Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I got to thinking about the way that California prices its electricity, which is never a good thing for a man’s blood pressure.
When I was a kid, the goal of the Public Utilities Commission and Pacific Gas and Electric was to provide cheap electricity. The Bonneville Dam and the Shasta Dam were lauded for bringing cheap, renewable electric power to the farms, just like the renewable electricity the Tennessee Valley Authority had supplied earlier. This cheap electricity was seen as liberating housewives from domestic slavery, and supporting business and manufacturing. It was hailed as the wave of the future and the path to success, and rightly so—cheap energy is the reason the developed world was able to lift itself out of poverty. And since we generated our own electric power when I was a kid, and had to live with the results when it went out, I know all about the ability of electricity to lessen even a kid’s load around a cattle ranch.
So … when did expensive energy become the new goal? When did raising the price of energy become a good thing? That’s topsy-turvy thinking.
I started this train of thought when I had occasion to revisit Anthony Watts’ outrageous electricity bill, which he discusses here.

Figure 1. Why California is circling the drain …
Ninety-two cents a freakin’ kilowatt-hour? The utility companies have a monopoly, and they are allowed to charge ninety-two cents a kilowatt-hour? How can that be? Isn’t the California Public Utilities Commission supposed to stop that kind of thing?
The most aggravating part of all of this to me is that so many people see this kind of pricing as being a good thing. Not the ninety-two cents part, most folks find that outrageous.
But lots of folks apparently approve of the part where the higher the demand for the electricity, the more the utilities charge for it. This is called “Time Of Use” pricing, and a lot of well-meaning people think it’s a good idea … not me. I figure that’s because they just never thought it through all the way, they never saw what’s at the other end of the spoon.
Now, the utilities claim that Time Of Use pricing is a good thing because it spreads the load more evenly over the 24 hours … but why should I care? That’s their business, to provide enough power for all conditions when and as needed … but I digress. Hang on, I can likely find an example of their justification style … OK, they say the reason for Time Of Use Pricing is:
“To ensure greater power reliability and a better energy future”.
Impressive, who wouldn’t want a better future. Can I translate that for you?
“Greater power reliability” means so they won’t run out of power. If they were honest they’d say that they have Time Of Use Pricing “to avoid brownouts because we don’t have adequate generation capacity”. And ensuring a “better energy future” means “we hope we can provide future power but only if we raise prices on you today.” I’ll return to this issue in a moment.
But in any case, what kind of heartless bastards charge you more for something when you really need it? Because with “Time Of Use” pricing, when Anthony’s wife and kids are suffering in the scorching heat in Chico and really need the aircon, Pacific Gas And Electric (PG&E) and the California Public Utilities Commission say “Fine, you folks can turn on your air conditioners … but it will cost you almost a dollar a kilowatt to cool down.”
I never in my life thought I’d see electricity pricing used as a weapon against the poor and the old folks like that. That is criminal. What a plan. The seniors can afford to air condition their apartments or their rooms whenever they don’t need to … but when it’s hot, when they really need to air condition them, they can’t afford to. Catch-22, thy name is legion.
Now, don’t get me wrong here. I’m sure the Public Utilities Commission didn’t intend that outcome. I’m not accusing them of deliberately trying to cook Grandma. To do that you’d need some smarts, and anyone implementing a plan like that clearly has no smarts to spare on Grandma. Sadly, it’s just another case of Noble Cause Corruption, where the noble cause of saving the world from Thermageddon™ has overwhelmed native common sense and compassion.
Seriously, folks, this kind of pricing is madness, it’s unacceptable. If we had a water utility, and they charged 5¢ a glass when you weren’t thirsty, and $5.00 a glass when you came in dying of thirst, everyone would scream bloody murder that as a public utility you can’t screw the customers like that. Pick a dang price for a glass of water and stick with it, you can’t be jacking the price through the roof on someone just because they’re thirsty, that’s not on.
But that’s exactly what’s happening with electricity. Air conditioning in Chico is becoming the province of the wealthy, due to the “Time Of Use” pricing policies of the PUC.
However, the PUC are not the villains here. They are caught in the middle because of the stupidity of the voters and of Governor Brown. The voters put in a very destructive “20% by 2020” plan requiring 20% of the electricity supply to come from renewables by 2020 … then Governor Moonbeam had a Brilliant Idea™, so he unilaterally raised it to 33% by 2020. I don’t know how he jacked it by himself, but his daddy was the Governor and he grew up in the state house, so he knows which side of the bread the bodies are buttered on … these things are mysteries to the uninitiated like you and I.
