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n the 1850s, manufactured gas was being introduced as means of lighting for
the first time and coal gasification works were being built in the larger
eastern American cities. San Francisco pioneer foundryman and blacksmith
Peter Donahue and his brothers established a foundry below North Beach, and
later in the south of Market area. The foundry would become the Union Iron
Works, the greatest industrial concern in 19th century San Francisco.
Donahue learned all he could about gas manufacturing and with his brother
James and a young engineer named Joseph G. Eastland incorporated the San
Francisco Gas Company on August 31, 1852. The original location for the gas
works was bounded by First, Fremont, Howard and Natoma streets south of
Market, on the then shore of the San Francisco Bay. On the night of February
11, 1854, the streets of San Francisco were for the first time lighted by
gas, and a banquet was held at the Oriental hotel. In a year, the company
had 12 miles (19 km) of street mains, thousands of gas streetlights, two gas
holders at First and Howard with a combined capacity of 160,000 cubic feet
(4,500 m3) and a monopoly of city gasification contracts. The cost of gas
was billed at 15 dollars per thousand cubic feet, where no meters were
installed, the price was estimated from the size of the burners. Shortly
thereafter, the Citizens Gas Company was given a fifty year franchise by the
state legislature but when the company was built and ready to deliver gas,
it sold out to the San Francisco Gas Company.
In April 1870, the City Gas Company was organized and built its works on the
Potrero Point shoreline. Another company, the Metropolitan Gas Company, was
established but was not a success, and it was quickly purchased by the San
Francisco Gas Company.
[edit] San Francisco Gas Light
All these companies were merged with larger infusions of capital into the
San Francisco Gas Light company in 1873. A rival company, the Central Gas
Company, came into existence in 1882 and the rate for gas went as low 0.90
cents a thousand cubic feet. The Central and the Pacific Gas Improvement
Company were merged into the San Francisco Gas and Electric Company, (SFG&E
Co.) September 1, 1903.
Rapid technological improvements in the processes of manufacturing gas were
immediately adopted by the company. When petroleum was produced in
California, the manufacture of water gas, then in general use in eastern and
midwest states, began in San Francisco.
Water gas was first made from anthracite coal brought around Cape Horn from
Swansea in Wales and enriched with California petroleum. The first water gas
works, a thoroughly modern plant, was established at Potrero Point and the
manufacture of water gas was a success due to the increased amount of
petroleum available that reduced costs. The company then acquired land in
North Beach at Bay, Laguna and Webster streets, and in 1891, the North Beach
Gas Works was built. For many years this facility, with its 2 million cubic
feet (57,000 m3) gas holder, was considered the finest gas works in the
world. The original plant at Howard Street was dismantled.
Circa 1890 they also built a small electrical generator at the Potrero Point
site, a first in California. This site would later become the Potrero
Generating Station.
[edit] San Francisco Gas and Electric
In December, 1896, the San Francisco Gas Light Company merged with the
Edison Light and Power Company under the new title San Francisco Gas and
Electric Company and this company existed until 1903 and then dissolved.
Other companies that started in the business in active competition but
eventually merged into the SFG&E co. were the Equitable Gas Light Company
and the Independent Electric Light and Power and the Independent Gas and
Power company, founded by Claus Spreckels, the king of California sugar.
[edit] Pacific Gas and Electric company 1905
The company known as Pacific Gas and Electric incorporated on October 10,
1905, as a consolidation of more than two dozen power and water concerns
around the state. PG&E went on to consolidate power in northern California
and by 1952 represented 520 companies merged.
By 1906, the exclusive use of petroleum for manufactured gas was catching on
and a 4,000,000 cubic feet gas-oil unit was built at the Potrero Gas Works.
A similar unit had been built at the Martin Station in Visitacion Valley on
the San Mateo border and was connected to the Potrero works by a 12-inch
(300 mm) high pressure pipe for use in San Francisco. At around the same
time, hydroelectric power was established in California at the Colgate power
plant on the Yuba River which began to deliver power for agriculture. In
1905, Pacific Gas and Electric Company was formed by a merger of the SFG&E
Co. and the California Gas and Electric Corporation. The 1906 earthquake
destroyed the North Beach Gas Works but the Potrero works were unaffected
and along with the Martin Station, supplied the city after the Great fire.
In 1912 PG&E began installing meters to free itself from the previous flat
rate billing scheme.
PG&E began delivering natural gas to San Francisco and northern California
in 1930 through the longest pipeline in the world, connecting the Texas gas
fields to northern California with compressor stations that included cooling
towers every 300 miles (480 km), at Topock on the state line, and near the
town of Hinkley, California. With the introduction of natural gas, the
company began retiring its polluting gas manufacturing facilities, though it
kept some plants on standby.
