FORM 10-Q
                    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                         Washington, D. C.   20549
                    ----------------------------------
(Mark One)
  [X]     QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
                       SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

               For the quarterly period ended September 30, 1998

                                   OR

  [ ]    TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE
                       SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

For the transition period from          to
                              ----------   ----------

               Exact Name of
Commission     Registrant        State or other   IRS Employer
File           as specified      Jurisdiction of  Identification
Number         in its charter    Incorporation    Number
- -----------    --------------    ---------------  --------------

1-12609        PG&E Corporation  California        94-3234914

1-2348         Pacific Gas and   California        94-0742640
               Electric Company

Pacific Gas and Electric Company        PG&E Corporation
77 Beale Street                         One Market, Spear Tower
P.O. Box 770000                         Suite 2400
San Francisco, California 94177         San Francisco, California
94105
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
     (Address of principal executive offices)      (Zip Code)

Pacific Gas and Electric Company        PG&E Corporation
(415) 973-7000                          (415) 267-7000
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
            Registrant's telephone number, including area code

Indicate by check mark whether the registrants (1) have filed
all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding twelve
months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was
required to file such reports), and (2) have been subject to
such filing requirements for the past 90 days.
          Yes     X                     No
               ----------                    -----------
Indicate the number of shares outstanding of each of the issuer's
classes of common stock, as of the latest practicable date.

Common Stock Outstanding October 23, 1998:
PG&E Corporation                     382,515,765 shares
Pacific Gas and Electric Company     Wholly owned by PG&E Corporation



PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
FORM 10-Q
FOR THE QUARTERLY PERIOD ENDED SEPTEMBR 30, 1998
TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                                                  PAGE
PART I.  FINANCIAL INFORMATION

ITEM 1.  CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
         PG&E CORPORATION
            STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED INCOME........................1
            CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET.................................2
            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS ................................3
         PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
            STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED INCOME........................4
            CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET.................................5
            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS.................................6
         NOTE 1:  GENERAL...........................................7
         NOTE 2:  THE ELECTRIC BUSINESS.............................9
         NOTE 3:  UTILITY OBLIGATED MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE
                  PREFERRED SECURITIES OF TRUST HOLDING
                  SOLELY UTILITY SUBORDINATED DEBENTURES...........16
         NOTE 4:  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES....................16

ITEM 2.  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF CONSOLIDATED
         RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND FINANCIAL CONDITION.............18
         RESULTS OF OPERATIONS.....................................20
            Common Stock Dividend..................................20
            Earnings Per Common Share..............................21
            Utility Results........................................21
            Unregulated Business Results...........................22
         FINANCIAL CONDITION.......................................22
         COMPETITION AND CHANGING REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT...........22
         THE UTILITY ELECTRIC GENERATION BUSINESS..................22
            Competitive Market Framework...........................22
            Electric Transition Plan...............................23
            Rate Freeze and Rate Reduction.........................24
            Transition Cost Recovery...............................24
            Utility Generation Divestiture.........................26
            Utility Generation Impairment..........................27
            Customer Impacts of Transition Plan....................28
            California Voter Initiative............................28
         THE UTILITY ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION BUSINESS................29
         THE UTILITY ELECTRIC DISTRIBUTION BUSINESS................30
         THE UTILITY GAS BUSINESS..................................30 
         UNREGULATED BUSINESS OPERATIONS...........................31
         PG&E CORPORATION..........................................31
         ACQUISITIONS AND SALES....................................31
         YEAR 2000.................................................32
         LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
            Sources of Capital.....................................35
            Utility Cost of Capital................................36
            1999 General Rate Case.................................37
            Environmental Matters..................................37
            Legal Matters..........................................37
            Risk Management Activities.............................38

ITEM 3.  QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES 
         ABOUT MARKET RISK.........................................38

PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 1.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS.........................................39
ITEM 5.  OTHER INFORMATION.........................................40
ITEM 6.  EXHIBITS AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K..........................40
SIGNATURE..........................................................42




PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION


ITEM 1.  CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

PG&E CORPORATION
STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED INCOME
(in millions, except per share amounts) 

                                              Three months ended             Nine months ended 
                                                 September 30,                 September 30,
                                               1998         1997             1998         1997  
                                             --------     --------         --------     ------- 
                                                                            
Operating Revenues
Utility                                      $  2,563     $  2,541         $  6,706     $  7,094
Energy commodities and services                 2,744        1,522            7,741        3,417
                                             --------     --------         --------     --------
Total operating revenues                        5,307        4,063           14,447       10,511
                                             --------     --------         --------     --------

Operating Expenses
Cost of energy for utility                        714          779            1,949        2,162
Cost of energy commodities and services         2,557        1,412            7,177        3,165
Operating and maintenance, net                    925          771            2,041        2,324
Depreciation and decommissioning                  569          473            1,713        1,397
                                             --------     --------         --------     --------
Total operating expenses                        4,765        3,435           12,880        9,048
                                             --------     --------         --------     --------
Operating Income                                  542          628            1,567        1,463
Interest expense, net                             199          174              604          497
Other income                                        8           20               24          114
                                             --------     --------         --------     --------
Income Before Income Taxes                        351          474              987        1,080
Income taxes                                      141          217              464          458
                                             --------     --------         --------     --------

Net Income                                   $    210     $    257         $    523     $    622
                                             ========     ========         ========     ========

Weighted Average Common Shares
Outstanding                                       382          414              382          407

Earnings Per Common Share, Basic and Diluted $    .55     $    .62         $   1.37     $   1.53

Dividends Declared Per Common Share          $    .30     $    .30         $    .90     $    .90


<FN>
The accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of this 
statement.





PG&E CORPORATION
CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET
(in millions)


Balance at                                                        September 30,     December 31,
                                                                        1998            1997
                                                                   ------------     -----------
                                                                                
ASSETS     
Current Assets
Cash and cash equivalents                                           $    278          $    237
Short-term investments                                                    33             1,160
Accounts receivable                                                                           
   Customers, net                                                      1,722             1,514
   Regulatory balancing accounts                                         277               658
   Energy marketing                                                      736               830
Inventories and prepayments                                              792               626
                                                                    --------          --------
Total current assets                                                   3,838             5,025
Property, Plant, and Equipment
Utility                                                               24,067            24,185
Gas transmission                                                       3,385             3,484
Other                                                                  2,548                57
                                                                    --------          --------
Total property, plant, and equipment (at original cost)               30,000            27,726
Accumulated depreciation and decommissioning                         (11,794)          (11,617)
                                                                    --------          -------- 
Net property, plant, and equipment                                    18,206            16,109

Other Noncurrent Assets
Regulatory assets                                                      6,034             6,700
Nuclear decommissioning funds                                          1,070             1,024
Other                                                                  2,490             1,699
                                                                    --------          --------
Total noncurrent assets                                                9,594             9,423
                                                                    --------          --------
TOTAL ASSETS                                                        $ 31,638          $ 30,557
                                                                    ========          ========
LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Current Liabilities
Short-term borrowings                                               $  1,937          $    103
Current portion of long-term debt                                        358               734
Current portion of rate reduction bonds                                  197               125
Accounts payable                                                             
   Trade creditors                                                       770               754
   Other                                                                 455               466
   Energy marketing                                                      587               758
Accrued taxes                                                            725               226
Other                                                                  1,077               893
                                                                    --------          -------- 
Total current liabilities                                              6,106             4,059

Noncurrent Liabilities
Long-term debt                                                         7,060             7,584
Rate reduction bonds                                                   2,511             2,776
Deferred income taxes                                                  3,717             4,029
Deferred tax credits                                                     294               339
Other                                                                  3,211             1,978
                                                                    --------          --------
Total noncurrent liabilities                                          16,793            16,706

Preferred Stock of Subsidiary With Mandatory Redemption Provisions       137               137
Utility Obligated Mandatorily Redeemable Preferred Securities of
   Trust Holding Solely Utility Subordinated Debentures                  300               300 
Stockholders' Equity
Preferred stock of subsidiary without mandatory redemption provisions  
   Nonredeemable                                                         145               145
   Redeemable                                                            198               313
Common stock                                                           5,848             6,366
Reinvested earnings                                                    2,111             2,531
                                                                    --------          -------- 
Total stockholders' equity                                             8,302             9,355
Commitments and Contingencies (Notes 2 and 4)                              -                 - 
                                                                    --------          -------- 
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                          $ 31,638          $ 30,557 
                                                                    ========          ======== 
<FN>
The accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of this 
statement.





PG&E CORPORATION
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
(in millions)


For the nine months ended September 30,                               1998              1997    
                                                                  ----------        ---------- 
                                                                              
Cash Flows From Operating Activities
Net income                                                        $     523         $     622
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash 
   provided by operating activities: 
   Depreciation, decommissioning, and amortization                    1,792             1,489
   Deferred income taxes and tax credits-net                           (309)             (196)
   Other deferred charges and noncurrent liabilities                 (1,071)               136
   Gain on sale of assets                                                 -              (120)
   Loss on sale of assets                                                21                 -
   Net effect of changes in operating assets                  
      and liabilities:                                        
      Accounts receivable                                               704              (52)
      Regulatory balancing accounts receivable                          618                 2 
      Inventories                                                       (45)              (46)
      Accounts payable                                                 (118)              (94)
      Accrued taxes                                                     501               321
      Other working capital                                            (101)              (73)
   Other-net                                                              -             179
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net cash provided by operating activities                             2,515             2,168
                                                                   ---------         ---------

Cash Flows From Investing Activities
Capital expenditures                                                 (1,262)           (1,181)
Investments in unregulated projects                                      17              (165)
Acquisitions                                                           (425)              (41)
Proceeds from sale of assets                                             58                 -
Other-net                                                               218               153 
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net cash used by investing activities                                (1,394)           (1,234)
                                                                   ---------         ---------

Cash Flows From Financing Activities
Common stock issued                                                      48                40
Common stock repurchased                                             (1,159)             (704)
Long-term debt issued                                                   139               363
Long-term debt matured, redeemed, or repurchased-net                 (1,295)             (436)
Short-term debt issued (redeemed)-net                                   507               643
Preferred stock redeemed or repurchased                                (105)               (7)
Dividends paid                                                         (377)             (389)
Other-net                                                                35               (20)
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net cash used by financing activities                                (2,207)             (510)
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents                              (1,086)              424
Cash and Cash Equivalents at January 1                                1,397               143
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Cash and Cash Equivalents at September 30                         $     311         $     567
                                                                   ---------         ---------

Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information
   Cash paid for:
      Interest (net of amounts capitalized)                       $     527         $     372
      Income taxes                                                      264               352

<FN>
The accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of this 
statement.





PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
STATEMENT OF CONSOLIDATED INCOME
(in millions)

                                                  Three months ended          Nine months ended
                                                    September 30,                September 30,
                                                  1998         1997            1998       1997 
                                                --------     --------        --------    ------
                                                                           
Electric utility                                $  2,226   $  2,161         $  5,496   $  5,760
Gas utility                                          337        380            1,210      1,334
                                                --------   --------         --------   --------
Total operating revenues                           2,563      2,541            6,706      7,094
                                                --------   --------         --------   --------

Operating Expenses
Cost of electric energy                              663        730            1,616      1,837
Cost of gas                                           51         49              333        325
Operating and maintenance, net                       641        695            2,055      2,159
Depreciation and decommissioning                     528        441            1,602      1,332
Provision for regulatory adjustment mechanisms       154        -               (349)       -  
                                                --------   --------         --------   --------
Total operating expenses                           2,037      1,915            5,257      5,653
                                                --------   --------         --------   --------
Operating Income                                     526        626            1,449      1,441
Interest expense, net                                160        146              493        437
Other income and (expense)                             7         17               78         40
                                                --------   --------         --------    -------
Income Before Income Taxes                           373        497            1,034      1,044
Income taxes                                         168        220              480        465
                                                --------   --------         --------    -------
Net Income                                           205        277              554        579

Preferred dividend requirement and
redemption premium                                     6          8               21         25
                                                --------   --------         --------    -------

Income Available for Common Stock               $    199   $    269         $    533    $   554
                                                ========   ========         ========    =======

<FN>
The accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of this 
statement.





PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
CONDENSED BALANCE SHEET
(in millions)


Balance at 
                                                                September 30,    December 31,
                                                                     1998            1997
                                                                 -----------     -----------
                                                                             
ASSETS
Current Assets
Cash and cash equivalents                                          $     78        $     80
Short-term investments                                                   15           1,143
Accounts receivable
   Customers, net                                                     1,295           1,204
   Regulatory balancing accounts                                        277             658
Related parties accounts receivable                                      28             459
Inventories and prepayments                                             482             523
                                                                   --------        --------
Total current assets                                                  2,175           4,067

Property, Plant, and Equipment 
Electric                                                             17,006          17,246
Gas                                                                   7,061           6,939
                                                                   --------        --------
Total property, plant, and equipment (at original cost)              24,067          24,185
Accumulated depreciation and decommissioning                        (11,209)        (11,134)
                                                                   --------        -------- 
Net property, plant, and equipment                                   12,858          13,051

Other Noncurrent Assets
Regulatory assets                                                     5,991           6,646
Nuclear decommissioning funds                                         1,070           1,024
Other                                                                   374             359
                                                                   --------        --------
Total noncurrent assets                                               7,435           8,029
                                                                   --------        --------
TOTAL ASSETS                                                       $ 22,468        $ 25,147
                                                                   ========        ========

LIABILITIES AND EQUITY
Current Liabilities
Short-term borrowings                                              $     10        $      -
Current portion of long-term debt                                       275             655
Current portion of rate reduction bonds                                 197             125
Accounts payable
   Trade creditors                                                      514             441
   Related parties                                                       61             134
   Other                                                                414             424
Accrued taxes                                                           494             229
Deferred income taxes                                                    52             149
Other                                                                   554             527
                                                                   --------        --------
Total current liabilities                                             2,571           2,684 

Noncurrent Liabilities
Long-term debt                                                        5,569           6,143
Rate reduction bonds                                                  2,511           2,776
Deferred income taxes                                                 3,000           3,304
Deferred tax credits                                                    294             338
Other                                                                 1,807           1,810
                                                                   --------        --------
Total noncurrent liabilities                                         13,181          14,371
 
Preferred Stock of Subsidiary With Mandatory Redemption Provisions      137             137
Company Obligated Mandatorily Redeemable Preferred Securities of 
   Trust Holding Solely Utility Subordinated Debentures                 300             300
Stockholders' Equity 
Preferred stock without mandatory redemption provisions 
   Nonredeemable                                                        145             145
   Redeemable                                                           142             257
Common stock                                                          3,806           4,582
Reinvested earnings                                                   2,186           2,671
                                                                   --------        --------
Total stockholders' equity                                            6,279           7,655
Commitments and Contingencies (Notes 2 and 4)                                             -
                                                                   --------        --------
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY                         $ 22,468        $ 25,147
                                                                   ========        ========

<FN>
The accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of this 
statement.





PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
(in millions)


For the nine months ended September 30,                              1998               1997   
                                                                  --------            -------- 
                                                                              
Cash Flows From Operating Activities
Net income                                                        $     554         $     579
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash 
   provided by operating activities:
   Depreciation, decommissioning, and amortization                    1,697             1,424
   Deferred income taxes and tax credits-net                           (297)             (220)
   Other deferred charges and noncurrent liabilities                   (243)              132
   Provision for regulatory adjustment mechanisms                      (349)                -
   Net effect of changes in operating assets
      and liabilities: 
      Accounts receivable                                               339              (163)
      Regulatory balancing accounts receivable                          618                 2 
      Inventories                                                         7               (17)
      Accounts payable                                                  116              (116)
      Accrued taxes                                                     265               336
      Other working capital                                              24               (60)
    Other-net                                                            24                23
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net cash provided by operating activities                             2,755             1,920
                                                                   ---------         ---------

Cash Flows From Investing Activities
Capital expenditures                                                   (963)           (1,116)
Other-net                                                               297               (90)
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net cash used by investing activities                                  (666)           (1,206)
                                                                   ---------         ---------

Cash Flows From Financing Activities
Common stock repurchased                                             (1,600)                -
Long-term debt issued                                                     2               355
Long-term debt matured, redeemed, or repurchased-net                 (1,175)             (334)
Short-term debt issued (redeemed)-net                                     -               132
Preferred stock redeemed or repurchased                                (107)                -
Dividends paid                                                         (337)             (548)
Other-net                                                                (2)              (10)
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Net cash used by financing activities                                (3,219)             (405)
                                                                
Net Change in Cash and Cash Equivalents                              (1,130)              309 
Cash and Cash Equivalents at January 1                                1,223               143
                                                                   ---------         ---------
Cash and Cash Equivalents at September 30                         $      93         $     452
                                                                   ---------         ---------

Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information
   Cash paid for:
      Interest (net of amounts capitalized)                       $     401         $     329
      Income taxes                                                      587               406

<FN>
The accompanying Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements are an integral part of this 
statement.




PG&E CORPORATION AND PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

NOTE 1: GENERAL

Basis of Presentation:
- ----------------------
This Quarterly Report Form 10-Q is a combined report of PG&E Corporation and 
Pacific Gas and Electric Company (the Utility), a regulated subsidiary of 
PG&E Corporation.  The Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements apply to 
both PG&E Corporation and the Utility.  PG&E Corporation's consolidated 
financial statements include the accounts of PG&E Corporation and its wholly 
owned and controlled subsidiaries, including the Utility (collectively, the 
Corporation).  The Utility's consolidated financial statements include its 
accounts as well as those of its wholly owned and controlled subsidiaries. 

   The Utility's financial position and results of operations are the 
principal factors affecting the Corporation's consolidated financial 
position and results of operations.   This quarterly report should be read 
in conjunction with the Corporation's and the Utility's Consolidated 
Financial Statements and Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
incorporated by reference in their combined 1997 Annual Report Form on 10-K.

   PG&E Corporation believes that the accompanying statements reflect all 
adjustments necessary to present a fair statement of the consolidated 
financial position and results of operations for the interim periods.  All 
material adjustments are of a normal recurring nature unless otherwise 
disclosed in this Form 10-Q.  All significant intercompany transactions have 
been eliminated from the consolidated financial statements.  Certain amounts 
in the prior year's consolidated financial statements have been reclassified 
to conform to the 1998 presentation.  Results of operations for interim 
periods are not necessarily indicative of results to be expected for a full 
year.

   The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally 
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates and 
assumptions.  These estimates and assumptions affect the reported amounts of 
revenues, expenses, assets, and liabilities and the disclosure of 
contingencies.  Actual results could differ from these estimates.  


Acquisitions and Sales:
- -----------------------
In July 1998, the Corporation sold its Australian energy holdings to Duke 
Energy International, LLP (DEI), a subsidiary of Duke Energy Corporation.  
The assets, located in the southeast corner of the Australian state of 
Queensland, include a 627-kilometer gas pipeline, pipeline operations, and 
trading and marketing operations.

   The sale to DEI represents a premium on the price in local currency of 
the Corporation's 1996 investment in the assets.  However, the transaction 
resulted in a non-recurring charge of $.06 per share in the second quarter, 
primarily due to the 22 percent currency devaluation of the Australian 
dollar against the U.S. dollar during the past two years.

   On September 1, 1998, the Corporation, through its subsidiary U.S. 
Generating Company (USGen), completed the acquisition of a portfolio of 
electric generating assets and power supply contracts from the New England 
Electric System (NEES) for $1.59 billion, plus $85 million for early 
retirement and severance costs previously committed to by NEES.  The 
acquisition has been accounted for using the purchase method of accounting.  
Accordingly, the purchase price has been preliminarily allocated to the 



assets purchased and the liabilities assumed based upon the fair values at
the date of acquisition.  

   Including fuel and other inventories and transaction costs, the 
Corporation's financing requirements total approximately $1.8 billion, 
funded through $1.3 billion of USGen debt and a $425 million equity 
contribution.  The net purchase price has been preliminarily allocated as 
follows: (1) Property, plant, and equipment of $2.3 billion; (2) Receivable 
for support payments of $0.8 billion; and (3) Contractual obligations of 
$1.3 billion.  The assets include hydroelectric, coal, oil, and natural gas 
generation facilities with a combined generating capacity of 4,000 megawatts 
(MW).  In addition, USGen assumed 25 multi-year power purchase agreements 
representing an additional 800 MW of production capacity.  USGen entered 
into agreements with NEES as part of the acquisition, which: (1) provide 
that NEES shall make support payments over the next ten years to USGen for 
the purchase power agreements; and (2) require that USGen provide 
electricity to NEES under contracts that expire over the next four to twelve 
years.

   The Corporation acquired NEES's generating facilities and power supply 
contracts in anticipation of deregulation of the electric industry in 
several New England states.  In Massachusetts, electric industry 
restructuring legislation opened retail competition in the electric 
generation business on March 1, 1998.  However, a referendum requesting 
voters to approve the continuation of this legislation in Massachusetts is 
on the November 1998 ballot.  If the voters vote to reject the legislation, 
then the restructuring legislation in Massachusetts will be repealed.  The 
Corporation does not expect that a repeal of the Massachusetts legislation, 
which relates primarily to the retail electricity market, would have a 
material impact on its results of operations or financial position.


Accounting for Risk Management Activities:
- ------------------------------------------
The Corporation, through its subsidiaries, engages in price risk management 
activities for both non-hedging and hedging purposes.  The Corporation 
conducts non-hedging activities principally through its unregulated 
subsidiary, PG&E Energy Trading.  Derivative and other financial instruments 
associated with the Corporation's electric power, natural gas, and related 
non-hedging activities are accounted for using the mark-to-market method of 
accounting. 

   Under mark-to-market accounting, the Corporation's electric power, 
natural gas, and related non-hedging contracts, including both physical and 
financial instruments, are recorded at market value, net of future servicing 
costs and reserves.  In the period of contract execution, income or expense 
is recognized.  The market prices used to value these transactions reflect 
management's best estimates considering various factors, including market 
quotes, time value, and volatility factors of the underlying commitments.  
The values are adjusted to reflect the potential impact of liquidating a 
position in an orderly manner over a reasonable period of time under present 
market conditions.  

   Changes in the market value (determined by reference to recent 
transactions) of these contract portfolios, resulting primarily from newly 
originated transactions and the impact of commodity price and interest rate 
movements, are recognized in operating revenue in the period of change.  
These unrealized gains and losses and related reserves are recorded as 
inventories and prepayments and other liabilities.

   In addition to the non-hedging activities discussed above, the 
Corporation may engage in hedging activities using futures, options, and 
swaps to hedge the impact of market fluctuations on energy commodity prices, 
interest rates, and foreign currencies.  The Corporation accounts for hedge 
transactions under the deferral method.  Initially, the Corporation defers 
gains and losses on these transactions and classifies them as Inventories 
and prepayments and Other liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheet.  
When the hedged transaction occurs, the Corporation recognizes the gain or 
loss in Cost of energy commodities and services or interest expense in the 
Statement of Consolidated Income.

   For regulatory reasons, the Utility manages price risk independently from 
the activities in the Corporation's unregulated businesses.  In the first 
quarter of 1998, the California Public Utility Commission (CPUC) granted 
approval for the Utility to use financial instruments to manage price 
volatility of gas purchased for the Utility's electric generation portfolio.  
The approval limits the Utility's outstanding financial instruments to $200 
million, with downward adjustments occurring as the Utility divests its 
fossil-fueled generation plants. (See Utility Generation Divestiture, 
below.)  Authority to use these risk management instruments ceases upon the 
full divestiture of fossil-fueled generation plants or at the end of the 
current electric rate freeze (see Rate Freeze and Rate Reduction, below), 
whichever comes first.

   In the second quarter of 1998, the CPUC granted conditional authority to 
the Utility to use natural gas-based financial instruments to manage the 
impact of natural gas prices on the cost of electricity purchased pursuant 
to existing power purchase contracts.  Under the authority granted in the 
CPUC decision, no natural gas-based financial instruments shall have an 
expiration date later than December 31, 2001.  Further, if the rate freeze 
ends before December 31, 2001, the Utility shall net any outstanding 
financial instrument contracts through equal and opposite contracts, within 
a reasonable amount of time.  Also during the second quarter, the Utility 
filed an application with the CPUC to use natural gas-based financial 
instruments to manage price and revenue risks associated with its natural 
gas transmission and storage assets.  The Utility currently does not use 
financial instruments to manage price risk.

   The Corporation's net gains and losses associated with price risk 
management activities for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 
30, 1998, were not material.

   In June 1998, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued Statement 
No. 133, "Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities," 
which is required to be adopted in years beginning after June 15, 1999.  The 
Statement permits early adoption as of the beginning of any fiscal quarter.  
The Corporation expects to adopt the new Statement no later than January 1, 
2000.  The Statement will require the Corporation to recognize all 
derivatives, as defined in the Statement, on the balance sheet at fair 
value.  Derivatives, or any portion thereof, that are not effective hedges 
must be adjusted to fair value through income.  If the derivative is an 
effective hedge, depending on the nature of the hedge, changes in the fair 
value of derivatives either will be offset against the change in fair value 
of the hedged assets, liabilities, or firm commitments through earnings or 
will be recognized in other comprehensive income until the hedged item is 
recognized in earnings.  The Corporation currently is evaluating what the 
effect of Statement 133 will be on the earnings and financial position of 
the Corporation.


NOTE 2: The Utility Electric Generation Business

On March 31, 1998, California became one of the first states in the country 
to allow open competition in the electric generation business.  Today, many 
Californians may choose an energy service provider, which will provide their 
electric power generation.  The Utility's customers may choose to purchase 
electricity: (1) from the Utility; (2) from retail electricity providers 
(for example, marketers including our energy service subsidiary, brokers, 
and aggregators); or (3) directly from unregulated power generators.  The 



Utility expects to continue to provide distribution services to
substantially all electric consumers within its service territory.


Competitive Market Framework:
- -----------------------------
To create the competitive generation market, California established a Power 
Exchange (PX) and an Independent Systems Operator (ISO).  The PX sets 
electricity prices in an open electric marketplace.  The ISO, under the 
jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), oversees 
California's electric transmission grid to ensure that all generators have 
comparable access and that the reliability of the system is maintained.  
California utilities retained ownership of utility transmission facilities, 
but relinquished operating control to the ISO.  Starting March 31, 1998, the 
ISO has scheduled the delivery of resources such as Qualifying Facilities 
(QFs) and Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant (Diablo Canyon).  These 
resources for operational or reliability reasons are considered "must-take" 
units and operate under cost-of-service contracts.  After scheduling must-
take resources, the ISO satisfies the remaining aggregate demand with 
purchases from the PX and purchases of necessary generation and ancillary 
services to maintain grid reliability.  To meet the ISO's demand, the PX 
accepts the lowest bids from competing electric providers, which establishes 
a market price.  Customers choosing to buy power directly from non-regulated 
generators or retailers will pay for that generation based upon negotiated 
contracts.

   CPUC regulation requires the Utility to sell all of its generated 
electric power and must-take electric power purchased from external power 
producers to the PX.  The Utility must then purchase all electric power for 
its retail customers from the PX.  For the three- and nine-month periods 
ended September 30, 1998, the Cost of energy for utility, reflected on the 
Statement of Consolidated Income, is comprised of the cost of PX purchases, 
ancillary services purchased from the ISO, and the cost of Utility 
generation, net of sales to the PX (in millions) as follows:

                                      For the three-      For the nine-
                                      months ended        months ended
                                      September 30, 1998  September 30, 1998
                                      ------------------  ------------------ 

      Cost of electric generation          576               1,566  
      Cost of purchases from the PX        379                 489
      Net cost of ancillary services       130                 169
      Proceeds from sales to the PX       (422)               (608)
                                         ------              ------ 
      Cost of electric energy              663               1,616
      Utility cost of gas                   51                 333
                                         ------              ------
      Cost of energy for Utility           714               1,949


Electric Transition Plan:
- -------------------------
In developing state legislation to implement a competitive market, involved 
parties believed that the Utility's market-based revenues would not be 
sufficient to recover (that is, to collect from customers) all generation 
costs.  Many of these costs resulted from past CPUC decisions.  To recover 
these uneconomic costs, called transition costs, and to ensure a smooth 
transition to the competitive environment, a transition plan was developed 
in the form of state legislation to position California for the new market 
environment.  The California legislature passed the legislation and the 
Governor signed it in 1996.  As discussed below in California Voter 
Initiative, on November 3, 1998, Californians  will vote on Proposition 9, 
which would overturn major portions of the current electric utility 



restructuring legislation and would have a material adverse impact on the
Utility and the Corporation.

   There are two principal elements of the transition plan established by 
the restructuring legislation: (1) an electric rate freeze and rate 
reduction; and (2) recovery of transition costs.  Both of these elements are 
discussed below.  The restructuring legislation transition period ends 
December 31, 2001.  At the conclusion of the transition period, the Utility 
will be at risk to recover any of its remaining generation costs through 
market-based revenues.


Rate Freeze and Rate Reduction:
- -------------------------------
During 1997, electric rates for the Utility's customers were held at 1996 
levels.  Effective January 1, 1998, the Utility reduced electric rates for 
its residential and small commercial customers by 10 percent and will hold 
their rates at that level throughout the transition period.  All other 
electric customers' rates remained frozen at 1996 levels.  The rate freeze 
will continue until the end of the transition period.  For the three- and 
nine-month periods ended September 30, 1998, the 10 percent electric rate 
reduction caused operating revenues to decrease by approximately $124 
million and $304 million, respectively, as compared to the same periods in 
1997.

   As authorized by the restructuring legislation, to pay for the 10 percent 
rate reduction, the Utility refinanced $2.9 billion of its transition costs 
with rate reduction bonds, which have maturities ranging from three months 
to ten years.  The bonds defer recovery of a portion of the transition costs 
until after the transition period.  Pending the outcome of Proposition 9, 
the Utility expects to recover the transition costs associated with the rate 
reduction bonds over the term of the bonds. 


