National Consumer Protection Week: PG&E Partners with the FTC to Help Customers Recognize and Avoid Utility Scams
Rhea-AI Summary
PG&E reports alarming utility scam statistics, with customers losing nearly $650,000 to fraudsters in 2024. The company received over 26,000 scam reports last year, with January 2025 alone seeing 1,700 attempts and $22,000 in losses. Small and medium businesses faced over 1,200 scam attempts in 2024.
During National Consumer Protection Week (March 2-8, 2025), PG&E is partnering with the Federal Trade Commission to raise awareness about scam prevention. Common tactics include threats of immediate service disconnection, demands for payment via prepaid cards, and impersonation of official phone numbers and websites.
The company emphasizes that it never requests financial information over phone, demands payment through prepaid cards or services like Zelle, or threatens disconnection without prior notification.
Positive
- Partnership with FTC for consumer protection education
- Implementation of customer verification systems and security measures
- Proactive scam awareness campaign and customer education initiatives
Negative
- Customers lost $646,000 to scammers in 2024
- Rising trend in scam attempts with 1,700 reports in January 2025 alone
- Small and medium businesses facing increased targeting by scammers
PG&E Customers Lost Nearly
Scams targeting utility customers continue at an alarming rate. In fact, during 2024, PG&E received over 26,000 reports from customers who were targeted by scammers impersonating the company, and customers lost
"Scammers will attempt to create a sense of urgency by threatening immediate disconnection of your utility services if you don't make immediate payment. Remember, PG&E will never ask you for financial information over the phone, nor will we ask for payment via pre-paid debit cards or money transfer services like Zelle. If you receive a call like this, hang up, and then either log onto PGE.com to confirm your account details, or you can call our customer service number," said Ron Rose, lead customer scam investigator for PG&E.
Scammers are opportunistic and look for times when customers may be distracted or stressed and are constantly contacting utility customers asking for payment to avoid immediate service disconnection. As a reminder, PG&E will never call for the first time within one hour of a service disconnection, nor will we ask customers to make payments with a pre-paid debit card, gift card, any form of cryptocurrency, or third-party digital payment mobile applications like Zelle or Venmo.
Small and medium-sized businesses are also a target, and scammers will focus their efforts during busy business hours, preying on business owners' sense of urgency to keep the doors open and the lights on. In fact, PG&E received over 1,200 reports of scam attempts targeting these customers during 2024.
Signs of a potential scam:
- Threat to disconnect: Scammers may aggressively demand immediate payment for an alleged past due bill.
- Request for immediate payment: Scammers may instruct the customer to purchase a prepaid card then call them back supposedly to make a bill payment.
- Request for prepaid card: When the customer calls back, the caller asks the customer for the prepaid card's number, which grants the scammer instant access to the card's funds.
- Refund or rebate offers: Scammers may say that your utility company overbilled you and owes you a refund, or that you are entitled to a rebate.
How customers can protect themselves
Customers should never purchase a prepaid card to avoid service disconnection or shutoff. PG&E does not specify how customers should make a bill payment and offers a variety of ways to pay a bill, including accepting payments online, by phone, automatic bank draft, mail or in person.
If a scammer threatens immediate disconnection or shutoff of service without prior notification, customers should hang up the phone, delete the email, or shut the door. Customers with delinquent accounts receive an advance disconnection notification, typically by mail and included with their regular monthly bill.
Signing up for an online account at pge.com is another safeguard. Not only can customers log in to check their balance and payment history, they can sign up for recurring payments, paperless billing and helpful alerts.
Scammers Impersonating Trusted Phone Numbers and Websites: Scammers are now able to create authentic-looking 800 numbers which appear on your phone display. The numbers don't lead back to PG&E if called back, however, so if you have doubts, hang up and call PG&E at 1-833-500-SCAM. If customers ever feel that they are in physical danger, they should call 911.
A recent trend is that scammers are creating fake utility bill-pay websites that appear in internet search results. For online payments, customers should log into pge.com, and either log into your account or create one to pay your bill.
Customers who suspect that they have been victims of fraud, or who feel threatened during contact with one of these scammers, should contact local law enforcement. The Federal Trade Commission's website is also a good source of information about how to protect personal information.
For more information about scams, visit pge.com/scams or consumer.ftc.org.
About PG&E
Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of PG&E Corporation (NYSE:PCG), is a combined natural gas and electric utility serving more than 16 million people across 70,000 square miles in Northern and
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SOURCE Pacific Gas and Electric Company