In its most recent energy affordability legislation, the Maryland Senate has reversed key utility accountability proposals passed by the state House and added new ways for utility companies to earn profit, including by reviving a billion-dollar gas subsidy that requires all ratepayers to cover the cost of running new gas pipelines to housing developments.
The state’s top Democrats must now resolve differences in the two energy bills before the legislative session ends on April 13.
The Senate’s move to restore utilities’ profits has irked environmental leaders and advocates, who believe the process lacked transparency and did not allow for a robust debate on the bill.
The current sentiment stands in sharp contrast to March 13, when Gov. Wes Moore, flanked by Senate President Bill Ferguson and House Speaker Joseline Peña-Melnyk, announced the Utility RELIEF Act, framing it as a unified response to spiking electricity bills. The legislation aimed to generate more in-state energy and hold utility companies accountable while guaranteeing customers at least $150 in annual savings on their energy bills.
As of December 2025, the average electricity bill in Maryland was around $183 per month, or roughly $2,200 annually.
In emailed remarks, Rhyan Lake, a spokesperson for Gov. Moore said that the governor and the state’s political leadership are finalizing the Utility RELIEF Act, “that will generate more energy in the state and hold big companies accountable while saving Maryland families at least $150 on their energy bill every year.”
Specifically, the Utility RELIEF Act, as passed in the House, included two provisions consumer advocates said were particularly critical. The first proposal prohibited forecasted ratemaking, a billing practice that allows utilities to seek rate increases based on projected spending rather than actual accrued costs supported by receipts. The second proposal required utilities to return unspent ratepayer money in full rather than keeping it for themselves.
A recent analysis by the Office of People’s Counsel found that a BGE customer using 900 kilowatt-hours per month saw annual costs rise to $164 over the past six years under forecasted ratemaking, compared to $55 over the previous six years of traditional ratemaking. The gap was wider for Pepco customers, the analysis found, estimating $323 annually under forecasted rates as opposed to $157 under traditional ratemaking.
The House version also kept intact a Public Service Commission decision that ended the decades-old practice requiring all ratepayers to subsidize the cost of new gas line extensions to housing developments. The OPC estimated that the subsidy costs ratepayers more than $1 billion over 10 years.
But both the House and Senate bills include cuts to EmPOWER Maryland, the state’s flagship energy efficiency program. That includes dropping its annual energy savings goal from 2.5 percent to 1.75 percent of kilowatt-hour sales and delaying the return to the full target until 2036. The cuts would reduce the monthly surcharge customers pay, lowering their bills by between $6 and $12 a month, but environmental and consumer advocates believe the changes will also shrink the efficiency benefits those customers receive.
The EmPOWER program, created in 2008, has returned $2.21 in benefits for every dollar spent, according to the state’s own analysis.
The House bill approved in mid-March also proposed drawing down the Strategic Energy Investment Fund (SEIF)—meant for clean energy financing—to plug the state’s budget shortfall.
In emailed comments, Heather Mizeur, a spokesperson for Speaker Peña-Melnyk said “the House version of the bill is the strongest posture for ratepayer protection” and that the speaker “advocated for restoration of these provisions in the final agreement.” Reacting to whether the House received any official analysis of the bill’s likely impact on the state’s greenhouse gas emissions targets, Mizeur said: “This session we have worked to close a budget deficit and have exercised restraint in requesting costly studies. This is an issue we can revisit in the future.”
The Senate bill that passed this week kept the EmPOWER cuts but reversed the utility accountability measures the House had endorsed. It also restored forecasted ratemaking and replaced the full-refund requirement the House had recommended with a performance incentive mechanism that allows utilities to keep a share of unspent ratepayer money as a bonus for spending less than projected.
The Senate also passed an amendment overriding the PSC’s decision on gas line subsidies, allowing the cost of new extensions to be collected from ratepayers. How and why the bill changed so dramatically remains unclear.
“The utilities profit more if they spend more, and now apparently they profit more if they spend less. So these sort of profit incentives, when they’re already raking in record profits, don’t help customers at all,” said Emily Scarr, senior advisor at Maryland PIRG, a consumer advocacy group.
Scarr called the Senate’s amendments an “unappetizing smorgasbord of bad amendments that reward the utility companies that are driving our high bills.” She was equally critical of what the two bills meant for ratepayers. “The House absolutely took bold action to rein in utilities’ wasteful spending and bring down costs to customers,” she said. “The Senate has undermined or rolled back a lot of those provisions and even added some to add new opportunities for utilities to profit at customers’ expense.”
Josh Tulkin, director of the Sierra Club’s Maryland chapter, said legislators had fundamentally misread what EmPOWER actually does. “The entire ratepayer relief that is being promised in the short term that they can quantify is coming from cutting the state’s energy efficiency program,” he said. “They seem to think that because of the way everything is structured, energy efficiency is some sort of hippie-dippie surcharge. They don’t seem to understand that it is just a different way to get people less expensive energy. You buy efficiency or you buy power. Right now efficiency is cheaper, and they are cutting the cheaper option—they are literally requiring utilities to purchase the more expensive thing.”
Justin Barry, director of energy initiatives at the Green & Healthy Homes Initiative, said the damage from cutting EmPOWER ran deeper than what the reduced savings target suggested.
“By reducing total electrical demand, the program lowers the shared electrical system costs, and by incentivizing emerging technologies like heat pump water heaters and geothermal systems, it helps make sure that highly efficient appliances are stocked by distributors and offered by contractors,” Barry argued. He also noted EmPOWER met its goals in recent cycles, making the cuts harder to justify on performance grounds.
The House and the Senate versions preserved funding for low-income efficiency programs administered through the state Department of Housing and Community Development. But Barry said moderate-income households that don’t qualify for those programs and cannot afford rooftop solar would lose access to appliance rebates and weatherization incentives that the scaled-back EmPOWER would no longer fund.
The workforce consequences were equally serious, he said, adding that home performance requires certified auditors trained in building science and retrofit installation. “It’s not [a] workforce that can come and go quickly,” he said, warning that scaling back the program could make fewer contractors available to homeowners and lead to job losses at small businesses.