Transition Cost Recovery:
- -------------------------
Transition costs are costs considered unavoidable and not expected to be 
recovered through market-based revenues.  These costs include: (1) the 
above-market cost of Utility-owned generation facilities; (2) costs 
associated with the Utility's long-term contracts to purchase power at 
above-market prices from QFs and other power suppliers; and (3) generation-
related regulatory assets and obligations.  (Regulatory assets are expenses 
deferred in the current or prior periods to be included in rates in future 
periods.)

   The costs of Utility-owned generation facilities currently are included 
in the Utility customers' rates.  Above-market facility costs result when 
book value is in excess of market value.  Conversely, below-market facility 
costs result when market value is in excess of book value.  The total amount 
of generation facility costs to be included as transition costs will be 
based on the aggregate of above-market and below-market values.  The above-
market portion of these costs is eligible for recovery as a transition cost.  
The below-market portion of these costs will reduce other unrecovered 
transition costs.  A valuation of a Utility-owned generation facility where 
the market value exceeds the book value could result in a material charge if 
the valuation of the facility is determined based upon any method other than 
a sale of the facility to a third party.  This is because any excess of 
market value over book value would be used to reduce other transition costs, 
without increasing the book value of the plant assets. 

   The Utility will not be able to determine the exact amount of generation 
facility costs that will be recoverable as transition costs until a market 
valuation process (appraisal or sale) is completed for each of the Utility's 
generation facilities.  The first of these valuations occurred on July 1, 
1998, when the Utility sold three Utility-owned electric generation plants 



for $501 million.  (See Utility Generation Divestiture, below.)  For
generation facilities that the Utility has not divested, the CPUC will 
approve the methodology to be used in the market valuation process.

   The above-market portion of costs associated with the Utility's long-term 
contracts to purchase power at above-market prices from QFs and other power 
suppliers also are eligible to be recovered as transition costs.  The 
Utility has agreed to purchase electric power from these suppliers under 
long-term contracts expiring on various dates through 2028.  Over the life 
of these contracts, the Utility estimates that it will purchase 
approximately 345 million megawatt-hours at an aggregate average price of 
6.5 cents per kilowatt-hour.  To the extent that this price is above the 
market price, the Utility expects to collect the difference between the 
contract price and the market price from customers, as a transition cost, 
over the terms of the contracts. 

   Generation-related regulatory assets, net of regulatory obligations, also 
are eligible for transition cost recovery.  As of September 30, 1998, the 
Utility has accumulated approximately $6.0 billion of these assets net of 
certain obligations, including the amounts reclassified from Property, 
plant, and equipment, discussed in Utility Generation Impairment below.

   The restructuring legislation specifies that the Utility must recover 
most transition costs by December 31, 2001.  This recovery period is 
significantly shorter than the recovery period of the related assets prior 
to restructuring.  Effective January 1, 1998, as authorized by the CPUC in 
consideration of the restructuring legislation, the Utility is recording 
amortization of most generation-related regulatory assets over the 
transition period.  The CPUC believes that the shortened recovery period 
reduces risks associated with recovery of all the Utility's generation 
assets, including Diablo Canyon and hydroelectric facilities.  Accordingly, 
the Utility is receiving a reduced return for all of its Utility-owned 
generation facilities.  In 1998, the reduced return on common equity for 
these facilities is 6.77 percent.  

   Although the Utility must recover most transition costs by December 31, 
2001, certain transition costs may be included in customers' electric rates 
after the transition period.  These costs include: (1) certain employee-
related transition costs; (2) above-market payments under existing QF and 
power-purchase contracts discussed above; and (3) unrecovered electric 
industry restructuring implementation costs.  In addition, transition costs 
financed by the issuance of rate reduction bonds are expected to be 
recovered over the term of the bonds through the collection of the Fixed 
Transition Amount (FTA) charge from customers.  Further, the Utility's 
nuclear decommissioning costs are being recovered through a CPUC-authorized 
charge, which will extend until sufficient funds exist to decommission 
Diablo Canyon and Humboldt Nuclear Power Plants.  During the rate freeze, 
the FTA and nuclear decommissioning charges will not increase the Utility 
customers' electric rates.  Excluding these specific items, the Utility will 
write off any transition costs not recovered during the transition period. 

   Effective January 1, 1998, the Utility has been collecting eligible 
transition costs through a CPUC-authorized nonbypassable charge called the 
competition transition charge (CTC).  The amount of revenue collected from 
frozen rates for recovery of transition costs is subject to seasonal 
fluctuations in the Utility's sales volumes.  Revenues available for the 
purpose of recovering transition costs exceeded transition cost expense for 
the three-month period ended September 30, 1998, by $154 million.  During 
the nine-month period ended September 30, 1998, transition cost expense 
exceeded associated revenues available for recovery of transition costs by 
$349 million.  In accordance with CPUC rate treatment of transition costs, 
the Utility deferred this excess as a regulatory asset.  The Utility expects 
to recover this regulatory asset during the remainder of the transition 
period. 



   During the transition period, the CPUC will review the accounting methods 
used by the Utility to recover transition costs and the amount of transition 
costs requested for recovery.  The CPUC is currently reviewing non-nuclear 
transition costs amortized in the first half of 1998.  The Utility expects 
the CPUC to issue decisions regarding these reviews in the second quarter of 
1999.  At this time, the amount of transition cost disallowances, if any, 
cannot be predicted.

   In addition, on August 31, 1998, an independent accounting firm retained 
by the CPUC completed its financial verification audit of the Utility's 
Diablo Canyon plant accounts at December 31, 1996.  The audit resulted in 
the issuance of an unqualified opinion.  The audit verified that Diablo 
Canyon sunk costs at December 31, 1996, were $3.3 billion of the total $7.1 
billion construction costs.  (Sunk costs are costs associated with Utility-
owned generating facilities that are fixed and unavoidable and currently 
included in the Utility customers' electric rates.)  The independent 
accounting firm also issued an agreed-upon special procedures report, 
requested by the CPUC, which questioned $200 million of the $3.3 billion 
sunk costs.  The CPUC will review any proposed adjustments to Diablo 
Canyon's recoverable costs, which resulted from the report.  At this time, 
the amount of transition cost disallowances, if any, cannot be predicted. 

   The Utility's ability to recover its transition costs during the 
transition period will be dependent on several factors.  The primary factor 
is whether voters approve and the courts uphold Proposition 9, which would 
eliminate transition cost recovery with certain exceptions.  If Proposition 
9 is defeated, the factors that continue to affect the Utility's ability to 
recover transition costs include: (1) the continued application of the 
regulatory framework established by the CPUC and state legislation; (2) the 
amount of transition costs ultimately approved for recovery by the CPUC; (3) 
the market value of the Utility-owned generation facilities; (4) future 
Utility sales levels; (5) future Utility fuel and operating costs; (6) the 
extent to which the Utility's authorized revenues to recover distribution 
costs are increased or decreased; and (7) the market price of electricity.


Utility Generation Divestiture:
- -------------------------------
As part of electric industry restructuring, the Utility decided to sell its 
fossil-fueled generation facilities.  If the voters approve Proposition 9 
(see California Voter Initiative, below,) then the Utility may alter its 
current divestiture plan.

   On July 1, 1998, the Utility completed the sale of three electric 
Utility-owned fossil-fueled generating plants to Duke Energy Power Services 
Inc. (Duke) for $501 million.  These three fossil-fueled plants had a 
combined book value at July 1, 1998, of approximately $351 million and a 
combined capacity of 2,645 MW.  The three power plants are located at Morro 
Bay, Moss Landing, and Oakland.

   The Utility will continue to operate and maintain the plants under a two-
year operating and maintenance agreement.  Additionally, the Utility will 
retain the liability for required environmental remediation of any pre-
closing soil or groundwater contamination at these plants.  Although the 
Utility is retaining such environmental remediation liability, the Utility 
does not expect any material impact on its or PG&E Corporation's financial 
position or results of operations.  See Note 4, Environmental Remediation, 
below. 

   In July 1998, the Utility agreed with the City and County of San 
Francisco to permanently close Hunters Point Power Plant when reliable 
alternative electricity resources are operational.  The CPUC approved this 
agreement in October 1998, allowing the Utility to recover the existing book 
value of Hunters Point and the plant's environmental remediation and 
decommissioning costs.  Hunters Point is a fossil-fueled plant with a 



generating capacity of 423 MW and a book value, including plant-related
regulatory assets, at September 30, 1998, of $33 million.  

   Subject to the outcome of Proposition 9, the Utility currently intends to 
sell its fossil-fueled and geothermal facilities: Potrero, Pittsburg, Contra 
Costa, and Geysers power plants.  These fossil-fueled and geothermal 
facilities have a combined generating capacity of 4,289 MW and a combined 
book value at September 30, 1998, of approximately $592 million.  The 
Utility is scheduled to receive final bids to purchase these plants in 
November 1998, and to complete the sale of these plants in 1999. 

   Any net gains from the sale of the Utility-owned fossil-fueled and 
geothermal plants will be used to offset other transition costs.  As a 
result, the Utility does not believe the sales will have a material impact 
on its results of operations.

   In 1997, the Utility informed the CPUC that it does not intend to retain 
its remaining 4,000 MW of hydroelectric facilities as part of the Utility.  
These remaining facilities have a combined book value at September 30, 1998, 
of approximately $1.6 billion.  As discussed above, any method of 
disposition of assets other than through sale to a third party could result 
in a material charge to the extent that the market value, as determined by 
the CPUC, is in excess of book value. 


Utility Generation Impairment:
- ------------------------------
In the third quarter of 1997, the Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) of the 
Financial Accounting Standards Board reached a consensus on its issue No. 
97-4, entitled "Deregulation of the Pricing of Electricity - Issues Related 
to the Application of SFAS (Statement of Financial Accounting Standard) No. 
71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, and No. 101, 
Regulated Enterprises - Accounting for the Discontinuation of Application of 
SFAS No. 71" (EITF 97-4), which provided authoritative guidance on the 
applicability of SFAS No. 71 during the transition period.  EITF 97-4 
required the Utility to discontinue the application of SFAS No. 71 for the 
generation portion of its operations as of July 24, 1997, the effective date 
of EITF 97-4.  EITF 97-4 requires that regulatory assets and liabilities 
(both those in existence today and those created under the terms of the 
transition plan established by the restructuring legislation) be allocated 
to the portion of the business from which the source of the regulated cash 
flows is derived.

   Under the guidance of EITF 97-4 and SFAS No. 121, "Accounting for the 
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to be Disposed 
Of," an impairment analysis was required of the generating assets no longer 
subject to the guidance of SFAS No. 71.  The Utility compared the cash flows 
from all sources, including CTC revenues, to the cost of the generating 
facilities and found that the assets were not impaired.  During the second 
quarter of 1998, the Staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 
issued interpretive guidance regarding the application of EITF 97-4 and SFAS 
No. 121.  The guidance states that an impairment analysis should exclude CTC 
revenues from the recovery stream.  Under this interpretation, the Utility 
performed the impairment analysis excluding CTC revenues and determined that 
$3.9 billion of its generation facilities were impaired.  Because the 
Utility expects to recover the impaired assets as a transition cost under 
the transition plan established by the restructuring legislation, discussed 
above, the Utility recorded a regulatory asset for the impaired amounts as 
required by EITF 97-4.  Accordingly, at June 30, 1998, this amount was 
reclassified from Property, Plant, and Equipment to Regulatory assets on the 
accompanying balance sheets.  In addition, prior year balances were 
reclassified.



California Voter Initiative:
- ----------------------------
On November 3, 1998, California voters will vote on Proposition 9, an 
initiative supported by various consumer groups.  

   Proposition 9 would overturn major provisions of California's electric 
industry restructuring legislation.  Proposition 9 proposes to: (1) require 
the Utility and the other California investor-owned utilities to provide a 
10 percent rate reduction to their residential and small commercial 
customers in addition to the 10 percent rate reduction mandated by the 
electric restructuring legislation; (2) eliminate transition cost recovery 
for nuclear generation plants and related assets and obligations (other than 
reasonable decommissioning costs); (3) eliminate transition cost recovery 
for non-nuclear generation plants and related assets and obligations (other 
than costs associated with QFs), unless the CPUC finds that the utilities 
would be deprived of the opportunity to earn a fair rate of return; and (4) 
prohibit the collection of any customer charges necessary to pay principal 
and interest on the rate reduction bonds or, if a court finds that such 
prohibition is not legal, require that utility rates be reduced to fully 
offset the cost of the customer surcharges. 

   If the voters approve Proposition 9, then legal challenges by the 
California utilities and others, including the Utility, would ensue.  The 
Utility intends to vigorously challenge Proposition 9 as unconstitutional 
and to seek an immediate stay of its provisions pending court review of the 
merits of its challenge.

   If Proposition 9 is approved, and if the Utility were unable to conclude 
that it is probable that Proposition 9 ultimately would be found invalid, 
then under applicable accounting principles the Utility would be required to 
write off generation-related regulatory assets, which would no longer be 
probable of recovery because of reductions in future revenues.  The Utility 
anticipates that such a write-off would range from a minimum of 
approximately $2.2 billion pre-tax to a maximum of approximately $5.0 
billion pre-tax.  This pre-tax loss would result in an after-tax loss 
ranging from $1.3 billion to $2.9 billion, or $3 to $8 per share.  The 
amount of the write-off is dependent on how the courts and regulatory 
agencies interpret and apply the provisions of Proposition 9.  The maximum 
$2.9 billion write-off would represent 48% of the Utility's total common 
stockholders' equity of $6.0 billion at September 30, 1998.

   The $2.9 billion maximum after-tax loss would eliminate the Utility's 
retained earnings of $2.2 billion at September 30, 1998, and the Utility 
would be unable to meet certain capital-related regulatory and legal 
conditions.  In addition, this loss would reduce the common equity ratio of 
the Utility's ratemaking capital structure from approximately 48% to 
approximately 32%, which is below the 48% equity ratio mandated by the CPUC.  
Such a loss would severely impair the Utility's ability to pay dividends to 
its preferred shareholders and the Corporation's ability to pay dividends to 
its common shareholders.  Also, the Utility is concerned that its credit 
rating could drop to low investment grade or even below investment grade.  
This would immediately and substantially reduce the market value of the 
Utility's $5.8 billion in debt securities, increase the cost of raising new 
debt capital, and may preclude the use of certain financial instruments for 
raising capital.

   The duration and amount of the rate decrease contemplated by Proposition 
9 is uncertain and, if Proposition 9 is approved, will be subject to 
interpretation by the courts and regulatory agencies.  However, if all 
provisions of Proposition 9 ultimately are upheld against legal challenge 
and interpreted in an adverse manner, the amount of the average earnings 
reductions could be approximately $200 million per year, or over $16 million 
per month, from now through 2001 (assuming rates are reduced to offset the 
charges for the rate reduction bonds) and approximately $50 million per year 
from 2002 (based on rates under current regulatory decisions, assuming such 



decisions are in effect after the latest date on which the rate freeze would
otherwise end) to 2007 (the longest maturity date of the rate reduction 
bonds).  The earnings reduction estimates depend on how the courts and 
regulators interpret Proposition 9 and how future rate changes unrelated to 
Proposition 9 (such as changes resulting from the General Rate Case 
proceeding, discussed below) affect the Utility's electric revenues.

