State Threatens Viability of East Bay Green Energy Program
Just as Alameda County was launching a new, publicly owned electricity service offering greener electricity at lower prices than PG&E, state regulators put a big new obstacle in its path. A little-noticed decision in October by the California Public Utilities Commission will raise the monthly “exit fee” that customers of East Bay Community Energy and other “community choice” programs have to pay to utility companies like PG&E.
The fee is intended to compensate the companies for “unavoidable expenses” they incurred to procure electricity for customers who now buy their electricity from community choice agencies. But environmentalists say the higher exit fees threaten the viability of community choice agencies like East Bay Community Energy, which offers renewable energy sources to residents and businesses in Oakland, Berkeley, and nearby cities.
CPUC commissioner Carla Peterman, who proposed the plan, said the changes “insure a more level playing field between customers,” so those who stay with traditional utilities “don’t get stuck paying back the costs for power that was bought for customers who now are served by community choice.”
But advocates of community choice call the new formula unfair and dangerous. According to a letter from 120 public officials — including the mayors of Oakland, Berkeley, Richmond, Albany, San Francisco, and San Jose, along with many members of Bay Area city councils and county boards of supervisors — it “would significantly and unfairly increase exit fees charged by big corporate utilities and threaten current and future community choice energy programs — the very programs that are helping the state exceed its emissions-reduction targets.”
Four Bay Area community choice agencies — MCE, Sonoma Clean Power, Peninsula Clean Energy, and CleanPower SF — have joined several statewide advocacy organizations in petitioning the CPUC to reconsider its decision. A spokesperson for the CPUC said it will “consider the applications and make a determination.”
The CPUC argues that raising the fee — technically called the “power charge indifference adjustment,” or PCIA — would mean only a small increase in customers’ bills. But according to the public officials’ statement, that small increase could “significantly jeopardize [community choice programs’] ability to invest in long-term renewable resources and customer programs.”
Nick Chaset, CEO of East Bay Community Energy, told the Express that EBCE is “very disappointed” with the CPUC’s decision. “We feel like they did not provide enough analysis to justify their plan and very little analysis of the impacts of the wholesale changes they made.” He also said that the commission has not yet set the PCIA rate for 2019, so “we don’t know what we’re on the hook for.”
The new PCIA will lower electricity bills for customers of utility companies and raise fees charged to community choice customers. This threatens the whole business model of EBCE, which pegs its rates at 1.5 percent lower than PG&E. “We remain committed to delivering lower-cost green energy,” Chaset said, although “we may have to narrow our discount.”
The higher exit fees will leave EBCE will leave with less money for operating expenses and community programs. “Nothing has been decided yet” about how to meet this challenge, Chaset said, but “we will be looking at cost-cutting measures.”
Critics charge that the new formula lets utility companies make any investment or spending decisions they want with no accountability on the basis of information that’s not available to the public. They say the utilities have paid inflated prices and made investments that were unwise because they already knew customers would be leaving for community choice programs.
The formula adopted by the CPUC “reward[s] big corporate utilities for mismanaging their energy portfolios,” says the letter from public officials. Weinrub speculates that the utility companies might even deliberately sell their extra electricity at low rates, so they could raise the PCIA.
Allowing the PCIA to keep rising, critics say, also creates uncertainty that makes it impossible for community choice agencies to figure out how to set their own rates.
Regardless of the technical details of the formula, Weinrub concluded, “The whole issue is political, representing different interests, and has to be decided on that basis. How to determine PCIA fees is all arbitrary, and the question is whether you’re going to be arbitrary on the side of our communities or arbitrary on the side of the monopoly utilities.”
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