[edit] Streetcars
1906 also marked the year that PG&E purchased the Sacramento Electric, Gas
and Railway Company. The history of the PG&E streetcar lines in Sacramento
goes back to the Sacramento City Street Railway, a 5-foot (1.5 m) gauge
horsecar railway that operated 9 miles (14 km) of street railway in
Sacramento in the late 1800s. The Sacramento Street Railway was purchased by
the Sacramento Electric, Power and Light Company Electric Railway. In 1896,
the Sacramento Electric, Power & Light Company Electric Railway was
purchased by the Sacramento Electric, Gas & Railway Company. In 1906, PG&E
acquired the line and in 1915 PG&E operated the line under the PG&E name.
PG&E's streetcars had lines such as the "#6 - Oak Park Line". In 1943, PG&E
sold the lines to Sacramento City Lines which ended up in the hands of the
National City Lines. National City Lines converted several streetcar lines
in that era to bus service and the track was abandoned on January 4,
1947.[3]
[edit] North American Company
By 1940, PG&E had become one of four major direct operating company
subsidiaries, out of a group of ten major direct subsidiaries, that were
controlled by North American Company. In eight of the ten direct
subsidiaries, North American owned at least 79% stake. By 1940 North
American was a US$2.3 billion holding company heading up a pyramid of by
then 80 companies.[4]
North American's stock had once been one of the twelve component stocks of
the May 1896 original Dow Jones Industrial Average.[5] North American
Company was broken up by the Securities and Exchange Commission, following
the United States Supreme Court decision of April 1, 1946.[4]
[edit] Postwar era
In the post war era, PG&E went on a massive building spree, creating 14 new
hydroelectric plants and 5 steam plants.
As of December 1992, PG&E operated 173 electric generating units and 85
generating stations, 18,450 miles (29,690 km) of transmission lines and
101,400 miles (163,200 km) of distribution system.
In the later 1990s, under electricity market deregulation this utility sold
off most of its natural gas power plants. The utility retained all of its
hydroelectric plants, the Diablo Canyon Power Plant and a few natural gas
plants, but the large natural gas plants it sold made up a large portion of
its generating capacity. This had the effect of requiring the utility to buy
power from the energy generators at fluctuating prices, while being forced
to sell the power to consumers at a fixed cost. However, the market for
electricity was dominated by the Enron Corporation, which, with help from
other corporations, artificially pushed prices for electricity ever higher.
This led to the California electricity crisis that began in 2000 on Path 15,
a transmission corridor PG&E built.
With a critical power shortage, rolling blackouts began on January 17, 2001.
[edit] Bankruptcy
With little generating capacity of its own, and unable to sell electricity
to consumers for more than it could buy it on the open market, PG&E entered
Chapter 11 bankruptcy April 6, 2001. The State of California bailed out the
utility, the cost of which worsened an already bad state budget situation.
This played an important part in the eventual recall of California Governor
Gray Davis.
PG&E emerged from bankruptcy in April 2004, after distributing $10.2 billion
to hundreds of creditors. Its 4.8 million electricity customers are expected
to pay an average $1,300 to $1,700 each in above-market prices through
2012.[citation needed]
[edit] Generation portfolio
PG&E's utility-owned generation portfolio consists an extensive
hydroelectric system, one operating nuclear power plant, one operating
natural gas-fired power plant, and another gas-fired plant under
construction. Two other plants owned by the company have been permanently
removed from commercial operation: Humboldt Bay Unit 3 (nuclear) and Hunters
Point (fossil).
[edit] Hydroelectric facilities
PG&E's hydroelectric portfolio is the largest under private ownership in the
United States. Drawing water from approximately 100 reservoirs along 16
river basins, its maximum electric output is 3,896 MW.
The single largest component is the Helms Pumped Storage Project, located in
Fresno County, California. Helms consists of three units, each rated at 404
MW, for a total output of 1,212 MW. The facility operates between Courtright
and Wishon reservoirs, alternately draining water from Courtright to produce
electricity when demand is high, and pumping it back into Courtright from
Wishon when demand is low. The powerhouse is situated more than 1,000 feet
(300 m) inside a solid granite mountain.
