Politics & Government

PG&E Agrees to Release Periodic Pipeline Safety Reports

The agreement comes as PG&E reached a settlement with the CPUC that requires the utility to provide officials and the public with information that tracks money spent on gas transmission line projects over the next four years.

Pacific Gas & Electric Co. reached a settlement today in San Francisco with the California Public Utilities Commission, which now requires the utility giant to release safety reports of its gas transmission lines in light of the Sept. 9 explosion that killed eight people.

The settlement, titled the Gas Accord V, will enable CPUC officials to better monitor PG&E's pipeline requirements following the blast that destroyed 38 homes in the Crestmoor neighborhood.

"This settlement means a higher level of accountability for PG&E," said Mindy Spatt, spokeswoman for The Utility Reform Network, or TURN, one organization PG&E settled with.

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The report, titled the Gas Transmission and Storage Safety Report, will provide the CPUC and the public with information that tracks money spent on gas transmission line projects over a four-year period.

"It's an issue of concern on our part," CPUC spokesman Andrew Kotch said.

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TURN pushed for this settlement following the explosion of Line 132 near Earl Avenue and Glenview Drive, and after the public learned of a received from customers that was initially slated to repair another part of the line running through South San Francisco.

"Now, if the money isn't spent on safety, it has to be returned to customers, instead of pocketed," Spatt said.

In addition to the new report, PG&E officials also revised their schedule for increasing utility fees to customers between 2011 and 2014. The company will now receive $95 million less in revenue than what they originally requested to the CPUC for rate hikes over the same time period, Spatt said.

Under the new agreement, a typical natural gas customer will experience about a 0.7 percent increase in their monthly bill between 2011 and 2014, according to the CPUC.

PG&E has received increased scrutiny by the CPUC and policymakers in the months following the explosion last year.

About a month ago, commissioners announced they would for failing to provide documentation justifying pressure levels in the utility's gas transmission lines.

In addition, the company complied with CPUC orders in February to reduce pressure on four of its natural gas transmission lines after commissioners learned they were running over maximum levels for several years.

Pressure on lines running through Milpitas, San Jose, Watsonville and Aptos Hills was reduced to 20 percent below their maximum allowable operating pressure in February.

"In the past, they haven't been held accountable," Spatt said. "We think this settlement will bring a higher level of transparency."

—Bay City News


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