State officials recommend gas price increase for 4.1 million consumers
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[October 18, 2023]
By ANDREW ADAMS
Capitol News Illinois
aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com
Utility customers throughout Illinois will likely see higher natural gas
bills beginning in January after staff at the state’s utility regulatory
agency recommended rate increases for four gas companies.
Those recommendations – made by administrative judges at the Illinois
Commerce Commission – next go to the appointed five-member commission
itself. Over the next two months, the ICC will weigh whether to approve
rate hikes for the 4.1 million customers of Ameren Illinois, Nicor Gas,
Peoples Gas and North Shore Gas.
Estimates on the consumer cost of the rate increases, which go into
effect in January, vary.
Nicor, which serves 2.2 million Illinoisans, estimates that their
original request would increase customer bills by about $9.28 per month.
Ameren customers’ bills are expected to increase by several dollars per
month as well. Peoples Gas claims that, due to the falling price of
natural gas, customer bills will remain at similar levels to last
winter.
The proposed rate increases have drawn criticism from consumer and
environmental advocates. Consumer advocacy groups, like Illinois PIRG,
oppose the increases and have argued the utilities are spending money
irresponsibly.
PIRG’s director, Abe Scarr, said that he expects the commission to
modify the recommendations “to be more consumer conscious, more climate
conscious.”
“The big question is what changes will the commissioners actually make,”
Scarr said.
Scarr and other advocates have been watching the commissioners closely
throughout the rate case process for hints as to how they might rule.
The commissioners are all relatively recent appointees of Gov. JB
Pritzker, with three having joined the board in the spring.
One of the major concerns in the gas cases – and the infrastructure
spending driving the rate increases – is the electrification of
residential heating and cooking across the U.S. Advocates say this could
lead to a future where companies create “stranded assets,” meaning
infrastructure that is no longer used.
But the gas companies have defended their requested increases by
pointing to the fact that much of the infrastructure spending is
required for safety reasons and by federal law.
“The company’s cost of service is now increasing due to continued
investments in our system infrastructure to meet new federal
compliance-related regulations and industry best practices that help
ensure system-wide reliability,” Allison Gregoire, a Nicor Gas
spokesperson, said in an email to Capitol News Illinois.
Higher prices, higher profits
The ICC has several levels to control the price of gas utility bills,
with one of the most significant being setting utilities’ “return on
equity” – in other words, the profit that’s returned to shareholders.
This has been a major point of contention throughout the 11-month rate
case process, with advocates, companies, the state’s attorney general,
and the staff of the ICC all proposing different potential rates.
Ultimately, the administrative judges overseeing the cases sided with
ICC staff on their recommended profit rates. For Nicor and Ameren, they
recommended a 9.89 percent return to shareholders. For Peoples Gas and
North Shore Gas – which are owned by the same parent company, the
administrative law judge recommended a 9.83 percent return.
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Yessenia Balcazar of the Southeast Environmental Task Force holds a
sign at a March 27 protest of Peoples Gas’ proposed rate increase in
downtown Chicago. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams)
While lower than the companies’ requested profit rates – all of
which were above 10 percent – the recommended rates were higher than
any proposed by consumer advocates.
The Citizens Utility Board, a nonprofit created by the General
Assembly in the 1980s to advocate for consumers before the ICC, was
part of a coalition of organizations that argued for a 9.5 percent
profit rate for Peoples Gas and Ameren and 9.4 percent for Nicor.
“Too often, they (the ICC) side with utilities, especially when it
comes to the profit rates for shareholders,” CUB director Sarah
Moskowitz said in an interview.
Utilities also say a wider profit margin allows them to more easily
attract investments and conduct business transactions.
“The requested rate of return will give us access to affordable
project financing with lower debt costs, and those savings will be
passed on to our customers,” Tucker Kennedy, Ameren’s director of
communications, said in a statement.
ICC’s busy year
Beyond the gas rate cases, the ICC is also considering two complex
cases that will determine the price of electricity for Ameren
Illinois and Commonwealth Edison, the two largest electric utilities
in the state.
These cases involve multi-year rate plans as well as a grid planning
process, both of which were outlined in the 2021 Climate and
Equitable Jobs Act.
These multi-year plans are expected to increase electricity rates
for most Illinois utility customers over the next four years, with
ComEd’s plan increasing rates by $200 per year by 2027 and Ameren’s
increasing rates by $300 per year over that span. The ICC
commissioners will likely lower these increases somewhat by the time
they vote on a final order in these cases later this year.
The commission is also considering permitting two controversial
pipelines that are designed to transport carbon dioxide for eventual
sequestration in underground geologic structures in central
Illinois.
In addition to ideological and political fights surrounding the
pipelines, there is also an ongoing legal question of what role
states should play in regulating CO2 transport. While the federal
Pipeline and Hazardous Material Administration has the authority to
determine safety, some states factor that into their regulatory
structures.
This was one of the main concerns cited by South Dakota regulators
when they quashed a permit application from Navigator CO2 for a
pipeline that would have terminated in Illinois. Last week,
Navigator withdrew its Illinois application from ICC consideration
but noted it may reapply.
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