Politics & Government

PG&E Ratepayers to Foot Bill More Than Half of $2.2 Billion Pipeline Project

The approval angered officials from San Bruno, where a pipeline explosion killed eight people in 2010.

By Bay City News Service

The California Public Utilities Commission on Thursday approved a planΒ that will allow PG&E to charge ratepayers for more than half of a $2.2Β billion project to upgrade its natural gas pipelines.

The approval of the plan, with a last-minute change removing aΒ requirement that the utility take lower profits for five years, angeredΒ officials from San Bruno where a ruptured pipeline resulted in an explosionΒ that killed eight people and destroyed 38 homes in 2010.

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PG&E's project includes pressure testing 783 miles of natural gasΒ pipelines, replacing 186 miles of pipelines while upgrading another 199 milesΒ and installing 228 automatic shutoff valves.

The plan approved by the CPUC at its meeting in San Francisco
today requires PG&E ratepayers to foot the bill for roughly 55 percent of the
projects while the utility's shareholders will fund the rest.

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An initial ruling had initially put ratepayers on the hook forΒ roughly 49 percent of the project and initially included a five-year term inΒ which PG&E's rate of profit on its improvement investments would be reducedΒ to 6.05 percent as part of a judge's recommendation.

But Wednesday evening, regulators amended the plan to disallowΒ that recommendation and raise the rate to about 11 percent, giving what SanΒ Bruno Mayor Jim Ruane said equated to a $130 million "Christmas present" toΒ PG&E.

"It's a slap in the face," Ruane said. "They blew up our town,Β they killed eight people, and here we are giving them cash."

State Sen. Jerry Hill, D-San Mateo, said the change showed thatΒ "PG&E owns the state of California and the PUC."

Hill said, "It's shameful that they would allow PG&E to profitΒ from their behavior, their negligence, their poor maintenance."

Thomas Long, legal director for the watchdog group The UtilityΒ Reform Network, said many of the pipelines in the project are only beingΒ replaced because PG&E lost the records for them.

"They had no idea if these pipelines were operating at safeΒ pressures," Long said. "PG&E loses records, we should pay for it?"

PG&E spokeswoman Brittany Chord said the utility's shareholdersΒ have already spent $1.5 billion since 2010 on work to meet previouslyΒ existing regulations and that "this proposed plan was put forward to addressΒ new safety expectations that were set by the CPUC."

Chord said, "We know we made a lot of mistakes, and we know weΒ have a lot of work to do."

She said PG&E had sought to have ratepayers fund a higherΒ percentage of the pipeline project β€” which is expected to add about $2 toΒ the average monthly residential utility bill β€” but they were rebuffed by theΒ CPUC.

In announcing the commission's decision, Commissioner Mike FlorioΒ said the project was "about moving forward and creating the safest naturalΒ gas infrastructure in the nation."

Florio said the ruling was a balance between the requests of PG&EΒ and those of San Bruno officials and survivors of the blast.

"We have to make sure PG&E isn't rewarded for the past ... but weΒ can't expect PG&E in the past to meet standards that didn't exist until now,"Β he said.

What do you think? Should ratepayers be asked to help pay for the upgrades to the gas transmission lines? Β Tell us in comments.

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