Current Electricity Rates (Residential Rate Class)
Lists the current rates charged by electricity distributors to residential customers.
Lists the current rates charged by electricity distributors to residential customers.
Lists the current rates charged by natural gas distributors to residential customers.
Lists the historical distribution rates charged by electricity distributors for all rate classes, beginning in 2006. Each year, electricity distributors apply to the OEB requesting changes to their distribution rates.
Total number of complaints against electricity distributors received by the OEB from January 1 to December 31 of each year, beginning in 2013. Complaints made directly to the distributor are not reported here.
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2022.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2021.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2020.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2019.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2018.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2017.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2016.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2015.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2014.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/complaints_data_2013.xml
Lists historical Time-of-Use and Tiered electricity rates as established under the Regulated Price Plan.
Details on the funding awarded to intervenors each fiscal year in respect of their participation in OEB proceedings and consultations.
List of entities licensed by the OEB. In the electricity sector, the following persons must be licensed by the OEB: distributors; transmitters; generators; retailers; wholesalers; unit sub-meter providers; the Independent Electricity System Operator; and the Smart Metering Entity. In the natural gas sector, entities that are marketing natural gas to low-volume consumers must be licensed by the OEB.
The travel, meal and hospitality expense claims of OEB employees and appointees.
This section provides regular updates on the travel, meal and hospitality expense claims of employees and appointees.
This section will show the person’s name and title, purpose of the trip(s), date and destination of the trip(s), names of government/agency attendees if applicable, plus a summary of expenses for relevant air fare, other transportation, accommodation, meals, hospitality and incidentals.
The OEB has been posting expense information since April 2010. Expense claims are reviewed prior to posting, by the Integrity Commissioner of Ontario.
Expense claim information for cabinet ministers and political staff as well as agency senior executives, appointees and the top five claimants of the designated agencies can be accessed through the Government of Ontario website as soon as possible after the claims are reviewed by the Integrity Commissioner.
All claims for reimbursement for travel and other expenses must comply with the principles and rules of the Travel, Meal and Hospitality Expenses Directive.
The principles for reimbursement of expenses in the Directive include:
All expense claims are subject to oversight and approval and are reimbursed only if the expense is appropriate and reasonable.
Information on this website was accurate at the time of posting.
The MOU sets out the accountability relationship between the Minister of Energy and Mines and the Chair and Board of Directors of the OEB. It clarifies operational roles and responsibilities, and provides expectations for the operational, administrative, communications, financial, auditing and reporting arrangements between the OEB and the Ministry.
The electricity distributor scorecards measure how well Ontario's electricity distributors are performing each year. It is designed to encourage electricity distributors to operate effectively, continually seek ways to improve productivity, and focus on improvements that their customers value.
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2024.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2023.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2022.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2021.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2020.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2019.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2018.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2017.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2016.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2015.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2014.xml
https://www.oeb.ca/_html/performance/data/scorecard_data_2013.xml
The Ontario Energy Board (OEB) is pleased to present our 2025/26 to 2027/28 Business Plan (the Plan), which focuses on fiscal year 2025/26 and includes forward-looking preliminary budgets for 2026/27 and 2027/28.
The demand for clean, affordable and reliable energy is increasing rapidly. Ontario is advancing a competitive all-of-the-above approach to meet this challenge, including using nuclear, hydroelectricity, natural gas, wind, solar and other sources to meet growing energy demands while emphasizing the province’s energy transformation and electrification goals.
The OEB’s role in the energy sector has never been more important. Although change is happening, in the sector and within the OEB, we are focused and ready to deliver on our mandate.
This Plan lays out our near-term response: to provide strategic and prudent oversight of Ontario’s energy sector through initiatives that support broader government priorities such as planning for growth, keeping costs down, enabling energy system modernization and streamlining solutions that will make Ontario an energy superpower.
Our work plan is informed by the Ministry of Energy and Mines’ (the Ministry) 2024 vision statement, Ontario’s Affordable Energy Future: The Pressing Case for More Power (the Government’s vision), which identifies energy priorities and provides policy guidance to the OEB on how to act within its legislated authorities. The OEB will support delivery of this vision by performing its adjudicative and other regulatory functions impartially, efficiently and transparently.
The OEB recovers its operating and capital costs through assessments to the natural gas and electricity market participants that it regulates. The cost assessment model is the approach used by the OEB to allocate costs.
Contains the location data for electricity and natural gas distributors’ service areas that can be used in geographic information systems (GIS) applications.
1110 Highway 26
L9X 1N6
Canada
28 Athens Street
L9C 3K9
Canada
3650 Dixie Road,, Suite 103
L4Y 3V9
Canada
129 Wyndham St. N.
N1H 4E9
Canada
82 Erie Street, 1st Floor
Stratford N5A 2M4
Canada
1110 Highway 26
L9X 1N6
Canada
1110 Highway 26
L9X 1N6
Canada
99 Regina Street South
Waterloo N2J 4G6
Canada
135 Dawson St, Suite 201
Thessalon P0R 1L0
Canada
Use it to find case-related documents: Regulatory Document Search (RDS)
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