SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
                       WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549 
                              FORM 10-K

(Mark One)
[X] Annual report pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 for the fiscal year ended     December 31, 2004 
   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                                     IRS Employer
File        as specified                  State of        Identification
Number      in its charter               Incorporation        Number
----------  --------------               --------------    -------------
1-40      PACIFIC ENTERPRISES              California         94-0743670

1-1402    SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY  California         95-1240705

555 WEST FIFTH STREET, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA             90013
----------------------------------------------           ----------
(Address of principal executive offices)                 (Zip Code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code    (213)244-1200
                                                     --------------

SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OF THE ACT:
                                                  Name of each exchange
Title of each class                                 on which registered
-------------------                               ---------------------
Pacific Enterprises Preferred Stock:               American and Pacific
      $4.75 dividend; $4.50 dividend;
      $4.40 dividend; $4.36 dividend

Southern California Gas Co. Preferred Stock               Pacific

SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(g) OF THE ACT:
Pacific Enterprises                                 None
Southern California Gas Company                     None

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports
required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 during the preceding 12 months and (2) has been subject to such filing
requirements for the past 90 days. Yes [ X ]   No  [   ]   
 
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 
of Regulation S-K is not contained herein, and will not be contained, to the 
best of registrant's knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements 
incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to
this Form 10-K.  [ X ]  

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as
defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes [  ]   No [ X ]

Exhibit Index on page 94.  Glossary on page 99. 

Aggregate market value of the voting stock held by non-affiliates of the
registrant as of January 31, 2005:
Pacific Enterprises                                       $68.8 Million
Southern California Gas Company                           $20.1 Million

Common Stock outstanding without par value as of January 31, 2005:
Pacific Enterprises                 Wholly owned by Sempra Energy
Southern California Gas Company     Wholly owned by Pacific Enterprises

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE:
Portions of the Information Statement prepared for the May 2005 annual meeting
of shareholders are incorporated by reference into Part III.

2

                        TABLE OF CONTENTS

PART I
Item 1.  Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4    
Item 2.  Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12  
Item 3.  Legal Proceedings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12  
Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders. . 12  

PART II
Item 5.  Market for Registrant's Common Equity and Related
            Stockholder Matters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12  
Item 6.  Selected Financial Data. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13  
Item 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial
            Condition and Results of Operations . . . . . . . . 13  
Item 7A. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures 
            About Market Risk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26  
Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data. . . . . . 27  
Item 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on
            Accounting and Financial Disclosure . . . . . . . . 82 
Item 9A. Controls and Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82  
Item 9B. Other Information  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
 

PART III
Item 10. Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant . . 85  
Item 11. Executive Compensation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86  
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
            and Management and Related Stockholder Matters. . . 86   
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions . . . . 86  
Item 14  Principal Accountant Fees and Services . . . . . . . . 86 

PART IV
Item 15. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports
            on Form 8-K . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87  

Consents of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm and 
            Report on Schedule. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89    

Signatures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92  

Exhibit Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94  

Glossary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99  


3



          INFORMATION REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS


This Annual Report contains statements that are not historical fact and 
constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private 
Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words "estimates," 
"believes," "expects," "anticipates," "plans," "intends," "may," 
"could," "would" and "should" or similar expressions, or discussions of 
strategy or of plans are intended to identify forward-looking 
statements. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of 
performance. They involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Future 
results may differ materially from those expressed in these forward-
looking statements. 

Forward-looking statements are necessarily based upon various 
assumptions involving judgments with respect to the future and other 
risks, including, among others, local, regional and national economic, 
competitive, political, legislative and regulatory conditions and 
developments; actions by the California Public Utilities Commission, 
the California State Legislature, and the Federal Energy Regulatory 
Commission and other regulatory bodies in the United States; capital 
markets conditions, inflation rates, interest rates and exchange rates; 
energy and trading markets, including the timing and extent of changes 
in commodity prices; the availability of natural gas; weather 
conditions and conservation efforts; war and terrorist attacks; 
business, regulatory, environmental and legal decisions and 
requirements; the status of deregulation of retail natural gas and 
electricity delivery; the timing and success of business development 
efforts; and other uncertainties, all of which are difficult to predict 
and many of which are beyond the control of the companies. Readers are 
cautioned not to rely unduly on any forward-looking statements and are 
urged to review and consider carefully the risks, uncertainties and 
other factors which affect the companies' business described in this 
report and other reports filed by the companies from time to time with 
the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

4

PART I
ITEM 1. BUSINESS

Description of Business

Pacific Enterprises (PE or the company) is an energy services company 
whose only significant subsidiary is Southern California Gas Company 
(SoCalGas), the nation's largest natural gas distribution utility. PE's 
common stock is wholly owned by Sempra Energy, a California-based 
Fortune 500 holding company, and PE owns all of the common stock of 
SoCalGas. The financial statements herein are, in one case, the 
Consolidated Financial Statements of PE and its subsidiary, SoCalGas, 
and, in the second case, the Consolidated Financial Statements of 
SoCalGas and its subsidiaries, which comprise less than one percent of 
SoCalGas' consolidated financial position and results of operations. 
Sempra Energy also indirectly owns all of the common stock of San Diego 
Gas & Electric (SDG&E). SoCalGas and SDG&E are collectively referred to 
herein as "the California Utilities." A description of SoCalGas is 
given in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition 
and Results of Operations" herein.

As PE itself has no operations, PE's financial position and operations 
consist of those of SoCalGas and some additional items attributable to 
PE's position as a holding company (e.g. cash, intercompany accounts, 
debt and equity).

Company Website

The company's website address is http://www.socalgas.com/ and Sempra 
Energy's website address is http://www.sempra.com/investor.htm. The 
company makes available free of charge via a hyperlink on its website 
its annual report on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current 
reports on Form 8-K, and any amendments to those reports as soon as 
reasonably practicable after such material is electronically filed with 
or furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission. 

RISK FACTORS

The following risk factors and all other information contained in this 
report should be considered carefully when evaluating the company. 
These risk factors could affect the actual results of the company and 
cause such results to differ materially from those expressed in any 
forward-looking statements of, or made by or on behalf of, the company. 
Other risks and uncertainties, in addition to those that are described 
below, may also impair its business operations. If any of the following 
risks occurs, the company's business, cash flows, results of operations 
and financial condition could be seriously harmed. These risk factors 
should be read in conjunction with the other detailed information 
concerning the company set forth in the notes to Consolidated Financial 
Statements and in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial 
Condition and Results of Operations" herein. 
         
SoCalGas is subject to extensive regulation by state, federal and local 
legislation and regulatory authorities, which may adversely affect the 
operations, performance and growth of its business.

5

The California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), which consists of 
five commissioners appointed by the Governor of California for 
staggered six-year terms, regulates SoCalGas' rates and conditions of 
service, sales of securities, rates of return, rates of depreciation, 
uniform systems of accounts, examination of records and long-term 
resource procurement. The CPUC conducts various reviews of utility 
performance (including reasonableness and prudency reviews) and 
affiliate relationships and conducts audits and investigations into 
various matters which may, from time to time, result in disallowances 
and penalties adversely affecting earnings and cash flows. Various 
proceedings involving the CPUC and relating to SoCalGas' rates, costs, 
incentive mechanisms, performance-based regulation and compliance with 
affiliate and holding company rules are discussed in the notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements and in "Management's Discussion and 
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations" herein.

Periodically, SoCalGas' rates are approved by the CPUC based on 
forecasts of capital and operating costs. If SoCalGas' actual capital 
and operating costs were to exceed the amount included in its base 
rates approved by the CPUC, it would adversely affect earnings and cash 
flows.

To promote efficient operations and improved productivity and to move 
away from reasonableness reviews and disallowances, the CPUC adopted 
Performance-Based Regulation (PBR) for the California Utilities. Under 
PBR, regulators require future income potential to be tied to achieving 
or exceeding specific performance and productivity goals, rather than 
relying solely on expanding utility plant to increase earnings. The 
three areas that are eligible for PBR rewards are: operational 
incentives based on measurements of safety, reliability and customer 
satisfaction; energy efficiency rewards based on the effectiveness of 
the programs; and natural gas procurement rewards. Although SoCalGas 
has received significant PBR rewards in the past, there can be no 
assurance that SoCalGas will receive rewards at similar levels in the 
future, or at all. Additionally, if SoCalGas fails to achieve certain 
minimum performance levels established under the PBR mechanisms, it may 
be assessed financial disallowances or penalties which could adversely 
affect their earnings and cash flows.
         
SoCalGas may be impacted by new regulations, decisions, orders or 
interpretations of the CPUC or other regulatory bodies. New 
legislation, regulations, decisions, orders or interpretations could 
change how SoCalGas operates, could affect its ability to recover their 
various costs through rates or adjustment mechanisms, or could require 
SoCalGas to incur additional expenses.
         
The California Utilities' future results of operations and financial 
condition may be materially adversely affected by the outcome of 
pending litigation against them.

The California energy crisis of 2000 and 2001 has generated numerous 
lawsuits, governmental investigations and regulatory proceedings 
involving many energy companies, including Sempra Energy and the 
California Utilities. They are the remaining defendants in class action 
and individual antitrust and unfair competition lawsuits scheduled for 
a jury trial to begin in September 2005 in which the plaintiffs have 
asserted that they are entitled to recover $24 billion in damages. 

6

Additional lawsuits have been filed by the Attorney General of Nevada 
and by others. They are also responding to an ongoing investigation 
being conducted by the California Attorney General and an ongoing CPUC 
proceeding related to the increase in natural gas prices at the 
California-Arizona border in 2000-2001. The California Utilities have 
expended and continue to expend substantial amounts defending these 
lawsuits and in connection with related investigations and regulatory 
proceedings. If these matters are ultimately resolved unfavorably to 
the California Utilities, their results of operations and financial 
condition and those of Sempra Energy may be materially adversely 
affected.  

These proceedings are discussed in the notes to Consolidated Financial 
Statements and in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial 
Condition and Results of Operations" herein. 

SoCalGas' cash flows, ability to pay dividends and ability to meet its 
debt obligations largely depend on the performance of its utility 
operations.

SoCalGas' utility operations are its major source of liquidity. 
SoCalGas' cash flows, ability to meet its obligations to creditors and 
its ability to pay dividends on its common stock are largely dependent 
upon the sufficiency of utility earnings and cash flows in excess of 
utility needs. 

Natural disasters, catastrophic accidents or acts of terrorism could 
materially adversely affect SoCalGas' business, earnings and cash 
flows.

Like other major industrial facilities, SoCalGas' natural gas pipelines 
and storage facilities may be damaged by natural disasters, 
catastrophic accidents or acts of terrorism. Any such incidents could 
result in severe business disruptions, significant decreases in 
revenues or significant additional costs to the company, which could 
have a material adverse effect on SoCalGas' earnings and cash flows. 
Given the nature and location of these facilities, any such incidents 
also could cause fires, leaks, explosions, spills or other significant 
damage to natural resources or property belonging to third parties, or 
personal injuries, which could lead to significant claims against the 
company and its subsidiaries. Insurance coverage may become unavailable 
for certain of these risks and the insurance proceeds received for any 
loss of or damage to any of its facilities, or for any loss of or 
damage to natural resources or property or personal injuries caused by 
its operations, may be insufficient to cover the company's losses or 
liabilities without materially adversely affecting the company's 
financial condition, earnings and cash flows.

GOVERNMENT REGULATION

California Utility Regulation

The CPUC, which consists of five commissioners appointed by the 
Governor of California for staggered six-year terms, regulates 
SoCalGas' rates and conditions of service, sales of securities, rate of 
return, rates of depreciation, uniform systems of accounts, examination 

7

of records, and long-term resource procurement. The CPUC conducts 
various reviews of utility performance and conducts investigations into 
various matters, such as deregulation, competition and the environment, 
to determine its future policies. The CPUC also regulates the 
relationship of utilities with their holding companies and is currently 
conducting an investigation into this relationship. This investigation 
is discussed further in Note 9 of the notes to Consolidated Financial 
Statements herein.

United States Utility Regulation

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) regulates the 
interstate sale and transportation of natural gas, the uniform systems 
of accounts and rates of depreciation. Both the FERC and the CPUC are 
currently investigating prices charged to the California investor-owned 
utilities (IOUs) by various suppliers of natural gas and electricity. 
Further discussion is provided in Note 9 of the notes to Consolidated 
Financial Statements herein. 

Local Regulation

SoCalGas has natural gas franchises with the 240 legal jurisdictions in 
its service territory. These franchises allow SoCalGas to locate, 
operate and maintain facilities for the transmission and distribution 
of natural gas in streets and other public places. Some franchises have 
fixed terms, such as that for the city of Los Angeles, which expires in 
2012. The range of expiration dates for the franchises with definite 
terms is 2005 to 2048. Most of the franchises do not have fixed terms 
and continue indefinitely.

Licenses and Permits

SoCalGas obtains numerous permits, authorizations and licenses in 
connection with the transmission and distribution of natural gas. They 
require periodic renewal, which results in continuing regulation by the 
granting agency. 

Other regulatory matters are described in Note 9 of the notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements herein.

NATURAL GAS UTILITY OPERATIONS

Resource Planning and Natural Gas Procurement and Transportation

SoCalGas is engaged in the purchase, sale, distribution, storage and 
transportation of natural gas. The company's resource planning, power 
procurement, contractual commitments and related regulatory matters are 
discussed below and in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of 
Financial Condition and Results of Operations" and in Notes 9 and 10 of 
the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements herein.

Customers

For regulatory purposes, customers are separated into core and noncore 
customers. Core customers are primarily residential and small 
commercial and industrial customers, without alternative fuel 

8

capability. Noncore customers consist primarily of electric generation, 
wholesale, large commercial, industrial and enhanced oil recovery 
customers. 

Most core customers purchase natural gas directly from SoCalGas. Core 
customers are permitted to aggregate their natural gas requirement and 
purchase directly from brokers or producers. SoCalGas continues to be 
obligated to purchase reliable supplies of natural gas to serve the 
requirements of the core customers.

Natural Gas Procurement and Transportation 

Most of the natural gas purchased and delivered by SoCalGas is produced 
outside of California, primarily in the southwestern U.S. and Canada. 
SoCalGas purchases natural gas under short-term and long-term 
contracts. Short-term purchases are primarily based on monthly spot-
market prices.

To ensure the delivery of the natural gas supplies to the distribution 
system and to meet the seasonal and annual needs of customers, SoCalGas 
is committed to firm pipeline capacity contracts that require the 
payment of fixed reservation charges to reserve firm transportation 
entitlements. SoCalGas sells excess capacity, if any, on a short-term 
basis. Interstate pipeline companies, primarily El Paso Natural Gas 
Company and Transwestern Pipeline Company, provide transportation 
services into SoCalGas' intrastate transmission system for supplies 
purchased by SoCalGas or its transportation customers from outside of 
California. All of these contracts will have expired by 2007. The rates 
that interstate pipeline companies may charge for natural gas and 
transportation services are regulated by the FERC. 

