the message board for Dubai English speaking community
Dr Strangeglove wrote:You guys can argue all you want, but that wasn't the intention of this thread. Don't we have enough of those already?
sage & onion wrote:Dr Strangeglove wrote:You guys can argue all you want, but that wasn't the intention of this thread. Don't we have enough of those already?
Your absolutely right, I still find it amazing how these people, a Dutch Guy who has never been to the UAE and an escaped criminal seem to think they know so much about me and how things work here.
Dr Strangeglove wrote:You guys can argue all you want, but that wasn't the intention of this thread. Don't we have enough of those already?
RobbyG wrote:Dr Strangeglove wrote:You guys can argue all you want, but that wasn't the intention of this thread. Don't we have enough of those already?
True. I think you should send it to DEWA headquarters and see how rapid your services will be revoked.
The contrary would be excellent service, but thats only in competitive markets.
What you say?
dee7o wrote:RobbyG wrote:Dr Strangeglove wrote:You guys can argue all you want, but that wasn't the intention of this thread. Don't we have enough of those already?
True. I think you should send it to DEWA headquarters and see how rapid your services will be revoked.
The contrary would be excellent service, but thats only in competitive markets.
What you say?
What competitive markets do you know of in the industry of electricity and water provision?
RobbyG wrote:Its a highly sophisticated system.
Bora Bora wrote:RobbyG wrote:Its a highly sophisticated system.
From what I gather, the system is more sophisticated than the people.
RobbyG wrote:Bora Bora wrote:RobbyG wrote:Its a highly sophisticated system.
From what I gather, the system is more sophisticated than the people.
True. Years of accumulation of incredible talent
Bora Bora wrote:
Unfortunately it didn't do much for the people themselves.
RobbyG wrote:Bora Bora wrote:
Unfortunately it didn't do much for the people themselves.
hold on...we got lower prices for electricity.
Bora Bora wrote:RobbyG wrote:Bora Bora wrote:
Unfortunately it didn't do much for the people themselves.
hold on...we got lower prices for electricity.
I see you have that "Dutch" thing going on with butchboy.
RobbyG wrote:Nah, he doesn't do it for me...
Lying Dutchwoman wrote:RobbyG wrote:Nah, he doesn't do it for me...
But he certainly does it for me
RobbyG wrote:Feisty. Give me a call when you had enough.
Lying Dutchwoman wrote:RobbyG wrote:Feisty. Give me a call when you had enough.
You can always visit me at Bethlehemsteeg 23 Amsterdam
Probably you have already seen me once or twice
RobbyG wrote:You're a long way from La Vie en Proost!
RobbyG wrote:I assume the rates in Dubai are more interesting for you?
RobbyG wrote:dee7o wrote:RobbyG wrote:
True. I think you should send it to DEWA headquarters and see how rapid your services will be revoked.
The contrary would be excellent service, but thats only in competitive markets.
What you say?
What competitive markets do you know of in the industry of electricity and water provision?
Well, for instance, lets take electricity in my country.
In the Netherlands we have a market with different players. You have electricity producers, suppliers, wholesale traders and infrastructure service companies all playing a part in the competitive value chain of electricity.
1. Major producers are: Nuon, Essent, Eneco, Delta, Electrabel, E-ON.
2. The wholesale traders program (PV party) is a system that is lawfully responsible to buy and sell electrity on energy exchanges, by means of energy futures or simply by intake/offload of under/oversupply to a supplier party in the Over-the-Counter market (OTC). This is also done with foreign producers who are connected to our energy infrastructure (Germany, Belgium, Norway and I believe the UK)
3. The semi-government owned company TeNNet it responsible for nationwide servicing of the infrastructure (high voltage part, fixed fee). The regional suppliers and service providers are responsible for (high and low voltage) distribution and low voltage infrastructure depending on demand.
Both private households and business companies can choose the supplier they want based on price data per hour. You can lock your energy price or keep it variable and your contract can be changed every year. The biggest suppliers also have PV party inhouse, so they buy and sell their own electricity to take every competitive advantage available in the market place.
Its a highly sophisticated system.
RobbyG wrote:I can imagine. But no, we haven't met. Never been there before.
What brings you to DF?
So what happens if TeNNet doesn't cut it? You still have an absolute monopoly in nationwide electricity distribution. If this TeNNet fails to produce the goods for whatever reason, the whole system is fried. Imagine this company was DEWA. Just because they distribute to other companies down the line and allow you to deal with them does not mean your service comes from multiple sources. No matter how good the rest of the links in this chain are, if TeNNet sucks, the whole system sucks. I admit, it is more sophisticated and probably much better than what we have here but has a very similar disadvantage of reliance on a single entity for the whole cycle to function.
dee7o
Dubai forums Addict
Posts: 320
Joined: 27 Feb 2009, 07:39
dude91x wrote:I hope dewa is reading all this