PG&E Partnership Would Bring up to $1B for Transmission Improvements

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The program would support clean-energy investment in disadvantaged communities and low-income households across PG&E’s service area in Northern and Central California.

Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) filed with the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) for approval of a transmission lease program with the nonprofit Citizens Energy Corporation, which could invest as much as $1 billion through the program.

The program would allow PG&E to accelerate work on its electric system to further improve safety, reliability, capacity and infrastructure health, and to enable new interconnections to clean-energy projects that support decarbonization. Citizens has committed to contributing a large share of its profits from the program to clean energy programs in low-income and disadvantaged communities across PG&E’s service area.

If Citizens invests the full $1 billion, it expects the program to generate hundreds of millions of dollars in charitable benefits over the lives of the leases.The program is designed so that customers would pay no more for the applicable transmission assets than they would without the program.

“At PG&E, we have a responsibility to build a better future for everyone whose lives we touch,” said PG&E Corporation CEO Patti Poppe. “We’re committed to finding innovative and affordable new ways to ensure that the transformation of California’s energy system benefits all the state’s residents. We’re excited and honored to partner with Citizens to help some of our most vulnerable communities build resilience against climate change.”

Citizens President Joseph P. Kennedy III said the program will serve the nonprofit’s mission to support projects and programs that increase grid strength and decrease electricity costs.

“Our vision is a safe, reliable and clean energy system that leaves no one behind,” Kennedy said. “This partnership with PG&E will advance our march toward a just and equitable clean-energy transition. We look forward to working closely with local communities in need across PG&E’s service area to hear their ideas about the investments that would most benefit them.”

Program details

Through the program, PG&E may offer Citizens options to lease entitlements to PG&E electric transmission assets. PG&E may offer five separate leases of 30 years each, for a total investment of up to $1 billion.

Citizens would make an upfront payment to PG&E as prepaid rent.

Citizens would lease the rights through a wholly owned subsidiary that would be a CAISO participating transmission owner. Citizens would recover the costs of its investments through the CAISO high-voltage Transmission Access Charge, after Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) review and approval to ensure the costs are just and reasonable.

Citizens has committed to contributing 50% to start, increasing to 90%, of net after-tax profits from its investments in the program.

Based on the terms of the program, the transmission assets would remain under PG&E ownership and under the operational control of the California Independent System Operator (CAISO). PG&E would remain responsible for the development, design, permitting, engineering, procurement, construction and operations and maintenance of the relevant assets.

The program needs the approval of the CPUC and FERC.  

Citizens investments

Pending regulatory approval, PG&E and Citizens expect to close on the first lease option in early 2025, with up to four more to follow through 2030.

Citizens will cap the capital cost component of its FERC rate at an estimate of the rate PG&E could have charged customers without the program. And due to the size and structure of this program, Citizens has also agreed to forgo recovery from CAISO customers of its own development and administrative and general costs, among other costs.

The CPUC and FERC have approved two similar programs between Citizens and San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E) – the 117-mile Sunrise PowerLink transmission line, which connects SDG&E’s grid to renewable energy generated in the Imperial Valley; and the Sycamore-Penasquitos transmission line, which links two substations in San Diego via partially undergrounded lines.

A third project – an 18-mile upgrade to an Imperial Irrigation District transmission line that imports and exports power between California’s Imperial Valley and Arizona – is expected to be in service in spring 2024 and is expected to result in $18 million in charitable funds on a $40 million Citizens investment.

Citizens’ funds from those programs supported the development of a 39-MW community solar program to benefit 12,000 low-income customers of the Imperial Irrigation District.

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