And of course, it’s nearly impossible to build a fossil-fired plant of any kind anywhere in California anyhow. I hear these days when you apply for a license in California to generate electricity from fossil fuels, the State Government just issues you a couple of lawsuits along with the permits, in order to save time …
So you can’t build fossil plants, and renewable plants are few and far between … and as a result the system operators, a company called CAISO, are always balancing on the edge of a “brownout”, when the power doesn’t go out, but you only get 90% of the voltage, or on the verge of rolling blackouts, the next step after brownouts … and we’ve seen both.
And to put the icing on the cake, somewhere along the line, some congenital idiot ruled that hydroelectric power doesn’t count as a renewable energy source. I hope that person roasts in the place of eternal barbecue and HE doesn’t have the money to run the air conditioner. Truly don’t think I’ve heard a more expensive and destructive ruling than that one, especially after the TVA and Bonneville Dam and Shasta Dam have shown that yes, idiots, hydropower is indeed renewable. Yeah, dams have problems and there’s lots of issues, but last I looked the rain is still working both reliably and renewably …
So by 2020 we’re suppose to get a third of our power from solar, and rainbows, and wind, and hydrogen, and biomass, and methane from the digestive apparati of unicorns, and fuel cells, anything expensive and out of reach will do. The suppliers of these nostrums have the state over a barrel, of course, and demand outrageous prices.
And as you would predict, this unbelievable idiocy has left the state woefully short of power. And as a result, the whole program has gone into reverse.
So now, rather than increasing the amount of cheap electric power available to the consumer like a utility should, we’re going the other way. The PUC and PGE aren’t encouraging people to utilize cheap power in order to better their lives. They aren’t doing their job of ensuring an adequate supply of inexpensive power. Far from it.
Instead, they’re doing whatever they can to push people back into the dark ages, because they are UNABLE TO GENERATE ENOUGH LIGHT OUT OF UNICORN ERUCTATIONS TO FILL THE DEMAND …
So that’s why, when they say the pricing is to “assure greater power reliability”, that’s a lie. They are using that pricing to discourage demand. Have you ever heard a dumber thing than a business working to discourage demand? Who anywhere tells their customers to buy less? Why jack your prices to force them to buy less?
Well, because they don’t have the power generating capacity. And this in turn is because for every two fossil-fueled or hydroelectric power plants you build, you need one unicorn-fueled plant, and those damn unicorns are proving much harder to catch than Governor Moonbeam figured …
But even given that that is the case, and given that the PUC is caught in the middle, there has to be a better plan than cooking Grandma to deal with that problem.
The people pushing these rattle-trap schemes, like “Death Train” Jim Hansen, always talk about the grandchildren … meanwhile, every one of their damn plans, of carbon taxes, and cap-and-trade, and subsidies, and requirements for “renewables”, and regulations, and all the rest, every one of them does nothing but screw Grandma and the rest of the poor.
Those plans do nothing but raise the cost of energy with almost no benefit to the environment.
They don’t reduce CO2. They don’t save the planet. They don’t help the environment. At best, with a following wind they might make a difference of a couple hundredths of a degree in a century. And indeed, because they further impoverish Grandma and the poor, they are actively harming the environment.
And meanwhile in the present, far from the ivory towers where they entertain their century-long fantasies, on the other side of the tracks, out of sight from the houses of the wealthy, the reality of these destructive, ugly policies hit Grandma and the poor of California the hardest. The head of the PUC doesn’t have to worry whether he can afford to air condition his sick child’s room … the CEO of PG&E isn’t losing sleep over his electric bill.
I fear I have no magic bullet to solve this. It will be a slow slog back to sanity. All I can do is to highlight the issues, and trust that at some point people will come to their senses.
So all of you folks that think that fighting CO2 will make a difference decades from now, remember the difference that this pseudo-green insanity is making today. Your actions are cooking Grandma, impoverishing the poor, and harming the environment today, and history will not find your part in inflicting pain and deprivation on society’s weakest members to be funny in the slightest. I truly don’t care if you think the poor in 2050 desperately need help from some imagined tragedy. You are screwing the poor today.
