PG&E Corp.'s (PCG) second-quarter earnings rose 32% on one-time gains as costs and revenue fell, resulting in operating returns just shy of Wall Street's average expectations.

California has seen unemployment rates rise above the national average while home-foreclosure rates are among the nation's highest. The utility, whose results are mostly decoupled from power demand, has worked to stem unpaid bills.

Profit rose to $388 million, or $1.02 a share, from $293 million, or 80 cents a share, a year earlier. The latest quarter included 22 cents in tax- and divestiture-related gains. However, earnings were hit by a 3 cent cost for remediation work.

Operating earnings for the second quarter were 83 cents a share compared with 80 cents a year earlier. Revenue fell 11% to $3.19 billion amid lower natural-gas prices.

Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters most recently were expecting earnings, excluding items, of 84 cents a share on revenue of $3.51 billion.

Gross margin rose to 20.5% from 16.3% on slumping fuel costs.

As for financing, executives said during a conference call with investors Wednesday that PG&E doesn't expect to make a major equity issuance through 2010. It also may pull back on smaller, ongoing equity issuance programs to limit the dilution of shares.

The parent of California utility Pacific Gas & Electric has been looking for ways to boost development of renewable energy to meet government mandates. In July, Pacific Gas & Electric signed a power purchase agreement with Sempra Energy's (SRE) merchant-generation unit to take the power from a 48-megawatt solar farm under development in Nevada. The project is expected to be completed by 2011.

Executives during a conference call said the company remains interested in partnering on renewable projects, purchasing projects after they have been operating, or other options. However, they said the utility doesn't have a master plan, instead looking on a project-by-project basis.

PG&E also on Wednesday reaffirmed its earnings forecasts for 2009 through 2011. To meet its estimate for this year, the company will need larger returns in the second half. Executives said the increase would come from cost-cutting measures underway, increased revenues from transmission line operations because of higher power demand in the summer months, and reductions in uncollectible bills. As for Pacific Gas & Electric's proposed rate increase, executives said the utility continues to move forward even amid the current recession. The new rates, if approved, would go into effect in 2011.

"By that time, the economy would have turned around," said Peter Darbee, chairman and chief executive of PG&E Corp.

Shares of PG&E recently traded down nearly 1% to $40.18.

-By Mark Peters and Mike Barris, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2457; mark.peters@dowjones.com;