

I’m not particularly enamored of publicly-owned utilities, but one data point in their favor — Santa Clara uses their own power utility, and their rates are considerably lower than PG&E’s.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon_Valley_Power
Silicon Valley Power (SVP) is a not-for-profit municipal electric utility owned and operated by the City of Santa Clara, California, United States. SVP provides electricity service to approximately 55,116 residential and business customers, including large corporations such as Intel, Applied Materials, Owens Corning and NVIDIA. SVP also owns and maintains a dark fiber network named SVP Fiber Enterprise.
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Well, this is SVP’s site, so not really an objective source, but I think it makes the point, and I’ve read about it elsewhere.
https://www.siliconvalleypower.com/residents/rates-and-fees
SVP D-1 average residential rate is $0.182/kWh.
PG&E E-1 average residential rate is $0.422/kWh.
$.18/kWh isn’t amazing by US standards, but it’s much closer to typical US rates than California as a whole is.


















One thing to keep in mind is that I’m pretty sure that PG&E services a lot of rural areas, which are less-densely-populated, and thus more expensive to provide service to.
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Yeah.
https://www.pge.com/tariffs/assets/pdf/tariffbook/ELEC_MAPS_Service Area Map.pdf
There might be government subsidy as well, but looking at PG&E’s rate schedule, it’s fixed across its service area.
https://www.pge.com/assets/pge/docs/account/rate-plans/residential-electric-rate-plan-pricing.pdf
That probably means that cities are partly footing the cost of providing electricity to rural areas via buying more-expensive electricity than would otherwise be necessary.
If one wants to have this subsidy in place — and one might not — then switching to a local utility would also potentially require adopting some sort of tax.