INTEGRATED REPORT 2022
Reporte Integrado 2022

Everything is connected

and we connect it all with the energy you want

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Reporte Integrado 2022

Everything is connected

and we connect it all with the energy you want

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Businesses that Challenge Us
Commercialization
Businesses that Challenge Us

Commercialization

Content
Our Challenges
Glossary
Content
Retail Commercialization Wholesale Commercialization

At Celsia, the commercialization of energy transcends the traditional concept of buying and selling the service to a cycle of in-person and digital support that makes us allies in energy efficiency for our clients.

GRI (3-3) At Celsia, we incorporate products and services that create value, providing well-being to households, facilitating the productivity of companies and contributing to sustainability in cities, with policies and goals that seek the comprehensive management of commercial risk, from negotiation to delivery of products and services to both wholesale and retail market clients.

Total Celsia Clients
0 Wholesale Clients
and Retail
in Colombia
0 Wholesale Clients
and Retail
in Central America
0 Clients
Total Celsia
Total Celsia Clients

Retail Commercialization

GRI (3-3) The Retailer represents the users of the electricity service in the national market, when managing the acquisition and transportation of energy from production points to client-consumption points, to satisfy their lighting, conservation, transformation, entertainment needs and quality of life at home, as well as commerce, industry and government entities.

As it is a basic service, the electricity provision in Colombia is subject to the guidelines of the Ministry of Mines and Energy, the regulations of the Energy and Gas Regulation Commission (CREG, in Spanish) and the supervision of the Superintendencies of Residential Public Utilities and Industry and Commerce. The regulations are aimed at satisfying the client’s requirements in terms of their connection, attention to their energy needs, the availability of physical and virtual relationship channels, the content of the bill and compliance with the Uniform Conditions Contract.

Celsia serves non-regulated clients in Colombia and large clients in Panama, who present a monthly demand of more than 100 kW. In Colombia, non-regulated clients are also considered those who consume more than 55,000 kWh per month.

In Colombia, Celsia serves regulated clients in the municipalities where it has coverage with its own networks:

0 Municipalities
Tolima
0 Municipalities
Valle del Cauca
0 Municipalities
Cundinamarca
0 Municipalities
Chocó

Our Management

GRI (3-3) (2-23) (2-24) Celsia stands out for its compliance with the standards that impact the quality of the services it provides; diligent Client Service; market development and sustainability; those of our allies and of products and services based on cutting-edge technology that contribute to maintaining a neutral environmental impact.

Celsia’s Service Portfolio includes products and services that improve the quality of life in homes and productivity in companies, focused on efficiency in the use of energy, the availability of service support and the development of sustainable energy solutions, including:

  • Conventional energy, self-generation, backup energy and solar energy;
  • Electric mobility: vehicles and charging stations;
  • Thermal district and co-generation;
  • Energy solutions: electrical projects, efficient lighting, backup energy and others;
  • Smart Home Line and technology with efficient appliances, audio and video products, sirens/alarms, computers, printers, mobile phones, consoles, and video games.;
  • Internet service in municipalities of Valle and Tolima, Colombia; and
  • Sewerage service in Serena del Mar, in Cartagena, Colombia.

Likewise, our billing and collection processes allow the incorporation of services provided by third parties into the energy account, such as:

  • Collection of the public lighting tax;
  • Sewerage services in Serena del Mar;
  • Security and citizen coexistence rate in Valle del Cauca and the surcharge per kilowatt/hour consumed;
  • Cleaning fee; and
  • Massive credit products (Celsia Store) and insurance.

Access to Energy

At Celsia, we serve clients with regulated energy in the Departments of Valle del Cauca and Tolima, Colombia, by managing the connection in accordance with the regulations of the Energy and Gas Regulation Commission, in a timely manner and without discriminating clients, providing continuous, reliable and secure service.