   As discussed in Transition Cost Recovery, above, the Utility is 
recovering most of its transition costs under a rate freeze through the 
transition period, which ends by December 31, 2001.  If Proposition 9 is 
immediately implemented, even on a temporary basis pending judicial review, 
then the Utility's opportunity to recover transition costs will be reduced 
each month.  Depending on market conditions, this reduction could amount to 
as much as $115 million per month, on average.

   In addition to the potential impacts on the Utility discussed above, 
during any such litigation, Proposition 9 may adversely affect the secondary 
market for the rate reduction bonds.  Further, the collection of the FTA 
charges necessary to pay the rate reduction bonds while the litigation is 
pending would be precluded, unless an immediate stay is granted.  Even if a 
stay is granted immediately, there may be terms and conditions imposed in 
connection with the stay that may adversely affect the cash flow for timely 
interest payments on the rate reduction bonds.  The failure to pay interest 
when due could give rise to an event of default.  Finally, if Proposition 9 
is upheld against legal challenge, then the primary source for payments on 
the rate reduction bonds would become unavailable and holders of the rate 
reduction bonds could incur a loss of their investment.


NOTE 3: UTILITY OBLIGATED MANDATORILY REDEEMABLE PREFERRED SECURITIES OF 
TRUST HOLDING SOLELY UTILITY SUBORDINATED DEBENTURES

The Utility, through its wholly owned subsidiary, PG&E Capital I (Trust), 
has outstanding 12 million shares of 7.90 percent cumulative quarterly 
income preferred securities (QUIPS), with an aggregate liquidation value of 
$300 million.  Concurrent with the issuance of the QUIPS, the Trust issued 
to the Utility 371,135 shares of common securities with an aggregate 
liquidation value of approximately $9 million.  The only assets of the Trust 
are deferrable interest subordinated debentures issued by the Utility with a 
face value of approximately $309 million, an interest rate of 7.90 percent, 
and a maturity date of 2025.


NOTE 4: COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES

Nuclear Insurance:
- ------------------
The Utility has insurance coverage for property damage and business 
interruption losses as a member of Nuclear Electric Insurance Limited 
(NEIL).  Under these policies, if a nuclear generating facility suffers a 
loss due to a prolonged accidental outage, then the Utility may be subject 
to maximum retrospective assessments of $17 million (property damage) and $6 
million (business interruption), in each case per policy period, in the 
event losses exceed the resources of NEIL.

   The Utility has purchased primary insurance of $200 million for public 
liability claims resulting from a nuclear incident.  Secondary financial 
protection provides an additional $9.7 billion in coverage, which is 
mandated by federal legislation.  It provides for loss sharing among 
utilities owning nuclear generating facilities if a costly incident occurs.  
If a nuclear incident results in claims in excess of $200 million, then the 
Utility may be assessed up to $176 million per incident, with payments in 
each year limited to a maximum of $20 million per incident.



Environmental Remediation:
- --------------------------
The Utility may be required to pay for environmental remediation at sites 
where the Utility has been or may be a potentially responsible party under 
the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act 
(CERCLA) or the California Hazardous Substance Account Act.  These sites 
include former manufactured gas plant sites, power plant sites, and sites 
used by the Utility for the storage or disposal of potentially hazardous 
materials.  Under CERCLA, the Utility may be responsible for remediation of 
hazardous substances, even if the Utility did not deposit those substances 
on the site.

   The Utility records a liability when site assessments indicate 
remediation is probable and a range of reasonably likely cleanup costs can 
be estimated.  The Utility reviews its remediation liability quarterly for 
each identified site.  The liability is an estimate of costs for site 
investigations, remediation, operations and maintenance, monitoring, and 
site closure.  The remediation costs also reflect: (1) technology; (2) 
enacted laws and regulations; (3) experience gained at similar sites; and 
(4) the probable level of involvement and financial condition of other 
potentially responsible parties.  Unless there is a better estimate within 
this range of possible costs, the Utility records the lower end of this 
range.

   The cost of the hazardous substance remediation ultimately undertaken by 
the Utility is difficult to estimate.  A change in the estimate may occur in 
the near term due to uncertainty concerning the Utility's responsibility, 
the complexity of environmental laws and regulations, and the selection of 
compliance alternatives.  The Utility had an accrued liability at September 
30, 1998, of $282 million for hazardous waste remediation costs at 
identified sites, including divested fossil-fueled power plants.  
Environmental remediation at identified sites may be as much as $486 million 
if, among other things, other potentially responsible parties are not 
financially able to contribute to these costs or further investigation 
indicates that the extent of contamination or necessary remediation is 
greater than anticipated.  The Utility estimated this upper limit of the 
range of costs using assumptions least favorable to the Utility, based upon 
a range of reasonably possible outcomes.  Costs may be higher if the Utility 
is found to be responsible for cleanup costs at additional sites or expected 
outcomes change.

   Of the $282 million liability, discussed above, the Utility has recovered 
$97 million and expects to recover $162 million in future rates.  
Additionally, the Utility is seeking recovery of its costs from insurance 
carriers and from other third parties as appropriate. 

   The Corporation believes the ultimate outcome of these matters will not 
have a material impact on its or the Utility's financial position or results 
of operations.


Legal Matters:
- --------------

Chromium Litigation

Several civil suits are pending against the Utility in various California 
state courts.  The suits seek an unspecified amount of compensatory and 
punitive damages for alleged personal injuries and, in some cases, property 
damage, resulting from alleged exposure to chromium in the vicinity of the 
Utility's gas compressor stations at Hinkley, Kettleman, and Topock, 
California.  Two of these cases also name PG&E Corporation as a defendant.   
Currently, there are claims pending on behalf of approximately 2,300 
plaintiffs.



   The Utility is responding to the suits and asserting affirmative 
defenses.  The Utility will pursue appropriate legal defenses, including 
statute of limitations or exclusivity of workers' compensation laws, and 
factual defenses, including lack of exposure to chromium and the inability 
of chromium to cause certain of the illnesses alleged.

   The Corporation believes that the ultimate outcome of this matter will 
not have a material impact on its or the Utility's financial position or 
results of operations.


Texas Franchise Fee Litigation
 
In connection with PG&E Corporation's acquisition of Valero Energy 
Corporation, now known as PG&E Gas Transmission, Texas Corporation (GTT), 
GTT succeeded to the litigation described below.

   GTT and various of its affiliates are defendants in at least two class 
action suits and six separate suits filed by various Texas cities.  
Generally, these cities allege, among other things, that: (1) owners or 
operators of pipelines occupied city property and conducted pipeline 
operations without the cities' consent and without compensating the cities; 
and (2) the gas marketers failed to pay the cities for accessing and 
utilizing the pipelines located in the cities to flow gas under city 
streets.  Plaintiffs also allege various other claims against the defendants 
for failure to secure the cities' consent.  Damages are not quantified.

   In June 1998, a jury trial began in the case brought by the City of 
Edinburg, on its own behalf and not as a class action, which involved, among 
other things, a particular franchise agreement entered into by a former 
subsidiary of GTT (now owned by Southern Union Gas Company (SU)) and the 
City and certain conduct of the defendants.  In August 1998, the jury 
returned a verdict in favor of the City and awarded actual damages in the 
approximate aggregate amount of $9.8 million, plus attorneys' fees of 
approximately $3.5 million against GTT, SU and various affiliates.  The jury 
refused to award punitive damages against the GTT defendants.  A hearing on 
the plaintiff's motion for entry of judgment has been scheduled for December  
1, 1998, after which the court will enter a judgment.  At the hearing, the 
court may provide guidance as to how the damages and attorneys' fees of 
approximately $13.3 million will be apportioned among the parties.  If an 
adverse judgment is entered, GTT and its various subsidiaries intend to 
appeal the judgment.

   The Corporation believes that the ultimate outcome of these matters will 
not have a material impact on its financial position or results of 
operation.




ITEM 2.  MANAGEMENT's DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF CONSOLIDATED RESULTS OF 
OPERATIONS AND FINANCIAL CONDITION 

San Francisco-based PG&E Corporation provides integrated energy services. 

PG&E Corporation's consolidated financial statements include the accounts of 
PG&E Corporation and its various business lines: 
- -Pacific Gas and Electric Company (Utility) 
- -Unregulated Business Operations consisting of:
   - Gas Transmission through PG&E Gas Transmission; 
   - Electric Generation through U.S. Generating Company (USGen);
   - Energy Commodities and Services through PG&E Energy Trading     
     and PG&E Energy Services.



Overview:
- ---------
This is a combined Quarterly Report Form 10-Q of PG&E Corporation and 
Pacific Gas and Electric Company.  Therefore, our Management's Discussion 
and Analysis of Consolidated Results of Operations and Financial Condition 
(MD&A) applies to both PG&E Corporation and the Utility.  PG&E Corporation's 
consolidated financial statements include the accounts of PG&E Corporation 
and its wholly owned and controlled subsidiaries, including the Utility 
(collectively, the Corporation).  Our Utility's consolidated financial 
statements include its accounts as well as those of its wholly owned and 
controlled subsidiaries.  This MD&A should be read in conjunction with the 
consolidated financial statements included herein.  Further, this quarterly 
report should be read in conjunction with the Corporation's and the 
Utility's Consolidated Financial Statements and Notes to Consolidated 
Financial Statements incorporated by reference in their combined 1997 Annual 
Report on Form 10-K.  

   In this MD&A, we explain the results of operations for the three- and 
nine-month periods ended September 30, 1998, as compared to the 
corresponding periods in 1997, and discuss our financial condition.  Our 
discussion of financial condition includes:
- - changes in the energy industry and how we expect these changes to    
influence future results of operations;
- - liquidity and capital resources, including discussions of capital 
financing activities, and uncertainties that could affect future results;   
and
- - risk management activities.

   This Quarterly Report Form 10-Q, including our discussion of results of 
operations and financial condition below, contains forward-looking 
statements that involve risks and uncertainties.  These statements are based 
on the beliefs and assumptions of management and on information currently 
available to management.  Words such as "estimates," "expects," 
"anticipates," "plans," "believes," and similar expressions identify 
forward-looking statements involving risks and uncertainties.  Actual 
results may differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking 
statements.

   The most important factor that could affect future results and that would 
cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the 
forward looking statements, or from historical results, is the outcome and 
potential impact of Proposition 9.  If the voters approve and the courts 
uphold Proposition 9, then Proposition 9 would overturn major provisions of 
California's electric industry restructuring legislation.  Other important 
factors include, but are not limited to: (1) the ongoing restructuring of 
the electric and gas industries in California and nationally; (2) the 
outcome of the regulatory proceedings related to the restructuring; (3) the 
Utility's ability to collect revenues sufficient to recover transition costs 
in accordance with its transition cost recovery plan, specifically in light 
of Proposition 9; (4) the planned sale of the Utility-owned fossil-fueled 
electric generating plants, which may be altered if the voters approve 
Proposition 9; (5) the impact of, and our ability to successfully integrate,
our acquisitions, including the New England Electric System (NEES) and the
Texas assets; (6) the potential impact from internal or external Year 2000 
problems; (7) the outcome of the Utility's Cost of Capital proceeding; (8) 
approval of the Utility's 1999 General Rate Case application providing the 
Utility the opportunity to earn its authorized rate of return; (9) increased 
competition; (10) our ability to expand into and to compete successfully in 
new markets as the passage of Proposition 9 may stall electric industry 
restructuring nationally; and (11) fluctuations in the prices of commodity 
gas and electricity and our ability to successfully hedge against such price 
risk.  We discuss each of these items in greater detail below.



RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

In this section, we provide the components of our earnings for the three- 
and nine-month periods ended September 30, 1998, and 1997.  We then explain 
why operating revenues and expenses varied from 1998 to 1997.

   The following table shows results of operations for the three- and nine-
month periods ended September 30, 1998, and 1997, and total assets at 
September 30, 1998, and 1997.  The results for unregulated business 
operations include the Corporation on a stand-alone basis.


(in millions)

                                         Unregulated   
                                           Business     Elimin-
                                Utility   Operations    ations     Total 
                               --------   ------------  -------   -------
                                                     
For the three months ended
September 30,
1998
Operating revenues             $ 2,563      $ 2,930    $ (186)   $ 5,307
Operating expenses               2,037        2,914      (186)     4,765
                               -------      -------     ------   -------
Operating income                   526           16         -        542 
Income available for
      common stock                 199           11         -        210

1997
Operating revenues             $ 2,541      $ 1,565     $ (43)   $ 4,063
Operating expenses               1,915        1,563       (43)     3,435
                               -------      -------     -------  -------
Operating income                   626            2         -        628
Income available for
      common stock                 269          (12)        -        257
 
For the nine months ended
September 30,
1998
Operating revenues             $ 6,706      $ 8,263    $ (522)   $14,447
Operating expenses               5,257        8,145      (522)    12,880
                               -------      -------     ------   -------
Operating income                 1,449          118         -      1,567
Income available for
      common stock                 533          (10)        -        523
Total assets at September 30   $22,468      $ 9,577    $ (347)   $31,698

1997
Operating revenues             $ 7,094      $ 3,485    $  (68)   $10,511
Operating expenses               5,653        3,463       (68)     9,048
                               -------      -------     -------  -------
Operating income                 1,441           22         -      1,463
Income available for
      common stock                 554           68         -        622
Total assets at September 30   $23,895      $ 5,903    $ (383)   $29,415
             


Common Stock Dividend: 
- ---------------------- 
We base our common stock dividend on a number of financial considerations, 
including sustainability, financial flexibility, and competitiveness with 
investment opportunities of similar risk.  Our current quarterly common 
stock dividend is $.30 per common share, which corresponds to an annualized 
dividend of $1.20 per common share.



   The California Public Utility Commission (CPUC) requires the Utility to 
maintain its CPUC-authorized capital structure, potentially limiting the 
amount of dividends the Utility may pay the Corporation.  At September 30, 
1998, the Utility was in compliance with its CPUC-authorized capital 
structure.  The Utility believes that it will continue to meet this 
condition in the future without affecting the Corporation's ability to pay 
common stock dividends.  However, if the voters approve and the courts 
uphold Proposition 9, then the Utility would be required to write off 
generation-related regulatory assets.  Such a loss would severely impair the 
Corporation's ability to pay dividends to its common shareholders.


Earnings Per Common Share:
- --------------------------
Earnings per common share for the three- and nine-month periods ended 
September 30, 1998, decreased $.07 and $.16 cents, respectively, as compared 
to the same periods in 1997.  The activity discussed below affected earnings 
per common share.


