CenterPoint Energy reaches settlement agreement with parties to lower bills for customers in its 2024 Houston Electric Rate Case

CenterPoint Energy (CenterPoint) announced today that it has reached a settlement agreement with parties to its 2024 rate case for its CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric business (Houston Electric), including the City of Houston and other regional municipalities. Subject to Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) review and approval, the settlement is expected to result in approximately $50 million less annual revenue to CenterPoint through roughly 2029, and an average decrease of approximately $1 a month for most customers or approximately 2 percent of the monthly bill of residential customers that use 1,000 kWh per month.

A rate case for Houston Electric occurs approximately once every four years and is part of an open and transparent regulatory process in which rates are set by the PUCT.

“All of us at CenterPoint are committed to continuing to work to meet the needs of our customers and providing the reliable, safe, and affordable service that they expect and deserve. Our settle agreement with these parties would reduce the amount of revenue that CenterPoint receives, and customer bills would decrease, while also addressing the significant investments we have made to strengthen our system for the benefit of our customers. Following customer feedback and constructive discussions with intervening parties over the last several months, this plan keeps our customers at the forefront and supports CenterPoint’s ultimate goal of building the most resilient coastal grid in the country,” said Jason Ryan, Executive Vice President of Regulatory Services and Government Affairs.

CenterPoint requested to temporarily withdraw its rate case in August to focus on the company’s Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative in the aftermath of Hurricane Beryl. The company resumed talks in the fall and this settlement agreement reflects discussions with intervening parties. It also includes both an expected rate reduction for customers and a proposal for CenterPoint to reduce its overall revenue by approximately $50 million until the next rate case. Residential customer bills will be lower by approximately $0.82 a month. Small business customer bills will be lower by approximately $1.28 a month.

Over the last decade, CenterPoint’s rates have remained relatively flat on an average annual basis, well below annual inflation, which averaged around 2.8 percent during that timeframe. The portion of customers’ electric bills that covers CenterPoint’s system was just under $50 a decade ago, and it remains approximately $50 today. In 2024, CenterPoint’s rates were the lowest among its peer utilities in Texas.

Investing in the Greater Houston Area’s Electric Grid

CenterPoint’s 2024 rate case is intended to support the capital investments that the company has made to expand and improve the Greater Houston area’s electric system. To help meet the region’s growing electric demand, CenterPoint has invested approximately $8 billion in its grid since the most recent rate case in 2019. Among these investments were:

· Installing nearly 2,200 miles of new distribution lines and more than 100 miles of new transmission lines to meet the needs of a strong economy;

· Constructing six new distribution substations and two new transmission substations to support regional growth and increased load needs;

· Interconnections for 25 new generation resources for the grid;

· Elevating 11 substations to aid in flood mitigation and improve the resiliency of CenterPoint Energy’s system; and

· Installing 437 Intelligent Grid Switching Devices to help prevent and reduce sustained outages, resulting in more than 80 million minutes of customer outages avoided in 2023.

These investments preceded the actions that CenterPoint has taken to strengthen the grid, improve communications and expand local and emergency partnerships as part of the Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative launched in August 2024. For more information about CenterPoint Energy’s electric rates and investments in the Greater Houston area grid, please visit CenterPointEnergy.com/FactsMatter.

CenterPoint’s proposal to help ERCOT would also help reduce customer bills

In December 2024, CenterPoint Energy proposed a unique solution to help mitigate the Electric Reliability Council of Texas’s (ERCOT) regional energy shortfall in Central Texas which is projected to begin in the summer 2025 while also lowering Greater Houston-area electric customer bills. CenterPoint’s proposal would send all 15 large emergency generation units to the San Antonio region for two years starting in Spring 2025. During that time, the company would make no revenue or profit off the proposal to help ERCOT and the State. Greater Houston Area electric customer bills would be reduced around that same time. This proposal is subject to ERCOT board approval.

To be clear, CenterPoint would receive no revenue or profit from ERCOT for the time period after the units are in San Antonio being dispatched by ERCOT. CenterPoint would also not charge Houston-area customers for costs associated with these units after the time period when they are in San Antonio being dispatched by ERCOT.

The combination of rate case revenue reduction and other financial commitments, including some 2024 foregone storm recovery costs, would roughly equal the same amount that has been billed to CenterPoint customers for the temporary generation costs since 2021.

The company would make no revenue or profit off of the temporary emergency generator proposal to help ERCOT and State of Texas which would have otherwise been paid by all customers across the state including CenterPoint customers.

CenterPoint’s Role in the Texas Electricity Market

CenterPoint is an electric transmission and distribution company in the Texas market. The Company does not own any power plants in the state; does not generate any electricity in the state; and does not purchase electricity on behalf of customers in Texas. It also does not have any electric customers in Texas outside the 12-county Greater Houston area.

The Baytown Times
0

New Report

Close