SASB IF-EU-240a.1 SASB IF-EU-000.A

COP 0 average monthly electricity bill for the first 99.95 kWh sold to Residential Clients each month.

SASB IF-EU-240a.3

0
Residential Clients
previously disconnected, whose service was restored within 30 days from the date of power outage.
0
of power outages
were restored within 30 days.
0
power outages
among Residential Clients due to non-payment of their bill.

SASB IF-EU-240a.1 SASB IF-EU-000.A

Number of Clients

Income per Type of Client

(COP million)

Income per Type of Client

Average Electrical Rate per kWh of electricity

(COP/KWh)

Average Electrical Rate per kWh of electricity

Energy Sold

(GWh)

Energy Sold

SASB (IF-EU-240a.4) Some external factors that impact access to energy service and its conservation are:

High Probability
and Minor Impact

High Probability
and Minor Impact

  • Public-order problems and epidemiological risks;
  • Natural and environmental factors.

Moderate Probability
and Low Impact

Moderate Probability
and Low Impact

  • Lack of opportunity in payments, due to decreased income in households and companies, unemployment, illness and inflation.

Low Probability
and Significant Impact

Low Probability
and Significant Impact

  • High dynamism of legal and regulatory standards;
  • Unavailability of networks near the client’s location.

Low Probability
and Minor Impact

Low Probability
and Minor Impact

  • Increased management time for field activities;
  • Non-compliance of client’s technical requirements.

As for non-regulated clients, there is difficulty in the opportunity for response from other agents, network operators and marketers.

Additionally, we identified some risks and opportunities from the external factors mentioned above:

Risks

  • Portfolio impairment, due to non-payment of collections in favor of Celsia and third parties;
  • Reduction in the Marketer’s income, due to compliance with regulatory standards, such as the application of the tariff option;
  • Difficulty for the delivery of invoices in areas with restricted access (landslide, flood), with the presence of armed groups or epidemiological risk; and
  • Mobility of clients with values pending collection.

Opportunities

  • Continuous development of processes and tools for client service, management of on-site activities, billing and collection;
  • Structuring processes to monitor the collection of services provided;
  • Employee training in assertive client service;
  • Promotion of client relationship and accompaniment; and
  • Use of technological platforms to expedite client service and disseminate topics of general interest.

Principal Results in 2022

Our clients are the center of our strategy, which is why we always seek to provide them with a memorable, unique and rewarding experience. Below, we present the main results we obtained during 2022:

We stabilized the Commercial Management System, with the required regulatory and operational adjustments.

We developed photovoltaic-energy projects to supply 95% of the energy demand in the facilities of 293 clients in Colombia, with a capacity of 3 GWh and a cost of COP 9.756 Billion, thereby avoiding the emission of 85.2 tons of CO2 year.

We served 372 clients with self-generation in Colombia and surpluses were recognized as follows: 1.7 GWh to 224 clients in Valle del Cauca, for COP 896 Million; 1 GWh to 142 clients in Tolima, for COP 604 Million and 92 MWh to five clients in other regions of Colombia (Cali, Antioquia and Cundinamarca), for COP 37 Million.

We launched the Vehicle-Charging Corridor for electric trucks and buses on the Buenaventura, Cali and Bogotá route. At the El Papayo substation, in Ibagué, we installed two 180 kW charging points.

We generated energy sales in Colombia for 3,704 GWh: 2,173 GWh in the regulated market (COP 1.6 Trillion) and 1,530 GWh in the non-regulated market (COP 0.8 Trillion).

With CETSA, we served the first regulated client in a market other than our own.

In Central America, we met the goals: USD 14.5 Million in revenue, 19.0 MWp contracted in photovoltaic energy and 29.3 GWh-year of energy for large customers.

We developed electronic billing for clients in Panama.

In Central America, we began commercial operations at the Parque Solar Prudencia Photovoltaic Plant as of January 14, 2022, for a capacity of 9.69 MW and 15.6 GWh-year.

