
PG&E, facing complaints over rate hikes, could delay paying most of $1 billion owed to customer credit fund. State regulators may introduce a new fixed charge by late 2025 or early 2026 in exchange for lower electricity prices. Recent rate hikes have affected commercial ratepayers, prompting concerns about rising electricity bills and potential industry relocation. The company's actions have sparked criticism for high costs and impact on businesses.



PG&E: killing our historic neon signs. I guess $51 million a year isn’t enough for Patty Pope. Maybe PG&E should stop paying to run all those useless television commercials instead of price gouging California residents and small businesses. “Zemrak said the $6,200 bill…
electricity bills for commercial ratepayers are rising dramatically. as the cost to generate power has decreased, the cost to deliver it has increased significantly. the result is far more expensive power. CA risks driving industry elsewhere, like Texas. https://t.co/FtSZcPzh9n
PG&E customers could see lowered, fixed power bills with CPUC's proposal https://t.co/0zjFHUur35 https://t.co/qrUog6ut7x