arkansas Public Service Commission (APSC). Current tariff sheets, including commercial and large-power schedules, are filed in the APSC online tariff database. Rate changes are filed with APSC and posted to AVECC news.

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