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  • Duke Energy - Duke Energy joins utilities across North America to protect customers from scams

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    January 12, 2022
    Good afternoon!  We expect a news story this week in the Upstate regarding Duke Energy customers being targeted by a new twist on an old trick- the scammer talks about a charge for a changeout of meters and then applies the typical rush for immediate payment. 
     
    If you or anyone you know experiences a similar call, the most important thing to do is simple: end the phone call. Duke Energy will never tell you that you’ve got 30 minutes to pay or you lose your service – that’s not how we operate. Hang up on the caller. Call us at the 800-number on your bill or on our website. If you take that one critical step, you’ve beaten the scammer.
     
    Education works – when we started aggressive scam awareness education efforts with customers five years ago, about 9% of customers fell for the scam. Now it’s down to 4%. But that’s still too many, and the scammers have stolen thousands – about $350,000 from Duke Energy customers through Oct. 31, 2021. In the first 10 months of 2021, nearly 1,200 Duke Energy customers in South Carolina reported scam attempts, resulting in about $41,000 lost
     
    After Duke Energy temporarily suspended disconnects in response to COVID-19 and offered extended payment plans, scammers adapted. Rather than focus on overdue bills, they tell the homeowner they need to pay a deposit for a new meter, which will later be refunded – again insisting on immediate deposit. Other trends include a focus on mobile banking apps, along with wire transfers and pre-paid cards. That’s a red flag – Duke Energy doesn’t take customer payments from mobile banking apps, and we will never tell you a specific payment method that you must use.
     
    We have a dedicated website for customers to learn more about scams and what they should be on the lookout for: duke-energy.com/StopScams.
     
     
    See the Duke Energy Illumination post below from November 2021 for Utility Scam Awareness Day.
     

    Duke Energy joins utilities across North America to protect customers from scams
    November 15, 2021
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    • Utility Scam Awareness Day (Nov. 17) focuses on educating customers against fraud.
    • The bad news: scam attempts are increasing. The good news: fewer customers are falling for them.
    • The bottom line: ‘End the Call. End the Scam.’
    CHARLOTTE, N.C. – A call comes in. The caller ID says it’s Duke Energy. An urgent voice insists that your electric service is being disconnected in 30 minutes unless you pay over the phone right now.
    If you get a call like this, hang up because Duke Energy never disconnects customers like this. Instead, call Duke Energy at the number on your bill, or check your balance online or via the Duke Energy app. And just like that, you’ve beaten the scammer.
    Sadly, the COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a record number of scam attempts – nearly 30,000 scam attempts were reported by Duke Energy customers in 2020 alone. The good news: Only about 4% of customers have fallen for a scam in the last year, down from more than 9% before Utility Scam Awareness Day began in 2016.
    Education works. That’s why Duke Energy has again joined forces with utilities across the United States and Canada to bring awareness to these criminal tactics on the sixth annual Utility Scam Awareness Day on Nov. 17. Utility Scam Awareness Day is part of the weeklong International Scam Awareness Week, an advocacy and awareness campaign focused on educating customers and exposing the tactics used by scammers.
    “Scammers have not shown compassion for small businesses and private citizens enduring the trying circumstances of the last two years,” said Jared Lawrence, Duke Energy’s vice president of metering services and customer service transformation. “In fact, they have intensified their criminal activity with high-pressure tactics and increasing use of technology. For that reason, utilities continue to unite to combat scammers by spreading awareness, and we are working with telecom partners to remove access to phone lines and encouraging policymakers to adopt stronger public protections.”
    Recognized annually, Utility Scam Awareness Day was created by Utilities United Against Scams (UUAS), a consortium of more than 150 electric, water and natural gas companies and their respective trade associations.
    End the Call. End the Scam.
    Duke Energy – a founding member of UUAS – and the consortium’s other member companies have seen an increase in scams attempting to take advantage of the uncertainty of the pandemic. Other scammers are preying on fears over nationwide natural gas price spikes. Many are attempting to use mobile banking apps to emphasize the “ease” of avoiding disconnection (Duke Energy does not take customer payments via mobile banking apps).
    While the techniques continually shift, the easiest way to defuse the pressure is to stop before you act. That’s why this year’s awareness theme is “End the Call. End the Scam.”
    “It’s perfectly acceptable for the customer to hang up the phone,” said UUAS Executive Director Monica Martinez. “The scammer’s initial goal is to pressure their targets and convince them that they work for the utility. Scammers are extremely sophisticated in their tactics, and by simply ending the call, you can end their scam. If you are unsure, you can always call back the utility by dialing the number found on your bill or on their website, and they will provide you with the correct information.”
    UUAS advises customers who suspect they have been victims of fraud or who feel threatened by a scammer to contact their local utility or law enforcement authorities. Here are tips to protect yourself from falling victim to utility scams.
    What to look for
    Common scam tactics include:
    • Threat to disconnect: Scammers may aggressively tell a customer their utility bill is past due and service will be disconnected – usually within 30 minutes – if a payment is not made.
       
