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Kilovar 1959's avatar

Long comment, as a former PG&E customer, the rate increases are more nuanced than the hard numbers show. California has a tiered rate system for IOUs, as you use more energy the rate you pay goes up. They also have time of use, so each of the three rate periods had its own set of teirs. So super peak tier 3 you're paying over fifty cents kwh. They massage the energy allowance in each teir every year. You would have to look into other states rate structures to see if there are similar games being played elsewhere.

Another thing to note is PG&E, SCE,& DTE along with having high rates also have among the highest customer outage minutes per year. Not only expensive, but unreliable too. If you want to watch where the Power outages are, go to poweroutage.us.

Ohio is doing things different, they have an open market for energy called Energy Choice Ohio. The utilities get paid for delivery and have a standard offer rate you can take or shop. I do shop, and I can tell you the utility delivery charges are always the larger part of the bill.

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Llewellyn Jones's avatar

Worth noting that natural gas prices are much cheaper than they were 15 years ago, so electricity prices could have gone down.

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