Utility Results:
- ----------------
Utility operating revenues increased $22 million for the three-month period 
and decreased $388 million for the nine-month period ended September 30, 
1998, as compared to the same periods in 1997.  Operating revenues for the 
three-month period ended September 30, 1998, increased primarily due to the 
termination of our volumetric (ERAM) and energy cost (ECAC) revenue 
balancing account, which reduced revenues by $122 million in 1997.  This 
increase is offset by lower billed revenues due to the 10% rate reduction 
and reduced sales volumes.  (The Utility replaced the ERAM and ECAC 
balancing accounts with the transition cost balancing account (TCBA), which 
impacts expenses instead of revenues as discussed in Transition Cost 
Recovery, below.)  Operating revenues for the nine-month period ended 
September 30, 1998, decreased due to: (1) a 10 percent electric rate 
reduction, discussed below, provided to residential and small commercial 
customers, which caused a decrease of $124 million and $304 million for the 
three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 1998, respectively; (2) a 
decrease in sales to medium and large electric customers, many of whom are 
now purchasing their electricity directly from unregulated power generators; 
and (3) a decrease in usage and sales to commercial and agricultural 
electric customers resulting from their lower demand for irrigation water 
pumping as a result of heavier rainfall in the current year.

   Utility operating expenses increased $122 million for the three-month 
period and decreased $396 million for the nine-month period ended September 
30, 1998, as compared to the same periods in 1997.  Operating expenses for 
the nine-month period ended September 30, 1998, declined primarily as a 
result of; (1) decreased fuel costs at power plants, primarily due to plant 
sales; (2) decreased costs associated with Qualifying Facilities (QFs) due 
to the expiration of the fixed price periods in many QF contracts; (3) lower 
transmission pipeline demand charges; and (4) expense deferrals related to 
electric industry restructuring.  Increased expenses incurred for system 
reliability and accelerated amortization of regulatory assets recovered 
under the transition plan established by the restructuring legislation 
partially offset these decreases.  As previously indicated, electric 
industry restructuring provides for recovery of certain costs in future 
periods.  Some costs, associated with the expense deferrals mentioned above, 
will be recovered as electric sales volumes increase during seasonal 
fluctuations.  Others relate to transition costs, which will be recovered 
over the term of the rate reduction bonds.  
  


Unregulated Business Results:
- -----------------------------
Our unregulated business operations include those business activities that 
are not directly regulated by the CPUC.  Unregulated business operating 
revenues for the three- and nine-month periods ended September 30, 1998, 
increased approximately $1.4 billion and $4.8 billion, respectively, while 
operating expenses increased approximately $1.4 billion and $4.7 billion, 
respectively, as compared to the same periods in 1997.  These increases were 
due to operations associated with our energy commodities and services 
activities and due to the acquisition of the natural gas operations of 
Valero Energy Corporation in July 1997.  Energy trading volumes continue to 
increase over 1997 levels.  The resultant operating revenue increases from 
these activities, however, were partially offset by decreases in our Texas 
operations from: (1) low natural gas transmission prices and volumes; and 
(2) low differentials between natural gas liquids prices and the cost of 
natural gas.

   Unregulated business operations contributed $23 million more in net 
income for the three-month period ended September 30, 1998, than in the same 
period in 1997, and $78 million less in net income in the nine-month period 
ended September 30, 1998, than in the same periods in 1997.  The decrease 
for the nine-month period ended September 30, 1998, is due to the loss on 
sale of our Australian holdings (See Acquisitions and Sales, below.)  The 
decrease was also due to the $110 million gain that the Corporation 
recognized in the second quarter 1997 on the sale of its interest in 
International Generating Company, Ltd.  The second quarter 1997 gain was 
partially offset by write-downs of certain unregulated investments of 
approximately $41 million.


FINANCIAL CONDITION

We begin this section by discussing the energy industry.  We also discuss 
how we are responding to restructuring on a national level, including a 
recent acquisition.  We then discuss liquidity and capital resources and our 
risk management activities.


COMPETITION AND CHANGING REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT: 

The Utility Electric Generation Business:

On March 31, 1998, California became one of the first states in the country 
to allow open competition in the electric generation business.  Today, many 
Californians may choose an energy service provider, which will provide their 
electric power generation.  The Utility's customers may choose to purchase 
electricity: (1) from the Utility; (2) from retail electricity providers 
(for example, marketers including our energy service subsidiary, brokers, 
and aggregators); or (3) directly from unregulated power generators.  Our 
Utility expects to continue to provide distribution services to 
substantially all electric consumers within its service territory.


Competitive Market Framework:
- -----------------------------
To create the competitive generation market, California has established a 
Power Exchange (PX) and an Independent Systems Operator (ISO).  The PX sets 
electricity prices in an open electric marketplace.  The ISO, under the 
jurisdiction of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), oversees 
California's electric transmission grid to ensure that all generators have 
comparable access and that the reliability of the system is maintained.  
California utilities retained ownership of utility transmission facilities, 
but relinquished operating control to the ISO.  Starting March 31, 1998, the 
ISO has scheduled the delivery of resources such as Qualifying Facilities 



(QFs) and Diablo Canyon.  These resources for operational or reliability
reasons are considered "must-take" units and operate under cost-of-service 
contracts.  After scheduling must-take resources, the ISO satisfies the 
remaining aggregate demand with purchases from the PX and purchases of 
necessary generation and ancillary services to maintain grid reliability.  
To meet the ISO's demand, the PX accepts the lowest bids from competing 
electric providers, which establishes a market price.  Customers choosing to 
buy power directly from non-regulated generators or retailers will pay for 
that generation based upon negotiated contracts. 

   CPUC regulation requires the Utility to sell all of its generated 
electric power and must-take electric power purchased from external power 
producers to the PX.  The Utility must then purchase all electric power for 
its retail customers from the PX.  For the three- and nine-month periods 
ended September 30, 1998, the Cost of energy for utility, reflected on the 
Statement of Consolidated Income, is comprised of the cost of PX purchases, 
ancillary services purchased from the ISO, and the cost of Utility 
generation, net of sales to the PX (in millions) as follows:

                                      For the three-      For the nine-
                                      months ended        months ended
                                      September 30, 1998  September 30, 1998
                                      ------------------  ------------------ 

      Cost of electric generation          576               1,566
      Cost of purchases from the PX        379                 489
      Net cost of ancillary services       130                 169
      Proceeds from sales to the PX       (422)               (608)
                                         ------              ------
      Cost of electric energy              663               1,616
      Utility cost of gas                   51                 333
                                         ------              ------
      Cost of energy for Utility           714               1,949


Electric Transition Plan:
- -------------------------
Over the past several years, we have taken steps to prepare for competition 
in the electric generation business.  We have worked with the CPUC to ensure 
a smooth transition into the competitive market environment.  In addition, 
we have made strategic investments throughout the nation that will further 
position us as a national energy provider.

   In developing state legislation to implement a competitive market, 
involved parties believed that our Utility's market-based revenues would not 
be sufficient to recover (that is, to collect from customers) all generation 
costs.  Many of these costs resulted from past CPUC decisions.  To recover 
these uneconomic costs, called transition costs, and to ensure a smooth 
transition to the competitive environment, a transition plan was developed 
in the form of state legislation to position California for the new market 
environment.  The California Legislature passed the legislation and the 
Governor signed it in 1996.  As discussed below in California Voter 
Initiative, on November 3, 1998, Californians will vote on Proposition 9, 
which would overturn major portions of the current electric utility 
restructuring legislation and would have a material adverse impact on the 
Utility and the Corporation.

   There are two principal elements of the transition plan established by 
restructuring legislation: (1) an electric rate freeze and rate reduction; 
and (2) recovery of transition costs.  Both of these elements, and the 
impact of the approved transition plan on our Utility's customers, are 
discussed below.  The restructuring legislation transition period ends 
December 31, 2001.  At the conclusion of the transition period, we will be 
at risk to recover any of our Utility's remaining generation costs through 
market-based revenues.



Rate Freeze and Rate Reduction:
- -------------------------------
During 1997, electric rates for our Utility's customers were held at 1996 
levels.  Effective January 1, 1998, the Utility reduced electric rates for 
its residential and small commercial customers by 10 percent and will hold 
their rates at that level throughout the transition period.  All other 
electric customers' rates remained frozen at 1996 levels.  The rate freeze 
will continue until the end of the transition period.  For the three- and 
nine-month periods ended September 30, 1998, the 10 percent rate reduction 
caused operating revenues to decrease by approximately $124 million and $304 
million, respectively, as compared to the same periods in 1997.

   As authorized by the restructuring legislation, to pay for the 10 percent 
rate reduction, the Utility refinanced $2.9 billion of its transition costs 
with rate reduction bonds, which have maturities ranging from three months 
to ten years.  The bonds defer recovery of a portion of the transition costs 
until after the transition period.  Pending the outcome of Proposition 9, 
the Utility expects to recover the transition costs associated with the rate 
reduction bonds over the term of the bonds.  


Transition Cost Recovery:
- -------------------------
Transition costs are costs considered unavoidable and not expected to be 
recovered through market-based revenues.  These costs include: (1) the 
above-market cost of Utility-owned generation facilities; (2) costs 
associated with the Utility's long-term contracts to purchase power at 
above-market prices from QFs and other power suppliers; and (3) generation-
related regulatory assets and obligations.  (Regulatory assets are expenses 
deferred in the current or prior periods to be included in rates in future 
periods.)

   The costs of Utility-owned generation facilities currently are included 
in the Utility customers' rates.  Above-market facility costs result when 
book value is in excess of market value.  Conversely, below-market facility 
costs result when market value is in excess of book value.  The total amount 
of generation facility costs to be included as transition costs will be 
based on the aggregate of above-market and below-market values.  The above-
market portion of these costs is eligible for recovery as a transition cost.  
The below-market portion of these costs will reduce other unrecovered 
transition costs.  A valuation of a Utility-owned generation facility where 
the market value exceeds the book value could result in a material charge if 
the valuation of the facility is determined based upon any method other than 
a sale of the facility to a third party.  This is because any excess of 
market value over book value would be used to reduce other transition costs, 
without increasing the book value of the plant assets.

   The Utility will not be able to determine the exact amount of generation 
facility costs that will be recoverable as transition costs until a market 
valuation process (appraisal or sale) is completed for each of the Utility's 
generation facilities.  The first of these valuations occurred on July 1, 
1998, when the Utility sold three Utility-owned electric generation plants 
for $501 million.  (See Utility Generation Divestiture, below.)  For 
generation facilities that the Utility has not divested, the CPUC will 
approve the methodology to be used in the market valuation process.

   The above-market portion of costs associated with the Utility's long-term 
contracts to purchase power at above-market prices from QFs and other power 
suppliers also are eligible to be recovered as transition costs.  The 
Utility has agreed to purchase electric power from these suppliers under 
long-term contracts expiring on various dates through 2028.  Over the life 
of these contracts, the Utility estimates that it will purchase 
approximately 345 million megawatt-hours at an aggregate average price of 



6.5 cents per kilowatt-hour.  To the extent that this price is above the
market price, the Utility expects to collect the difference between the 
contract price and the market price from customers, as a transition cost, 
over the terms of the contracts. 

   Generation-related regulatory assets, net of regulatory obligations, also 
are eligible for transition cost recovery.  As of September 30, 1998, the 
Utility has accumulated approximately $6.0 billion of these assets net of 
certain obligations, including the amounts reclassified from Property, 
plant, and equipment, discussed in Utility Generation Impairment below.

   The restructuring legislation specifies that the Utility must recover 
most transition costs by December 31, 2001.  This recovery period is 
significantly shorter than the recovery period of the related assets prior 
to restructuring.  Effective January 1, 1998, as authorized by the CPUC in 
consideration of the restructuring legislation, the Utility is recording 
amortization of most generation-related regulatory assets over the 
transition period.  The CPUC believes that the shortened recovery period 
reduces risks associated with recovery of all the Utility's generation 
assets, including Diablo Canyon and hydroelectric facilities.  Accordingly, 
the Utility is receiving a reduced return for all of its Utility-owned 
generation facilities.  In 1998, the reduced return on common equity for 
these facilities is 6.77 percent.  

   Although the Utility must recover most transition costs by December 31, 
2001, certain transition costs may be included in customers' electric rates 
after the transition period.  These costs include: (1) certain employee-
related transition costs; (2) above-market payments under existing QF and 
power-purchase contracts discussed above; and (3) unrecovered electric 
industry restructuring implementation costs.  In addition, transition costs 
financed by the issuance of rate reduction bonds are expected to be 
recovered over the term of the bonds through the collection of the Fixed 
Transition Amount (FTA) charge from customers.  Further, the Utility's 
nuclear decommissioning costs are being recovered through a CPUC-authorized 
charge, which will extend until sufficient funds exist to decommission 
Diablo Canyon and Humboldt Nuclear Power Plants.  During the rate freeze, 
the FTA and nuclear decommissioning charges will not increase the Utility 
customers' electric rates.  Excluding these specific items, the Utility will 
write off any transition costs not recovered during the transition period. 

   Effective January 1, 1998, the Utility has been collecting eligible 
transition costs through a CPUC-authorized nonbypassable charge called the 
competition transition charge (CTC).  The amount of revenue collected from 
frozen rates for recovery of transition costs is subject to seasonal 
fluctuations in the Utility's sales volumes.  Revenues available for the 
purpose of recovering transition costs exceeded transition cost expense for 
the three-month period ended September 30, 1998, by $154 million.  During 
the nine-month period ended September 30, 1998, transition cost expense 
exceeded associated revenues available for recovery of transition costs by 
$349 million.  In accordance with CPUC rate treatment of transition costs, 
the Utility deferred this excess as a regulatory asset.  The Utility expects 
to recover this regulatory asset during the remainder of the transition 
period. 

   During the transition period, the CPUC will review the accounting methods 
used by the Utility to recover transition costs and the amount of transition 
costs requested for recovery.  The CPUC is currently reviewing non-nuclear 
transition costs amortized in the first half of 1998.  The Utility expects 
the CPUC to issue decisions regarding these reviews in the second quarter of 
1999.  At this time, the amount of transition cost disallowances, if any, 
cannot be predicted.

   In addition, on August 31, 1998, an independent accounting firm retained 
by the CPUC completed its financial verification audit of the Utility's 
Diablo Canyon plant accounts at December 31, 1996.  The audit resulted in 



the issuance of an unqualified opinion.  The audit verified that Diablo
Canyon sunk costs at December 31, 1996, were $3.3 billion of the total $7.1 
billion construction costs.  (Sunk costs are costs associated with Utility-
owned generating facilities that are fixed and unavoidable and currently 
included in the Utility customers' electric rates.)  The independent 
accounting firm also issued an agreed-upon special procedures report, 
requested by the CPUC, which questioned $200 million of the $3.3 billion 
sunk costs.  The CPUC will review any proposed adjustments to Diablo 
Canyon's recoverable costs, which resulted from the report.  At this time, 
the amount of transition cost disallowances, if any, cannot be predicted.
 
   The Utility's ability to recover its transition costs during the 
transition period will be dependent on several factors.  The primary factor 
is whether voters approve and the courts uphold Proposition 9, which would 
eliminate transition cost recovery with certain exceptions.  If Proposition 
9 is defeated, the factors that continue to affect the Utility's ability to 
recover transition costs include: (1) the continued application of the 
regulatory framework established by the CPUC and state legislation; (2) the 
amount of transition costs ultimately approved for recovery by the CPUC; (3) 
the market value of the Utility-owned generation facilities; (4) future 
Utility sales levels; (5) future Utility fuel and operating costs; (6) the 
extent to which the Utility's authorized revenues to recover distribution 
costs are increased or decreased; and (7) the market price of electricity.


