Fort Loudoun Electric Cooperative (FLEC) Rate Selection Guide

Fort Loudoun Electric Cooperative (FLEC) is a member-owned cooperative serving roughly 36,300 meters across Blount, Loudon, and Monroe Counties in eastern Tennessee. FLEC has deployed Landis+Gyr AMI smart meters but exposes only a basic billing portal and mobile app — no Green Button, EDI, API, or formal third-party data program, so all advanced data access runs through manual customer-service requests with written authorization.

Tennessee · Electric Cooperative·Regulated market·Last updated May 28, 2026
01

Market Overview

Tennessee has no retail electric choice. As a non-PUC-regulated cooperative, FLEC sets rates through its board; rate schedules (residential, small demand, general service) are published on flec.org, with no data access tariffs or third-party data rules documented.

Market Type
Regulated (Monopoly)
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Fort Loudoun Electric Cooperative (FLEC) Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

Fort Loudoun Electric Cooperative (FLEC) is a TVA distribution cooperative serving Monroe and Blount County, Tennessee. Commercial accounts take service under TVA's General Power Schedule GSA, split into three parts by size: GSA-1 (under 50 kW and 15,000 kWh, energy-only), GSA-2 (50-1,000 kW, demand-billed above 50 kW), and GSA-3 (over 1,000 kW with tiered demand charges). Rates track TVA wholesale costs and include TVA's monthly fuel cost adjustment; FLEC's published rates were last updated effective April 2026.

Effective: April 1, 2026 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
Schedule GSA-1 — Small General PowercommercialCommercial accounts with demand under 50 kW and monthly usage under 15,000 kWhCustomer charge $32.50/month + flat energy charge $0.12369/kWh (inclusive of fuel adjustment components); no demand charge.$0.12369/kWh
Schedule GSA-2 — Medium General PowercommercialAccounts with demand between 50 kW and 1,000 kW, or under 50 kW with monthly usage above 15,000 kWhCustomer charge $150.00/month; energy: first 15,000 kWh at $0.12159/kWh, additional kWh at $0.07949/kWh; demand: first 50 kW free, over 50 kW at $18.71/kW.$0.07949-$0.12159/kWh+ $18.71/kW above 50 kW
Schedule GSA-3 — Large General PowerindustrialAccounts with demand greater than 1,000 kW (or 12-month highest billing demand above the GSA-2 threshold)Customer charge $350.00/month; energy: all kWh at $0.08001/kWh; demand: first 1,000 kW at $17.25/kW, 1,001-5,000 kW at $21.30/kW. Contract demand terms apply.$0.08001/kWh+ $17.25/kW first 1,000 kW; $21.30/kW above

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

📄

C&I billing data collection

Build a monthly PDF archive workflow from the FLEC portal — there is no machine-readable export.

Recommended:
General ServiceSmall Demand

PDF bills and portal views are the only documented formats; without CSV/XML or an API, disciplined manual archiving is the baseline for analysis.

Tips:
  • Enroll in E-Billing so bills arrive electronically
  • Download and file PDFs monthly per account
  • Request bulk billing history from customer service for backfill

Interval data for energy audits and demand analysis

Request 15-minute Landis+Gyr AMI data directly from customer service with a clear use case.

Recommended:
General ServiceSmall Demand

The AMI system collects interval data even though no self-service export exists; explicit requests citing account, date range, and CSV format get usable data in 1-2 business days.

Tips:
  • Phrase the request as '15-minute interval meter data for [account], [date range]'
  • Ask for CSV; accept PDF as fallback
  • Escalate to management if interval data is initially refused
🤝

Third-party energy management and aggregation

Negotiate a custom data-sharing arrangement backed by signed customer authorizations.

Recommended:
General Service

FLEC has no Share My Data portal, Green Button CMD, or aggregator partnerships — a written authorization plus a manually scheduled email/FTP feed is the only sanctioned path.