My best Independence Day wishes to you all, and remember, the beauty of America is that you’re all free to air condition your houses … but only when it’s not hot.
w.
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Roger Sowell says:
July 4, 2013 at 10:56 pm
Gosh, you’re a techy kind of fellow, aren’t you …
And yes, you are right, I don’t know what you can see from your house. However, I can see from my house that you have a very literal turn of mind.
That was what was called a “metaphor”. I was using the idea of what you can see from your house as a metaphor for what you are considering when defending the destructive electricity policies.
But I didn’t put words in your mouth. I didn’t say “Roger said”, or pretend you’d said something you hadn’t said.
I was trying to explain metaphorically why you seem willing to ignore and excuse the effect of your chosen policies on the poor.
Guess I was wrong, maybe you can see Grandma and you just ignore the effects of higher electricity prices on her and the other poor folks.
In any case, I don’t know the explanation, you’re right, and you know what?
I’m not all that interested …
w.
I thank those who have replied to my questions. They always lead to further questions (unfortunately I do not know how to use this comment area to reply to previous posts and I am doing laundry making my replies untimely – I come from a state with off shore wind farms and it is cheaper to do at night). Hydro is hydro. So the goal was to improve renewables, they needed far more renewables than the existing hydro. So why not allow additional large hydro? Why not let large and small hydro fill the void?
Roger Sowell “because I come from a crushingly poor start in life.”
But you want the elderly to have a crushingly poor end to life, either that or walk to the nearest bus stop in blazing heat to catch the number 9 that drops granny 4 blocks away from a cooling centre where nobody else can get too either. The cruelty of your fake compassion is incredible.
Cheap reliable energy for the masses is the only decent thing.
Variable unreliable energy is cave man crap.
“Catastrophic Anthropogenic Genocidal Warmistas” is what I call people who are so consumed fighting CO2 they don’t realize other humans are being sacrified by their cult practices.
Education is the only remedy.
I’m a fan of time-of-use billing and hope it will come to Austin soon. Though it might require some lifestyle changes, we would try to shift some of our electricity use to the times/days with lower demand (well pump/pool pump).
Utterly fascinating to see the Warmist/Green mind at work as Roger Sowell, nit-picks minor points, tinkers with definitions and generally obfuscates to try and deflect attention from the fact that a bizarre cartel is forcing up energy prices, in what should be one of the most energy rich states, on the basis of discredited, millennial doomsday pseudo science.
Only an anally retentive, Warmist fanatic would label large hydro-electric power schemes as NON renewable energy.
Willis, you ask what the solution is to this green energy lunacy.
Unfortunately, the solution is that rolling black outs are needed and people will have to die in their tens of thousands from energy poverty. Paradoxically, a long heat wave (obviously induced by global warming and not by a natural high pressure system!) may be what California needs before the so called political elite sees sense on energy policy.
I shook my head at this comment by Roger Sewell: “Finally, almost every California town and certainly the cities have cool buildings available for anyone during heat waves.” while the intention is obviously laudable, it clearly represents green lunacy at its best – “Let’s create a goofy, unnecessary problem so we can feel smug by demonstrating our green credentials.” In reality it will be hundreds of thousands, if not millions, who will suffer and there will not be enough space in these cool buildings. The amusing irony is that they will probably have to use back up diesel generators to keep these buildings cool.
You have a policy of this type of shared misery in war time. Maybe, the “War on Terror” has now spread to the molecule of carbon dioxide.
Roger Sowell says:
July 4, 2013 at 10:56 pm
Mr Sowell, I’m sorry but I think you miss the main point of what Willis has written. Electricity is, and should be the cheapest commodity that is available. It is easy to produce, easy to transmit, and should be available to everyone if the will is there.
If you wish to make it expensive, controlled and subject to various taxes (carbon etc) in order to prevent some spurious and conjected possible and maybe future warming/climate catastrophe then please explain how what you propose or wish to foist upon us will help to either prevent this future/possibly catastrophic calamity, will lift the millions of humans that live in what are basically stone age conditions up to even 3rd world standards, will help lift those stone age cultures up from a subsistance life style, where having children is an insurance policy because so many die as infants.