Utility Generation Divestiture:
- -------------------------------
As part of electric industry restructuring, the Utility decided to sell its 
fossil-fueled generation facilities.  If the voters approve Proposition 9 
(see California Voter Initiative, below,) then the Utility may alter its 
current divestiture plan.

   On July 1, 1998, the Utility completed the sale of three electric 
Utility-owned fossil-fueled generating plants to Duke Energy Power Services 
Inc. (Duke) for $501 million.  These three fossil-fueled plants had a 
combined book value at July 1, 1998, of approximately $351 million and a 
combined capacity of 2,645 MW.  The three power plants are located at Morro 
Bay, Moss Landing, and Oakland.

   The Utility will continue to operate and maintain the plants under a two-
year operating and maintenance agreement.  Additionally, the Utility will 
retain the liability for required environmental remediation of any pre-
closing soil or groundwater contamination at these plants.  Although the 
Utility is retaining such environmental remediation liability, the Utility 
does not expect any material impact on its or PG&E Corporation's financial 
position or results of operations.

   In July 1998, the Utility agreed with the City and County of San 
Francisco to permanently close Hunters Point Power Plant when reliable 
alternative electricity resources are operational.  The CPUC approved this 
agreement in October 1998, allowing the Utility to recover the existing book 
value of Hunters Point and the plant's environmental remediation and 
decommissioning costs.  Hunters Point is a fossil-fueled plant with a 
generating capacity of 423 MW and a book value, including plant-related 
regulatory assets, at September 30, 1998, of $33 million.

   Subject to the outcome of Proposition 9, the Utility currently intends to 
sell its fossil-fueled and geothermal facilities: Potrero, Pittsburg, Contra 
Costa, and Geysers power plants.  These fossil-fueled and geothermal 
facilities have a combined generating capacity of 4,289 MW and a combined 
book value at September 30, 1998, of approximately $592 million.  The 
Utility is scheduled to receive final bids to purchase these plants in 
November 1998, and to complete the sale of these plants in 1999.



   Any net gains from the sale of our Utility-owned fossil-fueled and 
geothermal plants will be used to offset other transition costs.  As a 
result, we do not believe the sales will have a material impact on our 
results of operations.

   In 1997, the Utility informed the CPUC that it does not intend to retain 
its remaining 4,000 MW of hydroelectric facilities as part of the Utility.  
These remaining facilities have a combined book value at September 30, 1998, 
of approximately $1.6 billion.  As discussed above, any method of 
disposition of assets other than through sale to a third party could result 
in a material charge to the extent that the market value, as determined by 
the CPUC, is in excess of book value.


Utility Generation Impairment:
- ------------------------------
In the third quarter of 1997, the Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) of the 
Financial Accounting Standards Board reached a consensus on its issue No. 
97-4, entitled "Deregulation of the Pricing of Electricity - Issues Related 
to the Application of SFAS (Statement of Financial Accounting Standard) No. 
71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of Regulation, and No. 101, 
Regulated Enterprises - Accounting for the Discontinuation of Application of 
SFAS No. 71" (EITF 97-4), which provided authoritative guidance on the 
applicability of SFAS No. 71 during the transition period.  EITF 97-4 
required the Utility to discontinue the application of SFAS No. 71 for the 
generation portion of its operations as of July 24, 1997, the effective date 
of EITF 97-4.  EITF 97-4 requires that regulatory assets and liabilities 
(both those in existence today and those created under the terms of the 
transition plan established by the restructuring legislation) be allocated 
to the portion of the business from which the source of the regulated cash 
flows is derived.

   Under the guidance of EITF 97-4 and SFAS No. 121, "Accounting for the
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for Long-Lived Assets to be Disposed 
Of," an impairment analysis was required of the generating assets no longer 
subject to the guidance of SFAS No. 71.  The Utility compared the cash flows 
from all sources, including CTC revenues, to the cost of the generating 
facilities and found that the assets were not impaired.  During the second 
quarter of 1998, the Staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 
issued interpretive guidance regarding the application of EITF 97-4 and SFAS 
No. 121.  The guidance states that an impairment analysis should exclude CTC 
revenues from the recovery stream.  Under this interpretation, the Utility 
performed the impairment analysis excluding CTC revenues and determined that 
$3.9 billion of its generation facilities were impaired.  Because the 
Utility expects to recover the impaired assets as a transition cost under 
the transition plan established by the restructuring legislation, discussed 
above, the Utility recorded a regulatory asset for the impaired amounts as 
required by EITF 97-4.  Accordingly, at June 30, 1998, this amount was 
reclassified from Property, Plant, and Equipment to Regulatory assets on the 
accompanying balance sheets.  In addition, prior year balances were 
reclassified.


Customer Impacts of Transition Plan:
- ------------------------------------ 
Effective March 31, 1998, all Californians may choose their electric 
commodity provider.  As of October 15, 1998, the Utility had accepted 
approximately 63,000 requests to switch their electric commodity supplier 
from the Utility to another electric commodity provider.  

   Regardless of the customer's choice of electric commodity provider, 
during the transition period, customers will be billed for electricity used, 
for transmission and distribution services, for public purpose programs, and 
for recovery of transition costs.  Customers who choose to purchase their 
electricity from non-Utility energy providers will see a change in their 



total bill only to the extent that their contracted electric commodity price
differs from the PX price.  Transition costs are being recovered from 
substantially all Utility distribution customers through a nonbypassable 
charge regardless of their choice in commodity provider.  We do not believe 
that the availability of choice to our customers will have a material impact 
on our ability to recover transition costs.

   In addition to supplying commodity electric power, commodity electric 
providers may choose the method of billing their customers and whether to 
provide their customers with metering services.  We are tracking cost 
savings that result when billing, metering, and related services within our 
Utility's service territory are provided by another entity.  Once these cost 
savings, or credits, are approved by the CPUC and the customer's energy 
provider is performing billing and metering services, we will: (1) refund 
the savings to customers where the Utility provides the billing for these 
services; or (2) remit the savings to the electric providers where the 
electric provider bills for these services.  The electric providers then 
will charge their customers for these services.  To the extent that these 
credits equate to our actual cost savings from reduced billing, metering, 
and related services, we do not expect a material impact on the 
Corporation's or the Utility's financial condition or results of operations.


California Voter Initiative:
- ----------------------------
On November 3, 1998, California voters will vote on Proposition 9, an 
initiative supported by various consumer groups.  

   Proposition 9 would overturn major provisions of California's electric 
industry restructuring legislation.  Proposition 9 proposes to: (1) require 
the Utility and the other California investor-owned utilities to provide a 
10 percent rate reduction to their residential and small commercial 
customers in addition to the 10 percent rate reduction mandated by the 
electric restructuring legislation; (2) eliminate transition cost recovery 
for nuclear generation plants and related assets and obligations (other than 
reasonable decommissioning costs); (3) eliminate transition cost recovery 
for non-nuclear generation plants and related assets and obligations (other 
than costs associated with QFs), unless the CPUC finds that the utilities 
would be deprived of the opportunity to earn a fair rate of return; and (4) 
prohibit the collection of any customer charges necessary to pay principal 
and interest on the rate reduction bonds or, if a court finds that such 
prohibition is not legal, require that utility rates be reduced to fully 
offset the cost of the customer surcharges. 

   If the voters approve Proposition 9, then legal challenges by the 
California utilities and others, including the Utility, would ensue.  The 
Utility intends to vigorously challenge Proposition 9 as unconstitutional 
and to seek an immediate stay of its provisions pending court review of the 
merits of its challenge.

   If Proposition 9 is approved, and if the Utility were unable to conclude 
that it is probable that Proposition 9 ultimately would be found invalid, 
then under applicable accounting principles the Utility would be required to 
write off generation-related regulatory assets, which would no longer be 
probable of recovery because of reductions in future revenues.  The Utility 
anticipates that such a write-off would range from a minimum of 
approximately $2.2 billion pre-tax to a maximum of approximately $5.0 
billion pre-tax.  This pre-tax loss would result in an after-tax loss 
ranging from $1.3 billion to $2.9 billion, or $3 to $8 per share.  The 
amount of the write-off is dependent on how the courts and regulatory 
agencies interpret and apply the provisions of Proposition 9.  The maximum 
$2.9 billion write-off would represent 48% of the Utility's total common 
stockholders' equity of $6.0 billion at September 30, 1998.



   The $2.9 billion maximum after-tax loss would eliminate the Utility's 
retained earnings of $2.2 billion at September 30, 1998, and the Utility 
would be unable to meet certain capital-related regulatory and legal 
conditions.  In addition, this loss would reduce the common equity ratio of 
the Utility's ratemaking capital structure from approximately 48% to 
approximately 32%, which is below the 48% equity ratio mandated by the CPUC.  
Such a loss would severely impair the Utility's ability to pay dividends to 
its preferred shareholders and the Corporation's ability to pay dividends to 
its common shareholders.  Also, the Utility is concerned that its credit 
rating could drop to low investment grade or even below investment grade.  
This would immediately and substantially reduce the market value of the 
Utility's $5.8 billion in debt securities, increase the cost of raising new 
debt capital, and may preclude the use of certain financial instruments for 
raising capital.

   The duration and amount of the rate decrease contemplated by Proposition 
9 is uncertain and, if Proposition 9 is approved, will be subject to 
interpretation by the courts and regulatory agencies.  However, if all 
provisions of Proposition 9 ultimately are upheld against legal challenge 
and interpreted in an adverse manner, the amount of the average earnings 
reductions could be approximately $200 million per year, or over $16 million 
per month, from now through 2001 (assuming rates are reduced to offset the 
charges for the rate reduction bonds) and approximately $50 million per year 
from 2002 (based on rates under current regulatory decisions, assuming such 
decisions are in effect after the latest date on which the rate freeze would 
otherwise end) to 2007 (the longest maturity date of the rate reduction 
bonds).  The earnings reduction estimates depend on how the courts and 
regulators interpret Proposition 9 and how future rate changes unrelated to 
Proposition 9 (such as changes resulting from the General Rate Case 
proceeding, discussed below) affect the Utility's electric revenues.

   As discussed in Transition Cost Recovery, above, the Utility is 
recovering most of its transition costs under a rate freeze through the 
transition period, which ends by December 31, 2001.  If Proposition 9 is 
immediately implemented, even on a temporary basis pending judicial review, 
then the Utility's opportunity to recover transition costs will be reduced 
each month.  Depending on market conditions, this reduction could amount to 
as much as $115 million per month, on average.

   In addition to the potential impacts on the Utility discussed above, 
during any such litigation, Proposition 9 may adversely affect the secondary 
market for the rate reduction bonds.  Further, the collection of the FTA 
charges necessary to pay the rate reduction bonds while the litigation is 
pending would be precluded, unless an immediate stay is granted.  Even if a 
stay is granted immediately, there may be terms and conditions imposed in 
connection with the stay that may adversely affect the cash flow for timely 
interest payments on the rate reduction bonds.  The failure to pay interest 
when due could give rise to an event of default.  Finally, if Proposition 9 
is upheld against legal challenge, then the primary source for payments on 
the rate reduction bonds would become unavailable and holders of the rate 
reduction bonds could incur a loss of their investment.


The Utility Electric Transmission Business:

Utility electric transmission revenues are under FERC jurisdiction.  In 
December 1997, the FERC put into effect rates to recover annual retail 
electric transmission revenues of $301 million, effective March 31, 1998, 
the operational date of the ISO and PX.  The authorized revenues were 
consistent with Utility electric transmission revenues in CPUC-authorized 
1997 electric rates.  In May 1998, the FERC allowed a $30 million increase 
in retail electric transmission revenues, effective October 30, 1998.  All 
1998 retail electric transmission revenues are subject to refund pending 



rate review proceedings by the FERC.  The Utility does not expect a material
change in transmission revenues resulting from the FERC's final decision.


The Utility Electric Distribution Business:

During the second quarter of 1998, the CPUC issued various decisions in 
which it indicated its support for competition within the electric 
distribution market.  We believe that these regulatory pronouncements are 
not consistent with prior CPUC policy on distribution competition, including 
duplicative distribution facilities.  Moreover, we believe that these 
pronouncements have increased substantially the uncertainty surrounding the 
future role of California's electric utility distribution companies.  In 
addition, we believe that the CPUC made these statements without a 
comprehensive examination of such fundamental issues as: (1) recovery of 
electric distribution transition costs; (2) the shifting of costs among 
customer classes and geographic regions; (3) the economic and environmental 
impacts of distribution competition; and (4) the distribution utilities' 
statutory obligation to serve.

   During the third quarter of 1998, the FERC issued a decision requiring 
the Utility to provide wholesale transmission service to an irrigation 
district.  The district requested 16 points of interconnection with the 
Utility's distribution facilities in order to serve 19 customers.  The 
Utility believes that the requested service is equivalent to retail 
wheeling.  The FERC decision may further facilitate duplicate electric 
distribution facilities.

   At this time, we cannot predict the extent that the CPUC or the FERC will 
allow the future construction of duplicative distribution facilities by 
other providers or the impact that future duplicative distribution 
facilities and increased competition will have on the Utility's future 
financial condition and results of operations.


The Utility Gas Business:

In March 1998, the Utility implemented a CPUC-approved accord with a broad 
coalition of customer groups and industry participants that adopted market-
oriented policies in the Utility's natural gas transmission business.  The 
accord unbundled the Utility's gas transmission and storage services from 
its distribution services and established gas transmission and storage rates 
for the period March 1998 through December 2002.  In addition, the accord 
increases the opportunity for the Utility's residential and small commercial 
(core) customers to purchase gas from competing suppliers.

   In January 1998, the CPUC opened a rulemaking proceeding to further 
expand market-oriented policies in California's gas industry.  Policies 
under consideration included the additional unbundling of services, 
streamlining regulation for noncompetitive services, mitigating the 
potential for anti-competitive behavior, and establishing appropriate 
consumer protections.  As required by the CPUC, several gas utilities, 
including the Utility, and other interested parties filed reports with the 
CPUC about gas market conditions.  On August 6, 1998, the CPUC issued an 
order requiring the utilities to file cost and rate undbundling applications 
with the CPUC by February 26, 1999.

   However, in August 1998, the California Legislature passed and the 
Governor signed Senate Bill (SB) 1602, which requires the CPUC to submit to 
the Legislature any findings or recommendations that would direct further 
natural gas industry restructuring for core customers.  SB 1602 also 
prohibits the CPUC from enacting any such decision prior to January 1, 2000. 
In light of this new law, the CPUC issued an order on October 8, 1998, 
stating that it would not enforce its order from August 6, 1998.  The CPUC 



plans to prepare a report for the Legislature identifying its proposed long
term market structure for the natural gas industry after hearings scheduled 
to be held in January 1999.  In concurrence with the new law, the CPUC will 
not adopt a final market structure policy before January 1, 2000.  At this 
time, we cannot predict the outcome of these proceedings and their impact on 
our financial position and results of operations.


