If you’ve followed Daren Bakst’s work, you know his concerns about Duke Energy’s Save-A-Watt program.

Now U.S. News is drawing attention to the program:

But some argue bolder measures are needed, and no one has led the charge more fiercely than Jim Rogers, chief executive of Duke Energy. Regulators are now weighing whether Duke should earn a return on each “Save-a-Watt” it gains from its 2.3 million ratepayers in North and South Carolina the same way it earns a return on kilowatts it generates through new power plant construction. Duke would charge ratepayers 90 percent of the cost of an unbuilt power plant (85 percent in South Carolina, where Duke agreed to a lower return).

Eventually, Duke intends to invest billions in smart grid and meter technology that will allow the company to power down customer appliances or air conditioning briefly at peak hours. Other programs probably will promote efficient lighting, insulation, airtight windows?things that customers aren’t buying enough of even though they’d save money in the long run. Ted Schultz, vice president for energy efficiency at Duke, says customers are making rational trade-offs: “Do I put four tires on my car, or do I insulate my house? Do I save for my kid to go to college, or do I put new windows in?”

Duke wants to design programs to front the costs of big-ticket home efficiency improvements and allow customers to pay them off on their utility bill. Some consumer advocates question whether efficiency should garner so high a return, but Schultz says, “We’re unlocking this resource that is sitting here that quite frankly hasn’t been tapped. This is tough sledding.”