California’s Electricity Disaster In Seven Charts

From Robert Bryce’s Substack

Robert Bryce,

Residential electricity prices jumped nearly 12% in 2023 and they are going higher. But the carbon intensity of power generation isn’t falling and low-income ratepayers are subsidizing the rich.

California’s energy woes are getting worse. According to the latest numbers from the Energy Information Administration, the state’s residential electricity prices, already among the highest in America, jumped by 3 cents per kilowatt-hour last year, an increase of 11.9%. The average California homeowner now pays 28.9 cents per kilowatt-hour for electricity, which is the third-highest price in the U.S., behind only Connecticut and Hawaii.  

Unfortunately, the 2023 price increases are only a hors d’oeuvre. California’s electric rates are headed for the exosphere. As I explained last March in “California Screamin,” in 2022:

The California Public Utilities Commission unanimously approved a scheme that aims to add more than 25 gigawatts of renewables and 15 gigawatts of batteries to the state’s electric grid by 2032 at an estimated cost of $49.3 billion. In addition, the California Independent System Operator released a draft plan to upgrade the state’s transmission grid at a cost of some $30.5 billion. The combined cost of those two schemes is about $80 billion.

Given the raging inflation in utility products, that $80 billion estimate is undoubtedly too low. Whatever the ultimate price tag, the state’s aggressive alt-energy plans will inflict more economic pain on the low-income residents of a state with the dubious distinction of having the highest poverty rate in the United States.

From natural gas bans to aggressive alt-energy mandates and bans on vehicles with internal combustion engines, the Golden State provides a clear example of what not to do. While California’s lunatic energy policy decisions go back decades, the most relevant regulations began in 2008. That’s when, as McClatchy newspapers explained:  

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed an executive order calling on utilities to provide one-third of their power from renewable resources by 2020. “This will be the most aggressive target in the nation,” he said. Increased reliance on renewable energy conceivably could hike future rates, however, because of higher production costs and the need to upgrade transmission facilities. Schwarzenegger’s order came on the eve of today’s international summit on global climate change in Los Angeles. (Emphasis added.)

These seven charts show how California’s electricity policies have unfolded since 2008.

Chart 1

The following chart uses a graphic created by Grant Chalmers, who works in information technology at the University of Brisbane. It shows that despite the massive increases in wind and solar production, the carbon intensity of California’s electric generation isn’t falling. To be clear, total electricity use in California is falling. All-sector electricity use in the state fell 11.2% between 2008 and 2023. (Hat tip to Joe Toomey.) That reduction in power use has likely helped reduce the state’s overall CO2 emissions, which, as seen in this December 14, 2023, California Air Resources Board report, have declined since 2008. But California is nowhere near net zero, and the carbon intensity of electricity production hasn’t budged in more than a decade.

Chart 2

Meanwhile, the state’s electricity prices are exploding.

Chart 3

Chart 4

The following chart shows the latest figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Although the average price of residential electricity in California is 28.9 cents per kilowatt-hour, it’s even more expensive in the state’s biggest cities.

Chart 5

A devastating February 8 report from The Public Advocates Office, estimated that rooftop solar incentives in California will cost “customers without solar an estimated $6.5 billion in 2024.” The report is astonishing for its brevity and its findings. The office, which is part of the California Public Utility Commission, concluded that the cost of solar subsidies for ratepayers who don’t have solar has nearly doubled since 2021. It explains: “The recent cost increases are driven by two main factors: (1) a surge in customers installing solar prior to the phase out of unsustainably lucrative program compensation terms, and (2) higher compensation to customers with rooftop solar for the excess energy their systems generate.” The report goes on, saying the main incentive for homeowners to install rooftop solar is a program called net energy metering which compensates those homeowners for “the electricity they generate by more than seven times its relative value to the grid.” (Emphasis added.) It continues:

The Public Advocates Office estimates Pacific Gas and Electric, Southern California Edison, and San Diego Gas & Electric customers without solar will pay an additional $6.5 billion in 2024 to support the program. In 2021, the cost was approximately $3.4 billion. Our analysis estimates that in 2024, more than 15% of the average household’s electricity bill will go to subsidizing the program across all utilities if they do not have solar. The amount has trended upward in recent years: the program made up 8 to 17% of the average customer’s bill in 2022, according to a prior CPUC estimate.