Unregulated Business Operations:

We provide a wide range of integrated energy products and services designed 
to take advantage of the competitive energy marketplace throughout the 
United States.  Through our unregulated subsidiaries, we: (1) provide gas 
transmission services in Texas and the Pacific Northwest; (2) develop, 
build, operate, own, and manage electric generation facilities across the 
country; (3) provide customers nationwide with services to manage and make 
more efficient their energy consumption; and (4) purchase and resell energy 
commodities and related financial instruments.  In providing integrated 
energy products and services, we continually evaluate the composition of our 
assets.


PG&E Corporation:

PG&E Corporation became the holding company of the Utility in 1997.  At that 
time, we transferred the unregulated subsidiaries of the Utility to PG&E 
Corporation.  A condition of the CPUC's approval of the holding company 
formation was that the CPUC's Office of Ratepayer Advocates (ORA) oversee an 
audit of transactions between the Utility and its affiliates for the period 
1994 to 1996.  The audit report, completed in November 1997, was critical of 
the Utility's affiliate transaction internal controls and compliance.  The 
auditors recommended imposing conditions affecting the financing and 
business composition of the Corporation.

   In April 1998, the Utility filed testimony with the CPUC opposing the 
recommended conditions.  Hearings were completed in September 1998 to 
determine if the additional recommended conditions should be imposed on PG&E 
Corporation.  We expect a final CPUC decision in early 1999.

   If the CPUC imposed the recommended financial conditions on the 
Corporation without modification, then such conditions could have an adverse 
impact on future results of operations.


ACQUISITIONS AND SALES:

In July 1998, the Corporation sold its Australian energy holdings to Duke 
Energy International, LLP (DEI), a subsidiary of Duke Energy Corporation.  
The assets, located in the southeast corner of the Australian state of 
Queensland, include a 627-kilometer gas pipeline, pipeline operations, and 
trading and marketing operations.

   The sale to DEI represents a premium on the price in local currency of 
the Corporation's 1996 investment in the assets.  However, the transaction 
resulted in a non-recurring charge of $.06 per share in the second quarter, 
primarily due to the 22 percent currency devaluation of the Australian 
dollar against the U.S. dollar during the past two years.

   On September 1, 1998, the Corporation, through its subsidiary U.S. 
Generating Company (USGen), completed the acquisition of a portfolio of 
electric generating assets and power supply contracts from the New England 
Electric System (NEES) for $1.59 billion, plus $85 million for early 
retirement and severance costs previously committed to by NEES.  The 
acquisition has been accounted for using the purchase method of accounting.  



Accordingly, the purchase price has been preliminarily allocated to the
assets purchased and the liabilities assumed based upon the fair values at 
the date of acquisition.  

   Including fuel and other inventories and transaction costs, the 
Corporation's financing requirements total approximately $1.8 billion, 
funded through $1.3 billion of USGen debt and a $425 million equity 
contribution.  The net purchase price has been preliminarily allocated as 
follows: (1) Property, plant, and equipment of $2.3 billion; (2) Receivable 
for support payments of $0.8 billion; and (3) Contractual obligations of 
$1.3 billion.  The assets include hydroelectric, coal, oil, and natural gas 
generation facilities with a combined generating capacity of 4,000 megawatts 
(MW).  In addition, USGen assumed 25 multi-year power purchase agreements 
representing an additional 800 MW of production capacity.  USGen entered 
into agreements with NEES as part of the acquisition, which: (1) provide 
that NEES shall make support payments over the next ten years to USGen for 
the purchase power agreements; and (2) require that USGen provide 
electricity to NEES under contracts that expire over the next four to twelve 
years.

   The Corporation acquired NEES's generating facilities and power supply 
contracts in anticipation of deregulation of the electric industry in 
several New England states.  In Massachusetts, electric industry 
restructuring legislation opened retail competition in the electric 
generation business on March 1, 1998.  However, a referendum requesting 
voters to approve the continuation of this legislation in Massachusetts is 
on the November 1998 ballot.  If the voters vote to reject the legislation, 
then the restructuring legislation in Massachusetts will be repealed.  The 
Corporation does not expect that a repeal of the Massachusetts legislation, 
which relates primarily to the retail electricity market, would have a 
material impact on its results of operations or financial position.


YEAR 2000:

The Year 2000 issue exists for the Corporation because many software and 
embedded systems use only two digits to identify a year in a date field, and 
were developed without considering the impact of the upcoming change in the 
century.  Some of these systems are critical to our operations and business 
processes and might fail or function incorrectly if not repaired or replaced 
with Year 2000 ready products.  By "ready", we mean that the system is 
remediated so that it will perform its essential functions.  We define 
"software" as both computer programming that has been developed by the 
Corporation for its own purposes ("in-house software") and that purchased 
from vendors ("vendor software").  "Embedded systems" refers to both 
computing hardware and other electronic monitoring, communications, and 
control systems that have microprocessors within them.

   Our Year 2000 project focuses on those systems that are critical to our 
business.  By "critical" we mean those systems the failure of which would 
directly and adversely affect our ability to generate or deliver our 
products and services or otherwise affect revenues, safety, or reliability 
for such a period of time as to lead to unrecoverable consequences.  For 
these critical systems, we have adopted a phased approach to address Year 
2000 issues.  The primary phases include: (1) an enterprise-wide inventory, 
in which systems critical to our business are identified; (2) assessment, in 
which critical systems are evaluated as to their readiness to operate after 
December 31, 1999; (3) remediation, in which critical systems that are not 
Year 2000 ready are made so, either through modifications or replacement; 
(4) testing, in which remediation is validated by checking the ability of
the critical system to operate within the Year 2000 time frame; and 
(5) certification, in which systems are formally acknowledged to be Year 
2000 ready, and acceptable for production or operation.



   Our Year 2000 project is proceeding generally on schedule.  For in-house 
and vendor software, we have completed the inventory phase and have 
identified approximately 1,000 critical systems.  Additional software that 
requires Year 2000 remediation may be discovered as we continue with the 
assessment, remediation, and testing phases.  We estimate that roughly 40 
percent of identified, critical, in-house software has been remediated, with 
completion of remediation of remaining in-house software scheduled for the 
end of 1998.  We estimate that roughly 10 percent of critical vendor 
software has been remediated and received.  Our corporate milestone for 
receipt of all remediated vendor software is March 1999.  We plan to finish 
testing remediated in-house and vendor software by May 1999 and expect to 
complete the certification phase for software by July 1999.

   We also have completed the inventory of all embedded systems, although 
additional embedded items that require Year 2000 repair or replacement may 
be discovered as we continue with the assessment, remediation, and testing 
phases.  Remediation of all critical embedded systems is planned to be 
completed by April 1999.  We expect to finish testing of these remediated 
systems by August 1999, and plan to complete the certification phase for 
embedded systems by October 1999.

   We are testing remediated software and embedded systems both for ability 
to handle Year 2000 dates, including appropriate leap year calculations, and 
to assure that code repair has not affected the base functionality of the 
code.  Software and embedded systems are tested individually and where 
judged appropriate will be tested in an integrated manner with other 
systems, with dates and data advanced and aged to simulate Year 2000 
operations.  Testing, by its nature, however, cannot comprehensively address 
all future combinations of dates and events.  Therefore, some uncertainty 
will remain after testing is completed as to the ability of code to process 
future dates, as well as the ability of remediated systems to work in an 
integrated fashion with other systems.  

   We also depend upon external parties, including customers, suppliers, 
business partners, gas and electric system operators, government agencies, 
and financial institutions, to reliably deliver their products and services.  
To the extent that any of these parties experience Year 2000 problems in 
their systems, the demand for and the reliability of our services may be 
adversely affected.  The primary phases we have undertaken to deal with 
external parties are: (1) inventory, in which critical business 
relationships are identified; (2) action planning, in which we develop a 
series of actions and a time frame for monitoring expected external party 
compliance status; (3) assessment, in which the likelihood of external party 
Year 2000 readiness is periodically evaluated; and (4) contingency planning, 
in which appropriate plans are made to be ready to deal with the potential 
failure of an external party to be Year 2000 ready.

   We have completed our inventory of external contacts and have identified 
more than 1,000 critical relationships.  We soon will complete the action-
planning phase for each of these entities.  Additional critical 
relationships may be entered into or discovered as we continue.  Assessment 
of Year 2000 readiness of these external parties will continue through 1999.  
We expect to complete contingency plans for each of these critical business 
relationships by July 1999.

   We plan to develop contingency plans for our critical software or 
embedded systems for which we determine Year 2000 repair or replacement is 
substantially at risk.  For example, if the schedule for repairing or 
replacing a non-compliant system lags and cannot be re-scheduled to meet 
certain milestones, then we expect to begin an appropriate contingency 
planning process.  These contingency plans would be implemented as 
necessary, if a remediated system does not become available by the date it 
is needed.  In addition, as described above, we plan to develop contingency 
plans for the potential failure of critical external parties to fully 
address their Year 2000 issues.



   We also recognize that, given the complex interaction of today's 
computing and communication systems, we cannot be certain that all of our 
efforts to have all critical systems Year 2000 ready will be successful.  
Therefore, irrespective of the progress of the Year 2000 project, we are 
preparing contingency plans for each subsidiary and essential business 
function.  These plans will take into account the possibility of multiple 
system failures, both internal and external, due to Year 2000 effects.

   These subsidiary and essential business function contingency plans will 
build on existing emergency and business restoration plans.  Although no 
definitive list of scenarios for this planning has yet been developed, the 
events that we considered for planning purposes include increased frequency 
and duration of interruptions of the power, computing, financial, and 
communications infrastructure.  We expect to complete first drafts of these 
subsidiary and essential business function contingency plans by the 
beginning of 1999.  We anticipate testing and revision of these plans 
throughout 1999.

   Due to the speculative nature of contingency planning, it is uncertain 
whether our contingency plans to address failure of external parties or 
internal systems will be sufficient to reduce the risk of material impacts 
on our operations due to Year 2000 problems.  

   The Corporation currently is revising and refining its procedures for 
tracking and reporting costs associated with its Year 2000 effort.  From 
1997 through September 1998, we have spent approximately $80 million to 
assess and remediate Year 2000 problems.  About $60 million of this cost was 
for software systems that we replaced for business purposes generally 
unrelated to addressing Year 2000 readiness, but whose schedule we advanced 
to meet Year 2000 requirements.  The replacement costs for these accelerated 
systems were capitalized.

   We estimate that our future costs to address Year 2000 issues will be 
approximately $180 million.  About $50 million of these remaining Year 2000 
costs will be capitalized because they relate to the purchase and 
installation of systems for general business purposes and the remaining $130 
million will be expensed.  As we continue to assess our systems and as the 
remediation, testing, and certification phases of our compliance effort 
progress, our estimated costs may change.  Further, we expect to incur costs 
in the year 2000 and beyond to remediate and replace less critical software 
and embedded systems.  We do not believe that the incremental cost of 
addressing Year 2000 issues will have a material impact on the Corporation's 
or the Utility's financial position or results of operation.

   The Corporation's current schedule is subject to change, depending on 
developments that may arise through further assessment of our systems, and 
through the remediation and testing phases of our compliance effort.  
Further, our current schedule is partially dependent on the efforts of third 
parties, including vendors, suppliers, and customers.  Delays by third 
parties may cause our schedule to change.  There also are risks associated 
with loss of or inability to locate critical personnel to remediate and 
return to service the identified critical systems.  We may fail to locate 
all systems critical to our business processes that require remediation.  A 
combination of businesses and government entities may fail to be Year 2000 
ready, which may lead to a substantial reduction in a demand for our energy 
services.

   Based on our current schedule for the completion of Year 2000 tasks, we 
believe our plan is adequate to secure Year 2000 readiness of our critical 
systems.  We expect our remediation efforts and those of external parties to 
be largely successful.  Nevertheless, achieving Year 2000 readiness is 
subject to various risks and uncertainties, many of which are noted above.  
We are not able to predict all the factors that could cause actual results 
to differ materially from our current expectations as to our Year 2000 



readiness.  If we, or third parties with whom we have significant business
relationships, fail to achieve Year 2000 readiness with respect to critical 
systems, there could be a material adverse impact on the Utility's and the 
Corporation's financial position, results of operations, and cash flows.


LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES:

Sources of Capital:
- -------------------
The Corporation funds capital requirements from cash provided by operations 
and, to the extent necessary, external financing.  The Corporation's policy 
is to finance its assets with a capital structure that minimizes financing 
costs, maintains financial flexibility and, with regard to the Utility, 
complies with regulatory guidelines.  Based on cash provided from operations 
and the Corporation's capital requirements, the Corporation may repurchase 
equity and long-term debt in order to manage the overall balance of its 
capital structure.

   During the nine-month period ended September 30, 1998, the Corporation 
issued $52 million of common stock, primarily through the Dividend 
Reinvestment Plan and the Stock Option Plan.  Also during the nine-month 
period ended September 30, 1998, the Corporation paid dividends of $355 
million and declared dividends of $343 million.  The Utility paid dividends 
of $315 million to PG&E Corporation during the nine-month period ended 
September 30, 1998.  In October 1998, the Utility declared dividends of $100 
million payable to the Corporation in October.  In October 1998, the 
Corporation declared the fourth quarter regular common dividend of $.30 per 
share payable January 15, 1999, to shareholders of record on December 15, 
1998.

   As of December 31, 1997, the Board of Directors had authorized the 
repurchase of up to $1.7 billion of our common stock on the open market or 
in negotiated transactions.  As part of this authorization, in January 1998, 
the Corporation repurchased in a specific transaction 37 million shares of 
common stock.  In connection with this transaction, the Corporation entered 
into a forward contract with an investment institution.  The Corporation 
settled the forward contract in September 1998.  There are no more 
outstanding shares to be repurchased under this program.

   The Corporation maintains a $500 million revolving credit facility,
which expires in 2002.  In August 1997, we entered into an additional
$500 million 364-day credit facility, which expires on November 29, 1998.  
The Corporation may extend the facilities annually for additional one-year 
periods upon agreement with the banks.  These credit facilities are used for 
general corporate purposes and support our commercial paper program.  The 
Corporation had $469 million of commercial paper outstanding at September 
30, 1998.

   On September 1, 1998, USGen entered into a $1.675 billion revolving 
credit facility.  The facility is to be used for general corporate purposes.  
The total amount outstanding at September 30, 1998, under the facility, was 
$540 million in eurodollar loans and $788 million in short-term commercial 
paper.

   At September 30, 1998, GTT had $130 million of outstanding short-term 
bank borrowings related to separate short-term credit facilities.  The 
borrowings are unrestricted as to use. 

   In July 1998, the Utility repurchased $800 million of its common stock 
from PG&E Corporation, in addition to its $800 million common stock 
repurchase from PG&E Corporation in April 1998.

   The Utility's long-term debt matured, redeemed, or repurchased during the 
nine-month period ended September 30, 1998, amounted to $962 million.  Of 



this amount: (1) $249 million related to the Utility's redemption of its 8
percent mortgage bonds due October 1, 2025; (2) $252 million related to the 
Utility's repurchase of its other mortgage bonds; and (3) $397 million 
related to the maturity of the Utility's 5 3/8 percent mortgage bonds.  The 
remaining $64 million related primarily to the other scheduled maturity of 
long-term debt.  Also, PG&E Funding retired $193 million of the rate 
reduction bonds during the nine-month period ended September 30, 1998.

