Arizona Senate Democratic Leader Priya Sundareshan (D-AZ) is pointing to fuel costs as a key reason electric bills keep climbing in the state.
Speaking on KTAR, Sen. Sundareshan said Arizonans have been hit with one rate increase after another, largely because utilities are trying to recoup the costs of natural gas-fired power plants.
The problem, she explains, is that natural gas prices can swing dramatically, and when they do, customers feel it directly in their bills.
"Natural gas is a very volatile fuel," she said.
That volatility makes electricity costs harder to predict, and Sundareshan argues it's a big part of why families keep opening higher-than-expected utility bills.
Every time operating costs rise, utilities turn to state regulators for permission to charge customers more through a formal process known as a rate case. Those requests have been coming more frequently, and she says that's putting real pressure on households already stretched thin by the rising cost of living.
Summer is Coming
It doesn't help that Arizona is one of the hottest states in the country.
Brutal summers mean air conditioners run for months on end, so residents naturally use more electricity than people in cooler parts of the country, making them especially vulnerable when fuel prices spike or rates go up.
The Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC) has the final say on whether utility rate hikes get approved. It's designed to weigh the financial needs of utilities against the burden placed on everyday customers.
However, rate cases tend to draw significant public attention precisely because their outcomes affect thousands of people at once.
Over recent years, energy affordability has become a growing political flashpoint in Arizona, with lawmakers, regulators, and consumer advocates all wrestling with how to keep the power on without overwhelming ratepayers.
There's no easy answer, and the debate is unlikely to quiet down anytime soon.
With fuel markets still unpredictable, the cycle of rate requests may not be over. For Arizona families already watching every dollar, that means electric bills could remain a source of frustration and a major issue, well into the future.













