Virtual assistant
Installer
Planning
Installer getting started guide (read first)
Overall site planning
Climkit Site Implementation Process
Climkit Gateway and communication
Planning electricity and RCP management
Planning electric vehicle charging station management
Planning heating, water and ancillary cost management
Planning collective laundry room management
Planning charging management for electric bikes
General terms and conditions of sale
Platform configuration
Request for an installer account
Creating a new site
Adding a router (4G or LAN)
Adding the Climkit Gateway
Adding electricity meters
Registering the photovoltaic installation information
Save battery information
Adding charging stations
Adding an OCPP Remote Charging Station
Adding a 4-relay I/O module
Adding RFID readers
Adding Heat and Water Meters
Installation and connection
Install a 4G Router
Install a LAN router
Install the Climkit Gateway
Install the RS485-Ethernet converter
Install the M-Bus converter
Install a PoE switch
Installing Wi-Fi access points
Installing electricity meters
Installing charging stations
Install the heat and water meters
Install an RFID badge reader
Install a three-phase relay meter
Install a Shelly relay meter
Install the 4-relay I/O module
Verification and tests
Owner
Administrative setup
Getting Started Guide - administrative setup
Form - 1. Contact information
Form - 2. Solutions
Form - 3. Rates
Contract and documents to complete
Account online for owners
Consumer information flyers
Online access, RFID badge, and charging stations
FAQ and other information
Resident
Account and App
Electricity bill
Electric vehicle charging station
Collective laundry room
eBike Charging
Platform
Platform access
Terminologie
Site
Parameters
Creation/editing of a note or to-do item
Close an issue to be processed
Site status
Add/Modify building(s)
The steps for setting up a site
Delete/deactivate a site
Add/Edit Equipment(s)
Modify site basic information
Equipment
Add/modify a gateway
Add/modify a router
Add/modify an electricity meter
Bulk meter insertion
Mass assignment of meters to a Gateway
Add/modify a distribution zone
Add/edit a charging station
Add/edit a thermal or water meter
Add/edit a DSO meter (FTP transfer)
Remote connection to a Climkit gateway
Administration
Stakeholders
Management conditions
Viewing site management conditions
Activating/deactivating a solution
Operating method configuration
Viewing financial conditions
Creation/editing/adding a financial condition
Deleting a financial condition
Accounts
Create a consumer account
Create a contact
View and download account invoices
Send access to the platform to a contact
Add/modify the billing address
Link an existing account to a site
Changing the correspondence method
Rates and billing points
Creation/editing of a billing point
Registering a move (change of address)
Assigning an account to a billing point
Add/modify default charge advance payment for a billing point
View site consumption rates
Tariff definition based on consumption
Creation/editing of a consumption rate
Creation/editing of a tariff component
See fixed rates and subscriptions
Customizing Invoice Position Labels
View the Financial conditions billed at the billing points
RFID badge
Accounting
Tools
Meter control
Visualization
Expense statements
Introduction to the Expense Statement Tool
Create/edit an accounting period
Modify expense statement parameters
Add/edit a general expenses invoice for an expense statement
Edit advance payments collected on an expense statement
Specifics of heating and hot water production costs
Check and download meter readings for the billing period
Distribute costs and generate expense statements
Exporting individual consumption data for the billing statement period
API
- Categories
- Owner
- FAQ and other information
- Billing in the context of RCP
Billing in the context of RCP
Updated
by Nicolas Vodoz
Within the scope of an RCP, the Owner (or the SME) becomes the electricity supplier for building Residents, assuming responsibilities usually allocated to the Distribution system operator (DSO). This includes investment, energy supply, facility maintenance, as well as metering and consumption billing services.
Article 16 of the Swiss Energy Ordinance (OEne) specifies how to calculate the prices charged to consumers. The objective is to make the investments made by the Owner profitable while protecting tenants from potential abuses. In the context of an SME, co-owners are free to apply whatever tariffs they wish.
Here are the 4 cost elements to consider in pricing:
1. Electricity drawn from the grid
The costs for electricity drawn from the grid include all elements billed by the DSO to the RCP: energy, grid usage, taxes, and the Input meter subscription.
These costs are recharged to consumers identically, without any margin for the Owner.
However, in the context of a microgrid where several buildings are connected to the same grid connection point, the Owner establishes a tariff to cover investments and maintenance costs related to the building connections (wiring, transformers, etc.). In this case, the price charged to consumers is determined according to the effective cost method for solar electricity, as explained below.
2. Solar electricity
The costs for internally produced electricity are covered by the sale of photovoltaic electricity to consumers and by the resale of the surplus fed into the DSO grid. The regulation offers two methods for setting the tariff for solar electricity sold to member consumers of the RCP:
- The lump sum: The tariff is a maximum of 80% of the standard electricity tariff (without peak/off-peak time consideration) of the DSO, which the consumer would pay if they were not an RCP member. In this case, the tariff does not need to be justified to the tenants.
- Effective costs: The tariff is calculated based on the effective costs of electricity production after deducting revenue from surplus sales. If the calculated tariff is lower than the standard product tariff, the difference is shared between the Owner and the tenant. If the calculated price is higher than the standard tariff, the tariff must equal the standard tariff, as the Owner is not entitled to charge more.
Effective costs include:
- Amortization of relevant investments (photovoltaic panels, inverters, wiring up to the electrical panel, installation costs, including assembly and scaffolding)
- Interest on depreciation, calculated according to the WACC (weighted average cost of capital) for production (set at 3.98% for 2025)
- Operating and maintenance costs (maintenance, repair and replacement of the installation, monitoring and surveillance of the installation, periodic maintenance, OIBT inspections, installation cleaning, administrative expenses, etc.)
Climkit recommends the lump sum method for obvious simplification reasons. Once this method is selected by the Owner, Climkit updates the solar tariff annually based on changes in local DSO tariffs.
3. Administrative fees
Administrative fees include all costs related to RCP management, such as meter data reading and transmission, statement generation, consumer Consumer billing, collection processing, and payment of the grid draw invoice.
With a service provider like Climkit, administrative costs for metering and billing are charged directly to consumers. Climkit offers meter reading and statement generation (CHF 3.50/month) and, optionally, billing and collections (CHF 6.50/month). See the details of the Climkit services for more information.
4. Meter subscription
When the Owner finances the meters, these investments must be treated like those for production installations. The lifespan of electronic meters is 10 to 15 years. Annual meter costs are calculated via a constant annuity over the amortization period, to which are added the interest defined by the production WACC.
If the installation of a meter costs between CHF 200 and CHF 250 for a 10-year lifespan and 4% interest is added, the Owner can collect a "meter subscription" of CHF 2.00 to CHF 2.50 per month per meter from consumers. Consequently, the purchase of meters by the Owner does not increase costs, but rather their investment, without altering their return.
As part of its billing service, Climkit offers to collect the meter subscription directly from consumers on behalf of the Owner.
References:
- Energy Ordinance (OEne) of 01/02/2024
- Self-consumption of electricity, David Sifonios, Propriétaires Services SA editions, 2023.