On January 10, less than a month before the Public Advocates Office published its report on rooftop solar, the Legislative Analyst’s Office sent a 16-page letter to Senator Maria Elena Durazo, a Democrat from central Los Angeles, that detailed the myriad ways in which California’s climate policies — in the words of The Two Hundred for Homeownership, a non-profit group that advocates for low- and moderate-income communities — “disproportionately burden lower-income people.” The letter found that the state’s net metering policies for rooftop solar:

Have historically subsidized electricity costs for households with rooftop solar while raising them for everyone else and researchers note that NEM is one driver of high increases in residential electricity prices. The average customer without rooftop solar pays 10 percent to 20 percent on their electricity bills to subsidize rooftop solar on the homes of others. (Emphasis added.)

None of this should be surprising. I spotlighted the class divide over solar energy and the transfer of wealth from poor to rich in 2017 in the Wall Street Journal. I wrote:

According to a study done for the California Public Utility Commission, residents who have installed solar systems have household incomes 68% higher than the state average. Ashley Brown, executive director of the Harvard Electricity Policy Group, calls the proliferation of rooftop solar systems and the returns they provide to lucky people like me, “a wealth transfer from less affluent ratepayers to more affluent ones.” It is, Mr. Brown says, “Robin Hood in reverse.”

This graphic shows the change in effective solar subsidies between 2021 and 2024. Rooftop solar and net energy metering would have horrified Robin and other denizens of Sherwood Forest.

Chart 6

There’s plenty of evidence the state’s energy mandates are punishing low-income Californians. On March 10, Rob Nikolewski, a sharp-eyed reporter at the San Diego Union-Tribune, published an article that began, “Roughly one-quarter of San Diego Gas & Electric customers are still behind on their monthly bills.” He continued, saying that about 3.48 million California ratepayers had “fallen behind on their monthly payments, as of January.” He then quoted Mark Wolfe, the executive director at the National Energy Assistance Directors Association, who said the numbers in California are “alarming.” Wolfe added: “The underlying problem is energy is very expensive in California and it’s not surprising to see people owing as much as they do.”

Chart 7

Given California’s soaring energy costs and exorbitant cost of living, it’s unsurprising that people are leaving for less-expensive pastures. In December, the Census Bureau reported that California lost some 75,000 residents in 2023, an exodus surpassed only by New  York, which lost about 102,000 people. In January, Fox News reported, “For the fourth year in a row, liberal California topped U-Haul’s Growth Index list for having the largest net outbound movers in 2023.”

The Power Hungry Podcast Is On Hiatus

After nearly four years, 223 episodes, and over 900,000 downloads, I am putting the Power Hungry podcast on hiatus. I have enjoyed doing the podcast and sincerely appreciate everyone who came on the show or tuned in. My colleague, Tyson Culver — who also directed and produced our new docuseries, Juice: Power, Politics & The Grid — has been a dependable podcast producer. But I’ve been stretched too thin lately. So, I’m hitting the pause button. I may come back to the podcast or I might start putting video content here on Substack. But those are decisions for another day. I look forward to having more time to focus on my speaking business and my writing here on Substack. Thanks to all of you who listened to the podcast.

Media Hits

1. Tyson and I were on the Pacific Research Institute’s podcast, Next Round, this week, discussing our docuseries. It was a good chat. Click here to listen.

2. Reporter John Moritz quoted me in a piece about the Texas grid that was published Monday in the Austin-American Statesman. John contacted me after reading my February 20, piece “Out of Transmission Revisited.” I was glad to get quoted saying, “The number of line-miles of high voltage transmission over the last few years has been declining…So these claims that we hear routinely that, ‘Oh, we’re just going to massively expand the grid.’ No, that is not going to happen.”

3. David Staples of the Edmonton Journal published an excellent piece yesterday on the backlash against alt-energy in Canada and the U.S. He quotes me and mentions our new docuseries and the Renewable Rejection Database.


If you don’t click that ♡ button, you will be required to pay the electric bill at Arnold Schwarzenegger’s mansion in Pacific Palisades. (With apologies to Doomberg.)

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Sean2828
March 25, 2024 1:56 am

California also has the highest fuel prices in the nation with carbon taxes paid to subsidize EV purchases (and high speed rail) and road maintenance taxes paid mainly by ICE vehicles.

