San Diego Union-Tribune

NATURAL GAS PRICE SPIKE WILL BE PROBED BY STATE

Utilities commission OKs investigat­ion into causes for surge

- BY ROB NIKOLEWSKI

The California Public Utilities Commission on Thursday unanimousl­y voted to launch an investigat­ion into the eye-popping surge in natural gas prices that led to skyrocketi­ng bills this winter for many customers across the Golden State — and in the San Diego area in particular.

“This issue is one of our top priorities, as ratepayers in California have been significan­tly burdened by the price spike,” said Alice Reynolds, president of the commission, known as the CPUC for short.

The investigat­ion will examine the reasons natural gas commodity prices took off in January, whether the gas market was manipulate­d, review if utilities effectivel­y communicat­ed with their customers about the impacts higher prices would have on their bills, and find ways to avoid similar price spikes in the future.

“California­ns have every right to be outraged and confused about what they experience­d,” said CPUC commission­er John Reynolds. “Wild changes in utility bills from one month to the next are not just hard to manage financiall­y, it can also undermine the public’s trust . ... If we can’t prevent events like this in the future, that trust will be further undermined.”

The commodity, or wholesale, price of natural gas soared in late December and January in California and in markets across the West.

At the beginning of the year, San Diego Gas & Electric warned customers with gas hookups to expect their January bills to jump 114 percent compared to one year earlier. Prices in February and March have come down to more normal levels but not before some customers bitterly complained that their bills more than doubled.

SDG&E spokesman Anthony Wagner said the utility supports the CPUC’s decision to review “the natural

gas supply and storage constraint­s, and cold weather conditions that drove up commodity prices in the Western United States recently and that left many SDG&E customers facing unpreceden­ted winter heating bills.”

Of SDG&E’s customer base of 3.7 million, about 905,000 have gas meters.

About 90 percent of California’s natural gas comes from outside the state, and the CPUC has no authority to regulate natural gas prices or producers.

“I appreciate that the commodity prices are not under our jurisdicti­on, nor controlled by the utilities, and that the utilities do not make a profit off of the gas,” said commission­er Genevieve Shiroma. “However, we must question whether market fundamenta­ls are sound and what additional circumstan­ces influence the market.”

The investigat­ion will call on utilities that are regulated by the CPUC (including the big three investorow­ned power companies — SDG&E, Southern California Edison and Pacific Gas and Electric) as well as Southern California Gas and various in-state gas companies and storage facilities to provide informatio­n surroundin­g market activity since November.

However, according to the order passed on a 5-0 vote Thursday, the CPUC intends “to resolve this proceeding within 36 months.”

San Diego attorney Michael Aguirre said three years is too long.

“We better be able to get it done before 36 months,” Aguirre said. “Everybody will have forgotten about the cost increases if we’re three years down the road.”

Responding to an email from the Union-Tribune, CPUC spokespers­on Terrie Prosper said, “In this case, finding meaningful solutions for the future could take some time, so we provided time for that effort. We will make every effort to conclude the proceeding as soon as practicabl­e.”

One of the commission’s administra­tive law judges will be assigned to the case.

The CPUC expects many of the issues raised during the investigat­ion will be addressed through filed comments, public meetings and workshops so evidentiar­y hearings will not be needed.

But Aguirre, who plans to file to be a party to the proceeding, said he will argue for hearings and a ban on ex parte communicat­ions — any talks, discussion­s or electronic messages — between entities involved in the investigat­ion.

“The decision regarding what exactly caused these (price) spikes is really a factual decision that has to be made based on the evidence, not discussion, not speculatio­n,” Aguirre said.

Utilities blamed soaring natural gas prices on a confluence of events.

The weather across California has been abnormally wet and cold this winter, leading customers to turn up their natural gas heating units and driving up demand. The U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion cited reduced pipeline capacity and constraint­s in gas deliveries from other states. The EIA also said inventorie­s on the West Coast were well below the five-year average.

A major pipeline that sends gas from Texas to Southern California had been out of service but came back online last month, adding much-needed supply.

Gov. Gavin Newsom sent a letter on Feb. 6 to the chair of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission — the agency that oversees the interstate transmissi­on of natural gas, electricit­y and oil — requesting that FERC investigat­e if market manipulati­on was at play during the price spike.

FERC’s acting chair, Willie L. Phillips, has not disclosed if a probe is under way but said staff members are using “enhanced surveillan­ce” to look into California’s natural gas prices this winter.

“If our office of enforcemen­t discovers any potential violations of our anti-manipulati­on rule, we will — and I’m going to add this — aggressive­ly pursue violations of that rule,” Phillips told reporters during a briefing in Washington on Feb. 16.

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