According to "Btu's Daily Gas Wire", the annual average spot price of 
natural gas at the California/Arizona border was $5.53 per million 
British thermal unit (mmbtu) in 2004 ($6.35 in December 2004), compared 
with $5.10 per mmbtu in 2003 and $3.14 per mmbtu in 2002. Prices for 
natural gas increased toward the end of 2002, 2003 and in 2004. 
SoCalGas's weighted average cost (including transportation charges) per 
mmbtu of natural gas was $5.92 in 2004, $5.05 in 2003 and $3.03 in 2002.

With improved delivery capacity to California, SoCalGas expects 
adequate resources to be available at prices that generally will follow 
national natural gas pricing trends and volatility. 

Natural Gas Storage

SoCalGas provides natural gas storage services for use by the core, 
noncore and off-system customers. Core customers are allocated a 
portion of SoCalGas' storage capacity. Remaining customers, including 
SDG&E, can bid and negotiate the desired amount of storage on a 
contract basis. The storage service program provides opportunities for 
customers to store natural gas, usually during the summer to reduce 
winter purchases when natural gas costs are generally higher. This 
allows customers to select the level of service they desire to assist 
them in managing their fuel procurement and transportation needs. 

9

Demand for Natural Gas

SoCalGas faces competition in the residential and commercial customer 
markets based on the customers' preferences for natural gas compared 
with other energy products. The demand for natural gas by electric 
generators is influenced by a number of factors. In the short-term, 
natural gas use by electric generators is impacted by the availability 
of alternative sources of generation. The availability of 
hydroelectricity is highly dependent on precipitation in the western 
United States. In addition, natural gas use is impacted by the 
performance of other generation sources in the western United States, 
including nuclear and coal, and other natural gas facilities outside 
the service area. Natural gas use is also impacted by changes in end-
use electricity demand. For example, natural gas use generally 
increases during summer heat waves. Over the long-term, natural gas use 
will be greatly influenced by additional factors such as the location 
of new power plant construction. More generation capacity currently is 
being constructed outside Southern California than within the utility 
service area. This new generation will likely displace the output of 
older, less efficient local generation, reducing the use of natural gas 
for electric generation.

Effective March 31, 1998, electric industry restructuring provided out-
of-state producers the option to purchase energy for California utility 
customers. As a result, natural gas demand for electric generation 
within Southern California competes with electric power generated 
throughout the western United States. Although electric industry 
restructuring has no direct impact on SoCalGas' natural gas operations, 
future volumes of natural gas transported for electric generating plant 
customers may be significantly affected to the extent that regulatory 
changes divert electric generation from SoCalGas' service area.

Growth in the natural gas markets is largely dependent upon the health 
and expansion of the Southern California economy and prices of other 
energy products. External factors such as weather, the price of 
electricity, electric deregulation, the use of hydroelectric power, 
competing pipelines and general economic conditions can result in 
significant shifts in demand and market price. SoCalGas added 75,000 
new customer meters in 2004 and 72,000 in 2003, representing growth 
rates of 1.4 percent and 1.3 percent, respectively. SoCalGas expects 
that its growth rate for 2005 will approximate that for 2004.

In the interruptible industrial market, customers are capable of 
burning a fuel other than natural gas. Fuel oil is the most significant 
competing energy alternative. The company's ability to maintain its 
industrial market share is largely dependent on price. The relationship 
between natural gas supply and demand has the greatest impact on the 
price of the company's product. With the reduction of natural gas 
production from domestic sources, the cost of natural gas from non-
domestic sources may play a greater role in the company's competitive 
position in the future. The price of oil depends upon a number of 
factors, including the relationship between world-wide supply and 
demand, and the policies of foreign and domestic governments.

The natural gas distribution business is seasonal in nature as 
variations in weather conditions generally result in greater revenues 
during the winter months when temperatures are colder. As is prevalent 

10

in the industry, the company injects natural gas into storage during 
the summer months (usually April through October) for withdrawal 
storage during the winter months (usually November through March) when 
customer demand is higher.

RATES AND REGULATION 

Information concerning rates and regulations applicable to SoCalGas is 
provided in "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial 
Condition and Results of Operations" and in Notes 1 and 9 of the notes 
to Consolidated Financial Statements  herein. 

ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS

Discussions about environmental issues affecting the company are 
included in Note 10 of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements 
herein. The following additional information should be read in 
conjunction with those discussions.

Hazardous Substances  

In 1994, the CPUC approved the Hazardous Waste Collaborative Memorandum 
account, allowing California's IOUs to recover their hazardous waste 
cleanup costs, including those related to Superfund sites or similar 
sites requiring cleanup. Recovery of 90 percent of hazardous waste 
cleanup costs and related third-party litigation costs, and 70 percent 
of the related insurance-litigation expenses is permitted. In addition, 
the company has the opportunity to retain a percentage of any insurance 
recoveries to offset the 10 percent of costs not recovered in rates.

During the early 1900s, SoCalGas and its predecessors manufactured gas 
from coal or oil. The manufactured-gas plants (MGPs) often have become 
contaminated with the hazardous residual by-products of the process. 
SoCalGas has identified 42 such sites at which it (together with other 
users as to 21 of these sites) may have cleanup obligations. At a 
minimum, preliminary investigations have been completed on 41 of the 
sites. As of December 31, 2004, 27 of these sites have been remediated, 
of which 22 have received certification from the California 
Environmental Protection Agency. At December 31, 2004, SoCalGas' 
estimated remaining investigation and remediation liability for the 
MGPs is $40.5 million. 

SoCalGas lawfully disposes of wastes at permitted facilities owned and 
operated by other entities. Operations at these facilities may result 
in actual or threatened risks to the environment or public health. 
Under California law, businesses that arrange for legal disposal of 
wastes at a permitted facility from which wastes are later released, or 
threaten to be released, can be held financially responsible for 
corrective actions at the facility.

SoCalGas has been named as a potentially responsible party (PRP) for 
one landfill site and one industrial waste disposal site, from which 
releases have occurred.

Remedial actions and negotiations with other PRPs and the United States 
Environmental Protection Agency have been in progress since 1993 for 

11

the Casmalia landfill site. The company's share of costs to remediate 
this site is estimated to be $1.3, of which $0.9 million has been 
spent.

In December 1999, SoCalGas was notified that it is a PRP at a waste 
treatment facility in Bakersfield, California. SoCalGas is working with 
other PRPs in order to remove from the site certain liquid wastes that 
threaten to be released. SoCalGas' share of total site cleanup costs is 
estimated at $0.7 million, of which $0.2 million has been spent. 

At December 31, 2004, the company's estimated remaining investigation 
and remediation liability related to hazardous waste sites, including 
the MGPs, was $41.9 million, of which 90 percent is authorized to be 
recovered through the Hazardous Waste Collaborative mechanism. The 
company believes that any costs not ultimately recovered through rates, 
insurance or other means will not have a material adverse effect on the 
company's consolidated results of operations or financial position.

Estimated liabilities for environmental remediation are recorded when 
amounts are probable and estimable. Amounts authorized to be recovered 
in rates under the Hazardous Waste Collaborative mechanism are recorded 
as a regulatory asset.

Air and Water Quality   

California's air quality standards are more restrictive than federal 
standards. The transmission and distribution of natural gas require the 
operation of compressor stations, which are subject to increasingly 
stringent air-quality standards. Costs to comply with these standards 
are recovered in rates.

OTHER MATTERS

Research, Development and Demonstration (RD&D)

The SoCalGas RD&D portfolio is focused in five major areas: operations, 
utilization systems, power generation, public interest and 
transportation. Each of these activities provides benefits to customers 
and society by providing more cost-effective, efficient natural gas 
equipment with lower emissions, increased safety and reduced operating 
costs. The CPUC has authorized SoCalGas to recover its operating costs 
associated with RD&D. SoCalGas' annual RD&D costs have averaged $8.2 
million over the past three years.

Employees of Registrant

As of December 31, 2004, SoCalGas had 6,448 employees, compared to 
6,570 at December 31, 2003.
 
Labor Relations

Field, technical and most clerical employees at SoCalGas are 
represented by the Utility Workers' Union of America (UWUA) or the 
International Chemical Workers' Union Council (ICWUC). The collective 
bargaining agreement for field, technical and most clerical employees 
at SoCalGas covering wages, hours, working conditions, medical and 

12

various benefit plans was in effect through December 31, 2004. SoCalGas 
has signed with UWUA and ICWUC, a new collective bargaining agreement 
that will be in effect from January 1, 2005 through September 30, 2008. 

ITEM 2. PROPERTIES

Natural Gas Properties 

At December 31, 2004, SoCalGas' natural gas facilities included 2,830 
miles of transmission and storage pipeline, 47,307 miles of 
distribution pipeline and 45,954 miles of service piping. They also 
included 11 transmission compressor stations and 4 underground storage 
reservoirs, with a combined working capacity of 122 billion cubic feet.

Other Properties

SoCalGas leases approximately half of a 52-story office building in 
downtown Los Angeles through 2011. The lease has six separate five-year 
renewal options.

The company owns or leases other offices, operating and maintenance 
centers, shops, service facilities and equipment necessary in the 
conduct of its business.

ITEM 3. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

Except for the matters described in Note 10 of the notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements or referred to elsewhere in this 
Annual Report, neither the companies nor their subsidiaries are party 
to, nor is their property the subject of, any material pending legal 
proceedings other than routine litigation incidental to their 
businesses.

ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS
        None

                                 PART II

ITEM 5. MARKET FOR REGISTRANT'S COMMON EQUITY AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER 
MATTERS

All of the issued and outstanding common stock of PE is owned by Sempra 
Energy. The information required by Item 5 concerning dividends 
declared is included in the "Statements of Consolidated Changes in 
Shareholders' Equity" set forth in Item 8 of this Annual Report herein.

13

ITEM 6. SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA



 (Dollars in millions)                  At December 31, or for the years then ended   
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                       2004      2003      2002      2001      2000 
                                      ------    ------    ------    ------    ------
                                                             
Pacific Enterprises:                                                                
Income Statement Data:                                                             
 Operating revenues                  $ 3,997   $ 3,544   $ 2,858   $ 3,716   $ 2,854 
 Operating income                    $   235   $   237   $   246   $   269   $   263 
 Dividends on preferred stock        $     4   $     4   $     4   $     4   $     4 
 Earnings applicable to 
   common shares                     $   232   $   217   $   209   $   202   $   207 

Balance Sheet Data:
 Total assets                        $ 5,953   $ 5,833   $ 5,883   $ 5,414   $ 5,957 
 Long-term debt                      $   864   $   762   $   657   $   579   $   821 
 Short-term debt *                   $    30   $   175   $   175   $   150   $   120 
 Shareholders' equity                $ 1,814   $ 1,697   $ 1,684   $ 1,574   $ 1,526 

SoCalGas:    
Income Statement Data:
   Operating revenues                $ 3,997   $ 3,544   $ 2,858   $ 3,716   $ 2,854 
   Operating income                  $   238   $   223   $   242   $   273   $   266 
   Dividends on preferred stock      $     1   $     1   $     1   $     1   $     1 
   Earnings applicable to
     common shares                   $   232   $   209   $   212   $   207   $   206 
Balance Sheet Data:
   Total assets                      $ 5,502   $ 5,349   $ 5,403   $ 4,986   $ 5,329 
   Long-term debt                    $   864   $   762   $   657   $   579   $   821 
   Short-term debt *                 $    30   $   175   $   175   $   150   $   120 
   Shareholders' equity              $ 1,407   $ 1,376   $ 1,340   $ 1,327   $ 1,309 
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Includes long-term debt due within one year.


Since Pacific Enterprises is a wholly owned subsidiary of Sempra Energy 
and SoCalGas is a wholly owned subsidiary of Pacific Enterprises, per 
share data is not provided.
     
This data should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial 
Statements and the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements contained 
herein. 

ITEM 7. MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

INTRODUCTION

This section of the 2004 Annual Report includes management's discussion 
and analysis of operating results from 2002 through 2004, and provides 
information about the capital resources, liquidity and financial 
performance of Pacific Enterprises (PE) and Southern California Gas 
Company (SoCalGas). SoCalGas, PE or the two together are referred to as 
"the company" herein, the distinction being indicated by the context. 
This section also focuses on the major factors expected to influence 
future operating results and discusses investment and financing 

14

activities and plans. It should be read in conjunction with the 
Consolidated Financial Statements included in this Annual Report. 

PE is the holding company for SoCalGas, the nation's largest natural 
gas distribution utility. SoCalGas owns and operates a natural gas 
distribution, transmission and storage system supplying natural gas 
throughout approximately 20,000 square miles of service territory.  Its 
service territory extends from San Luis Obispo on the north to the 
Mexican border in the south, excluding San Diego County, the City of 
Long Beach and the desert area of San Bernardino County. SoCalGas 
provides natural gas service to residential, commercial, industrial, 
utility electric generation and wholesale customers, through 5.5 
million meters in a service area with a population of 19.5 million. 
SoCalGas and its sister utility, San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E), are 
collectively referred to herein as "the California Utilities."

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS 

The following table shows net income for each of the last five years. 

(Dollars in millions)
-----------------------------------------
                  PE       SoCalGas       
              ----------  ----------
 2004            $ 236      $ 233  
 2003            $ 221      $ 210
 2002            $ 213      $ 213 
 2001            $ 206      $ 208
 2000            $ 211      $ 207
                             
-----------------------------------------

To understand the operations and financial results of the company, it 
is important to understand the ratemaking procedures to which the 
company is subject.

SoCalGas is subject to various regulatory bodies and rules at national, 
state and local levels. The primary regulatory body is the California 
Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), which regulates utility rates and 
operations. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) regulates 
interstate transportation of natural gas and various related matters. 
Municipalities and other local authorities regulate the location of 
utility assets, including natural gas pipelines. 

The natural gas industry experienced an initial phase of restructuring 
during the 1980s by deregulating natural gas sales to noncore 
customers. Further restructuring continues to be considered, as 
discussed in Note 9 of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.    

Natural Gas Revenue and Cost of Natural Gas. Natural gas revenues 
increased to $4.0 billion in 2004 from $3.5 billion in 2003, and the 
cost of natural gas increased to $2.3 billion in 2004 from $1.8 billion 
in 2003. The increases were primarily attributable to natural gas cost 
increases, which are passed on to customers. For natural gas revenues, 
this increase was offset by $48 million of Gas Cost Incentive Mechanism 
(GCIM) awards and $1 million of Performance-Based Regulation (PBR) 
awards recognized during 2003. Performance awards are discussed in Note 

15

9 of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. SoCalGas' weighted 
average cost per million British thermal units (mmbtu) of natural gas 
was $5.92 in 2004, $5.05 in 2003 and $3.03 in 2002.    

