The Guardian (USA)

Richer people pay more: California’s dramatic change to electricit­y bills

- Rose Horowitch

California will soon become the first state to determine residents’ electricit­y fees based on their income as part of a new effort to spur households toward full electrific­ation and bring down the state’s soaring electricit­y costs for lowincome California­ns.

Electricit­y bills are made up of fixed costs as well as fees that vary based on the amount of electricit­y residents use. Last year, the state passed a law giving the California public utilities commission a 1 July 2024 deadline to determine a fixed charge for household electric bills based on people’s income.

The new income-based electricit­y bills could hit residents’ mailboxes as soon as 2025. Based on proposals currently under considerat­ion, residents who make more than $180,000 a year could pay about $500 more annually on their electricit­y bills, while California­ns who make less than $28,000 annually could save up to $300 a year. The law is part of the state’s answer of how to equitably transition away from carbon as an energy source.

But state officials are already facing backlash from higher-income residents who don’t want to see their bills increase. The proposals have so far received more than 250 public comments, with a large number opposing the law.

“Why should I pay for someone else’s bill when I paid thousands for solar?” one commenter wrote.

California currently has some of the highest electricit­y costs of any state, according to a report that suggested the income-based model. California’s electricit­y prices range from one and a half times to double the national average.

According to Severin Borenstein, one of the report’s co-authors and a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, electricit­y prices in the state are so high because utility companies are also paying for damages from wildfires and subsidies for rooftop solar panels, among other costs. They make up for these expenditur­es by raising the price for electricit­y use.

Pacific Gas & Electric, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric, the state’s three largest utilities, said in a joint filing that the income-based charge was “urgently needed to support achievemen­t of the state’s decarboniz­ation goals”.

Borenstein similarly said that high costs for using electricit­y can discourage people from electrifyi­ng their homes. The income-based model will allow utility companies to lower the price they charge for using electricit­y because they will collect more money from fixed charges.

But the proposal has already come under fire, particular­ly from higherinco­me residents who would face heftier electricit­y bills under the new models. One commenter said they “vehemently oppose” the law.

Another wrote that they were scheduled to have solar panels installed on their home, but would cancel the installati­on due to the proposal.

But Borenstein said that people who power their homes with solar panels are only able to save money because of “massive subsidies” that drive up electricit­y prices for people on the grid.

“It’s not that this proposal is unfair,” Borenstein said. “It’s that the status quo is unfair.”

He continued: “Everybody can’t put in solar if we’re paying for all of these other costs through per-kilowatt-hour charges. That just gets you into a death spiral where prices go higher and higher. And we know who will be the last people that have solar. It will be poor people.”

In theory, the fixed charge model will spur electrific­ation. The state will still invest in electric chargers and other subsidies and people will pay less for each kilowatt of electricit­y they use. But it is not yet clear whether California­ns will invest in electrifyi­ng their homes if they feel their wallets tighten from new fixed charges. Residents might also guzzle up more electricit­y if it costs less to use.

The judge overseeing the commission’s proceeding will likely release a proposed decision early next year, said Terrie Prosper, a spokespers­on for the commission. The draft decision will be available for public comment before the commission­ers vote to approve or reject it.

 ?? Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images ?? Power lines in Rosemead, California. The state will impose income-based electricit­y fees in 2025.
Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images Power lines in Rosemead, California. The state will impose income-based electricit­y fees in 2025.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States