I am gratified to read that you are involved with helping seniors in your area, I would suggest you cast your altruistic tendencies wider, and spend time in the Solomons, South East Asia, the Hill Tribes of the Golden Triangle, then come back and tell me that poverty, subsistance living, childhood mortality are what you wish to bring to the western world by making a cheap source of power too expensive to sustain the many who use it to increase their well being.
I appreciate that you may be more learned than I am, all I have done for the last 20 years is live among those people and seen the needless waste of potential, life and resources caused in main by various *AID* agencies that promote *sustainable* lifestyles, which prevent even the most basic of civilised amenities being introduced.
Sorry, forgot the 🙁
What’s the carbon footprint of my cremation, years before I should need it? Heat make me weak and lethargic and cold makes my blood pressure spike. I have to bite the bullet when the utility bills arrive because I have a lot of living to do and my house temperature will be healthful. I don’t make the “assistance” level income to get a 20% discount, so I grow a garden, cook all our meals (even my own bread) and cut costs in many other ways.
Of course, there’s another credible reason why the watermellons don’t at all mind elderly people dying from the heat.
Sceaming headline: “40% more elderly die from this year’s heatwave than last”. Ergo… Gosh, greenhouse getting worse so we must make energy even more expensive to save our loved ones. Higher taxes, now!
Repeat process next year, and the next, and the next, and the…
I’m only half joking.
Where is CA’s Tahrir square? The elites live on the coast, and zone it so nobody else can live there. Force most of us to the interior, and then empty our bank accounts when we try to survive the heat. Well, maybe it’s time to take back the coast.
The good news is, most of these old hippies won’t be around much longer. They’ve made a real mess of things. If we actually had a free market, there would be no problem. But they’ve done quite a good job twisting markets for “our” good, which has worked out really well for them.
Let’s just examine the facts, shall we? California just experienced a severe heat wave, with many areas having highs of more than 100 degrees F for two or three days. I did search to see if there have been any deaths, “cooked Grandmas” in Mr. Eschenbach’s over-hyped words, during this heat wave. With California journalists the way they are, such a death would be front-page news.
And I found, unfortunately and very sadly, one report of an elderly man who died during the heat wave. That is very sad, and my condolences to his friends and family. The report is shown below:
“A 77-year-old man whose air conditioning unit was blowing hot air was found dead in his Central Valley home in what appears to be the first death connected to California’s blistering heat wave, officials said Wednesday.
Firefighters found the man in an unresponsive state on the floor of his Stanislaus County home Tuesday evening, officials said. They began CPR and rushed the victim to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
The air conditioner in the room was blowing out air that was more than 100 degrees, according to the Stanislaus County Health Department.” Source: Los Angeles Times
So, does this count as a “cooked Grandma” (or Grandpa)? As tragic as it is, and to me, any such death is tragic, the answer must be “No”. This man was elderly, at 77, but his death was not due to being unable to afford electricity for the air conditioner. His unit was running, thus using electricity. Per the news story, the problem here was some failure in the air conditioning unit, which could be many things.
So, in a state with almost 40 million people, during a serious heat wave, there are no reports of elderly deaths because people could not or did not run their air conditioners.
read it all:
2 July: WLRN Florida: Transcript: Former Energy Secretary Wants Power Generation Decentralized
President Obama announced, last week, a hugely ambitious plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and push the country towards cleaner energy. Right now, just nine percent of our energy consumption comes from renewable sources.
Former U.S. secretary of energy, Stephen Chu, would like to see us get to 50 percent by the middle of the century. Chu left the cabinet in April, but even before that, he began talking to utility companies could adopt a radically different business model.
STEPHEN CHU: Well, it goes back to an old business model that the old AT&T used to have. They sold you phone service. They would supply you with the phone. They owned the phone. They maintained the phone.
MONTAGNE: Similarly, Chu would like utilities to start installing solar panels and batteries storage units in people’s homes. The idea hasn’t gained much traction yet, but Stephen Chu remains hopeful, and discussed with us how he sees utility companies making this work.
CHU: They will say, allow us to use your roof, allow us to use a little corner of your garage, and we will equip you with solar power. We own it. We maintain it. We’re responsible for it. You don’t have any out-of-pocket expenses. You just buy electricity at the same rate, or maybe even a lower rate. In addition to that, you have, you know, like five kilowatts of energy storage in your home. And five kilowatts – when you’re in a blackout situation and you want to keep your refrigerator going, you want to keep a couple of energy-efficient light bulbs lit at night – that goes a long way…
http://wlrn.org/post/former-energy-secretary-wants-power-generation-decentralized
Kurt in Switzerland says:
July 4, 2013 at 9:20 pm
Even the lower rate jumps ($0.09 – $0.25 – $0.88) are obscene. This will drive people to cook their meals using firewood more often.