    • New meter refund: After Duke Energy temporarily suspended disconnects in response to COVID-19 and offered extended payment plans, scammers adapted. Rather than focus on overdue bills, they tell the homeowner they need to pay a deposit for a new meter, which will later be refunded – again insisting on immediate deposit.
       
    • Mobile banking apps: Customers are instructed to send immediate payment through a mobile app. Duke Energy does not accept payments through the Cash App, Venmo or Zelle apps. (Customers can make payments directly on Duke Energy’s mobile app, available in the Apple App Store for iOS and the Google Play Store for Android.)
       
    • Personal information: Criminals promise to mail refund checks for overpayments on a customer’s account if they can confirm their personal data, including birthdays and, in some cases, Social Security numbers.
    Protect yourself
    Customers with past-due accounts receive multiple advance notices, typically by mail and in their regular monthly bill, and Duke Energy will always offer a variety of ways to pay a bill, including online payments, phone payments, automatic bank drafts, mail or in person. Duke Energy will never:
    • Threaten immediate service interruption, call to demand payment about money owed without first sending you a notification by mail, or show up at your door demanding payment.
       
    • Specify using a prepaid card or mobile banking app for payment.
       
    • Ask for personal information or credit or debit card numbers over the phone, by email or in person – either for a payment or a refund.
    Remember: If customers suspect someone is trying to scam them, they should hang up, delete the email or shut the door. Contact the utility immediately at the number on the most recent monthly bill or on the utility’s official website, not the phone number the scammer provides. If customers feel they are in physical danger, they should call 911.
    More information is available at duke-energy.com/StopScams.
    Duke Energy
    Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK), a Fortune 150 company headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., is one of America’s largest energy holding companies. Its electric utilities serve 7.9 million customers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky, and collectively own 51,000 megawatts of energy capacity. Its natural gas unit serves 1.6 million customers in North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Ohio and Kentucky. The company employs 27,500 people.
    Duke Energy is executing an aggressive clean energy strategy to create a smarter energy future for its customers and communities – with goals of at least a 50% carbon reduction by 2030 and net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. The company is a top U.S. renewable energy provider, on track to own or purchase 16,000 megawatts of renewable energy capacity by 2025. The company also is investing in major electric grid upgrades and expanded battery storage, and exploring zero-emitting power generation technologies such as hydrogen and advanced nuclear.
    Duke Energy was named to Fortune’s 2021 “World’s Most Admired Companies” list and Forbes’ “America’s Best Employers” list. More information is available at duke-energy.com. The Duke Energy News Center contains news releases, fact sheets, photos and videos. Duke Energy’s illumination features stories about people, innovations, community topics and environmental issues. Follow Duke Energy on TwitterLinkedInInstagram and Facebook.
     
     
     
    Contact:
    Mindy Taylor
    mindy.taylor@duke-energy.com, (800) 452-2777