Under the current regulatory framework, the cost of natural gas 
purchased for customers and the variations in that cost are passed 
through to the customers on a substantially concurrent basis. However, 
SoCalGas' GCIM allows SoCalGas to share in the savings or costs from 
buying natural gas for customers below or above market-based monthly 
benchmarks. The mechanism permits full recovery of all costs within a 
tolerance band above the benchmark price and refunds all savings within 
a tolerance band below the benchmark price. The costs or savings 
outside the tolerance band are shared between customers and 
shareholders. Further discussion is provided in Notes 1 and 9 of the 
notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

Natural gas revenues increased to $3.5 billion in 2003 from $2.9 
billion in 2002, and the cost of natural gas increased to $1.8 billion 
in 2003 from $1.2 billion in 2002. The change was primarily 
attributable to natural gas price increases, partially offset by 
reduced volumes. Revenues also increased due to the performance awards 
recognized during 2003.  

16

The table below summarizes SoCalGas' natural gas volumes and revenues 
by customer class for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002. 


NATURAL GAS SALES, TRANSPORTATION AND EXCHANGE
(Dollars in millions, volumes in billion cubic feet)


                              Natural Gas Sales    Transportation & Exchange       Total
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              Volumes   Revenue      Volumes   Revenue      Volumes   Revenue  
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     
2004:
  Residential                     254   $ 2,572            2     $   7          256   $ 2,579  
  Commercial and industrial       108       871          273       195          381     1,066  
  Electric generation plants       --        --          178        54          178        54  
  Wholesale                        --        --          156        45          156        45  
                              ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                  362   $ 3,443          609     $ 301          971     3,744 
  Balancing accounts and other                                                            253  
                                                                                     --------
    Total                                                                             $ 3,997 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003:
  Residential                     241   $ 2,188            2     $   7          243   $ 2,195  
  Commercial and industrial       106       741          273       184          379       925  
  Electric generation plants       --        --          179        49          179        49  
  Wholesale                        --        --          138        34          138        34  
                              ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                  347   $ 2,929          592     $ 274          939     3,203  
  Balancing accounts and other                                                            341  
                                                                                     --------
    Total                                                                             $ 3,544   
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2002:
  Residential                     256   $ 1,843            2     $   7          258   $ 1,850  
  Commercial and industrial       100       537          289       168          389       705  
  Electric generation plants       --        --          201        38          201        38  
  Wholesale                        --        --          156        23          156        23  
                              ---------------------------------------------------------------
                                  356   $ 2,380          648     $ 236        1,004     2,616  
  Balancing accounts and other                                                            242  
                                                                                     --------
    Total                                                                             $ 2,858  
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Other Operating Expenses. Other operating expenses at SoCalGas were 
$950 million, $954 million and $872 million in 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively. The decrease in 2004 was due primarily to the favorable 
resolution of regulatory issues offset by litigation costs. 
Additionally, operating expenses in 2003 include charges for litigation 
costs and for losses associated with a sublease of portions of the 
SoCalGas headquarters building. The increase in 2003 compared to 2002 
was primarily the result of these charges, as well as higher labor and 
employee benefits costs. During 2002, the company recorded $13 million 
in litigation costs related to the California energy crisis.  

Other Income. Other income and deductions consist primarily of interest 
income from short-term investments, interest income/expense from 
regulatory balancing accounts and allowance for equity funds used 
during construction. Excluding the impact of income taxes on non-
operating income, other income at SoCalGas was $31 million, $40 
million, and $10 million in 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively. The 

17

decrease in 2004 was due to higher interest income in 2003 resulting 
from the favorable $30 million before-tax resolution of income-tax 
issues with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), offset by the $15 
million before-tax gain from the sale of partnership property in 2004. 
The increase in 2003 compared to 2002 was due to higher interest income 
as discussed above. 

Income Taxes.  Income tax expense at SoCalGas was $154 million, $150 
million and $178 million in 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively. The 
corresponding effective income tax rates were 39.8 percent, 41.7 
percent and 45.5 percent. The decreases in 2003 compared to 2002 were 
due to the $12 million favorable resolution of income-tax issues in the 
fourth quarter of 2003. In addition, income before taxes in 2003 
included $30 million in interest income arising from the income tax 
settlement, resulting in an offsetting $13 million income tax expense. 

Net Income. SoCalGas recorded net income of $233 million, $210 million 
and $213 million in 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively. The increase in 
2004 was due to higher margins, the resolution of the 2004 cost of 
service proceedings, which favorably impacted net income by $34 
million, and the $9 million after-tax gain on the sale of partnership 
property, offset by $24 million of litigation costs. Additionally, 2003 
net income was affected by the $32 million after-tax charge for 
litigation costs and for losses associated with a long-term sublease of 
portions of its headquarters building, offset by the favorable 
resolution of income tax issues and by higher GCIM awards.

The decrease for 2003 compared to 2002 was due primarily to the 
litigation charges and sublease losses in 2003 and the end of sharing 
of merger savings (which favorably impacted earnings by $17 million for 
the year ended December 31, 2002), offset by the resolution of income 
tax issues and higher GCIM awards in 2003. 

CAPITAL RESOURCES AND LIQUIDITY 

SoCalGas' operations are the major source of liquidity. In addition, 
working capital requirements can be met through the issuance of short-
term and long-term debt. Cash requirements primarily consist of capital 
expenditures for utility plant. 

At December 31, 2004, the company had $34 million in unrestricted cash 
and $770 million in available unused, committed lines of credit, of 
which PE had $500 million for the sole purpose of providing loans to 
Sempra Global, another subsidiary of Sempra Energy, and SoCalGas had 
$270 million. 

Management believes that these amounts and cash flows from operations 
and debt issuances will be adequate to finance capital expenditures and 
meet liquidity requirements and other commitments. Forecasted capital 
expenditures for the next five years are discussed in "Future Capital 
Expenditures for Utility Plant". Management continues to regularly 
monitor SoCalGas' ability to finance the needs of its operating, 
financing and investing activities in a manner consistent with its 
intention to maintain strong, investment-quality credit ratings. Rating 
agencies and others that evaluate a company's liquidity generally 
consider a company's capital expenditures and working capital 

18

requirements in comparison to cash from operations, available credit 
lines and other sources available to meet liquidity requirements.

CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES 

Net cash provided by PE's consolidated operating activities totaled 
$544 million, $375 million and $521 million for 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively. Net cash provided by SoCalGas' operating activities 
totaled $501 million, $385 million and $527 million for 2004, 2003 and 
2002, respectively.  

The increase in net cash provided by operating activities was due to 
changes in regulatory balancing accounts in 2004, offset by a higher 
increase in accounts receivable in 2004. 

The decrease in 2003 compared to 2002 was primarily attributable to 
SoCalGas' decrease in overcollected regulatory balancing accounts in 
2003 resulting from higher natural gas prices and lower usage and the 
refunding of customer deposits, offset by lower tax payments in 2003.  

During 2004, the company contributed $42 million to other postretirement 
benefit plans but made no contribution to the pension plan.

CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES 

Net cash used in PE's consolidated investing activities totaled $293 
million, $216 million and $508 million for 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively. Net cash used in SoCalGas' investing activities totaled 
$253 million, $279 million and $417 million for 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively. The increase in cash used in investing activities was due 
to lower affiliate loan repayments received in 2004. For SoCalGas, the 
decrease in cash used in investing activities was due to higher 
repayments received from Sempra Energy in 2004. 

PE's decrease in 2003 compared to 2002 was primarily due to the $97 
million repayment from Sempra Energy in 2003 compared to $177 million 
of advances to Sempra Energy in 2002. For SoCalGas, the change in 2003 
compared to 2002 was the same as PE except that SoCalGas received $34 
million of the $97 million repayment in 2003 and made $86 million of 
the $177 million in advances to Sempra Energy in 2002. Advances to 
Sempra Energy are payable on demand.

Future Capital Expenditures for Utility Plant

Significant capital expenditures in 2005 are expected to include $350 
million for improvements to the distribution and transmission systems. 
These expenditures are expected to be financed by cash flows from 
operations and debt issuances.

Over the next five years, the company expects to make capital 
expenditures of $1.8 billion, including $350 million in each of the 
next five years. 

Construction programs are periodically reviewed and revised by the 
company in response to changes in economic conditions, competition, 

19

customer growth, inflation, customer rates, the cost of capital, and 
environmental and regulatory requirements. 

CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES 

Net cash used in PE's consolidated financing activities totaled $249 
million, $149 million and $4 million for 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively. Net cash used in SoCalGas' financing activities totaled 
$246 million, $96 million and $101 million for 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively.

The cash used in financing activities for 2004 increased due to lower 
issuances of long-term debt, offset by lower payments on long-term 
debt. The increase in PE's cash used in financing activities in 2003 
was attributable to higher repayments on long-term debt and an increase 
of $150 million in dividends paid to Sempra Energy in 2003, offset by 
an increase in the issuances of long-term debt. The change in SoCalGas' 
net cash used in financing activities is the same as PE, except for 
dividends paid to PE, which are unchanged from 2002 to 2003.

Long-Term and Short-Term Debt 

In December 2004, SoCalGas issued $100 million of floating-rate first 
mortgage bonds maturing in December 2009. The interest rate is based on 
the 3-month LIBOR rate plus 0.17%.  

Repayments on long-term debt in 2004 included $175 million of SoCalGas' 
first mortgage bonds.  

In 2003, SoCalGas issued $500 million of first mortgage bonds.  

Repayments on long-term debt in 2003 included $325 million of SoCalGas' 
first mortgage bonds.  In addition, $70 million of SoCalGas' $75 
million medium-term notes were put back to the company.  

In October 2002, SoCalGas publicly offered and sold $250 million of 
4.80% first mortgage bonds, maturing in October 2012. 

Repayments on long-term debt in 2002 included $100 million of first 
mortgage bonds. 

In May 2004, the California Utilities obtained a combined $500 million 
three-year syndicated revolving credit facility to replace their 
expiring 364-day facility of a like amount. No amounts were outstanding 
under this facility at December 31, 2004. SoCalGas had $30 million of 
commercial paper outstanding at December 31, 2004.

In September 2004, PE extended the termination date of its revolving 
credit agreement to September 30, 2005 and increased the revolving 
credit commitment from $250 million to $500 million. No amounts were 
outstanding under this facility at December 31, 2004.

Notes 2 and 3 of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements provide 
further discussion of debt activity and lines of credit.
  
20


Dividends 

Common dividends paid to Sempra Energy were $200 million in 2004, 
compared to $250 million in 2003 and $100 million in 2002. Dividends 
paid by SoCalGas to PE amounted to $200 million in each of 2004, 2003 
and 2002. 

The payment and amount of future dividends are within the discretion of 
the companies' boards of directors. The CPUC's regulation of SoCalGas' 
capital structure limits the amounts that are available for loans and 
dividends to Sempra Energy from SoCalGas. At December 31, 2004, the 
company could have provided a total (combined loans and dividends) of 
$200 million to Sempra Energy. 

Capitalization 

Total capitalization, including short-term debt and the current portion 
of long-term debt, at December 31, 2004 was $2.7 billion, of which $2.3 
billion applied to SoCalGas. The debt-to-capitalization ratios were 33 
percent and 39 percent at December 31, 2004 for PE and SoCalGas, 
respectively. 

Commitments 

The following is a summary of the company's principal contractual 
commitments at December 31, 2004. Liabilities related to fixed-price 
contracts and other derivatives are excluded as they are primarily 
offset against regulatory assets and will be recovered from customers 
through the ratemaking process. Additional information concerning 
commitments is provided above and in Notes 3, 5 and 10 of the notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements.

21


                                    
                                          2006      2008
                                           and       and
(Dollars in millions)          2005       2007      2009    Thereafter    Total
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         
SOCALGAS
Short-term debt              $   30     $   --    $   --      $   --     $   30
Long-term debt                   --          8       100         756        864 
Interest on debt (1)             37         74        74         160        345 
Natural gas contracts           921        128         5          --      1,054
Operating leases                 43         89        92          91        315
Environmental commitments        14         28        --          --         42
Pension and postretirement 
  benefit obligations (2)       136        295       326         939      1,696    
Asset retirement obligations      1          3         1           4          9
                            ---------------------------------------------------
     Total                    1,182        625       598       1,950      4,355  
PE - operating leases            13         26        28           7         74
                            ---------------------------------------------------
Total PE consolidated        $1,195     $  651    $  626      $1,957     $4,429
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Based on rates in effect at December 31, 2004.
(2) Amounts are before reduction for the Medicare Part D subsidy and only include  
    expected payments for the next 10 years.


Credit Ratings

Credit ratings of the company remained at investment grade levels in 
2004. As of January 31, 2005, company credit ratings were as follows:

                           Standard    Moody's Investor 
                           & Poor's     Services, Inc.   Fitch 
---------------------------------------------------------------- 
SOCALGAS
Secured debt                   A+            A1            AA
Unsecured debt                 A-            A2           AA-
Preferred stock              BBB+          Baa1            A+
Commercial paper              A-1           P-1           F1+
                            ------------------------------------
PE - preferred stock         BBB+             -             A
---------------------------------------------------------------- 

As of January 31, 2005, SoCalGas has a stable outlook rating from all 
three credit rating agencies.  

FACTORS INFLUENCING FUTURE PERFORMANCE

Performance of the companies will depend primarily on the ratemaking 
and regulatory process, natural gas industry restructuring, and the 
changing energy marketplace. These factors are discussed in Note 9 of 
the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

Market Risk

Market risk is the risk of erosion of the company's cash flows, net 
income, asset values and equity due to adverse changes in prices for 
various commodities, and in interest rates. 

Sempra Energy has adopted corporate-wide policies governing its market 
risk management activities. Assisted by Sempra Energy's Energy Risk 

22

Management Group (ERMG), Sempra Energy's Energy Risk Management 
Oversight Committee (ERMOC), consisting of senior officers, oversees 
company-wide energy risk management activities and monitors the results 
of activities to ensure compliance with the company's stated energy 
risk management policies. Utility management receives daily information 
on positions and the ERMG receives information detailing positions 
creating market and credit risk for the company, consistent with 
affiliate rules. The ERMG independently measures and reports the market 
and credit risk associated with these positions. In addition, the ERMOC 
monitors energy price risk management activities independently from the 
groups responsible for creating or actively managing these risks. 

Along with other tools, the company uses Value at Risk (VaR) to measure 
its exposure to market risk. VaR is an estimate of the potential loss 
on a position or portfolio of positions over a specified holding 
period, based on normal market conditions and within a given 
statistical confidence interval. The company has adopted the 
variance/covariance methodology in its calculation of VaR, and uses 
both the 95-percent and 99-percent confidence intervals. VaR is 
calculated independently by the ERMG for the company. Historical 
volatilities and correlations between instruments and positions are 
used in the calculation. As of December 31, 2004, the total VaR of the 
company's natural gas positions was not material. 

