Minnesota utilities seek rate increases for power, natural gas


NFPA 70E Training

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 6 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$199
Coupon Price:
$149
Reserve Your Seat Today
Minnesota's biggest utilities filed requests to charge consumers even higher energy rates for electricity and natural gas.

CenterPoint Energy and Xcel Energy said the proposed rate hikes are spurred by rising wholesale prices for natural gas, higher operating costs, capital investments and other factors.

CenterPoint Energy asked the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission to raise natural gas distribution rates, a move that would, if approved, raise the average residential customer's bill about $3 a month. Interim rates will appear on bills beginning in January.

The request is to pay for rising distribution costs, rather than wholesale gas prices, which already are passed on to consumers and are driving bills up the most, CenterPoint regulatory specialist Joe Klenken said.

Wholesale costs account for about 80 percent of a customer's bill, and those costs are expected to rise by 40 percent this season.

The distribution hike request would generate $40.9 million yearly, or 2.4 percent of CenterPoint revenue.

Xcel Energy asked the commission to increase electric base rates so the average residential electric customer would be billed $6.78 more per month, based on a monthly use of 675 kilowatt-hours.

That would be an annual increase in revenue of 8.05 percent, or $168 million. Until the commission decides the case in early fall 2006, the interim rate increase will be $3.87 a month, beginning in January.

The rate-increase request is the first in 13 years for Xcel, which said it must continue to invest in infrastructure - from transmission towers to wires to generating plants, said Scott Wilensky, executive director for Xcel state public affairs.

Xcel has gained about 180,000 customers during those 13 years, particularly in the metro area, he said, and residential and commercial customers are using more electricity, from air conditioning to laptops to high-definition TVs.

Consumers can ward off higher energy bills with conservation measures. And a warm October and early November also could help ease the pain. On the evening of November 2, for example, the temperature in Minneapolis was in the upper 60s.

CenterPoint spokesman Rolf Lund said that even though gas prices are at a record high of $1.39 per therm, consumption is lower - partly because people aren't running their furnaces as much because of the warm weather.

"That is going to lower their consumption and lower their October bills," Lund said, "and it's a good start for November."

CenterPoint also cited, in seeking higher rates, bad debts and the $38 million cost of replacing potentially flawed gas service lines in 34 Minnesota communities this year.

Because cost-conscious consumers have conserved energy as natural gas prices rose, use has declined, affecting CenterPoint's ability to recover distribution costs.

Related News

Three Mile Island at center of energy debate: Let struggling nuclear plants close or save them

Three Mile Island Nuclear Debate spotlights subsidies, carbon pricing, wholesale power markets, grid reliability, and…
View more

Time running out for Ontario to formally request Pickering nuclear power station extension

Pickering Nuclear Plant Extension faces CNSC approval as Ontario Power Generation pursues license renewal before…
View more

Wind turbine firms close Spanish factories as Coronavirus restrictions tighten

Spain Wind Turbine Factory Shutdowns disrupt manufacturing as Vestas, Siemens Gamesa, and Nordex halt Spanish…
View more

Ontario Teachers' Plan Acquires Brazilian Electricity Transmission Firm Evoltz

Ontario Teachers' Evoltz Acquisition expands electricity transmission in Brazil, adding seven grid lines across ten…
View more

BOE Says UK Energy Price Guarantee is Key for Next Rates Call

UK Market Stability Outlook remains febrile as the Bank of England, Treasury, and OBR forecasts…
View more

EIA expects solar and wind to be larger sources of U.S. electricity generation this summer

US Summer Electricity Outlook 2022 projects rising renewable energy generation as utility-scale solar and wind…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Download the 2026 Electrical Training Catalog

Explore 50+ live, expert-led electrical training courses –

  • Interactive
  • Flexible
  • CEU-cerified