The mayor’s office did not respond to a request for comment regarding how the city could reach its climate goals while also expanding natural gas infrastructure.
POWER Interfaith has been working to push PGW to change its business model away from fossil fuels.
In what is typically a budgetary process that gains little public attention, the group tried to challenge PGW’s priorities this year through legal means. By intervening in the budget review process, POWER argued that PGW is required by city law to do a cost-benefit analysis of infrastructure expansion to insure a positive return on investment. POWER said the law requires this be done before the Gas Commission’s budgetary review and approval process, which should be transparent and open to public review.
“This is critical because PGW’s capital spending has significant impacts on affordability and climate change,” said Devin McDougall, an attorney with the environmental law firm Earthjustice, who represents the climate justice group POWER Interfaith.
McDougall made the group’s case ahead of the vote to approve the capital budget. He argued that expanding the city’s natural gas infrastructure would increase rates among a population that already has some of the highest “energy burden” in the country, meaning a population of ratepayers who pay a large part of their income to heat their homes.
“Additionally, the more PGW expands its distribution infrastructure, the more expensive it will become for the city to achieve its commitment to decarbonization by 2050, and the harder it will become for the city to protect its most vulnerable residents from climate impacts that will grow in severity as greenhouse gas emissions increase,” McDougall said.
POWER has said in the past that PGW needs to shift to a new business model that could include renewables or render itself obsolete.
“Fossil fuels are already bringing us heat waves, drought, crop failures, rising food prices… and lawsuits against the fossil fuel industry have begun,” said Nadine Young, a member of POWER and retired finance attorney who also spoke at the meeting. “Companies will suffer crippling liability for all of this harm. Meanwhile, costs of [renewables are] dropping and former ratepayers are telling their neighbors about their new heat pumps and induction stoves. And yet PGW plans to expand its infrastructure for new gas business.”
A report published in 2021 pointed out several challenges faced by PGW in developing a business that does not rely on fossil fuels. The PGW Business Diversification Study recommended further study into three separate future pathways for PGW: geothermal energy, expanded weatherization and harvesting sewer gas or landfill gas that produces methane.