Tips:
  • Use an authorization letter covering billing, interval, and demand data with a 12-month validity
  • Expect NDA/legal review and possible fees
  • Renew authorizations annually and reconcile data periodically

04

Cost Optimization Strategies

As a TVA cooperative, FLEC passes through TVA wholesale rate structures, so savings come from operational levers rather than supplier choice: demand control on GSA-2/GSA-3, watching the 15,000 kWh and 50 kW class boundaries, and TVA EnergyRight incentives. The GSA-2 demand charge of $18.71/kW is the single largest controllable line item for most mid-size accounts.

Demand peak management

For: GSA-2 and GSA-3 accounts

$18.71/kW-month avoided on GSA-2; $17.25-$21.30/kW on GSA-3

GSA-2 bills $18.71/kW for every kW above 50, set by the single highest interval of the month. Stagger HVAC and equipment starts, interlock large loads, and use AMI interval data to alarm before a new peak is set.

Rate boundary awareness

For: Growing accounts near the GSA-1/GSA-2 boundary

Avoids structural overpayment; high-load-factor accounts save on the tail block

Crossing 15,000 kWh/month or 50 kW moves an account from GSA-1's flat $0.12369/kWh into GSA-2's demand-billed structure — which can cut energy cost (additional kWh at $0.07949) for high-load-factor accounts but raise it for peaky ones. Model both before adding load.

Load factor improvement on GSA-3

For: Industrial GSA-3 accounts

Each point of load factor improvement lowers the blended $/kWh

GSA-3's $0.08001/kWh flat energy rate rewards round-the-clock operation; demand charges punish short, sharp peaks. Shifting batch processes to flatten load improves the effective blended rate, and contract demand should be right-sized annually.

TVA EnergyRight business incentives

For: All commercial and industrial members

Rebates typically cover a meaningful share of qualifying upgrade costs

TVA's EnergyRight program offers commercial energy assessments, prescriptive rebates (lighting, HVAC, refrigeration, compressed air), and custom incentives delivered through local power companies like FLEC.

Fuel cost adjustment timing awareness

For: Energy-intensive flexible operations

Budgeting accuracy; modest savings from seasonal scheduling

TVA's fuel cost adjustment moves monthly with wholesale fuel markets. For energy-intensive seasonal operations with scheduling flexibility, tracking the FCA trend helps time discretionary production and budget accurately.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Fort Loudoun Electric Cooperative (FLEC) interval data →


05

Frequently Asked Questions

Can C&I customers get 15-minute interval data from FLEC?

Only by manual request. FLEC's Landis+Gyr AMI meters collect interval data, but there is no self-service export — call 1-877-353-2674 and request 15-minute interval meter data for your account number and date range, specifying CSV if available. Expect delivery by email within 1-2 business days.

Does FLEC support Green Button, EDI, or an API?

No. Despite its AMI deployment, FLEC documents no Green Button Download or Connect My Data, no ESPI/REQ.21 compliance, no EDI transaction sets (814/820/867/810), and no REST or GraphQL API. All programmatic-style access reduces to manual customer-service workflows.

How does a consultant or aggregator access FLEC member data?

Through a custom manual arrangement. Obtain a signed customer authorization letter covering billing, interval, and demand data; submit it to custserv@flec.org or by phone; negotiate a data-sharing agreement (possibly with NDA); and set up a scheduled email or file-transfer feed. Plan for days-to-weeks of setup and annual authorization renewals.

What billing data formats does the FLEC portal export?

PDF only. The portal at billpay.flec.org provides bill viewing, balance, payment history, and PDF downloads, but no CSV or XML export. For bulk billing history or custom formats, contact customer service at 1-877-353-2674.

Is FLEC regulated by the Tennessee Public Utility Commission?

No. As a non-profit member-owned cooperative distributing TVA power, FLEC is governed by its bylaws and board policies rather than the PUC, files no state tariffs, and faces no regulatory mandate to offer Green Button or third-party data access — which explains the manual-only data landscape.

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