The company uses energy and natural gas derivatives to manage natural 
gas price risk associated with servicing its load requirements. The use 
of derivative financial instruments is subject to certain limitations 
imposed by company policy and regulatory requirements. 

Revenue recognition is discussed in Note 1 and the additional market 
risk information regarding derivative instruments is discussed in Note 
7 of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

The following discussion of the company's primary market risk exposures 
as of December 31, 2004 includes a discussion of how these exposures 
are managed. 

Commodity Price Risk 

Market risk related to physical commodities is created by volatility in 
the prices and basis of natural gas. The company's market risk is 
impacted by changes in volatility and liquidity in the markets in which 
these commodities or related financial instruments are traded. The 
company is exposed, in varying degrees, to price risk primarily in the 
natural gas markets. The company's policy is to manage this risk within 
a framework that considers the unique markets, and operating and 
regulatory environments. 

The company's market risk exposure is limited due to CPUC-authorized 
rate recovery of natural gas purchase, sale, intrastate transportation 
and storage activity. However, the company may, at times, be exposed to 
market risk as a result of SoCalGas' GCIM, which is discussed in Note 9 
of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. If commodity prices 
were to rise too rapidly, it is likely that volumes would decline. This 
would increase the per-unit fixed costs, which could lead to further 
volume declines. The company manages its risk within the parameters of 

23

the company's market risk management framework. As of December 31, 
2004, the company's exposure to market risk was not material.  

Interest Rate Risk 

The company is exposed to fluctuations in interest rates primarily as a 
result of its long-term debt. The company historically has funded 
operations through long-term debt issues with fixed interest rates and 
these interest rates are recovered in utility rates. Some recent debt 
offerings have used a combination of fixed-rate and floating-rate debt. 
Subject to regulatory constraints, interest-rate swaps may be used to 
adjust interest-rate exposures. 

At December 31, 2004, the company had $613 million of fixed-rate debt 
and $252 million of variable-rate debt. Interest on fixed-rate utility 
debt is fully recovered in rates on a historical cost basis and 
interest on variable-rate debt is provided for in rates on a forecasted 
basis. At December 31, 2004, SoCalGas' fixed-rate debt had a one-year 
VaR of $76 million and its variable-rate debt had a one-year VaR of $11 
million. 

At December 31, 2004, the notional amount of interest-rate swap 
transactions totaled $150 million. Note 3 of the notes to Consolidated 
Financial Statements provides further information regarding interest 
rate swap transactions. 

In addition, the company is ultimately subject to the effect of 
interest-rate fluctuation on the assets of its pension plan and other 
postretirement plans. 

Credit Risk

Credit risk is the risk of loss that would be incurred as a result of 
nonperformance by counterparties of their contractual obligations. As 
with market risk, the company has adopted corporate-wide policies 
governing the management of credit risk. Credit risk management is 
performed by the ERMG and the company's credit department and overseen 
by the ERMOC. Using rigorous models, the ERMG and the company calculate 
current and potential credit risk to counterparties on a daily basis 
and monitor actual balances in comparison to approved limits. The 
company avoids concentration of counterparties whenever possible, and 
management believes its credit policies associated with counterparties 
significantly reduce overall credit risk. These policies include an 
evaluation of prospective counterparties' financial condition 
(including credit ratings), collateral requirements under certain 
circumstances, the use of standardized agreements that allow for the 
netting of positive and negative exposures associated with a single 
counterparty and other security such as lock-box liens and downgrade 
triggers. 

The company monitors credit risk through a credit approval process and 
the assignment and monitoring of credit limits. These credit limits are 
established based on risk and return considerations under terms 
customarily available in the industry. 

The company periodically enters into interest-rate swap agreements to 
moderate exposure to interest-rate changes and to lower the overall 

24

cost of borrowing. The company would be exposed to interest-rate 
fluctuations on the underlying debt should counterparties to the 
agreement not perform. Additional information regarding the company's 
use of interest-rate swap agreements is provided under "Interest Rate 
Risk". 

CRITICAL ACCOUNTING POLICIES AND KEY NON-CASH PERFORMANCE INDICATORS

Certain accounting policies are viewed by management as critical 
because their application is the most relevant, judgmental and/or 
material to the company's financial position and results of operations, 
and/or because they require the use of material judgments and 
estimates. 

The company's significant accounting policies are described in Note 1 
of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. The most critical 
policies, all of which are mandatory under generally accepted 
accounting principles and the regulations of the Securities and 
Exchange Commission, are the following:

Statement of Financial Accounting Standards (SFAS) 5, "Accounting 
for Contingencies," establishes the amounts and timing of when 
the company provides for contingent losses. Details of the 
company's issues in this area are discussed in Note 10 of the 
notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.

SFAS 71, "Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of 
Regulation," has a significant effect on the way the California 
Utilities record assets and liabilities, and the related revenues 
and expenses that would not be recorded absent the principles 
contained in SFAS 71.

SFAS 109, "Accounting for Income Taxes," governs the way the 
company provides for income taxes. Details of the company's 
issues in this area are discussed in Note 4 of the notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements.

SFAS 123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation" and SFAS 148 
"Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation - Transition and 
Disclosure," give companies the choice of recognizing a cost at 
the time of issuance of stock options or merely disclosing what 
that cost would have been and not recognizing it in its financial 
statements. Sempra Energy has elected the disclosure option for 
all options that are so eligible. The effect of this is discussed 
in Note 1 of the notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. 

SFAS 123R, "Share-Based Payment" requires public companies to 
measure and record the cost of employee services received in 
exchange for an award of equity instruments based on the grant-
date fair value of the awards and gives companies three methods 
to do so. This statement is effective for Sempra Energy on July 
1, 2005. Further discussion is provided in Note 1 of the notes to 
Consolidated Financial Statements. 

SFAS 133, "Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging 
Activities," SFAS 138 "Accounting for Certain Derivative 
Instruments and Certain Hedging Activities" and SFAS 149 

25

"Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and Hedging 
Activities," have a significant effect on the balance sheets of 
the company but have no significant effect on its income 
statements because of the principles contained in SFAS 71. 

In connection with the application of these and other accounting 
policies, the company makes estimates and judgments about various 
matters. The most significant of these involve:

   The calculation of fair or realizable values. 

   The collectibility of receivables, regulatory assets, deferred 
   tax assets and other assets. 

   The resolution of various income-tax issues between the company 
   and the various taxing authorities.

   The various assumptions used in actuarial calculations for 
   pension and other postretirement benefit plans.

   The probable costs to be incurred in the resolution of litigation.

Differences between estimates and actual amounts have had significant 
impacts in the past and are likely to have significant impacts in the 
future. 

As discussed elsewhere herein, the company uses exchange quotations or 
other third-party pricing to estimate fair values. The assumed 
collectibility of receivables considers the aging of the receivables, 
the creditworthiness of customers and the enforceability of contracts, 
where applicable. The assumed collectibility of regulatory assets 
considers legal and regulatory decisions involving the specific items 
or similar items. The assumed collectibility of other assets considers 
the nature of the item, the enforceability of contracts where 
applicable, the creditworthiness of the other parties and other 
factors. The anticipated resolution of income-tax issues considers past 
resolution of the same or similar issue, the status of any income-tax 
examination in progress and positions taken by taxing authorities with 
other taxpayers with similar issues. Actuarial assumptions are based on 
the advice of the company's independent actuaries. The likelihood of 
deferred tax recovery is based on analyses of the deferred tax assets 
and the company's expectation of future financial and/or taxable 
income, based on its strategic planning.

Choices among alternative accounting policies that are material to the 
company's financial statements and information concerning significant 
estimates have been discussed with the audit committee of the board of 
directors.  

Key non-cash performance indicators for the company include numbers of 
customers and quantities of natural gas sold. The information is 
provided in "Introduction" and "Results of Operations."  

26

NEW ACCOUNTING STANDARDS 

Relevant pronouncements that have recently become effective and have 
had a significant effect on the company's financial statements are SFAS 
132 (revised 2003) and 143. They are described in Note 1 of the notes 
to Consolidated Financial Statements. Pronouncements of particular 
importance to the company's financial statements are described below. 

SFAS 143, "Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations": SFAS 143 
requires entities to record the fair value of liabilities for legal 
obligations related to asset retirements in the period in which they 
are incurred. It also requires the company to reclassify amounts 
recovered in rates for future removal costs not covered by a legal 
obligation from accumulated depreciation to a regulatory liability.

ITEM 7A. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

The information required by Item 7A is set forth under "Item 7. 
Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results 
of Operations - Market Risk."

27

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA - 
Pacific Enterprises

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Pacific Enterprises:

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Pacific 
Enterprises and subsidiaries (the "Company") as of December 31, 2004 
and 2003, and the related consolidated statements of income, 
shareholders' equity and cash flows for each of the three years in the 
period ended December 31, 2004. These financial statements are the 
responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is to 
express an opinion on these financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable 
assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material 
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence 
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An 
audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and 
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the 
overall financial statement presentation.  We believe that our audits 
provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, 
in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of 
December 31, 2004 and 2003, and the results of its operations and its 
cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 
2004, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in 
the United States of America.

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the effectiveness 
of the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of 
December 31, 2004, based on the criteria established in Internal 
Control-Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring 
Organizations of the Treadway Commission and our report dated February 
22, 2005 expressed an unqualified opinion on management's assessment of 
the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial 
reporting and an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of the 
Company's internal control over financial reporting.


/S/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP


San Diego, California
February 22, 2005


28


REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Pacific Enterprises:
 
We have audited management's assessment, included in the accompanying 
Management's Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting, that 
Pacific Enterprises and subsidiaries (the "Company") maintained 
effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 
2004, based on criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated 
Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the 
Treadway Commission.  The Company's management is responsible for 
maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for 
its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial 
reporting.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion on management's 
assessment and an opinion on the effectiveness of the Company's 
internal control over financial reporting based on our audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States).  Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable 
assurance about whether effective internal control over financial 
reporting was maintained in all material respects.  Our audit included 
obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial 
reporting, evaluating management's assessment, testing and evaluating 
the design and operating effectiveness of internal control, and 
performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the 
circumstances.  We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis 
for our opinions.

A company's internal control over financial reporting is a process 
designed by, or under the supervision of, the company's principal 
executive and principal financial officers, or persons performing 
similar functions, and effected by the company's board of directors, 
management, and other personnel to provide reasonable assurance 
regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of 
financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally 
accepted accounting principles.  A company's internal control over 
financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) 
pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, 
accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the 
assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that 
transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of 
financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting 
principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being 
made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors 
of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding 
prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or 
disposition of the company's assets that could have a material effect 
on the financial statements.

Because of the inherent limitations of internal control over financial 
reporting, including the possibility of collusion or improper 
management override of controls, material misstatements due to error or 
fraud may not be prevented or detected on a timely basis.  Also, 

29

projections of any evaluation of the effectiveness of the internal 
control over financial reporting to future periods are subject to the 
risk that the controls may become inadequate because of changes in 
conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or 
procedures may deteriorate. 

In our opinion, management's assessment that the Company maintained 
effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 
2004, is fairly stated, in all material respects, based on the criteria 
established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework issued by the 
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.  Also 
in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, 
effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 
2004, based on the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated 
Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the 
Treadway Commission.

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated 
financial statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2004 of 
the Company and our report dated February 22, 2005 expressed an 
unqualified opinion on those financial statements. 

/s/  DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

San Diego, California 
February 22, 2005

30


PACIFIC ENTERPRISES AND SUBSIDIARIES               
STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED INCOME                 
(Dollars in millions)


                                                         Years ended December 31, 
                                                         2004      2003      2002 
                                                       -------   -------   -------
                                                                  
Operating revenues                                     $ 3,997   $ 3,544   $ 2,858
                                                       -------   -------   -------
Operating expenses
  Cost of natural gas                                    2,283     1,830     1,192
  Other operating expenses                                 953       950       879
  Depreciation                                             255       289       276
  Income taxes                                             157       132       172
  Franchise fees and other taxes                           114       106        93
                                                       -------   -------   -------
    Total operating expenses                             3,762     3,307     2,612
                                                       -------   -------   -------
Operating income                                           235       237       246
                                                       -------   -------   -------
Other income and (deductions)
  Interest income                                           17        38        11
  Regulatory interest - net                                  9         3        (4)
  Allowance for equity funds used during 
    construction                                             5         9        10
  Income taxes on non-operating income                       2        (8)        2
  Preferred dividends of subsidiaries                       (1)       (1)       (1)
  Gain on sale of partnership assets                        15        --        -- 
  Other - net                                               --        (6)        9
                                                       -------   -------   -------
    Total                                                   47        35        27
                                                       -------   -------   -------
Interest charges
  Long-term debt                                            35        41        40
  Other                                                     12        13        23
  Allowance for borrowed funds used during 
    construction                                            (1)       (3)       (3)
                                                       -------   -------   -------
    Total                                                   46        51        60
                                                       -------   -------   -------
Net income                                                 236       221       213
Preferred dividend requirements                              4         4         4
                                                       -------   -------   -------
Earnings applicable to common shares                   $   232   $   217   $   209
                                                       =======   =======   =======
See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


31



PACIFIC ENTERPRISES AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Dollars in millions)
                                               
                                               
                                                  December 31,     December 31,
                                                      2004             2003
                                                 -------------    -------------
                                                           
ASSETS
Utility plant - at original cost                    $ 7,254           $ 7,007
Accumulated depreciation                             (2,863)           (2,739)
                                                    -------           -------
    Utility plant - net                               4,391             4,268
                                                    -------           -------
Current assets:   
  Cash and cash equivalents                              34                32
  Accounts receivable - trade                           673               509
  Accounts receivable - other                            14                36
  Interest receivable                                    32                30
  Due from unconsolidated affiliates                      7                76
  Income taxes receivable                                31                48
  Deferred income taxes                                   9                --
  Regulatory assets arising from fixed-price
    contracts and other derivatives                      97                85
  Other regulatory assets                                26                 8
  Inventories                                            72                74
  Other                                                  10                12
                                                    -------           -------
    Total current assets                              1,005               910
                                                    -------           -------
Other assets:
  Due from unconsolidated affiliates                    396               356
  Regulatory assets arising from fixed-price
    contracts and other derivatives                      52               148
  Sundry                                                109               151
                                                    -------           -------
    Total other assets                                  557               655
                                                    -------           -------
Total assets                                        $ 5,953           $ 5,833
                                                    =======           =======
 
See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


32


PACIFIC ENTERPRISES AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Dollars in millions)
                                                
                                               
                                                 December 31,      December 31,
                                                     2004              2003
                                                 -------------     ------------
                                                              