   In January 1998, the Utility redeemed its Series 7.44 percent preferred 
stock with a face value of $65 million.  In July 1998, the Utility redeemed 
its Series 6-7/8 percent preferred stock with a face value of $43 million.

   The Utility maintains a $1 billion revolving credit facility, which 
expires in 2002.  The Utility may extend the facility annually for 
additional one-year periods upon agreement with the banks.  There were no 
borrowings under this credit facility at September 30, 1998.  


Utility Cost of Capital:
- ------------------------
The CPUC authorized a return on rate base for the Utility's gas and electric 
distribution assets for 1998 of 9.17 percent.  The authorized 1998 cost of 
common equity is 11.20 percent, which is lower than the 11.60 percent 
authorized for 1997. 

   As discussed above, in Transition Cost Recovery, the CPUC separately 
reduced the authorized return on common equity (ROE) on our Utility's 
hydroelectric and geothermal generation assets to 90 percent of the 
Utility's 1997 adopted cost of debt, or 6.77 percent.  The Utility believes 
that this reduction is inappropriate and has sought a rehearing of this 
decision.

   On May 8, 1998, the Utility filed its 1999 Cost of Capital Application 
with the CPUC.  The Utility requested a return on common equity of 12.1 
percent and an overall return on rate base of 9.53 percent for its gas and 
electric distribution operations.  The Utility did not request a change in 
its currently authorized capital structure of 46.2 percent debt, 5.8 percent 
preferred equity, and 48 percent common equity.

   On August 10, 1998, the CPUC's ORA filed its testimony recommending a ROE 
of 8.64 percent for electric distribution operations and a ROE of 9.32 
percent for gas distribution operations.  ORA's recommended ROEs result in 
recommended overall returns on rate base for electric and gas distribution 
operations of 7.85 percent and 8.17 percent, respectively.  If adopted by 
the CPUC, then ORA's recommendation would result in decreases for 1999 
electric and gas distribution revenues of $162 million and $38 million, 
respectively, as compared to revenues based upon ROE currently authorized by 
the CPUC.

   The ORA's ROE recommendation for electric distribution operations is due 
to its perception of the changing economic conditions in the past year, and 
its perceived reduction in business risk for electric distribution 
operations as compared to the formerly integrated generation, transmission, 
and distribution operations.  The ORA also believes that the CPUC's method 
of adjusting the cost of capital annually based on incremental changes in 
economic factors has led to what the ORA believes have been inflated 
authorized returns in recent years.

   To the extent the actual electric and gas rate bases adopted by the CPUC 
in the GRC proceeding are less than the rate bases proposed by the Utility, 
the estimated 1999 revenue reductions from the lower ROEs recommended by the 
ORA in the cost of capital proceeding would be less.  We expect the CPUC to 
adopt a final decision in the cost of capital proceeding in February 1999, 
and a final decision in the GRC proceeding in March 1999.



1999 General Rate Case (GRC):
- -----------------------------
In December 1997, the Utility filed its 1999 GRC application with the CPUC.  
During the GRC process, the CPUC examines the Utility's non-fuel related 
costs to determine the amount it can charge customers.  The Utility has 
requested an increase in authorized revenues, to be effective January 1, 
1999, of $572 million in electric base revenues and an increase of $460 
million in gas base revenues over authorized 1998 revenues. 

   On June 26, 1998, the ORA provided their revenue requirement calculation, 
which supplements ORA's June 8, 1998, report on the 1999 GRC proceeding.  
The ORA recommended a decrease of $86 million in electric base revenues and 
an increase in gas base revenues of $91 million over the Utility's 1998 
authorized base revenues.

   Hearings for the GRC before an administrative law judge took place from 
August 24, 1998, through October 16, 1998.  The administrative law judge 
considers testimony and other evidence from many parties, including the ORA.  
The Utility expects the CPUC to issue a proposed decision by the 
administrative law judge in February 1999.  The CPUC may accept all, part, 
or none of the ORA's recommendations.  We cannot predict the amount of base 
revenue increase or decrease the CPUC ultimately will approve.  In the event 
of an adverse decision by the CPUC, and if the Utility is unable to lower 
expenses to conform to the base revenue amounts adopted by the CPUC while 
maintaining safety and system reliability standards, the ability of the 
Utility to earn its authorized rate of return for the years 1999 through 
2001 would be adversely affected.

   The CPUC permitted the Utility to submit a plan for establishing interim 
rates, effective January 1, 1999, to cover the period between that date and 
the date the CPUC issues its decision.  The CPUC plans to issue a decision 
on interim rates in December 1998.

   The 1999 GRC will not affect the authorized revenues for electric and gas 
transmission services or for gas storage services.  The Utility's authorized 
revenues for each of these services are determined in other proceedings. 


Environmental Matters:
- ----------------------
We are subject to laws and regulations established to both improve and 
maintain the quality of the environment.  Where our properties contain 
hazardous substances, these laws and regulations require us to remove or 
remedy the effect on the environment.

   At September 30, 1998, the Utility expects to spend $282 million for 
clean-up costs at identified sites over the next 30 years.  If other 
responsible parties fail to pay or expected outcomes change, then these 
costs may be as much as $486 million.  Of the $282 million, the Utility has 
recovered $97 million and expects to recover $162 million in future rates.  
Additionally, the Utility is seeking recovery of its costs from insurance 
carriers and from other third parties.  Further, as discussed above, the 
Utility will retain the pre-closing remediation liability associated with 
divested generation facilities. (See Note 4 of Notes to Consolidated 
Financial Statements.)


Legal Matters:
- --------------
In the normal course of business, both the Utility and the Corporation are 
named as parties in a number of claims and lawsuits.  See Part II, Item 1, 
Legal Proceedings and Note 4 to the Consolidated Financial Statements for 
further discussion of significant pending legal matters.



Risk Management Activities:
- ---------------------------
In the first quarter of 1998, the CPUC granted approval for the Utility to 
use financial instruments to manage price volatility of gas purchased for 
our Utility electric generation portfolio.  The approval limits the 
Utility's outstanding financial instruments to $200 million, with downward 
adjustments occurring as the Utility divests its fossil-fueled generation 
plants (see Utility Generation Divestiture, above).  Authority to use these 
risk management instruments ceases upon the full divestiture of fossil-
fueled generation plants or at the end of the current electric rate freeze 
(see Rate Freeze and Rate Reduction, above), whichever comes first.

   In the second quarter of 1998, the CPUC granted conditional authority to 
the Utility to use natural gas-based financial instruments to manage the 
impact of natural gas prices on the cost of electricity purchased pursuant 
to existing power purchase contracts.  Under the authority granted in the 
CPUC decision, no natural gas-based financial instruments shall have an 
expiration date later than December 31, 2001.  Further, if the rate freeze 
ends before December 31, 2001, the Utility shall net any outstanding 
financial instrument contracts through equal and opposite contracts, within 
a reasonable amount of time.  Also during the second quarter, the Utility 
filed an application with the CPUC to use natural gas-based financial 
instruments to manage price and revenue risks associated with its natural 
gas transmission and storage assets.  See Note 1 for additional discussion 
of risk management activities.  The Utility currently does not use financial 
instruments to manage price risk.



ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK 

PG&E Corporation's and Pacific Gas and Electric Company's primary market 
risk results from changes in energy prices and interest rates.  We engage in 
price risk management activities for both non-hedging and hedging purposes.  
Additionally, we may engage in hedging activities using futures, options, 
and swaps to hedge the impact of market fluctuations on energy commodity 
prices, interest rates, and foreign currencies.  (See Risk Management 
Activities, above.)



                  PART II.  OTHER INFORMATION

                 ---------------------------
Item 1.     Legal Proceedings
            -----------------

A.  Texas Franchise Fee Litigation

As previously disclosed in PG&E Corporation and Pacific Gas and Electric 
Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 
1997, and in a Current Report on Form 8-K dated August 25, 1998, in 
connection with PG&E Corporation's acquisition of Valero Energy Corporation 
(Valero), now known as PG&E Gas Transmission, Texas Corporation (GTT), 
various PG&E Corporation entities (formerly Valero entities) are defendants 
in eight lawsuits pending in several Texas state courts involving claims 
related to, among other things, the payment of franchise fees or street use 
fees to Texas cities and municipalities and the conduct of the defendants. 

On June 15, 1998, a jury trial began in the 92nd State District Court, 
Hidalgo County, Texas, in the case of the City of Edinburg (City) v. Rio 
Grande Valley Gas Co. (RGVG), Valero Energy Corporation (now known as GTT), 
Valero Transmission Company (now known as PG&E Texas Pipeline Company), 
Valero Natural Gas Company (now known as PG&E Texas Natural Gas Company),  
Reata Industrial Gas Company (now known as PG&E Energy Trading Holdings 
Corporation), Valero Transmission, L.P. (now known as PG&E Texas Pipeline, 
L.P.), and Reata Industrial Gas, L.P. (now known as PG&E Reata Energy, 
L.P.), and Southern Union Gas Company and certain affiliates (SU).  At 
issue, among other things, in the case is the franchise agreement entered 
into between RGVG, the local gas distribution company, and the City on 
October 1, 1985, to permit RGVG to sell gas and construct, maintain, own, 
and operate gas pipelines in city streets.  At the time of entering into the 
franchise agreement, RGVG was a wholly owned subsidiary of Valero.  Valero 
(now GTT) sold RGVG to Southern Union Gas Company on September 30, 1993.

On August 14, 1998, a jury returned a verdict in favor of the City and 
awarded damages in the approximate aggregate amount of $9.8 million, plus 
attorneys' fees of approximately $3.5 million, against GTT, SU and various 
affiliates.  The jury found that RGVG committed fraud in connection with 
entering into the franchise agreement and further found that RGVG failed to 
comply with the franchise agreement with respect to payments due under the 
agreement.  The jury also found that RGVG transferred the rights, 
privileges, and duties required to be performed by RGVG under the agreement 
without the express written consent of the City.  The jury found that GTT 
and various GTT subsidiaries tortiously interfered with the franchise 
agreement and that the City did not consent to the location of GTT's 
pipelines on public easements within the City.  Also, the jury found that 
GTT was responsible for the conduct of RGVG from October 1, 1985 (the date 
the franchise agreement was entered into) until September 30, 1993 (the date 
GTT, then known as Valero, sold RGVG to Southern Union).  

The jury refused to award punitive damages against the GTT defendants.  A 
hearing on the plaintiff's motion for entry of judgment has been scheduled 
for December 1, 1998, after which the court will enter a judgment.  At the 
hearing, the court may provide guidance as to how the damages and attorneys' 
fees of approximately $13.3 million will be apportioned among the parties.  
If an adverse judgment is entered, GTT and its various subsidiaries intend 
to appeal the judgment.   

The Corporation believes the ultimate outcome of the Texas franchise fees 
cases described above will not have a material adverse impact on its 
financial position or results of operation.




Item 5.     Other Information
            -----------------

A.  Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges and Ratio of Earnings to 
    Combined Fixed Charges and Preferred Stock Dividends

Pacific Gas and Electric Company's earnings to fixed charges ratio for the 
nine months ended September 30, 1998 was 3.01.  Pacific Gas and Electric 
Company's earnings to combined fixed charges and preferred stock dividends 
ratio for the nine months ended September 30, 1998 was 2.84.  The statement 
of the foregoing ratios, together with the statements of the computation of 
the foregoing ratios filed as Exhibits 12.1 and 12.2 hereto, are included 
herein for the purpose of incorporating such information and exhibits into 
Registration Statement Nos. 33-62488, 33-64136, 33-50707 and 33-61959, 
relating to Pacific Gas and Electric Company's various classes of debt and 
first preferred stock outstanding.


Item 6.     Exhibits and Reports on Form 8-K
            --------------------------------
(a)  Exhibits:

Exhibit 10.1	PG&E Corporation Deferred Compensation Plan for 
                Officers, as amended and restated July 22, 1998

Exhibit 10.2	PG&E Corporation Deferred Compensation Plan for 
                Directors, as amended and restated July 22, 1998

Exhibit 10.3	PG&E Corporation Executive Stock Ownership Program, 
                as amended and restated July 22, 1998

Exhibit 11	Computation of Earnings Per Common Share

Exhibit 12.1	Computation of Ratios of Earnings to Fixed
                Charges for Pacific Gas and Electric Company

Exhibit 12.2	Computation of Ratios of Earnings to Combined
                Fixed Charges and Preferred Stock Dividends for
                Pacific Gas and Electric Company

Exhibit 27.1	Financial Data Schedule for the quarter ended
                September 30, 1998 for PG&E Corporation

Exhibit 27.2	Financial Data Schedule for the quarter ended
                September 30, 1998 for Pacific Gas and Electric
                Company

(b)  Reports on Form 8-K during the third quarter of 1998 and
     through the date hereof (1):

     1.  July 10, 1998 
     Item 5.  Other Events
     A. Electric Industry Restructuring 
        1.  California Voter Initiative
        2.  Divestiture
     B. Pacific Gas and Electric Company's General Rate Case
           Proceeding
     C. Sale of Australian Assets

     2.  July 16, 1998
     Item 5.  Other Events
     A.  Second Quarter 1998 Consolidated Earnings(unaudited)

     3.  August 25, 1998



     Item 5.  Other Events
     A. Pacific Gas and Electric Company's 1999 Cost of Capital Proceeding
     B. Texas Franchise Fee Litigation

     4.  October 21, 1998
     Item 5.  Other Events
     A. Third Quarter 1998 Consolidated Earnings
                 (unaudited)

(1) Unless otherwise noted, all Reports on Form 8-K were filed under
both Commission File Number 1-12609 (PG&E Corporation) and Commission
File Number 1-2348(Pacific Gas and Electric Company)



                            SIGNATURE

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
the registrants have duly caused this report to be signed on their
behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.


                         PG&E CORPORATION

                               and

                         PACIFIC GAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY




                               
                               CHRISTOPHER P. JOHNS
November 2, 1998         By    
                               -----------------------
                               CHRISTOPHER P. JOHNS
                                 Vice President and Controller
                                 (PG&E Corporation)
                                 Vice President and Controller
                                 (Pacific Gas and Electric Company




                       Exhibit Index



Exhibit No.	Description of Exhibit

10.1	PG&E Corporation Deferred Compensation Plan for Officers, 
        as amended and restated July 22, 1998

10.2	PG&E Corporation Deferred Compensation Plan for 
        Directors, as amended and restated July 22, 1998

10.3	PG&E Corporation Executive Stock Ownership Program, as 
        amended and restated July 22, 1998

11	Computation of Earnings Per Common Share

12.1	Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges for
	Pacific Gas and Electric Company

12.2	Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Combined Fixed
	Charges and Preferred Stock Dividends for Pacific Gas and
	Electric Company

27.1	Financial Data Schedule for the quarter ended September 
        30, 1998 for PG&E Corporation

27.2	Financial Data Schedule for the quarter ended September 
        30, 1998 for Pacific Gas and Electric Company