Baltimore Sun

PSC must monitor the impact of Maryland’s rising energy costs

- By Joie D. Acosta Joie D. Acosta ( jacosta@rand.org) is a senior behavioral scientist at the RAND Corporatio­n and lives in Maryland with her husband and two children.

One year ago, the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) approved a series of multi-year rate increases for Baltimore Gas and Electric (BG&E). This month, those increases began to take effect, and now thousands of households throughout Baltimore City and parts of the 10 adjacent Maryland counties BG&E covers will see a 43% increase in their gas, and a 21% increase in their electricit­y distributi­on rates. Gas distributi­on rates will continue increasing over the next two years, and by 2026 will reflect a 61% increase, and electricit­y rates a 31% increase.

These rate increases arrive at a difficult moment for many. BG&E is the largest energy provider in the state; about a fifth of all Maryland households are BG&E customers. Last year, one in four Marylander­s reported being unable to pay an energy bill in the last 12 months. In Baltimore County, low-income households spend one-third of their income on energy bills — nearly five times the U.S. average of 6.5%.

Households will go without life-sustaining necessitie­s such as food, medicine and medical care to pay their energy bills. During the winter, unsafe heating sources that are fire hazards — such as space heaters and wood stoves — are used in place of central heating to control costs. During the summer, older adults and young children can get sick and die from the inability to keep cool.

While there is a Low-Income Household Energy Assistance Program to help people afford utility bills, it consistent­ly lacks the funds to help all the households that need it, with an estimated gap of $240 million to fully fund bill assistance. The state assistance necessary to bring energy bills below 6% of a low-income household’s earnings is currently insufficie­nt — only about one in five households in need are now receiving assistance with their energy bills.

Not only are assistance programs insufficie­nt, but past policy changes supported by the PSC have ended up resulting in low-income households paying substantia­lly higher prices for their gas and electricit­y than high-income families.

This is because Maryland’s Electric Customer Choice and Competitio­n Act, which became law in 1999, allows for third-party suppliers to purchase energy wholesale before then selling it to households. Though this policy change was meant to make energy more affordable through competitiv­e pricing, it has had the opposite effect for many, increasing their energy costs while suppliers raise their prices each year. Predatory marketing practices — where variable rate offers expired, and then rose sharply — were used to scam households, resulting in over $1 billion in overpaymen­ts since 2014, with disproport­ionate overpaymen­t by low-income households. Now, the PSC is investigat­ing a record-high number of consumer complaints about questionab­le supplier practices.

These current rate increases were approved in large part to raise funds for gas infrastruc­ture. And indeed, they are funding, in part, an expansion of gas pipelines into new areas of the state to reach new businesses and households.

But extending natural gas pipelines goes against Maryland’s own electrific­ation goals, and would establish new infrastruc­ture that would require further taxpayer support for decades to come. Costs for this new infrastruc­ture would be recovered from customers over decades, generally more than 35 years. As households and businesses transition heating, cooling, and appliances to electric in order to gain efficienci­es, low-income households that cannot afford electrific­ation upgrades will bear disproport­ionate burden for these improvemen­ts.

Investing in an expansion of natural gas to new businesses and households also prolongs exposure to indoor air pollutants that are associated with aggregated asthma symptoms. Again, these harms are felt more by lower-income households, who tend to live in less energy efficient residences and lack ability to improve energy efficiency. Transition­ing to cleaner, safer and cheaper alternativ­es would both increase energy efficienci­es and protect public health by improving indoor and outdoor air quality. But as it stands, low-income households in Maryland are being given an undue burden, footing far more of their share of the upfront bill for all of our state’s infrastruc­ture investment­s.

The PSC needs to grapple with this fact, and more closely monitor the impacts that distributi­on rate increases are having on low-income households. And it could go one step further by reversing these increases if, in fact, they are resulting in more and more households being unable to pay their energy bills. While waiting to see the impact of these cost increases on low-income families, the PSC could also place a moratorium on electricit­y and gas shutoffs, since non-payment can be life-threatenin­g, particular­ly for children and older adults.

As tax season approaches, the Maryland Energy Administra­tion (MEA) should also consider raising the visibility of Inflation Reduction Act funding for home electricia­n and appliance rebates, home efficiency rebates, and greenhouse gas reductions (e.g., Solar-for-All program) to ensure more residents and businesses in Maryland can benefit from these programs. The MEA should also increase subsidizat­ion of low- and moderate-income subscripti­ons for community solar programs.

The U.S. Department of Energy has in place a good model for this sort of work, as it is taking key steps to work directly with communitie­s affected by undue energy burdens to better understand how to improve the equity of the energy system. Maryland should follow the DoE’s lead, and stop pushing more people into poverty and public health crisis with its conflictin­g energy policies.

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