CAPITALIZATION AND LIABILITIES
Capitalization:
  Common stock (600 million shares authorized;
    84 million shares outstanding)                  $ 1,453           $ 1,367
  Retained earnings                                     285               253
  Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)          (4)               (3)
                                                    -------           -------
    Total common equity                               1,734             1,617
  Preferred stock                                        80                80
                                                    -------           -------
    Total shareholders' equity                        1,814             1,697
  Long-term debt                                        864               762
                                                    -------           -------
    Total capitalization                              2,678             2,459
                                                    -------           -------
Current liabilities:
  Short-term debt                                        30                --
  Accounts payable - trade                              314               227
  Accounts payable - other                               65                44
  Due to unconsolidated affiliates                      127               121
  Interest payable                                       10                18
  Deferred income taxes                                  --                24
  Regulatory balancing accounts - net                   178                86
  Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives            97                86
  Customer deposits                                      49                43
  Current portion of long-term debt                      --               175
  Other                                                 259               262
                                                    -------           -------
    Total current liabilities                         1,129             1,086
                                                    -------           -------

Deferred credits and other liabilities:
  Customer advances for construction                     55                40
  Postretirement benefits other than pensions            64                72
  Deferred income taxes                                 123               121
  Deferred investment tax credits                        41                44
  Regulatory liabilities arising from cost of
    removal obligations                               1,446             1,392
  Other regulatory liabilities                           67               109
  Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives            52               148
  Preferred stock of subsidiary                          20                20
  Deferred credits and other                            278               342
                                                    -------           -------
    Total deferred credits and other liabilities      2,146             2,288
                                                    -------           -------
Commitments and contingencies (Note 10)

Total liabilities and shareholders' equity          $ 5,953           $ 5,833
                                                    =======           =======

See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


33


PACIFIC ENTERPRISES AND SUBSIDIARIES
STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in millions)

                                                     Years ended December 31,
                                                     2004      2003      2002  
                                                   -------   -------   -------    
                                                               
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES                                          
  Net income                                       $   236   $   221   $   213 
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net                                  
   cash provided by operating activities:                                     
    Depreciation                                       255       289       276 
    Deferred income taxes and investment                                     
      tax credits                                      (15)       38        38
    Gain on sale of partnership assets                 (15)       --        -- 
  Changes in other assets                                3        (3)       16 
  Changes in other liabilities                         (46)      (46)       --
  Changes in working capital components:                                      
    Accounts receivable                               (145)      (44)      (67)
    Interest receivable                                 (1)      (30)       -- 
    Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives         (2)       (2)        6
    Inventories                                          2         2       (34) 
    Other current assets                                 1        10        (4) 
    Accounts payable                                   107        35        (4)
    Income taxes                                        61        38       (69) 
    Due to/from affiliates - net                        34        37        12 
    Regulatory balancing accounts                       93       (99)       80 
    Regulatory assets and liabilities                  (23)      (24)        1
    Customer deposits                                    6       (64)       66 
    Other current liabilities                           (7)       17        (9) 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net cash provided by operating activities        544       375       521 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES                                          
  Expenditures for property, plant and equipment      (311)     (318)     (331)
  Affiliate loans                                       11        97      (177)
  Net proceeds from sale of assets                       7         5        -- 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net cash used in investing activities           (293)     (216)     (508)
                                                   -------   -------   -------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES                                          
  Common dividends paid                               (200)     (250)     (100)
  Preferred dividends paid                              (4)       (4)       (4)
  Issuance of long-term debt                           100       500       250 
  Payments on long-term debt                          (175)     (395)     (100)
  Increase (decrease) in short-term debt                30        --       (50)
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net cash used in financing activities           (249)     (149)       (4)
                                                   -------   -------   -------
Increase in cash and cash equivalents                    2        10         9 
Cash and cash equivalents, January 1                    32        22        13 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
Cash and cash equivalents, December 31             $    34   $    32   $    22 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION                              
  Interest payments, net of amounts capitalized    $    49   $    54   $    50 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
  Income tax payments, net of refunds              $   111   $    99   $   200 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF NON-CASH INVESTING 
  AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES
    Assets contributed by Sempra Energy            $    --   $    48   $    --
    Liabilities assumed                                 --       (17)       --
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net assets contributed by Sempra Energy      $    --   $    31   $    -- 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.



34     

     
     PACIFIC ENTERPRISES AND SUBSIDIARIES
     STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY 
     Years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002
     (Dollars in millions)
     
      
      
                                                                                                  Accumulated
                                                                                                  Other          Total  
                                        Comprehensive    Preferred     Common       Retained      Comprehensive Shareholders'
                                        Income           Stock         Stock        Earnings      Income(Loss)   Equity
      -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                      
      Balance at December 31, 2001                        $ 80        $ 1,317         $ 177         $ --        $ 1,574 
      Net income/comprehensive income         $ 213                                     213                         213 
                                              =====  
      Preferred stock dividends declared                                                 (4)                         (4)
      Common stock dividends declared                                                  (100)                       (100)
      Capital contribution                                                  1                                         1 
      -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Balance at December 31, 2002                          80          1,318           286           --          1,684 
      Net income                              $ 221                                     221                         221 
      Other comprehensive income 
        adjustment - pension                     (3)                                                  (3)            (3) 
                                              -----  
      Comprehensive income                    $ 218  
                                              =====
      Quasi-reorganization adjustment                                                                                    
        (Note 1)                                                           18                                        18 
      Preferred stock dividends declared                                                 (4)                         (4)
      Common stock dividends declared                                                  (250)                       (250)
      Capital contribution                                                 31                                        31 
      -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Balance at December 31, 2003                          80          1,367           253           (3)         1,697 
      Net income                              $ 236                                     236                         236 
      Other comprehensive income 
        adjustment - pension                     (1)                                                  (1)            (1)
                                              -----                                                                     
      Comprehensive income                    $ 235                                                                     
                                              =====
      Quasi-reorganization adjustment                                                                                   
        (Note 1)                                                           86                                        86 
      Preferred stock dividends declared                                                 (4)                         (4)
      Common stock dividends declared                                                  (200)                       (200)
      -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Balance at December 31, 2004                        $ 80        $ 1,453         $ 285         $ (4)       $ 1,814
      =======================================================================================================================
       
      See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. 
   

35

NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 

NOTE 1. SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES   

Principles of Consolidation

The Consolidated Financial Statements include the accounts of Pacific 
Enterprises (PE or the company) and its subsidiary, Southern California 
Gas Company (SoCalGas or the company). The financial statements herein 
are, in one case, the Consolidated Financial Statements of PE and its 
subsidiary, SoCalGas, and, in the second case, the Consolidated 
Financial Statements of SoCalGas and its subsidiaries, which comprise 
less than one percent of SoCalGas' consolidated financial position and 
results of operations. All material intercompany accounts and 
transactions have been eliminated. 

As a subsidiary of Sempra Energy, the company receives certain services 
therefrom, for which it is charged its allocable share of the cost of 
such services. Management believes that cost is reasonable, but 
probably less than if the company had to provide those services itself.

Quasi-Reorganization

In 1993, PE effected a quasi-reorganization for financial reporting 
purposes as of December 31, 1992. Certain of the liabilities 
established in connection with the quasi-reorganization were favorably 
resolved in 2003 and 2004, resulting in adjustments to common stock in 
these years. The remaining liabilities will be resolved in future years 
and management believes the provisions established for these matters 
are adequate. 

Use of Estimates in the Preparation of the Financial Statements 

The preparation of financial statements in conformity with generally 
accepted accounting principles requires management to make estimates 
and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of revenues and 
expenses during the reporting period, and the reported amounts of 
assets and liabilities and the disclosure of contingent assets and 
liabilities at the date of the financial statements. Actual amounts can 
differ significantly from those estimates. 

Basis of Presentation 

Certain prior-year amounts have been reclassified to conform to the 
current year's presentation. 

Regulatory Matters

Effects of Regulation 

The accounting policies of the company conform with generally accepted 
accounting principles for regulated enterprises and reflect the 
policies of the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) and the 
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). SoCalGas and its 
affiliate, San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E), are collectively referred 
to herein as "the California Utilities."

36

The company prepares its financial statements in accordance with the 
provisions of SFAS 71, Accounting for the Effects of Certain Types of 
Regulation, under which a regulated utility records a regulatory asset 
if it is probable that, through the ratemaking process, the utility 
will recover that asset from customers. To the extent that recovery is 
no longer probable as a result of changes in regulation or the 
utility's competitive position, the related regulatory assets would be 
written off. In addition, SFAS 144, Accounting for the Impairment or 
Disposal of Long-Lived Assets, requires that a loss be recognized 
whenever a regulator excludes all or part of utility plant or 
regulatory assets from ratebase. Regulatory liabilities represent 
reductions in future rates for amounts due to customers. Information 
concerning regulatory assets and liabilities is provided below in 
"Revenues," "Regulatory Balancing Accounts" and "Regulatory Assets and 
Liabilities." 

Regulatory Balancing Accounts 

The amounts included in regulatory balancing accounts at December 31, 
2004, represent net payables (payables net of receivables) that are 
returned by reducing future rates. 
 
Except for certain costs subject to balancing account treatment, 
fluctuations in most operating and maintenance accounts affect utility 
earnings. Balancing accounts provide a mechanism for charging utility 
customers the amount actually incurred for certain costs, primarily 
commodity costs. The CPUC has also approved balancing account treatment 
for variances between forecast and actual for SoCalGas' commodity costs 
and volumes, eliminating the impact on earnings from any throughput and 
revenue variances from adopted forecast levels. Additional information 
on regulatory matters is included in Note 9. 

Regulatory Assets and Liabilities 

In accordance with the accounting principles of SFAS 71, the company 
records regulatory assets and regulatory liabilities as discussed 
above. 

37

Regulatory assets (liabilities) as of December 31 relate to the 
following matters: 
  
(Dollars in millions)                              2004         2003 
---------------------------------------------------------------------
SoCalGas 
---------             
Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives     $   148      $   233 
Environmental remediation                            42           44 
Unamortized loss on retirement of debt, net          44           45 
Cost of removal obligation**                     (1,446)      (1,392)
Deferred taxes refundable in rates                 (199)        (194)
Employee benefit costs                               65          (77)
Other                                                 7            9 
                                                ---------------------
  Total                                          (1,339)      (1,332)
                                                                     
PE - Employee benefit costs (transferred to 
 SoCalGas in 2004)                                   --           72 
                                                ---------------------
  Total PE consolidated                         $(1,339)     $(1,260)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
                                          
** This is related to SFAS 143, Accounting for Asset Retirement 
Obligations, which is discussed below in "New Accounting Standards."

Net regulatory assets (liabilities) are recorded on the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets at December 31 as follows:

(Dollars in millions)                              2004         2003 
---------------------------------------------------------------------
SoCalGas                                         
--------
Current regulatory assets                       $   123      $    93 
Noncurrent regulatory assets                         52          148 
Current regulatory liabilities*                      (1)          -- 
Noncurrent regulatory liabilities                (1,513)      (1,573)
                                                ---------------------
   Total                                         (1,339)      (1,332)

PE - Noncurrent regulatory liabilities               --           72 
                                                ---------------------
   Total PE consolidated                        $(1,339)     $(1,260)
---------------------------------------------------------------------

* Included in Other Current Liabilities. 

All of these assets either earn a return, generally at short-term 
rates, or the cash has not yet been expended and the assets are offset 
by liabilities that do not incur a carrying cost. 

Cash and Cash Equivalents 

Cash equivalents are highly liquid investments with maturities of three 
months or less at the date of purchase. 

38

Collection Allowances 

The allowance for doubtful accounts was $5 million, $4 million and $4 
million at December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively. The company 
recorded a provision (reduction thereof) for doubtful accounts of $9 
million, $3 million and $(5) million in 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively. 

Inventories 

At December 31, 2004, inventory shown on the Consolidated Balance 
Sheets included natural gas of $61 million and materials and supplies 
of $11 million. The corresponding balances at December 31, 2003 were 
$63 million and $11 million, respectively. Natural gas is valued by the 
last-in first-out (LIFO) method. When the inventory is consumed, 
differences between the LIFO valuation and replacement cost are 
reflected in customer rates. Materials and supplies at SoCalGas are 
generally valued at the lower of average cost or market. 

Income Taxes

Income tax expense includes current and deferred income taxes from 
operations during the year. In accordance with SFAS 109, Accounting for 
Income Taxes, the company records deferred income taxes for temporary 
differences between the book and tax bases of assets and liabilities.  
Investment tax credits from prior years are being amortized to income 
over the estimated service lives of the properties. Other credits are 
recognized in income as earned. The company follows certain provisions 
of SFAS 109 that permit regulated enterprises to recognize deferred 
taxes as regulatory assets or liabilities if it is probable that such 
amounts will be recovered from, or returned to, customers. 

Property, Plant and Equipment 

Utility plant primarily represents the buildings, equipment and other 
facilities used by SoCalGas to provide natural gas services. 

The cost of plant includes labor, materials, contract services and 
certain expenditures, including refurbishments, replacement of major 
component parts and labor and overheads incurred to install the parts, 
incurred during a major maintenance outage of a generating plant. 
Maintenance costs are expensed as incurred.  In addition, the cost of 
plant includes an allowance for funds used during construction (AFUDC). 
The cost of most retired depreciable utility plant minus salvage value 
is charged to accumulated depreciation. 

Accumulated depreciation for natural gas utility plant at SoCalGas was 
$2.9 billion and $2.7 billion at December 31, 2004 and 2003, 
respectively. A discussion of SFAS 143 is provided below under "New 
Accounting Standards." Depreciation expense is based on the straight-
line method over the useful lives of the assets, an average of 23 years 
in each of 2004, 2003 and 2002, or a shorter period prescribed by the 
CPUC. The provision for depreciation as a percentage of average 
depreciable utility plant was 3.68, 4.36 and 4.34 in 2004, 2003 and 
2002, respectively. Note 9 includes a discussion of industry 
restructuring, which affected recorded depreciation. 

39

AFUDC, which represents the cost of debt and equity funds used to 
finance the construction of utility plant, is added to the cost of 
utility plant. Although it is not a current source of cash, AFUDC 
increases income and is recorded partly as an offset to interest 
charges and partly as a component of Other Income and Deductions in the 
Statements of Consolidated Income.  AFUDC amounted to $6 million, $12 
million and $13 million for 2004, 2003 and 2002, respectively. 

Legal Fees

Legal fees that are associated with a past event and not expected to be 
recovered in the future are accrued when it is probable that they will 
be incurred. 

Comprehensive Income 

Comprehensive income includes all changes, except those resulting from 
investments by owners and distributions to owners, in the equity of a 
business enterprise from transactions and other events, including 
foreign-currency translation adjustments minimum pension liability 
adjustments, and certain hedging activities. The components of Other 
Comprehensive Income, which consists of all these changes other than 
net income as shown on the Statement of Consolidated Income, are shown 
in the Statements of Consolidated Changes in Shareholders' Equity. At 
December 31, 2004, Accumulated Other Comprehensive Income consisted 
entirely of minimum pension liability adjustments, net of income tax. 

