Basically what happens is this:

  • There’s a significant fixed cost associated with maintaining gas infrastructure
  • When there are fewer ratepayers, that cost is spread over fewer people
  • So once more than a certain percentage of the population quits gas, it kicks off a spiral of increasing prices that push everybody who can afford to get off gas off it
  • The few that are left are in real trouble financially.

This is why there has been a push in places like Ithaca to do it block-by-block, allowing for distribution shutdown in conjunction with individual building improvements.