California regulators may be scratching their heads about what to do with gas purchasing incentives for the state’s major utilities following Southern California Gas Co.’s filing that claims its purchases over a 12-month period ending last June were $223 million below market prices.

It was the “largest amount of savings on gas costs during any one-year period in our 134-year history” of SoCalGas, which is owned by San Diego-based Sempra Energy, according to Anne Smith, a vice president quoted in a report to the company’s employees.

Under a regulator-approved “gas cost incentive mechanism (GCIM) that has been in place in recent years, the utility can apply a formula allowing it to share the savings between customers and shareholders.” It’s an incentive to the utility “to take reasonable risks to keep gas costs low, while ensuring a reliable supply,” SoCalGas’s director of gas acquisition, Jim Harrigan, told employees in the recent report.

With this relatively embarrassing “windfall” for shareholders, the utility recommended to the California Public Utilities Commission in June two options for spreading the wealth:

Both options carry proposed rate increases to implement them. The first would necessitate a 44 cents/month increase for a 12-month period, while the second alternative would require a $1.52/month hike for one year.

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