Revenues 

Revenues of SoCalGas are primarily derived from deliveries of natural 
gas to customers and changes in related regulatory balancing accounts. 
Revenues from natural gas sales and services are generally recorded 
under the accrual method and recognized upon delivery. Natural gas 
storage contract revenues are accrued on a monthly basis and reflect 
reservation, storage and injection charges in accordance with 
negotiated agreements, which have terms of up to three years. Operating 
revenue includes amounts for services rendered but unbilled 
(approximately one-half month's deliveries) at the end of each year. 

Additional information concerning utility revenue recognition is 
discussed above under "Regulatory Matters." 

Transactions with Affiliates 

On a daily basis, SoCalGas and SDG&E share numerous functions with each 
other and they also receive various services from and provide various 
services to Sempra Energy.

At December 31, 2004, PE has intercompany receivables from Sempra 
Energy and other affiliates of $4 million and $3 million, respectively. 
The corresponding amounts at December 31, 2003 were $73 million and $3 
million, respectively. Of the total balances, $22 million was recorded 
at SoCalGas at December 31, 2003 but no balance was recorded at 
SoCalGas at December 31, 2004. Such amounts are included in current 
assets as Due from Unconsolidated Affiliates. PE has a promissory note 
due from Sempra Energy which bears a variable interest rate based on 

40

short-term commercial paper rates. The balances of the note were $394 
million and $354 million at December 31, 2004 and 2003, respectively, 
and are included in noncurrent assets as Due from Unconsolidated 
Affiliates. PE also had $2 million due from other affiliates at both 
December 31, 2004 and 2003. 

In addition, PE had intercompany payables due to various affiliates of 
$127 million and $121 million at December 31, 2004 and 2003, 
respectively, which are reported as a current liability. These balances 
are due on demand. Of the total balances, $55 million was recorded at 
SoCalGas at both December 31, 2004 and 2003. 

New Accounting Standards 

SFAS 123 (revised 2004), "Share-Based Payment" (SFAS 123R): In December 
2004, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued SFAS 123R, 
a revision of SFAS 123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation (SFAS 
123), which establishes the accounting for transactions in which an 
entity exchanges its equity instruments for goods or services received. 
This statement requires companies to measure and record the cost of 
employee services received in exchange for an award of equity 
instruments based on the grant-date fair value of the award and gives 
companies three alternative transition methods. The modified 
prospective method requires companies to recognize compensation cost 
for unvested awards that are outstanding on the effective date based on 
the fair value that the company had originally estimated for purposes 
of preparing its SFAS 123 pro forma disclosures. For all new awards 
that are granted or modified after the effective date, a company would 
use SFAS 123R's measurement model. The second alternative is a 
variation of the modified prospective method, allowing companies to 
restate earlier interim periods in the year that SFAS 123R is adopted 
using applicable SFAS 123 pro forma amounts. Under the third 
alternative, the modified retrospective method, companies would apply 
the modified prospective method, but also restate their prior financial 
statements to include the amounts that were previously reported in 
their pro forma disclosures under the original provisions of SFAS 123. 
The company has not determined the transition method it will use. The 
effective date of this statement is July 1, 2005 for Sempra Energy.   

SFAS 132 (revised 2003), "Employers' Disclosures about Pensions and 
Other Postretirement Benefits": This statement revised employers' 
disclosures about pension plans and other postretirement benefit plans. 
It requires disclosures beyond those in the original SFAS 132 about the 
assets, obligations, cash flows and net periodic benefit cost of 
defined benefit pension plans and other defined postretirement plans. 
It does not change the measurement or recognition of those plans. Note 
5 provides additional information on employee benefit plans. 

SFAS 143, "Accounting for Asset Retirement Obligations": Beginning in 
2003, SFAS 143 requires entities to record liabilities for future costs 
expected to be incurred when assets are retired from service, if the 
retirement process is legally required. It requires recording of the 
estimated retirement cost over the life of the related asset by 
depreciating the present value of the obligation (measured at the time 
of the asset's acquisition) and by accreting the present value of the 
estimated future obligation over the asset's estimated useful life. The 
adoption of SFAS 143 on January 1, 2003 resulted in the recording of 

41

asset retirement obligations of $10 million associated with the future 
retirement of three storage facilities. It also requires the 
reclassification of estimated removal costs, which had historically 
been recorded in accumulated depreciation, to a regulatory liability. 
At both December 31, 2004 and 2003, these costs were $1.4 billion. 
Implementation of SFAS 143 has had no effect on results of operations 
and is not expected to have a significant effect in the future.

The changes in the asset retirement obligations for the years ended 
December 31, 2004 and 2003 are as follows (dollars in millions): 

                                                  2004       2003     
------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance as of January 1                          $  11*     $  --
Adoption of SFAS 143                                --         10
Accretion expense                                    1          1
Revision of estimated cash flows                    (3)        --   
                                                 ------     ------
Balance as of December 31                        $   9*     $  11*
------------------------------------------------------------------

* The current portion of the obligation is included in Other Current 
Liabilities on the Consolidated Balance Sheets.

In June 2004, the FASB issued a proposed interpretation, Accounting for 
Conditional Asset Retirement Obligations, an interpretation of FASB 
Statement No. 143. The interpretation would clarify that a legal 
obligation to perform an asset retirement activity that is conditional 
on a future event is within the scope of SFAS 143. Accordingly, the 
interpretation would require an entity to recognize a liability for a 
conditional asset retirement obligation if the liability's fair value 
can be reasonably estimated. A final interpretation is expected to be 
issued by the FASB in the first quarter of 2005 and would be effective 
for the company on December 31, 2005. The company has not determined 
the effect the proposed interpretation would have on its financial 
statements if the proposed interpretation is adopted.

SFAS 149, "Amendment of Statement 133 on Derivative Instruments and 
Hedging Activities": Effective July 1, 2003, SFAS 149 amended and 
clarified accounting for derivative instruments, including certain 
derivative instruments embedded in other contracts, and for hedging 
activities under SFAS 133. Under SFAS 149, natural gas forward 
contracts that are subject to unplanned netting generally do not 
qualify for the normal purchases and normal sales exception. ("Unplanned 
netting" refers to situations whereby contracts are settled by paying or 
receiving money for the difference between the contract price and the 
market price at the date on which physical delivery would have 
occurred. The "normal purchases and normal sales exception" provides 
for not marking to market contracts that are very rarely settled by 
means other than physical delivery of the commodity involved in the 
transaction.) In addition, effective January 1, 2004, power contracts 
that are subject to unplanned netting and that do not meet the normal 
purchases and normal sales exception under SFAS 149 will continue to be 
marked to market. Implementation of SFAS 149 did not have a material 
impact on reported net income.

42

SFAS 151, "Inventory Costs, an amendment of ARB No. 43, Chapter 4": 
This statement amends the guidance in Accounting Research Bulletin 
(ARB) No. 43, Chapter 4, Inventory Pricing, to clarify the accounting 
for abnormal amounts of idle facility expense, freight, handling cost 
and wasted material. This statement requires that those items be 
recognized as current-period charges regardless of whether they meet 
the criteria of "abnormal". The statement is effective for inventory 
costs incurred during fiscal years beginning after June 15, 2005. The 
company does not expect that this statement will have a material impact 
on the company's financial statements.

FASB Staff Position (FSP) 106-2, "Accounting and Disclosure 
Requirements Related to the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and 
Modernization Act of 2003": The Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement 
and Modernization Act of 2003 (the "Act") was enacted in December of 
2003. The Act establishes a prescription drug benefit under Medicare, 
known as "Medicare Part D," and a tax-exempt federal subsidy to 
sponsors of retiree health care benefit plans that provide a benefit 
that actuarially is at least equivalent to Medicare Part D. At December 
31, 2003, the company elected a one-time deferral of the accounting for 
the Act, as permitted by FSP 106-1, Accounting and Disclosure 
Requirements Related to the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement and 
Modernization Act of 2003. 

In May 2004, the FASB issued FSP 106-2, which supersedes FSP 106-1 and 
provides guidance on the accounting, disclosure, effective date and 
transition requirements related to the Medicare Prescription Drug Act. 
During 2004, the company adopted FSP 106-2 retroactive to the beginning 
of the year. 

The company and its actuarial advisors determined that benefits 
provided to certain participants will actuarially be at least 
equivalent to Medicare Part D, and, accordingly, the company will be 
entitled to an expected tax-exempt subsidy that reduces the company's 
accumulated postretirement benefit obligation under the plan at January 
1, 2004 by $94 million and the net postretirement benefit cost for 2004 
by $12 million. Employee benefit plans are discussed further in Note 5.  

NOTE 2. SHORT-TERM BORROWINGS 

Committed Lines of Credit

SoCalGas and its affiliate, SDG&E, have a combined $500 million three-year 
syndicated revolving credit facility under which each utility individually 
may borrow up to $300 million, subject to a combined borrowing limit for 
both utilities of $500 million. Borrowings under the agreement bear 
interest at rates varying with market rates and SoCalGas' credit rating. 
The agreement requires SoCalGas to maintain, at the end of each quarter, a 
ratio of total indebtedness to total capitalization (as defined in the 
agreement) of no more than 60 percent. Borrowings under the agreement are 
individual obligations of the borrowing utility and a default by one 
utility would not constitute a default, or preclude borrowings by, the 
other. At December 31, 2004, SoCalGas had no amounts outstanding under this 
facility. SoCalGas had $30 million of commercial paper outstanding at 
December 31, 2004. 

43

PE has a revolving credit commitment of $500 million that expires in 
September 2005.  Borrowings under the credit agreement are available to 
provide loans to Sempra Global and would bear interest at rates varying 
with market rates, PE's credit ratings and amounts borrowed. Borrowings are 
guaranteed by Sempra Energy and would be subject to mandatory repayment if 
Sempra Energy's or SoCalGas' ratio of debt to total capitalization (as 
defined in the agreement) were to exceed 65 percent, or should there be a 
change in law materially and adversely affecting the ability of SoCalGas to 
pay dividends or make other distributions to PE. No amounts were 
outstanding under this facility at December 31, 2004.

The company's weighted average interest rate on the total short-term debt 
outstanding was 2.25% at December 31, 2004.

NOTE 3.  LONG-TERM DEBT

--------------------------------------------------------------
                                             December 31,     
(Dollars in millions)                     2004          2003  
--------------------------------------------------------------
First mortgage bonds
  Variable rate (2.63% at December 31, 
   2004)December 1, 2009                $  100       $   --
  4.375% January 15, 2011                  100          100
  Variable rates after fixed-to-
   floating rate swaps (2.69% at 
   December 31, 2004) January 15, 2011     150          150
  4.8% October 1, 2012                     250          250
  5.45% April 15, 2018                     250          250
  6.875% November 1, 2025                   --          175
                                        ----------------------
                                           850          925
                                        ----------------------
Other long-term debt
  6.375% May 14, 2006                        8            8
  5.67% January 18, 2028                     5            5
  Market value adjustments for interest 
    rate swaps - net (Expires 2011)          2            -
                                        ----------------------
                                            15           13
                                        ----------------------
                                           865          938
                                        ----------------------
  Current portion of long-term debt         --         (175)
  Unamortized discount on long-term debt    (1)          (1)
                                        ----------------------
Total                                   $  864       $  762
--------------------------------------------------------------

Excluding market value adjustments for interest-rate swaps, maturities 
of long-term debt are $8 million in 2006, $100 million in 2009 and $755 
million thereafter. 

First Mortgage Bonds 

First mortgage bonds are secured by a lien on SoCalGas' utility plant. 
SoCalGas may issue additional first mortgage bonds upon compliance with 

44

the provisions of its bond indentures, which require, among other 
things, the satisfaction of pro forma earnings-coverage tests on first 
mortgage bond interest and the availability of sufficient mortgaged 
property to support the additional bonds, after giving effect to prior 
bond redemptions. The most restrictive of these tests (the property 
test) would permit the issuance, subject to CPUC authorization, of an 
additional $598 million of first mortgage bonds at December 31, 2004. 

SoCalGas called $175 million of long-term debt in January 2004 and 
incurred $2 million in call premium costs. This amount has been 
recorded as a regulatory asset and is being amortized over the life of 
the original issue.   

In December 2004, the company issued $100 million of first mortgage 
bonds maturing in 2009. The bonds bear interest at 0.17% above LIBOR.

Unsecured Long-term Debt

Various long-term obligations totaling $13 million are unsecured at 
December 31, 2004. 

On January 15, 2003, $70 million of SoCalGas' 5.67% $75 million medium-
term notes were put back to the company. 

Interest-Rate Swaps 

The company periodically enters into interest-rate swap agreements to 
moderate its exposure to interest-rate changes and to lower its overall 
cost of borrowing. In December 2003, SoCalGas entered into an interest-
rate swap that effectively exchanged the fixed rate on $150 million of 
its $250 million 4.375% first mortgage bonds for a floating rate. The 
swap expires in 2011. 

NOTE 4. INCOME TAXES 

The reconciliation of the statutory federal income tax rate to the 
effective income tax rate is as follows: 

                                               Years ended December 31,
                                                2004     2003     2002
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Statutory federal income tax rate               35.0%    35.0%    35.0%
Depreciation                                     5.1      6.1      5.2
State income taxes, net of 
  federal income tax benefit                     4.8      5.8      5.4
Tax credits                                     (0.7)    (0.8)    (0.8)
Settlement of Internal Revenue Service audit      --     (3.1)      --
Equity AFUDC		         		(3.6)    (1.0)    (1.0)
Other,  net                                     (1.1)    (3.2)     0.6 
                                               ------------------------
     Effective income tax rate                  39.5%    38.8%    44.4%
----------------------------------------------------------------------

45

The components of income tax expense are as follows: 

                                              Years ended December 31,
(Dollars in millions)                           2004    2003     2002
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Current:
  Federal                                      $ 125   $  73    $ 103
  State                                           45      29       29
                                               -----------------------
    Total                                        170     102      132
                                               -----------------------
Deferred:
  Federal                                         (1)     37       36
  State                                          (11)      4        5
                                               -----------------------
    Total                                        (12)     41       41
                                               -----------------------
Deferred investment tax credits                   (3)     (3)      (3)
                                               -----------------------
Total income tax expense                       $ 155   $ 140    $ 170
----------------------------------------------------------------------

On the Statements of Consolidated Income, federal and state income 
taxes are allocated between operating income and other income. PE is 
included in the consolidated income tax return of Sempra Energy and is 
allocated income tax expense from Sempra Energy in an amount equal to 
that which would result from PE's having always filed a separate 
return.

