PG&E Residential Customers Set to Receive a Bill Credit

Press release from PG&E:

Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) pgeFor the second time this year, more than five million Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) customers will automatically receive the California Climate Credit on their energy bill.

The California Climate Credit is part of California’s efforts to combat climate change and distributed by PG&E to customers. This credit is from the California Cap-and-Trade Program, which requires power plants, fuel providers, and large industrial facilities that emit greenhouse gases to buy carbon pollution allowances. The credit on your bill is designed to help utility customers during the transition to a low-carbon future.

Residential electric households will receive a credit of $38.39 on their October bills, the same amount provided during March. Residential natural gas households also received a credit of $52.78 earlier this year. Combined-use customers’ total bill credits for 2023 is $129.56.

Residential households receive the electric credit two times each year, while the natural gas credit is issued once a year. Eligible small business customers receive the same electric credit, in the same amount as residential customers, twice a year.

For more information about additional programs that are funded by the California Cap-and-Trade Program to reduce carbon pollution, improve public health and the environment, and provide meaningful benefits to the most disadvantaged communities, visit www.caclimateinvestments.ca.gov/.

PG&E Financial Assistance Programs

In addition to the California Climate Credit, customers are encouraged to explore other ways to save energy and money including financial assistance and other programs:

  • California Alternate Rates for Energy (CARE) ProgramProvides a discount of 20% or more each month on gas and electricity bills.
  • Family Electric Rate Assistance Program (FERA): Offers a monthly discount of 18% on electricity bills for households with 3+ people.
  • Medical Baseline: For eligible residential customers who have additional energy needs due to certain qualifying medical conditions. Customers can get an additional monthly allotment of power, or a discount based on your rate.
  • Budget Billing: Averages out energy costs for more predictable monthly payments and eliminates big spikes in bills due to seasonal changes.
  • Bill Forecast Alerts: Notifications sent by email, text or phone notifying the customer if their monthly bill is expected to exceed a specific amount set by the customer.

About PG&E

Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is a combined natural gas and electric utility serving more than 16 million people across 70,000 square miles in Northern and Central California. For more information, visit pge.com and pge.com/news.

You can read about PG&E’s data privacy practices here or at PGE.com/privacy.

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14 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Big Rick
Guest
Big Rick
2 years ago

Oh boy that $130 this year sure is going to help me since my electricity went from 14 cents a kilowatt hour to 36 cents a kilowatt hour in no more than 12 months

How generous of you pg&e!

Amazing how their stocks went from $8 to 17 in the same time frame too!

Lone Ranger
Guest
Lone Ranger
2 years ago
Reply to  Big Rick

Power and gas rates are controlled by our government, thank ole Joe’s green policies for the hike. He is pushing his green policy and making the hard working American people pay dearly on both sides. Never thought I’d see the day when one politician could do so much damage economically, this guy takes the cake.

tru matters
Guest
tru matters
2 years ago
Reply to  Lone Ranger

You mean this green policy?
“The Biden administration announced plans last week to expand the Gulf of Mexico waters available to oil and gas drilling as part of the new five-year leasing plan that will take effect in 2024.”
Or maybe you mean this:
“The Biden administration has approved a massive new oil drilling project in Alaska, over the objections of environmental advocates who have said greenlighting the plan would violate the president’s climate goals.”

Last edited 2 years ago
Lone Ranger
Guest
Lone Ranger
2 years ago
Reply to  tru matters

Yep, you got me. His pro drilling approach is backed up by the price of a barrel of oil. Crack me up, go get you sum of that 6 dollar a gallon fuel.

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago
Reply to  Big Rick

Take that $130 and buy pg&e stock, cause you know it’s still going up.

Mr. Clark
Member
2 years ago

PGE has to pay for all those law suits, tree cutters, upgrades to the grid, and corporate bonuses.

Mountain man
Guest
Mountain man
2 years ago
Reply to  Mr. Clark

Break up Pge , they should be ashamed to show their faces anywhere , bloated company

HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
2 years ago
Reply to  Mountain man

And the CPUC, they aren’t any better.

Ernie Branscomb
Guest
Ernie Branscomb
2 years ago

Gee, PG&E is going to give me $38.39 and all it does is piss me off. What the heck is wrong with me anyway? We live in a strange world during strange times.

Guest
Guest
Guest
2 years ago

With that I heartily agree. We seem to be living in a bad Saturday Night comedy sketch and can’t escape.

HotCoffee
Guest
HotCoffee
2 years ago
Reply to  Guest

I thought it was more like the Twilight Zone.

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago

My question is: what if we don’t use the entire $130 in October, does the remainder roll over to November’s bill? Because, $130 is about two months usage for us.

NoBody
Guest
NoBody
2 years ago

Did you even read the article? You get $53 once a year for gas usage and $38 twice a year for electric usage. Not $130 all at one time. If you don’t use gas then no credit. This credit for Oct is for electricity so it’s $38.

To answer your question though, any credits given will rollover to future months. Just like paying extra on your bill.

Bug on a Windshield
Guest
Bug on a Windshield
2 years ago
Reply to  NoBody

Jeepers kriminy, get a little lysdexic in your reading and someone jumps all over your case. Well excu-use . . . me!

Thank you, however, for your second paragraph. That does answer my question, since, we most certainly will not use the entire $38 electric credit in one month.