Reply to  Sean2828
March 25, 2024 4:28 am

High electricity prices and high gasoline prices are a good way to sap the vigor out of an economy.

James Snook
March 25, 2024 2:16 am

The ‘class divide’ in roof top solar was inevitable and foreseeable. Firstly you have to actually own your own roof and secondly you have to have, or be able to borrow, the capital, to buy and install the equipment.

Its clearly going to be a proposition that only a relatively wealthy minority can take advantage of, as are all components Net Zero ‘programmes’ throughout the world.

Reply to  James Snook
March 25, 2024 4:49 am

On two separate occasions, about 10 years apart, I considered solar and in both cases there was absolutely no return on investment at all. A complete waste of money, unless of course the cost of electricity was utterly ridiculous and if that was the case escape was the better option as we can see occurring in CA. I suspect those that can escape will continue to do so for greener pastures. The entire renewable energy scheme is a fraud.

Peter K
Reply to  George T
March 26, 2024 3:22 am

I installed solar system by myself, 3.4kW. So far it returned 1000Eur from 4500Eur investment in 2 years, I have quite low electricity price of 0.16Eur/kWh. I’m in not best solar environment in Europe. Being in California for example my gain would be around 30% higher.

March 25, 2024 2:24 am

When WDGs get to 25% of market share there is no point adding more without adding commensurate storage. At that point, they should realise that they have reached the edge of the cliff. Going forward guarantees economic decline because no energy intensive industries or manufacturing are viable without enshrined theft.

A realistic cost estimate to achieve NetZero in Australia is $1.2tr. Seems a reasonable number but it equates to $45k per person. It would be less than half the cost per person for households and remaining businesses to make their own electricity.

Net metering was even recognised as problematic in Australia. It will likely prove to be the fastest way to achieve NetZero. California will be hollowed out with an ever increasing divide between those who take and those who give. The latter will eventually leave when they can no longer bear the economic burden and rising crime.

Writing Observer
Reply to  RickWill
March 26, 2024 1:40 am

The former leave when there is nobody left from whom to take.

Unfortunately, they just move to a greener pasture to eat out the substance there.

Ron Long
March 25, 2024 3:23 am

What a mess! If electricity payers are $2.2 billion behind, and California has the largest poverty rate in the USA, how much of that 2.2 big ones is going to be paid? It’s like the comment says: California would be a great State except it’s infested with Californians (some exceptions).

Reply to  Ron Long
March 25, 2024 4:31 am

The problem is California is infested with radical Democrats who destroy everything they touch. Everything.

Reply to  Tom Abbott
March 25, 2024 4:58 am

In CO where we will be departing shortly; the super majority government structure is on track to replicating the CA model of governance. Irrational emotional crusade to undermine personal liberties and freedoms which is making CO quite expensive to live here any longer.

Joe Crawford
Reply to  George T
March 27, 2024 1:50 pm

I left CO about 35 years after my property taxes had already increased around 25% and were scheduled higher. I left because I knew I would not be able to afford the taxes on my house when I retired.

March 25, 2024 5:04 am

There is only one remedy

ELECT TRUMP BY A LANDSLIDE

to oust a lot of those idiots from government
to seal all the borders like sardine cans
no one into our US, without proper documents, obtained in their own country, and only after learning English and having ten years of modern industrial experience; the US already has tens of millions useless, obsolete “workers
This is about MAGA and you cannot do that with illegals

Reply to  wilpost
March 25, 2024 8:25 am

F J B

MarkW
Reply to  wilpost
March 25, 2024 9:27 am

He’ll have to be elected by a landslide, in order to still be winning after the Democrats get through counting the extra ballots they always manage to find.

c1ue
March 25, 2024 5:16 am

Let’s put the above numbers in some context – because California is a large state with a large population. CA has about 13.3 million households, so $80 billion by 2032 = $860 a year or $71 a month. Seems like a lot.
Now consider that wind and solar are only providing 25.6% of total electricity generation…and a significant percentage of that is not “California” – it is electricity imported from other states.
Lastly, remove the percentage of electricity produced by wind and solar that is curtailed – i.e. is excess to demand therefore costs money to dump. It was about 0.4% for wind and 4% for solar, overall.
Supposedly LCOE for wind and solar is cheaper…why then are California electricity prices so high? San Francisco is the most ridiculous of all – it has its own power utility including getting electricity from the dams in the Sierras: fully amortized and super cheap.
I generally highly dislike blanket “communist” and “socialist” terms that get flung about in WuWT all the time – but California’s government and utilities are very much “socialism for the rich”.

