KQED Radio
KQED Newssee more
Latest Newscasts:KQEDNPR
Player Sponsored By
upper waypoint

Historic PG&E Rate Increases Will Hit Hard in 2024

at
Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

 (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Before you open your next electricity bill, you might want to brace yourself. PG&E is hiking their rates starting this month, and this one is historic. Bills for the average household are expected to jump $34.50 a month and there could be more rate hikes on the horizon. The increase will fund projects addressing wildfire mitigation, especially an unprecedented attempt to bury power lines in high-risk areas. After the new rate hike, PG&E rates will have doubled over the last 10 years. Is all the new work necessary? Is sticking ratepayers with the bill the only option? We’ll talk with energy and utility experts about what this move means for PG&E and for the rest of us.

Guests:

Katherine Blunt, energy reporter, Wall Street Journal. Her recent book is "California Burning: The Fall of Pacific Gas and Electric—And What It Means for America’s Power Grid."

Meredith Fowlie, professor, UC Berkeley Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics; faculty director at the Energy Institute at Haas

Mark Toney, executive director, The Utility Reform Network

Sponsored

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Sal Khan on 'How AI Will Revolutionize Education (and Why That’s Good Thing)'The Point-in-Time Count Is Meant to be a Snapshot of Unhoused Populations. How Clear is That Picture?Is California’s Wine Industry in Trouble?Blowing the Whistle on Medical ResearchForum From the Archives: From Beyoncé to Lil Hardin, 'My Black Country' Celebrates the Undersung Black History and Future of Country MusicForum From the Archives: Remembering Glide Memorial's Cecil WilliamsMiranda July Wrestles with the Female Midlife Crisis in ‘All Fours’Rachel Khong’s Novel ‘Real Americans’ Questions the Limits of Identity‘My Octopus Teacher’ Filmmaker on Connecting to Our Wild SelvesState Supreme Court to Decide Fate of Prop. 22 … and the Gig Economy