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Xcel Energy-Colorado catches heat from customers getting off gas

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After spending $40,000 to electrify her Boulder home, which included installing heat pumps, K.K. DuVivier was ready to disconnect from natural gas and have her meter turned off. Then she got the bill to flip the switch: $5,333.

The bill marked due Dec. 12 arrived after what DuVivier described as frustrating rounds of calls and emails as she tried to stop the gas service she no longer needs from Xcel Energy. The bill didn’t say why she owed more than $5,000.

When she contacted Xcel again, DuVivier got an email saying the bill was for demolishing and removing her gas line, something she had told the company wasn’t necessary.

The latest development is a bill with a $5,333 credit and a zero balance. Again, no explanation. She still hasn’t heard when or if Xcel will turn off her gas meter and stop the monthly service charges.

“I’m a lawyer and I’m committed to this and I’m having to struggle,” DuVivier said.

The University of Denver law professor, who specializes in environmental and energy law, worries that efforts to electrify homes and businesses will run into roadblocks if the process to disconnect from natural gas isn’t made more user-friendly. She said the forms she had to fill out didn’t address her situation: a customer who wanted the gas off but wasn’t vacating her house.

The state, utilities and several local governments have goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions contributed by buildings. Commercial and residential buildings accounted for up to 30% of the total heat-trapping emissions in the U.S. in 2021, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

A 2021 state law targets the building sector’s impact on emissions that cause climate change. The law, among the first of its kind in the country, requires natural gas providers in Colorado with more than 90,000 customers to use more “clean” energy and other methods to decrease the greenhouse gas emissions from their distribution systems.

Xcel Energy, which has 1.5 million natural gas customers in Colorado, was the first utility in the country to submit a clean heat plan. The Colorado Public Utilities Commission is considering the proposal now.

“K.K.’s issue was not a new one for me,” said Carolyn Elam, sustainability senior manager for the city of Boulder.

Elam has heard from a few residents with problems similar to DuVivier’s, while other people have had little or no problem. She said it seems to vary depending on the age of the house and gas infrastructure. Older homes might not have a built-in means to disconnect from the main line.


After spending $40,000 to electrify her Boulder home, which included installing heat pumps, K.K. DuVivier was ready to disconnect from natural gas and have her meter turned off. Then she got the bill to flip the switch: $5,333.

The bill marked due Dec. 12 arrived after what DuVivier described as frustrating rounds of calls and emails as she tried to stop the gas service she no longer needs from Xcel Energy. The bill didn’t say why she owed more than $5,000.

When she contacted Xcel again, DuVivier got an email saying the bill was for demolishing and removing her gas line, something she had told the company wasn’t necessary.

The latest development is a bill with a $5,333 credit and a zero balance. Again, no explanation. She still hasn’t heard when or if Xcel will turn off her gas meter and stop the monthly service charges.

“I’m a lawyer and I’m committed to this and I’m having to struggle,” DuVivier said.

The University of Denver law professor, who specializes in environmental and energy law, worries that efforts to electrify homes and businesses will run into roadblocks if the process to disconnect from natural gas isn’t made more user-friendly. She said the forms she had to fill out didn’t address her situation: a customer who wanted the gas off but wasn’t vacating her house.

The state, utilities and several local governments have goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions contributed by buildings. Commercial and residential buildings accounted for up to 30% of the total heat-trapping emissions in the U.S. in 2021, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

A 2021 state law targets the building sector’s impact on emissions that cause climate change. The law, among the first of its kind in the country, requires natural gas providers in Colorado with more than 90,000 customers to use more “clean” energy and other methods to decrease the greenhouse gas emissions from their distribution systems.

Xcel Energy, which has 1.5 million natural gas customers in Colorado, was the first utility in the country to submit a clean heat plan. The Colorado Public Utilities Commission is considering the proposal now.

“K.K.’s issue was not a new one for me,” said Carolyn Elam, sustainability senior manager for the city of Boulder.

Elam has heard from a few residents with problems similar to DuVivier’s, while other people have had little or no problem. She said it seems to vary depending on the age of the house and gas infrastructure. Older homes might not have a built-in means to disconnect from the main line.

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