If that occurs and I expect it will, the irony is that they may in fact be doing something to cool the planet. Although, not by reducing CO2.
It’s my contention that the early 20th century warming resulted from reduced aerosol pollution, as people switched from fires to electricity and gas for cooking primarily, although for other things as well. This theory has the merit that it identifies a common cause for the both the early and late 20th century warming (aerosol reductions).
When I saw the Cooking Grandma headline, I read ‘cooking’ as an adjective rather than a gerund verb, and thought Willis was going to refer to this switch to electricity for cooking.
I did a bit on the “smart” grid a while back:
http://www.ecnmag.com/articles/2013/06/smart-grid-future-energy
If you read carefully you will note I’m not too fond of the smart grid.
“But even given that that is the case, and given that the PUC is caught in the middle, there has to be a better plan than cooking Grandma to deal with that problem.”
Then let’s hear it.
Until then your choices are rotating blackouts or variable pricing.
Variable pricing at least gives people a choice.
1. Why provide very expensive and inefficient “assistance” when all that is needed is easily available cheap power?
2. The worlds very first hydro power scheme is still operational. It was built in 1868 and is a place of beauty and a superb natural habitat.
Roger Sowell.
Wait, are you saying that the global warming scare is NOT about taking money from the poor and feeling smug about it?
Then, what’s the point of it all?
@ur momisugly W. Eschenbach, re being poor…
“You should be poor sometime, Roger, or at least read up on them. Cheap electricity was created for the poor. You are taking it away from them.”
I believe I addressed that earlier. I have been poor, for many years. Too poor to have new clothes, or decent food, or health care, or air conditioning. Being dirt poor is one reason I worked so very hard to obtain an education in engineering, then law school. It is another reason I help the poor and elderly at every chance. I just don’t brag about it.
I also champion the rights of the poor and elderly, and warned against the suffering that AB 32 in California would create for those groups. Some of my writings on this can be found here:
http://sowellslawblog.blogspot.com/search?q=poor
“AB 32 Hits Poor the Hardest”
“AB 32 Hypocrisy vs Health and Poverty”
Again, Eschenbach, you make statements with zero basis in fact.
Oh well people.. Its the tax funded green rush.. Nobody actually knows how to make any money any more.. So they pass environmental laws so they can set up a save the world from a harmless gas scam.. Governments benefit, Schools benefit, rich people benefit.. Pretty much everybody except the working class and the poor..
They got away with it because governments subsidized our hydro bills to shield us from the true cost of such CRIMINAL mismanagement..
Here in Ontario we should be paying about 1000 dollars a bill (every two months) for what the liberals have done to our power grid..
its coming real soon..
Roger, can I suggest you stop defending yourself and start defending the poor. They do not want “assistance”, they want food and energy at affordable prices. Your replies indicate that you do not think they should have that but “assistance” instead.
Roger Sowell, you’re a heartless pr*ck.
The utilities still send out paper bills with all sorts of brochures in them, including ones in several languages describing the various assistance programs. Senior centers also spread the word. I certainly spread the word. Senior organizations such as AARP also spread the word. The seniors that I know also go to great lengths to help each other and share tips on cutting expenses.
So you think people who are tired, elderly and feeble, have nothing better to do with their time than scour every piece of junk mail garbage which comes through their letterbox, in the hope of finding some government scheme they can scrounge to make ends meet?
All because you want to hit people you don’t like with uncomfortably high power bills?
Growing old with dignity is obviously something which you don’t value.
Just visited Roger Sowell’s blog, and find my first impression of him was dead wrong.
This gent should be welcome at WUWT but perhaps his inbuilt legal hums and haws mitigate against him here.
I suggest others do what I did.
Just my 2 cents worth.
Roger Sowell says:
July 4, 2013 at 11:37 pm
Sure, lets’ examine the facts. Gotta love the logic. Only one person died during the recent heat wave, so that means it’s OK to overcharge for what should be cheap electricity …
w.