Under typical state law, public electric utility companies must obtain regulatory approvals before changing the rates they charge their customers. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, 89 electric utilities sought to change their rates by filing rate cases with state regulatory commissions in 2018. This represents a significant increase relative to two decades ago.
Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration |
According to EIA, the frequency or number of electric utility rate cases "typically reflects changes in the costs of generating and delivering electricity." For 2018, EIA pointed to increases in spending for electric transmission and delivery (as opposed to generation) as driving most of the rate increases that were ultimately approved.
EIA notes that the last time electric utility rate case filings were this active was the early 1980s, an era of significant rate increases: electricity rates increased at an average annual rate of 12% in the decade following the 1973 oil embargo. To explain that historic period of numerous rate cases, EIA points to factors including investments in coal and nuclear plants following the oil crisis; the enactment of the federal Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act of 1978 (PURPA), which required utilities to purchase electricity from generation from small, independently-owned renewable facilities, and the 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear plant accident which placed increased focus (and expense) on the safety of nuclear plants. By contrast, during a period of time when the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission was restructuring most electric markets (between 1995 and 2000), fewer than 20 rate cases were filed in most years.
Utilities typically ask for approval of significantly higher rate increases than are ultimately approved by regulators. According to EIA, in 2018, utilities asked for an aggregate rate increase $6.8 billion, but regulators approved a total increase of just $2.8 billion.
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