Do you remember when people were complaining that the difference between the top tier (I think it used to be either Tier 3 or Tier 4) and the lowest tier, on the E-1 plan, back when that was what most people were on, was too high? And PG&E did away with the top tier, replaced it with a high usage surcharge, and also created the ETOU-B plan? Well guess what? If you think about it, this crap is back, but it's much more devious this time around. Instead of charging people who use more electricity a higher rate per kWh explicitly, they've decided to do it in a much more sneaky way. Someone who uses fewer kWh over the term gets a higher rebate per kWh than someone who uses more. And a lot of people forget about the "climate credit" and only think about the published rates. Everyone (particularly people who own EVs) should complain about this. Basically, subtract 3930¢/(your total kWh usage over 6 months) from the published rates. If you used only 393 kWh, you get a whopping 10¢/kWh discount. If you used 3930 kWh, you only get a 1¢/kWh discount. This heavily benefits people who draw very little power over the month for whatever reason, and I wonder if the meters for those AT&T U-verse boxes on street corners get the full $39.30 credit every 6 months. Also, consider a customer who for some reason manages to only use about 40 kWh/month, barely paying more than the minimum delivery charge of $10.12 monthly. Guess what? He gets almost his entire bill back as a climate credit!