Your utility is UI and you appear to have two plans to choose from.
RT (peak/off-peak)
and
R (flat rate)
Both plans have a seasonal (summer winter) rate adjustment.
<TABLE border=1 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=3 width="100%"><TBODY><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #1f497d; WIDTH: 298px" colSpan=2>
UI Rate RT</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff; WIDTH: 7px" rowSpan=7> </TD><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #602826; WIDTH: 470px" colSpan=3>
UI Rate R</TD></TR><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; WIDTH: 170px">
Basic Service Charge </TD><TD style="WIDTH: 129px">
$15.85/month </TD><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 124px">
Basic Service Charge</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 347px" colSpan=2>
$15.85/month</TD></TR><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; WIDTH: 170px">
Rate </TD><TD style="WIDTH: 129px">
Per kilowatt-hour (kWh)</TD><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 124px">
Rate</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 162px">
Per kWh (less than 500 kWh total usage)</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 186px">
Per kWh (more than 500 kWh total usage)</TD></TR><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; WIDTH: 170px">
Summer on-peak*</TD><TD style="WIDTH: 129px">28.1222¢</TD><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 84px" rowSpan=2>
Summer</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 87px" rowSpan=2>21.1895¢</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 165px" rowSpan=2>21.1895¢</TD></TR><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; WIDTH: 170px">
Summer off-peak</TD><TD style="WIDTH: 129px">18.1085¢</TD></TR><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; WIDTH: 170px">
Winter on-peak</TD><TD style="WIDTH: 129px">26.7488¢</TD><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 84px" rowSpan=2>
Winter</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 87px" rowSpan=2>20.7684¢</TD><TD style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #d8d8d8; WIDTH: 165px" rowSpan=2>20.7684¢</TD></TR><TR><TD style="TEXT-ALIGN: right; WIDTH: 170px">
Winter off-peak</TD><TD style="WIDTH: 129px">18.1085¢</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
* Summer rates are effective from June 1 through Sept. 30. On peak-hours are weekdays from noon to 8 p.m.
Lets look at those pumps you replaced over 1 year, assuming they run 24/7... rounding to exactly 52 weeks in a year to keep the math simple:
The year consists of
16 Weeks of summer rates
36 Weeks of winter rates
A week has
40 PEAK hours
128 OFF PEAK hours
8736 hours per year (rounding from 8765.xx for similicity)
Summer on-peak = 640 hours
Summer off-Peak = 2048 hours
Winter on-peak = 1440 hours
Winter of-peak = 4608 hours
You report saving 165W with your pump change so lets calculate the yearly saving.
((640h * 165W) / 1000) * $0.28122 = $29.70
((2048h * 165W) / 1000) * $0.181085 = $61.19
((1440h * 165W) / 1000) * $0.267488= $63.56
((4608h * 165W) / 1000) *$0.181085 = $137.68
That turns out to be $292.126771 in savings, or on avarage (ignoring seasons) about $25 a month.
If you were on the FLAT rate plan:
Summer hours = 2688
Winter hours = 6048
((2688h * 165W) / 1000) * $.211895 = $93.98
((6048h * 165W) / 1000) * $.207684 = $207.25
Turns out to be $301.23 in saving for the year...
You can build a simple spreadsheet with columns for the rate periods and costs, placing ALL of your household electric needs in the table and use it to determine if the peak/off-peak plan is really saving you money.
To be honest... if it were me, I would move as far away from that nonsense as I could. They are talking about peak rates of nearly $1.75 per kWh in your state and MANDATING that customers accept the plan or be punished with a single HIGH rate of nearly $.50 per kWh. Your citiziens and government have determined that THEY shall be allowed to tell you when and how much electricity you are allowed to use without being taxed to high hell... Not to single you out, but YOUR fish tank is what they are trying to do away with becuase you are consuming more than your fair share of electricity for a non essential use.