California Cuts PG&E’s and Edison’s Profits for Grid Investments

Hundreds May Have Been Exposed to Rabies in Grand Teton National Park Cabins

California regulators reduced the profit that utilities are allowed to make on infrastructure investments in an effort to rein in soaring electricity bills.

Related: Massive Wildfire Liabilities Push Utilities to Use AI to Stop Blazes

The move Thursday by the California Public Utilities Commission underscores its oft-conflicting policy goals: while the state is keen for power providers to fortify a grid that’s sparked catastrophic wildfires, doing so costs billions of dollars. Those expenses are typically passed on by utilities owned by PG&E Corp., Edison International and Sempra to homes and businesses. State regulators are also trying to minimize further inflation of utility bills.

Related: PG&E Investing $73B in Capital Spending Through 2030 to Harden System

On a 4-1 vote, returns for PG&E, Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric — the state’s main investor-owned utilities — were set at a range of 9.78% to 10.03% compared to the national average of about 9.72%.

PG&E had asked for 11.3%, SoCal Edison wanted 11.75% and SDG&E called for 11.25%.

Copyright 2025 Bloomberg.

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California
Profit Loss

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