Gums
Reply to  c1ue
March 25, 2024 6:26 am

Salute!,

As much as I dislike the practice of telling folks that”you are getting what you voted for”, I have some compassion for some now and then . In California and New York’s case, I must remind the voters there what a famous philosopher’s Mother told him:

“stupid is as stupid does”

Then there’s Gen Honore who fired back at reporters in a press conference following the Katrina debacle on New Orleans:

“don’t get stuck on stupid”
.
Gums sends…

c1ue
Reply to  Gums
March 26, 2024 6:46 am

Believe it or not – the majority of California by area did not vote for this.
Even in SF – there are many people who did not vote for this, but the PMCs dominate the cities and the cities dominate the overall vote.
But most importantly: nobody voted for these actual policies. There has never been a referendum to mandate the California Air Resources Board (CARB) – which is the unelected bureaucratic entity which kicked all of this off. Now CARB is extending its authority to all VOCs – volatile organic compounds – including those in food, makeup, whatever. The only remaining step is regulating human VOCs – i.e. the literal CO2 we breath.

MarkW
Reply to  c1ue
March 25, 2024 9:28 am

All socialism, is socialism for the rich.

c1ue
Reply to  MarkW
March 26, 2024 6:50 am

Sorry, but that is idiotic.
Socialism turned Russia from a 3rd rate 2nd world power into a regional superpower with a military on par with anyone in the world.
China – while it has capitalism, is still far more socialist than capitalist. And while a bunch of Central Committee members are now billionaires – these billionaires have raised literally hundreds of millions of Chinese out of poverty and have directed that nation into a literally historic economic surge over an entire generation (40 years) and counting.
How much have the last 2 generations of American and European super wealthy contributed to all of the other Americans’ and Europeans’ prosperity?

Denis
March 25, 2024 6:24 am

Forty one cents per kilowatt-hour in San Francisco!” Here in southern Maryland, a very blue state, I paid a bit less that 9 cents/Kwh on my last electric bill.

John Hultquist
March 25, 2024 7:06 am

I suppose the cost of electrons and fuel in CA must also raise the price of groceries. There is a phrase: “You can’t do just one thing.”
There must be millions of “not rich” folks in CA having trouble paying for the basic needs of a family.

MarkW
Reply to  John Hultquist
March 25, 2024 9:31 am

The new $20/hr minimum wage, with higher amounts for certain industries, isn’t helping either.

Drake
March 25, 2024 8:00 am

Funny how San Diego and San Francisco are 40% more expensive than Los Angeles.

The hidden part of that is the electrical power from Hoover Dam is over 80% sent to the LA area. The output is varied to provide peaking power. So the LA area does not need to start up gas plants to cover variability in output from unreliable generation or variability of demand from normal electrical consumption.

I say cut the power from Hoover dam to LA and let them reap the rewards of their actions in the form of a 40% rise in electric rates. The massive number of voters in LA have been protected from the actions of their elected officials for long enough.

It will take Federal action through congress to make the change, and the new POTUS and congress must take that action ASAP.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Drake
March 25, 2024 9:20 am

I was just about to ask why SF was so much more expensive than LA. Thanks for answering that. 🙂

Writing Observer
Reply to  Drake
March 26, 2024 1:47 am

They get a fair amount from the Palo Verde nuclear plant in Arizona. A large part of their 30% imported electricity is from “dirty” fossil fuel plants in other States, too.

But that’s the Democrat way – destroy production in their own back yard, proclaim their virtue far and wide – and export the “problems” elsewhere.

MarkW
March 25, 2024 9:19 am

All-sector electricity use in the state fell 11.2% between 2008 and 2023. 

That tends to happen when people and businesses are leaving the state in droves.

Writing Observer
March 26, 2024 1:38 am

The lead picture is why the fight isn’t just against Democrat socialists – it’s also against so-called Republicans that are also socialists.

Some progress is being made, judging by the recent “retirements” (before humiliation at the polls) – but, please, faster!