[edit] Nuclear facilities
The Diablo Canyon Power Plant, located in Avila Beach, California, is the
only operating nuclear asset owned by PG&E. The maximum output of this power
plant is 2,240 MWe, provided by two equally sized units. As designed and
licensed, it could be expanded to four units, at least doubling its
generating capacity.[6] Over a two-week period in 1981, 1,900 activists were
arrested at Diablo Canyon Power Plant. It was the largest arrest in the
history of the U.S. anti-nuclear movement.[7]
The company operated the Humboldt Bay Power Plant, Unit 3 in Eureka,
California. It is the oldest commercial nuclear plant in California and its
maximum output was 65 MWe. The plant operated for 13 years, until 1976 when
it was shut down for seismic retrofitting. New regulations enacted after the
Three Mile Island accident, however, rendered the plant unprofitable and it
was never restarted. Unit 3 is currently in decommissioning phase and
scheduled to be fully dismantled in 2015. The spent nuclear fuel is
currently stored at the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (ISFSI)
on the plant site because of the United States Department of Energy's
failure to open the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository in a timely
manner.
Pacific Gas & Electric planned to build the first commercially viable
nuclear power plant in the United States at Bodega Bay, a fishing village
fifty miles north of San Francisco. The proposal was controversial and
conflict with local citizens began in 1958.[8] In 1963 there was a large
demonstration at the site of the proposed Bodega Bay Nuclear Power Plant.[9]
The conflict ended in 1964, with the forced abandonment of plans for the
power plant.[8]
[edit] Fossil facilities
Built in 1956, there are two conventional fossil fuel (natural gas/fuel oil)
units at Humboldt Bay Power Plant that produce 105 MWe of combined output.
These units, along with two 15 MWe Mobile Emergency Power Plants (MEPPs),
will be retired in the summer of 2010. The Humboldt Bay Generating Station,
built on the same site, is set to take the older power plant's place in the
summer of 2010. It will producing 163 MWe using natural gas for fuel and
fuel oil for backup on Wärtsilä Diesel engines. It will employ technology to
produce 80 percent fewer ozone precursors and 30 percent less CO2 than the
previous facility. The new design will also reduce water use by eliminating
the need for "once-through" cooling.
As part of a settlement with Mirant Services LLC for alleged market
manipulations during the 2001 California energy crisis, PG&E took ownership
of a partially constructed natural gas unit in Antioch, California. The 530
MW unit, known as the Gateway Generating Station, was completed by PG&E and
placed into operation in 2009.
On May 15, 2006, after a long and bitter political battle, PG&E shut down
its 48-year-old Hunters Point power plant in San Francisco. At the time of
closure, the maximum output of the plant was 170 MW. Residents of the
impoverished neighborhood had been pushing for more than a decade to close
the plant, claiming it contributed to above average rates of asthma and
other ailments.
PG&E broke ground in 2008 on a 660 MW natural gas power plant located in
Colusa County. It is expected to begin operation in 2010, and will serve
nearly half a million residences using the latest technology and
environmental design. The plant will use dry cooling technology to
dramatically reduce water usage, and cleaner-burning turbines to reduce CO2
emissions by 35 percent relative to older plants.[10]
[edit] Solar facilities
On April 1, 2008, PG&E announced contracts to buy three new solar power
plants in the Mojave Desert. With an output of 500 MW and options for
another 400 MW, the three installations will initially generate enough
electricity to power more than 375,000 residences.[11]
On April 14, 2009 the San Jose Mercury News carried an article by Steve
Johnson stating that PG&E is asking the California Public Utilities
Commission to approve a project to deliver 200 Megawatts of power to
California from space. This method of obtaining electricity from the sun
eliminates (mostly) the darkness of night experienced from solar sites on
the surface of the earth. According to PG&E spokesman Jonathan Marshall,
energy purchase costs are expected to be similar to other renewable energy
contracts.
[edit] PG&E and the environment
Beginning in the mid-1970s, regulatory and political developments began to
push utilities in California away from a traditional business model. In
1976, the California State Legislature amended the Warren-Alquist Act[12],
which created and gives legal authority to the California Energy Commission,
to effectively prohibit the construction of new nuclear power plants. The
Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) filed as an intervenor in PG&E's 1978
General Rate Case (GRC), claiming that the company's requests for rate
increases were based on unrealistically high projections of load growth.
Furthermore, EDF claimed that PG&E could more cost-effectively encourage
industrial co-generation and energy efficiency than build more power plants.
As a result of EDF's involvement in PG&E's rate cases, the company was
eventually fined $50 million by the California Public Utilities Commission
for failing to adequately implement energy efficiency programs.
Since Mr. Darbee took control of the PG&E Company in 2004, PG&E has
aggressively promoted its green image through a variety of programs and
campaigns.
In the early 2000s, the CEO of PG&E Corporation, Peter Darbee, and then-CEO
of Pacific Gas & Electric Company, Tom King, publicly announced their
support for California Assembly Bill 32, a measure to cap statewide
greenhouse gas emissions and a 25% reduction of emissions by 2020. The bill
was signed into law by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on September 27, 2006.
