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California natural gas bills are soaring, and help is limited

According to SoCalGas, which serves most of Southern California, prices are running about five times higher than last January. (David McNew/Getty Images)

Californians are getting hit with outrageously high natural gas bills this January as utility companies pass on the increased cost of procuring gas to their customers.

According to SoCalGas, which serves most of Southern California, prices are running about five times higher than last January.


Among the reasons: below-normal temperatures along the West Coast which has led to higher demand, reduced supplies from Canada and the Rocky Mountains, low storage levels in the western U.S., and pipeline maintenance in West Texas.

“SoCalGas does not set the price for natural gas,” the utility says. “Instead, natural gas prices are determined by national and regional markets. SoCalGas buys natural gas in those markets on behalf of residential and small business customers, and the cost of buying that gas is billed to those customers with no markup, meaning SoCalGas does not profit from the movement of gas commodity prices.”

Regardless of the reasons why gas bills are soaring, Californians are feeling the pinch.

If you are having trouble paying your bill, some limited resources are available.

The Gas Assistance Fund through SoCalGas is offering one-time grants of up to $100 for qualifying customers. To qualify, you must meet several requirements:

Number of people in the householdTotal yearly household income* not more than
1-2$36,620
3$46,060
4$55,500
5$64,940
6$74,380
7$83,820
8$93,260
SoCalGas

SoCalGas recently announced a $1 million contribution to the GAF, which will be allocated on a first-come, first-served basis, the utility said.

SoCalGas also announced it is delaying collections on overdue accounts until April 1 and will not disconnect overdue customers during the first half of the year.

SoCalGas recommends the following tips to reduce your natural gas bill:

Most natural gas in California comes from out-of-state basins, according to the California Public Utilities Commission, which regulates utility rates. In 2017, California utility customers received 38% of their natural gas supply from the Southwest, 27% from Canada, 27% from the U.S. Rocky Mountain region, and 8% from production in California.