Mildly Infuriating
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Electrical service should have a fixed connection fee.
The reason this happens is because electrical companies have two different kind of costs:
Those related to obtaining the electrical power from generation companies.
Those related to maintaining the grid and providing a connection.
In the past, normally what they did was to simply reduce this to a single price, and for that to be per unit of electricity used. That is, the consumer pays $N. That was at least not an entirely unreasonable approximation when people were pulling electricity off the grid.
The thing is, if a user mostly generates power locally, they still want to have that electrical connection and providing that connection still costs money. But now they're also not paying for their share of the grid connectivity -- it's getting offloaded to the people who aren't generating electricity locally.
Hence, the split that many utility companies are shifting to. There's a fixed charge to have a connection to the grid, which covers the cost of grid maintenance. And there's a separate cost per kWh of energy used.
If someone doesn't care about the grid connection -- like, they're confident that they can handle their power needs locally, don't care about having a grid connection, they do have the option to just drop service. But most people want to have the access to draw more power if they aren't generating enough, so they want to retain their grid connection. With the grid connection fee being broken out, they cover their share of the costs.
Now, I've no disagreement that California electricity rates are pretty bonkers. They're some of the highest in the US:
https://www.electricchoice.com/electricity-prices-by-state/
But the issue isn't having a separate grid connection fee from an electricity used fee.
Are you saying that someone who uses 10kWh of grid power per month should pay the same "connection fee" as someone who uses 990kWh per month?
In Norway we pay a different fixed fee based on the maximum hourly use (average of three highest hours) during a month, so that consumers that need a lot of effect from the grid pays the most.