Title 15 › Chapter CHAPTER 59— - RETAIL POLICIES FOR NATURAL GAS UTILITIES › § 3203
State regulators and nonregulated gas utilities must, within 2 years after November 9, 1978 (or within 2 years after October 24, 1992 for standards 3 and 4), give public notice and hold a hearing about the federal standards below. After the hearing, they must adopt each standard that they find appropriate and that fits state law, or put in writing which standards they will not adopt and why. Those written reasons must be available to the public. The federal standards say: gas companies may not cut off service except under the specific shut-off procedures in another part of the law; customers must not be charged for a utility’s promotional or political advertising (those costs stay with the owners); utilities must plan to give adequate, reliable service at the lowest system cost, and those plans must be kept up to date, allow public input, show how results will be checked, and be carried out after approval; rates must make investments in energy conservation and demand-side programs at least as profitable as building new supply, and regulators should tie utility earnings partly to performance and protect recovery of fixed costs when sales fall; utilities must make energy efficiency part of their planning and treat it as a priority; and rates should be designed to encourage cost-effective energy efficiency, with options like separating fixed-cost recovery from sales volume, offering incentives for program success, and tailoring rate designs by customer class. If a state adopts standards 3 or 4, it must consider effects on small businesses and avoid giving utilities unfair competitive advantages.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 3203
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73