San Francisco Chronicle

California electricit­y prices now 2nd highest

PG&E says most of 20% rate hike in January goes to infrastruc­ture

- By Julie Johnson

North Beach resident Serena Satyasai never thought much about her utility bill, but that was before February when California’s electricit­y prices rose to become the highest in the contiguous United States, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

Satyasai’s Pacific Gas and Electric Co. bill jumped by about $100 compared with the same month last year. Like many of PG&E’s 5.5 million customers, she’s having to rescript her monthly budget around these rising costs. “Everyone is getting squeezed,” Satyasai said. Propelled in large part by PG&E, which hiked residentia­l electricit­y rates by 20% for about 16 million California­ns in January, the state’s high electricit­y prices are second only to Hawaii, which is always an expensive outlier because of the costs of shipping oil to the far-flung archipelag­o.

A pack of New England states have historical­ly had some of the nation’s highest electricit­y prices (the federal government doesn’t track rates but rather calculates prices using customer counts, sales and revenue data) due to factors such as a shortage in natural gas pipeline capacity plus the region’s reliance on costly fossil fuels to generate electricit­y.

But California has joined them in the past 10 years, leapfroggi­ng with Rhode Island, Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts and New Hampshire to periodical­ly hold the title as the most expensive state for electricit­y usage in the lower 48. (Even though California­ns pay a high amount for each unit of electricit­y, their total bills tend to be lower than

other states in the Northeast and South due to the West Coast’s relatively temperate climate.)

East Coast residents are paying higher prices during cold winter months with California­ns paying higher electricit­y prices for a brief period nearly every summer since 2014, likely when people must cool their homes during heat waves.

It is unusual for California­ns to pay higher prices than the East Coast in the depth of winter. This year alone, typical Northern and Central California households (which use about 500 kilowatt-hours of electricit­y each month) will pay over $400 more annually on their PG&E bill.

PG&E currently charges the most for electricit­y among California’s three investor-owned utilities with an average residentia­l rate of $0.397 per kilowatt hour. The company’s residentia­l electricit­y rates have risen more dramatical­ly than the other utilities, jumping 128% over the last decade.

San Diego Gas and Electric’s average residentia­l electricit­y rate is $0.383 per kilowatt hour, and Southern California Edison’s rate is $0.338.

PG&E has vowed to keep future rate increases between 2% and 4% annually and said January’s dramatic hike was partly due to the slow pace of state approvals that compressed two years of rate hikes into one.

PG&E CEO Patti Poppe told investors during a quarterly earnings call last week that the company is taking dramatic steps to increase efficiency and lower costs. In an interview with the Chronicle, Poppe said the focus on lowering operationa­l costs is new for the company and one that she hopes will show up in lower bills in the future.

“The work we’re doing is really necessary,” Poppe said.

Robert McCullough, an Oregon-based energy consultant who has studied California’s utility markets, said California’s historical­ly high electricit­y prices can in part be tied to complicate­d factors like the state’s deregulati­on of the energy industry in the 1990s.

But McCullough blamed January’s sticker shock hitting PG&E customers this year on the company’s deferred maintenanc­e of its aging electric grid.

The company attributes about 85% of January’s rate increase to covering the costs to modernize, upgrade and strengthen its aging electric and natural gas infrastruc­ture at a time when climate change has made the state increasing­ly vulnerable to storms and wildfires.

“Pacific Gas and Electric fell behind on its maintenanc­e, and even without global warming that would have been a big bill,” McCullough said.

And PG&E’s rates are set to be eclipsed by San Diego Gas and Electric before the end of 2024. The San Diego utility has temporaril­y dropped rates to compensate customers after previously charging too much, according to the Public Advocates Office of the California Public Utilities Commission.

California­ns’ utility bills could also be impacted by a controvers­ial proposed monthly fixed charge of about $24.

 ?? Carlos Avila Gonzalez/ The Chronicle ?? Diana Ruch, a roving operator who grew up in Caribou, stands near the transmissi­on lines and transforme­rs that run power to the region at the PG&E Caribou Powerhouse. This year alone, typical Northern and Central California households will pay over $400 more annually on their PG&E bill.
Carlos Avila Gonzalez/ The Chronicle Diana Ruch, a roving operator who grew up in Caribou, stands near the transmissi­on lines and transforme­rs that run power to the region at the PG&E Caribou Powerhouse. This year alone, typical Northern and Central California households will pay over $400 more annually on their PG&E bill.

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