Clients and Electricity Sales in the Retail Market

Wholesale Commercialization

GRI (3-3) This refers to the market in which large energy blocks are exchanged among different agents, contributing to reliable supply and efficient energy-price formation. These aspects are essential for the economic growth of society and their proper management leads to the generation of value for the Organization and for Stakeholders.

Wholesale Commercialization allows the sale of generated energy and its firm power (that is, that which is capable of delivering a generation unit with a high level of reliability) available in the short, medium and long term, to ensure income that makes the permanence of existing assets and the development of new projects possible.

Our Management

GRI (3-3) (2-23) (2-24) Wholesale Commercialization comprises the markets in which energy and its attributes can be negotiated among agents:
Long Term:
A direct-negotiation scheme for large energy blocks with marketers and generators.
1
Short Term:
A daily market where generators compete for dispatch and the consequent attention to demand.
2
Reliability or Firm Power:
This is the charge for reliability (Colombia) or the power market (Panama), in which the commitment is to have the committed power and its associated energy when required. It includes a secondary market and the management of the voluntary disconnectable demand of prosumers, with whom there are agreements.
3
Other Business Opportunities,
such as the energy financial-derivatives market, fuel management and the sale of carbon emission-reduction certificates.
4

We have a specialized team to plan, analyze risks and markets, as well as fuel supply (gas, coal or liquids) management, required by our thermal plants, which are the starting point for evaluating short., medium- and long-term signals that we use in the operation of the Spot (short-term) Market, in the commercialization of contracts (long-term market9, the management of the Reliability Market and other markets.

Principal Results in 2022

GRI (3-3)

In Colombia, we achieved 127% compliance with the budgeted Marketing Margin for the Wholesale Business.

We added the Tesorito de Motores Thermoelectric Plant internal combustion to natural gas to the Generation Portfolio.

We incorporated our own and represented solar plants into the Generation Portfolio: Tucanes, Los Caballeros, La Medina, Cerritos and Montelíbano.

In the exclusive Non-Conventional Renewable Energy Sources (FNCER, in Spanish) auctions, organized by the Ministry of Mines and Energy, the Escobal Solar Farm was assigned for a period of 15 years.

We were awarded the offer for 2023 of Celsia Centroamérica in the LPI ETESA 01 – 2022 Tender.

We achieved the transfer of power-only contracts from Bahía Las Minas Corp. to Celsia Centroamérica.

We maintain an outstanding rating for management and processes by clients in the energy market.

Clients and Electricity Sales in the Wholesale Market
Our Challenges

GRI (3-3) Short-, Medium- and Long-Term Objectives:

Short Term(0 to 2 years)

Retail

In Colombia:

  • Encourage our clients to produce energy for their own benefit, the environment and diversify sources of electricity production.
  • Continue developing products and services available to our clients.
  • Develop solutions that facilitate electric mobility in Colombia as an environmentally sustainable alternative.
  • Serve 1.3 Million clients in Colombia with the regulated-electricity service.
  • Expand the coverage of the regulated market to clients connected to networks of other distributors.

In Central America:

  • Achieve 80 MWp in distributed-generation solutions.
  • Achieve income for USD 8 Million annually in distributed-generation solutions.
  • Implement the Backup Energy Service in Panama with 4 MW of capacity and gross income of USD 200,000.
  • Obtain income for USD 11 Million in Large Client Energy (non-regulated market).
  • Begin operations in an additional country in the region.
Wholesaler
  • Meet the Marketing-Margin Target set for the Wholesale Business.
  • Commercial management in the secondary market of the reliability charge to minimize the impact of scheduled maintenance and failures of the Organization’s generation plants, especially the thermoelectric plants.
  • Commercial management of gas for the Tesorito Plant, which allows increasing generation on merit.
  • Ensure the contracting of Power and Energy for the Dos Mares Hydroelectric Complex.

