
Homeowners Are Flipping the Script on Energy Costs: Now SCE, SDG&E, and PG&E May Have to Buy Power From Solar Battery Homes at Premium Rates
Homeowners Are Flipping the Script on Energy Costs: Now SCE, SDG&E, and PG&E May Have to Buy Power From Homes With Solar and Batteries at Premium Rates
California homeowners are facing a new energy reality: electric bills keep rising, the grid needs more clean power, and utilities like SCE, SDG&E, and PG&E are under pressure to find flexible energy resources fast.
For decades, homeowners were only utility customers. They bought power, paid the bill, and absorbed rate increases. But with solar panels, battery storage, solar PPA programs, and Virtual Power Plant programs, that relationship is changing. Now the home itself can become part of the power supply.
Edison International’s own net-zero plan shows why this matters. Edison says California’s clean energy transition depends on electrifying the economy with clean power, and SCE remains committed to delivering 100% carbon-free power to customers by 2045.
That goal creates a massive need for more renewable energy, more battery storage, more grid flexibility, and more distributed energy resources. Edison says electricity demand in SCE’s service area is already projected to grow 35% faster over the next decade than the company estimated just two years ago.
That is where homeowners with solar and batteries become relevant.
A home solar system can generate clean electricity during the day. A home battery can store that power and release it later, especially during peak evening hours when the grid is strained and electricity is most expensive. When thousands of homes are connected through a Virtual Power Plant, those homes can act together like a flexible clean-energy resource.
Edison’s fact sheet says California will need sufficient affordable carbon-free resources, including renewables paired with storage and clean firm generation that can supply power 24/7 in any weather.Home solar and battery storage directly support that need by adding local clean power and flexible stored energy close to where electricity is used.
This is why solar PPA programs and Virtual Power Plant programs are becoming important for California homeowners who want to lower electric bills without leasing, financing, or buying solar equipment and batteries upfront. Instead of taking on ownership costs, eligible homeowners may be able to access solar and battery storage through a power purchase agreement and use the energy produced at their home.
For homeowners searching for ways to lower electric bills in California, this is a major shift. A solar PPA can help reduce monthly electricity costs. A battery can help reduce peak-rate exposure. A Virtual Power Plant program can allow stored home energy to support the grid when utilities need power most.
Edison’s own planning shows the grid needs this type of flexibility. The company says emissions from power delivered to SCE customers are forecast to be reduced by 95% between 2005 and 2045.But reaching that target requires clean energy resources, infrastructure deployment, storage, and coordination across utilities, government, and stakeholders.
That means the homeowner’s rooftop is no longer just a rooftop. It is potential grid infrastructure.
Edison also forecasts that the average SCE customer could save 40% on total energy expenses by 2045, but that outcome depends on building enough clean power, storage, and infrastructure while keeping the grid reliable and affordable.Virtual Power Plant homes can support that future by reducing the need to rely only on large utility-scale projects, transmission upgrades, and fossil-fuel backup.
The biggest takeaway is simple: SCE, SDG&E, and PG&E need more clean power. Homeowners have rooftops. Homeowners have batteries. Homeowners can store electricity at the edge of the grid, exactly where demand happens.
That flips the script.
Instead of being only a customer of the utility, a homeowner with solar and battery storage can become part of California’s clean energy solution.
Through solar PPA programs and Virtual Power Plant programs, homeowners may be able to lower energy bills, reduce dependence on rising utility rates, and help supply clean power back to the grid.
For Californians worried about rising electric bills, wildfire-related utility costs, grid upgrades, and future rate hikes, the answer may not be waiting for SCE, SDG&E, or PG&E to lower rates. The answer may be turning the home into a clean-energy asset.
That is why more homeowners are looking at solar PPAs, battery storage, and Virtual Power Plant programs as a smarter path to energy savings. The future of California energy may not be controlled only by big utilities. It may be powered by homes.
Sources
Edison International, “Reaching Net Zero”
https://www.edison.com/clean-energy/reaching-net-zero