[edit] The legal case in Hinkley (1993-1996)
This section has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these
issues on the talk page.
* Its neutrality is disputed. Tagged since November 2008.
* Its factual accuracy is disputed. Tagged since November 2008.
When natural gas was introduced in the west, an extensive network of
pipelines from the southwest fields was built to ship gas from Texas to
northern California. These pipelines required repressurization stations
approximately every three hundred miles. The town of Hinkley was one such
site. In 1993, PG&E was accused of contamination of drinking water with
toxic hexavalent chromium in the Southern California town of Hinkley. The
chemical was used in water cooling towers to prevent scale and rust. PG&E
had alerted the townsfolk earlier about the chromium but said that it was
nothing to worry about, saying that chromium was in many multivitamins.
While this is true of trivalent chromium, or chromium(III), the hexavalent
chromium used by PG&E is not meant for human consumption of any kind. Many
illnesses were allegedly linked to it, including cancers, birth defects, and
organ failures, which PG&E was said to know about but failed to reveal.
After many arguments the case had finally led to arbitration with maximum
damages of $400 million. After the first 40 people received about $110
million, PG&E reassessed its position and decided it was a bad idea. The
case was settled in 1996 for $333 million, the largest settlement ever paid
in a direct-action lawsuit in U.S. history. The 2000 movie Erin Brockovich
portrayed the event. It was also featured on A&E Network's "American
Justice".
In 2006, PG&E agreed to pay $295 million to settle cases involving another
1,100 people statewide for chromium(VI) related claims. In 2008, PG&E
settled the last of the cases involved with the Hinkley claims for $20
million.[13]
[edit] References and footnotes
* "The History of Gas Lighting in San Francisco" Pacific Gas and Electric
Magazine Vol. 1 #3 August 1909
* PG&E - A Report on the Companies Environmental Policies and Practices -
Council on Economic Priorities - NY April 1994
* Roe, David. Dynamos and Virgins. (New York: Random House, 1984.)
[edit] See also
San Francisco Bay Area portal
Companies portal
* Battery-to-grid
* Southern California Edison
* Diablo Canyon Power Plant
* San Diego Gas & Electric
[edit] References
1. ^ a b c "PG&E Corp 2008 Annual Report" (PDF). http://www.pgecorp.com/investors/financial_reports/annual_report_proxy_statement/ar_pdf/2008/2008AnnualReport.pdf.
2. ^ "PG&E Corporation 2008 Corporate Responsibility Report" (PDF). http://www.pge-corp.com/corp_responsibility/reports/2008/img/pge_crr_2008.pdf.
3. ^ *Fickewirth, Alvin A. (1992). California Railroads. San Marino,
California: Golden West Books. pp. 117. ISBN 0-87095-106-8.
4. ^ a b U.S. Supreme Court decision, NORTH AMERICAN CO. v. SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COM'N, 327 U.S. 686 (1946), Decided April 1, 1946, FindLaw.com
5. ^ Jeremy J. Siegel, Stocks for the Long Run, McGraw-Hill, Second Edition,
1998, ISBN 0-07-058043-X
6. ^ Statement made repeatedly by Dr. Bill Wattenburg during his weekly
radio show in 2007 and 2008, broadcast on radio station KGO out of San
Francisco, California.
7. ^ Conservation Fallout: Nuclear Protest at Diablo Canyon
8. ^ a b Paula Garb.Critical Masses: Opposition to Nuclear Power in
California, 1958-1978 (book review) Journal of Political Ecology, Vol 6,
1999.
9. ^ Office of Technology Assessment. (1984). Public Attitudes Toward
Nuclear Power p. 231.
10. ^ http://www.colusa-sun-herald.com/news/-2039--.html PG&E charges ahead
11. ^ PG&E backs 3 solar plants in the Mojave by David R. Baker, San
Francisco Chronicle, April 1, 2008
12. ^ Full text of the Warren-Alquist Act, see section 25524.2
13. ^ "PG&E settles last chromium(VI) case". Los Angeles Times: pp. B2.
April 8, 2008
[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Pacific Gas and Electric Company
* Official website
* PG&E Corporation
* PG&E Clean Air Transportation Program
* Next100 - A Dialogue on the Next Century of Energy
* PG&E: We Can Do This
* PG&E history timeline
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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Gas_and_Electric_Company"
Categories: Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange | Companies
based in San Francisco, California | Companies established in 1905 | History
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Nuclear power companies of the United States | Power companies of the United
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