Medium Term(3 to 5 years)

Retail

In Colombia: 

  • Be the ally of our business clients to develop projects that improve the efficiency of their processes.
  • Achieve that – between 2023 and 2024 – the sales of regulated energy in markets other than their own are 45 GWh.
  • Contribute to the development of electric mobility in Colombia, with solutions that facilitate the growth of electric transport and its future sustainability.

In Central America:

  • Achieve 100 MWp in distributed-generation solutions and achieve revenues for USD 10 Million per year.
  • Achieve 14 MW in backup power with a Gross Income of USD 1 Million.
  • Implement 2,000 tons of refrigeration with an income of USD 3 Million per year.
  • Begin operations in three additional countries in the region.
Wholesaler
  • Achieve long-term hiring goals, in accordance with the Marketing and Risk-Management Policy.
  • Incorporate the Generation-Project Portfolio that the Organization is developing into Wholesale Marketing Management.
  • Increase the commercialization of third-party energy.

Long Term(6 or more years)

Retail

In Colombia:

  • Evaluate the Organizations Product and Service Portfolio to incorporate businesses at the forefront of regulations and technological progress.
  • Develop comprehensive offers of products and services tailored for different market segments.
  • Study the incorporation of new companies in the Colombian Electric Sector that carry out energy- distribution and commercialization activities.

In Central America:

  • Have a presence in five additional countries in the region.
Wholesaler
  • Explore tools and management models and incorporate those that contribute to the continuous improvement of processes associated with wholesale marketing.
Glossary

Retail Commercialization: Those transactions carried out between an energy-trading company and the end user, such as homes, shopping centers, industry, among others.

Wholesale Commercialization: These are the transactions between the generating agents and the marketers that represent the end clients.

Regulated Clients: They are, for the most part, residential clients or small businesses with maximum consumption of 55 MWh/month or 100 kW of power.

Non-Regulated Clients: They are large consumers of energy and, due to this condition, they are free to contract the provision of the energy service with the company that offers them a better price in generation and commercialization.

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About Our Report
Relevant facts
Strategic Framework
Strategy and Sustainability
Risk Management
Information Privacy
Businesses that Challenge Us
Generation
Transmission and Distribution
Commercialization
We Act with a Vision of the Future
Diversification and Expansion of Our Businesses
Innovation
Cybersecurity
We Enrich the Lives of Our Clients
This Is How We Lead
Corporate Governance
Ethics and Transparency
We adapt to the Political and Social Environment
Economic Performance
The Value Chain and Sustainable Sourcing
We Take Care of the Environment
Climate Change
Environmental Management
Eco-Efficiency
Biodiversity
We Promote Social Development
We Promote Social Development
Contribution to Society
Human Rights
Value Added to Society (VAS)
Celsia Culture
Labor Practices
Talent Development
Attraction and retention of talent
Occupational Health and Safety
Downloads

CELSIA

INTEGRATED REPORT 2022

  • About Our Report
  • Relevant facts
  • Strategic Framework
    • Strategy and Sustainability
    • Risk Management
    • Information Privacy
  • Businesses that Challenge Us
    • Generation
    • Transmission and Distribution
    • Commercialization
  • We Act with a Vision of the Future
    • Diversification and Expansion of Our Businesses
    • Innovation
    • Cybersecurity
  • We Enrich the Lives of Our Clients
  • This Is How We Lead
    • Corporate Governance
    • Ethics and Transparency
  • We adapt to the Political and Social Environment
  • Economic Performance
  • The Value Chain and Sustainable Sourcing
  • We Take Care of the Environment
    • Climate Change
    • Environmental Management
    • Eco-Efficiency
    • Biodiversity
  • We Promote Social Development
    • We Promote Social Development
      • Contribution to Society
      • Human Rights
      • Value Added to Society (VAS)
    • Celsia Culture
      • Labor Practices
      • Talent Development
      • Attraction and retention of talent
    • Occupational Health and Safety
  • Downloads