46

Accumulated deferred income taxes at December 31 relate to the 
following: 

(Dollars in millions)                              2004        2003
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Deferred tax liabilities:
  Differences in financial and
    tax bases of utility plant and other assets   $ 266       $ 269
  Regulatory balancing accounts                      50          76
  Regulatory assets                                  --          32
  Global settlement                                  --          (1)
  Loss on reacquired debt                            18          17
  Other                                               1          30
                                                  --------------------
     Total deferred tax liabilities                 335         423
                                                  --------------------
Deferred tax assets:
  Investment tax credits                             29          31
  Postretirement benefits                            40          77
  Deferred compensation                              14          19
  State income taxes                                 15          11
  Workers compensation                               21          20
  Lease                                              15          18
  Other accruals not yet deductible                  79          95
  Other                                               8           7
                                                  --------------------
     Total deferred tax assets                      221         278
                                                  --------------------
Net deferred income tax liability                 $ 114       $ 145
----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The net deferred income tax liability is recorded on the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets at December 31 as follows: 
  
(Dollars in millions)                              2004        2003
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Current (asset) liability                         $  (9)      $  24 
Noncurrent liability                                123         121
                                                  --------------------
    Total                                         $ 114       $ 145
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Pacific Enterprises' Quasi-Reorganization

Effective December 31, 1992, PE effected a quasi-reorganization for 
financial reporting purposes. The reorganization resulted in a 
restatement of the company's assets and liabilities to their estimated 
fair value at December 31, 1992 and the elimination of PE's retained 
earnings deficit.  Since the reorganization was for financial purposes 
and not a taxable transaction, the company established deferred taxes 
relative to the book and tax bases differences.  

During 2004, the company completed an extensive analysis of PE's 
deferred tax accounts. The analysis resulted in a $72 million reduction 
of the deferred tax liabilities and an offsetting credit to equity.  
The credit was recorded to equity because the balances related to tax 

47

effects of transactions prior to the quasi-reorganization.  In 2004, 
the company also concluded its outstanding IRS examinations and appeals 
related to PE and its subsidiaries. As of December 31, 2004, the 
company's balance sheet includes a net deferred tax asset of $15 
million related to remaining reserves arising from the quasi-
reorganization.

NOTE 5. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

Pension and Other Postretirement Benefits 

The company has funded and unfunded noncontributory defined benefit 
plans that together cover substantially all of its employees.  The 
plans provide defined benefits based on years of service and either 
final average or career salary.

The company also has other postretirement benefit plans covering 
substantially all of its employees. The life insurance plans are both 
contributory and noncontributory, and the health care plans are 
contributory, with participants' contributions adjusted annually. Other 
postretirement benefits include retiree life insurance, medical 
benefits for retirees and their spouses, and Medicare Part B 
reimbursement for certain retirees.

There were no amendments to the company's pension and other 
postretirement benefit plans in 2003 or 2004. During 2002, the company 
had amendments reflecting retiree cost of living adjustments, which 
resulted in an increase in the pension plan benefit obligation of $48 
million. 

December 31 is the measurement date for the pension and other 
postretirement benefit plans. The following table provides a 
reconciliation of the changes in the plans' projected benefit 
obligations during the latest two years, the fair value of assets and a 
statement of the funded status as of the latest two year ends:
 
48



                                                                          Other         
                                              Pension Benefits    Postretirement Benefits
                                              ----------------    -----------------------
(Dollars in millions)                          2004      2003          2004      2003    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  
CHANGE IN PROJECTED BENEFIT OBLIGATION:
Net obligation at January 1                 $ 1,551   $ 1,368        $  820    $  682    
Service cost                                     30        27            17        15    
Interest cost                                    93        90            43        47    
Actuarial loss (gain)                            84       172           (74)      103    
Transfer of liability from Sempra Energy          2         6            --        --    
Benefit payments                               (135)     (112)          (34)      (27)   
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Net obligation at December 31                 1,625     1,551           772       820    
                                            ---------------------------------------------

CHANGE IN PLAN ASSETS:
Fair value of plan assets at January 1        1,473     1,289           471       370    
Actual return on plan assets                    176       294            53        83   
Employer contributions                           --         2            42        45    
Transfer of assets from Sempra Energy             2        --            --        --    
Benefit payments                               (135)     (112)          (34)      (27)   
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Fair value of plan assets at December 31      1,516     1,473           532       471    
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Benefit obligation, net of plan assets
  at December 31                               (109)      (78)         (240)     (349)   
Unrecognized net actuarial loss                  74        71           176       277    
Unrecognized prior service cost                  65        71            --        --    
Unrecognized net transition obligation           --         1            --        --    
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Net recorded asset (liability) 
  at December 31                            $    30    $   65        $  (64)   $  (72)   
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The net asset (liability) is recorded on the Consolidated Balance 
Sheets at December 31 as follows:


                                                                           Other         
                                              Pension Benefits    Postretirement Benefits
                                              ----------------    -----------------------
(Dollars in millions)                          2004      2003         2004       2003    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
Prepaid benefit cost                          $  46     $  78        $  --      $  --    
Accrued benefit cost                            (16)      (13)         (64)       (72)   
Additional minimum liability                     (7)       (6)          --         --    
Accumulated other comprehensive 
  income (pretax)                                 7         6           --         --    
                                              -------------------------------------------
Net recorded asset (liability)                $  30     $  65        $ (64)     $ (72)   
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


At December 31, 2004 and 2003, the company had an unfunded and a funded 
pension plan. The funded plan had projected benefit obligations in 
excess of its plan assets. The following table provides information for 
the funded plan at December 31: 

(Dollars in millions)                          2004      2003         
-------------------------------------------------------------
Projected benefit obligation                $ 1,596   $ 1,526         
Accumulated benefit obligation              $ 1,384   $ 1,333         
Fair value of plan assets                   $ 1,516   $ 1,473         

49

The following table provides the components of net periodic benefit 
costs (income) for the years ended December 31:



                                                                           Other         
                                          Pension Benefits        Postretirement Benefits
                                          ----------------        -----------------------
(Dollars in millions)                   2004    2003    2002        2004    2003    2002 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  
Service cost                           $  30   $  27   $  27       $  17   $  15   $  10 
Interest cost                             93      90      86          43      47      35 
Expected return on assets                (98)   (107)   (130)        (34)    (32)    (35)
Amortization of:
  Transition obligation                   --       1       1          --       8       8 
  Prior service cost                       7       6       4          --      --      -- 
  Actuarial (gain) loss                    3       1     (19)          8       9      --
Regulatory adjustment                    (61)    (14)     32          10      (4)     24 
                                       --------------------------------------------------
Total net periodic benefit
  cost (income)                        $ (26)  $   4   $   1       $  44   $  43   $  42 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

As described in Note 1, the company adopted FSP 106-2 in 2004 
retroactive to the beginning of the year. The company and its actuarial 
advisors determined that benefits provided to certain participants will 
actuarially be at least equivalent to Medicare Part D, and, 
accordingly, the company will be entitled to an expected tax-exempt 
subsidy that reduces the company's accumulated postretirement benefit 
obligation under the plan at January 1, 2004 by $94 million and the net 
postretirement benefit cost for 2004 by $12 million.   

The significant assumptions related to the company's pension and other 
postretirement benefit plans are as follows:



                                                                           Other         
                                               Pension Benefits  Postretirement Benefits
                                               ----------------  ----------------------- 
                                                2004      2003         2004       2003    
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                      
WEIGHTED-AVERAGE ASSUMPTIONS USED 
 TO DETERMINE BENEFIT OBLIGATION
 AS OF DECEMBER 31:
Discount rate                                   5.66%     6.00%        5.66%     6.00%   
Rate of compensation increase                   4.50%     4.50%        4.50%     4.50%   

WEIGHTED-AVERAGE ASSUMPTIONS USED 
 TO DETERMINE NET PERIODIC BENEFIT
 COSTS FOR YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31:
Discount rate                                   6.00%     6.50%        6.00%     6.50%   
Expected return on plan assets                  7.50%     7.50%        7.50%     7.50%
Rate of compensation increase                   4.50%     4.50%        4.50%     4.50%   
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


50

The expected long-term rate of return on plan assets is derived from 
historical returns for broad asset classes consistent with 
expectations from a variety of sources, including pension consultants 
and investment advisors.



                                                         2004                    2003    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         
ASSUMED HEALTH CARE COST
  TREND RATES AT DECEMBER 31:
Health-care cost trend rate                             19.00% *                30.00% * 
Rate to which the cost trend rate is assumed to
  decline (the ultimate trend)                           5.50%                   5.50%
Year that the rate reaches the ultimate trend            2008                    2008 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*  This is the weighted average of the increases for all health plans. The rate for these  
   plans ranged from 10% to 20% in 2004 and from 15% to 40% in 2003, respectively. 


Assumed health-care cost trend rates have a significant effect on the 
amounts reported for the health-care plan costs. A one-percent change 
in assumed health-care cost trend rates would have the following 
effects:




(Dollars in millions)                                   1% Increase     1% Decrease      
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           
Effect on total of service and interest cost
  components of net periodic postretirement
  health-care benefit cost                                 $  12           $   9
                                                           
                                                         
Effect on the health-care component of the 
  accumulated other postretirement
  benefit obligation                                       $ 123           $  97         
                                                               
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Pension Plan Investment Strategy

The asset allocation for Sempra Energy's pension trust (which includes 
SoCalGas' pension plan) at December 31, 2004 and 2003 and the target 
allocation for 2005 by asset categories are as follows: 




                                                 Target               Percentage of Plan    
                                               Allocation           Assets at December 31, 
                                               ----------           ----------------------
Asset Category                                    2005                2004       2003     
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         
U.S. Equity                                         45%                 45%        45%    
Foreign Equity                                      25                  32         30    
Fixed Income                                        30                  23         25    
                                               -------------------------------------------
  Total                                            100%                100%       100%    
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


51

The company's investment strategy is to stay fully invested at all 
times and maintain its strategic asset allocation, keeping the 
investment structure relatively simple. The equity portfolio is 
balanced to maintain risk characteristics similar to the Standard & 
Poor's 1500 with respect to market capitalization, and industry and 
sector exposures. The foreign equity portfolios are managed to track 
the MSCI Europe, Pacific Rim and Emerging Markets indexes. Bond 
portfolios are managed with respect to the Lehman Aggregate Index. The 
plan does not invest in Sempra Energy securities.

Investment Strategy for Other Postretirement Benefit Plans 

The asset allocation for the company's other postretirement benefit 
plans at December 31, 2004 and 2003 and the target allocation for 2005 
by asset categories are as follows:



                                                 Target               Percentage of Plan    
                                               Allocation           Assets at December 31,
                                               ----------           ---------------------- 
Asset Category                                    2005                2004       2003     
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        
U.S. Equity                                         70%                 73%        71%    
Fixed Income                                        30                  27         27    
Cash                                                 0                   0          2    
                                               -------------------------------------------
  Total                                            100%                100%       100%    
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The company's other postretirement benefit plans, which are distinct 
from other postretirement benefit plans included in Sempra Energy's 
pension trust (shown above), are funded by cash contributions from the 
company and the retirees. The asset allocation is designed to match the 
long-term growth of the plan's liability. These plans are managed using 
index funds.

Future Payments

The company expects to contribute $2 million to its pension plan and 
$45 million to its other postretirement benefit plans in 2005.

The following table reflects the total benefits expected to be paid for 
the next 10 years to current employees and retirees from the plans or 
from the company's assets, including both the company's share of the 
benefit cost and, where applicable, the participants' share of the 
costs, which is funded by participant contributions to the plans. 

52




                                                               Other         
(Dollars in millions)              Pension Benefits    Postretirement Benefits
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     
2005                                   $ 104              $  32
2006                                   $ 109              $  34 
2007                                   $ 115              $  37 
2008                                   $ 120              $  39
2009                                   $ 126              $  41
2010-2014                              $ 705              $ 234
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The expected future Medicare Part D subsidy payments are as follows:
                                                     
(Dollars in millions)                       
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2005                                                      $  --
2006                                                      $   3
2007                                                      $   3
2008                                                      $   3
2009                                                      $   3
2010-2014                                                 $  21  
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Savings Plan 

The company offers a trusteed savings plan to all eligible employees. 
Eligibility to participate in the plan is immediate for salary 
deferrals. Employees may contribute, subject to plan provisions, from 
one percent to 25 percent of their regular earnings. After one year of 
completed service, the company begins to make matching contributions. 
Employer contributions are equal to 50 percent of the first 6 percent 
of eligible base salary contributed by employees and, if certain 
company goals are met, an additional amount related to incentive 
compensation payments. 

Employer contributions are invested in Sempra Energy common stock and 
had been required to remain so invested until termination of employment 
or until the employee's attainment of age 55, when they could be 
transitioned into other investments. Effective January 1, 2005, all 
employees have the ability to transfer employer contributions into 
other investments. The employees' contributions are invested in Sempra 
Energy stock, mutual funds, or institutional trusts (the same 
investments in which employees may now direct the employer 
contributions). Employer contributions for the  SoCalGas plans are 
partially funded by the Sempra Energy Employee Stock 
Ownership Plan and Trust. Company contributions to the savings plan 
were $10 million in 2004, $9 million in 2003 and $8 million in 2002. 

NOTE 6. STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION

Sempra Energy has stock-based compensation plans intended to align 
employee and shareholder objectives related to the long-term growth of 
the company. The plans permit a wide variety of stock-based awards, 

53

including nonqualified stock options, incentive stock options, 
restricted stock, stock appreciation rights, performance awards, stock 
payments and dividend equivalents.

In 1995, SFAS 123, Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation, was issued. 
It encourages a fair-value-based method of accounting for stock-based 
compensation. As permitted by SFAS 123, Sempra Energy and its 
subsidiaries adopted only its disclosure requirements and continue to 
account for stock-based compensation in accordance with the provisions 
of Accounting Principles Board Opinion 25. Discussion of SFAS 123R (a 
revision of SFAS 123) is provided in Note 1. The subsidiaries record an 
expense for the plans to the extent that subsidiary employees 
participate in the plans or that subsidiaries are allocated a portion 
of Sempra Energy's costs of the plans. PE recorded expenses of $9 
million, $9 million and $1 million in 2004, 2003 and 2002, 
respectively.

NOTE 7. FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

Fair Value

The fair values of certain of the company's financial instruments 
(cash, temporary investments, notes receivable, short-term debt and 
customer deposits) approximate their carrying amounts. The following 
table provides the carrying amounts and fair values of the remaining 
financial instruments at December 31: 




                                              2004                   2003
                                       Carrying    Fair       Carrying    Fair 
(Dollars in millions)                    Amount    Value        Amount    Value 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             
First mortgage bonds                    $  850    $ 856        $ 925     $ 925    
Other long-term debt                        15       12           13        10 
                                   -------------------------------------------
   Total long-term debt                 $  865    $ 868        $ 938     $ 935   
                                   -------------------------------------------
PE:
  Preferred stock                       $   80    $  66        $  80     $  65 
  Preferred stock of subsidiary             20       20           20        19 
                                   -------------------------------------------
                                        $  100    $  86        $ 100     $  84 
                                   -------------------------------------------
SoCalGas:
  Preferred stock                       $   22    $  21        $  22     $  20 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The fair values of long-term debt and preferred stock are based on 
their quoted market prices or quoted market prices for similar 
securities. 

Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities

The company follows the guidance of SFAS 133 and related amendments 
SFAS 138 and 149 (collectively SFAS 133) to account for its derivative 

54

instruments and hedging activities. Derivative instruments and related 
hedges are recognized as either assets or liabilities on the balance 
sheet, measured at fair value. Changes in the fair value of derivatives 
are recognized in earnings in the period of change unless the 
derivative qualifies as an effective hedge that offsets certain 
exposure. 

SFAS 133 provides for hedge accounting treatment when certain criteria 
are met. For derivative instruments designated as fair value hedges, 
the gain or loss is recognized in earnings in the period of change 
together with the offsetting gain or loss on the hedged item 
attributable to the risk being hedged; therefore, there is no effect on 
net income. For derivative instruments designated as cash flow hedges, 
the effective portion of the derivative gain or loss is included in 
other comprehensive income, but not reflected in the Statements of 
Consolidated Income until the corresponding hedged transaction is 
similarly reflected. The ineffective portion is reported in earnings 
immediately. There was no effect on other comprehensive income for the 
years ended December 31, 2004 and 2003. In instances where derivatives 
do not qualify for hedge accounting, gains and losses are recorded in 
earnings immediately. 

The company utilizes natural gas derivatives to manage commodity price 
risk associated with servicing its load requirements. These contracts 
allow the company to predict with greater certainty the effective 
prices to be received by the company and the prices to be charged to 
its customers. The use of derivative financial instruments is subject 
to certain limitations imposed by company policy and regulatory 
requirements. The company classifies its forward contracts as follows:   

Contracts that meet the definition of normal purchase and sales, i.e., 
those that rarely settle by means other than physical delivery of the 
commodities involved in the transaction, are eligible for the normal 
purchases and sales exception of SFAS 133, whereby they are accounted 
for under accrual accounting and recorded in Revenues or Cost of 
Natural Gas on the Statements of Consolidated Income at the time of 
delivery. Due to the adoption of SFAS 149, the company has determined 
that its natural gas contracts entered into after June 30, 2003 
generally do not qualify for the normal purchases and sales exception. 

Natural Gas Purchases and Sales: The unrealized gains and losses 
related to these forward contracts are offset by regulatory assets and 
liabilities on the Consolidated Balance Sheets to the extent derivative 
gains and losses will be recoverable or payable in future rates. If 
gains and losses are not recoverable or payable through future rates, 
the company applies hedge accounting if certain criteria are met. When 
a contract no longer meets the requirements of SFAS 133, the unrealized 
gains and losses and the related regulatory asset or liability will be 
amortized over the remaining contract life. 

55

The following were recorded in the Consolidated Balance Sheets at 
December 31 related to derivatives:




(Dollars in millions)                                    2004        2003
------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
                                                            
Fixed-price Contracts and Other Derivatives:
   Current liabilities                                  $  97       $  86
   Noncurrent liabilities                                  52         148
                                                   ----------------------
     Total                                                149         234
                                                   ----------------------
   Current assets                                           1          --
   Noncurrent assets                                        2          --
                                                   ----------------------
     Total                                                  3          --
                                                   ----------------------
Net liabilities                                         $ 146       $ 234
-------------------------------------------------------------------------


Regulatory assets and liabilities related to derivatives held by SoCalGas
at December 31 were:




(Dollars in millions)                                    2004        2003
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                             
Regulatory Assets and Liabilities:
   Current regulatory assets                            $  97       $  85
   Noncurrent regulatory assets                            52         148
                                                   ----------------------
     Total                                                149         233
   Current regulatory liabilities                           1          --
                                                   ----------------------
Net                                                     $ 148       $ 233
------------------------------------------------------------------------- 


As of December 31, 2004, the difference between net liabilities and net 
regulatory assets was primarily due to market value adjustments of $2 
million related to fixed-to-floating interest rate swaps. The above had 
no impact on net income during 2004 and 2003. 

Market Risk

The company's policy is to use derivative physical and financial 
instruments to reduce its exposure to fluctuations in interest rates 
and commodity prices. Transactions involving these instruments are with 
major exchanges and other firms believed to be credit-worthy. The use 
of these instruments exposes the company to market and credit risk, 

56

which may at times be concentrated with certain counterparties, 
although counterparty nonperformance is not anticipated.
 
Interest-Rate Risk Management

The company periodically enters into interest-rate swap agreements to 
moderate its exposure to interest-rate changes and to lower the overall 
cost of borrowing. This is described in Note 3. 

Energy Contracts

SoCalGas records transactions for natural gas contracts in Cost of 
Natural Gas in the Statements of Consolidated Income. For open 
contracts not expected to result in physical delivery, changes in 
market value of the contracts are recorded in these accounts during the 
period the contracts are open, with an offsetting entry to a regulatory 
asset or liability. The majority of the company's contracts result in 
physical delivery. 

NOTE 8.  PREFERRED STOCK

Preferred Stock of Southern California Gas Company
-----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     December 31,
                                                    2004     2003
-----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    (in millions)   
$25 par value, authorized 1,000,000 shares        
    6% Series, 28,041 shares outstanding             $  1    $  1
    6% Series A, 783,032 shares outstanding            19      19
  Without par value, authorized 10,000,000 shares      --      --
                                                   --------------
                                                     $ 20    $ 20
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
None of SoCalGas' preferred stock is callable. All series have one 
vote per share and cumulative preferences as to dividends, and have a 
liquidation value of $25 per share plus any unpaid dividends. 

57


Preferred Stock of Pacific Enterprises 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
                                                  
                                                                December 31,
                                              Call Price       2004     2003 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
                                                                (in millions)

                                                               
  $4.75 Dividend, 200,000 shares outstanding   $ 100.00       $  20    $  20
  $4.50 Dividend, 300,000 shares outstanding   $ 100.00          30       30
  $4.40 Dividend, 100,000 shares outstanding   $ 101.50          10       10
  $4.36 Dividend, 200,000 shares outstanding   $ 101.00          20       20
  $4.75 Dividend, 253 shares outstanding       $ 101.00          --       --
                                                           ------------------
                                                              $  80    $  80
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------


PE is authorized to issue 15,000,000 shares of preferred stock without 
par value. The preferred stock is subject to redemption at PE's option 
at any time upon not less than 30 days' notice, at the applicable 
redemption price for each series, plus any unpaid dividends.  All 
series have one vote per share and cumulative preferences as to 
dividends, and have a liquidation value of $100 per share plus any 
unpaid dividends. 

NOTE 9.  REGULATORY MATTERS

Natural Gas Industry Restructuring (GIR)

In December 2001, the CPUC issued a decision related to GIR, with 
implementation anticipated during 2002. On April 1, 2004, after many 
delays and changes, the CPUC issued a decision that adopts tariffs to 
implement the 2001 decision. However, by that same decision, the CPUC 
stayed implementation of the GIR tariffs until it issues a decision in 
Phase I of the Natural Gas Market Order Instituting Ratemaking (OIR) 
discussed below. At that time, the CPUC will reconcile the GIR market 
structure with whatever structure results from the Phase I decision of 
the Natural Gas Market OIR. If implemented, the stayed decision would 
unbundle the costs of SoCalGas' backbone transmission system from rates 
and result in revising noncore balancing account treatment to exclude 
the balancing of SoCalGas' backbone transmission costs and place 
SoCalGas at risk for recovery of $80 million for transmission and $81 
million for storage (current dollars). The decision would create firm 
tradable rights for the transmission system. Other noncore 
costs/revenues would continue to be fully balanced until the decision 
in the next Biennial Cost Allocation Proceeding (BCAP) discussed below. 

Natural Gas Market OIR

The CPUC's Natural Gas Market OIR was instituted in January 2004, and 
will be addressed in two phases. A decision on Phase I was issued in 

58

September 2004 and Phase II is awaiting CPUC direction on further 
proceedings. In Phase I, the CPUC's objective was to develop a process 
enabling the CPUC to review and pre-approve new interstate capacity 
contracts before they are executed. In addition, the California 
Utilities must submit proposals on any liquefied natural gas (LNG) 
project to which interconnection is planned, providing costs and terms, 
including access to the pipelines in Mexico being developed by an 
affiliated company, Sempra Pipelines and Storage. Phase II will 
primarily address emergency reserves and ratemaking policies. The 
CPUC's objective in the ratemaking policy component of Phase II is to 
identify and propose changes to policies that create incentives that 
are consistent with the goal of providing adequate and reliable long-
term supplies and that do not conflict with energy efficiency programs. 
The focus of the Gas OIR is the period from 2006 to 2016. Since GIR, 
discussed above, would end in August 2006 and there is overlap between 
GIR and the OIR issues, a number of parties (including SoCalGas) have 
requested the CPUC not to implement GIR.

The California Utilities have made comprehensive filings in the OIR 
outlining a proposed market structure that is intended to create access 
to new natural gas supply sources (such as LNG, which is the business 
of an affiliated company, Sempra LNG) for California. In their Phase I 
and Phase II filings, SoCalGas and SDG&E proposed a framework to 
provide firm tradable access rights for intrastate natural gas 
transportation; provide SoCalGas with continued balancing account 
protection for intrastate transmission and distribution revenues, 
thereby eliminating throughput risk; and integrate the transmission 
systems of SoCalGas and SDG&E so as to have common rates and rules. The 
California Utilities also proposed that the capital expenditures 
necessary to access new sources of supply be included in ratebase and 
that the total amount of the expenditures would be $200 million to $300 
million.

The California Utilities also proposed a methodology and framework to 
be used by the CPUC for granting pre-approval of new interstate 
transportation agreements. The Phase I decision approved the California 
Utilities' transportation capacity pre-approval procedures with some 
modifications. SoCalGas' existing pipeline capacity contracts with 
Transwestern Pipeline Company expire in November 2005 and its primary 
contracts with El Paso Natural Gas Company expire in August 2006. 
SoCalGas recently was granted pre-approval by the CPUC of a contract 
for released capacity on the Kern River Gas Transmission Company 
system, and four capacity contracts with El Paso. The contracts would 
expire between 2007 and 2011. In February 2005, SoCalGas filed for pre-
approval of two new capacity contracts with Transwestern that would 
expire in 2009 and 2011. The CPUC's decision on pre-approval of the 
Transwestern contracts is expected to be received by March 2005. All 
interstate transportation capacity under the pre-approved contracts 
will be used to transport natural gas supplies on behalf of the 
California Utilities' core residential and small commercial customers, 
and all costs of the capacity will be recovered in the customers' rates 
through each utility's Purchased Gas Account, a balancing account. In 
December 2004, pursuant to the Phase I decision, SoCalGas filed an 
application to implement proposals for transmission system integration, 
firm access rights, and off-system delivery services. The CPUC has 
determined that the ratemaking treatment and cost responsibility for 
any access-related infrastructure will be addressed in future 

59

applications to be filed when more is known about the particular 
projects. Phase II of the Gas Market OIR will review the CPUC's 
ratemaking policies on throughput risk to better align these with its 
objectives of promoting energy conservation and adequate 
infrastructure. Phase II will also investigate the need for emergency 
natural gas storage reserves and the role of the utility in 
backstopping the noncore market.

Cost of Service

On December 2, 2004, the CPUC issued a decision in the California 
Utilities' cost of service proceedings that essentially approved a 
settlement recommended by all major parties to the proceedings. The 
decision reduces the California Utilities' annual rate revenues, 
effective retroactively to January 1, 2004, by an aggregate net amount 
of approximately $33 million from the rates in effect during 2003. The 
reduced rates will remain in effect through 2007, subject to annual 
attrition allowances. 

Attrition allowances, performance-based incentive mechanisms (PBR), 
which is described in the following section, and related matters will 
be addressed by the CPUC in Phase II of the cost of service 
proceedings, expected to be decided in the first quarter of 2005. In 
addition to recommending changes in the PBR formulas, the CPUC's Office 
of Ratepayer Advocates (ORA) also proposed the possibility of 
performance penalties for service quality, safety and service 
reliability, without the possibility of performance awards. Hearings 
took place in June 2004. In July 2004, all of the active parties in 
Phase II who dealt with post-test-year ratemaking and performance 
incentives filed for adoption by the CPUC of an all-party settlement 
agreement for most of the Phase II issues, including annual inflation 
adjustments and earnings sharing. The proposed settlement does not 
cover performance incentives. For the interim years of 2005-2007, the 
Consumer Price Index would be used to adjust the escalatable authorized 
base rate revenues within identified floors and ceilings, each of which 
limits the adjustment to approximately two to four percent of the prior 
year's authorized base rate revenues. 

SoCalGas had filed for continuation of existing PBR mechanisms for 
service quality and safety that would otherwise expire at the end of 
2003. In January 2004, the CPUC issued a decision that extended 2003 
service and safety targets through 2004, but did not determine the 
extent of rewards or penalties. As part of the proposed Phase II 
Settlement Agreement, earnings sharing, under which IOUs return to 
customers a percentage of earnings above specified levels, would be 
suspended for 2004 and resume for 2005 through 2007. The proposed 
earnings sharing mechanism also provides the utility the option to file 
for suspension of the earnings sharing mechanism if earnings fall 175 
basis points or more below its authorized rate of return; however, if 
earnings are more than 300 basis points above the utility's authorized 
rate of return, the earnings sharing mechanism would be automatically 
suspended and trigger a formal regulatory review by the CPUC to 
determine whether modification of the ratemaking mechanism is required. 

On February 15, 2005, the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) and the CPUC 
Commissioner assigned to Phase II of the cost of service proceedings 
issued differing proposed decisions for consideration by the CPUC. If 

60

adopted by the CPUC, the ALJ's decision would not approve the parties' 
settlement of the Phase II issues, but would authorize the California 
Utilities to adjust their authorized revenues in each of years 2005 
through 2007 on a formula basis similar to that proposed by the 
California Utilities and also establish performance measures with 
reward and penalty potentials of approximately $20 million. In 
addition, the ALJ's decision would have the utilities' cost of capital 
reviewed on an annual basis. If adopted by the CPUC, the Commissioner's 
proposed decision would approve the parties' settlement and also 
approve performance measures for customer service, safety and 
reliability with the same reward and penalty provisions as the ALJ's 
proposed decision. The Commissioner's proposed decision also would 
continue the use of the cost of capital adjustment mechanism currently 
in place, which adjusts each utility's rate of return automatically 
based on market indices. The CPUC may adopt either proposed decision, 
as proposed or with modifications, or reject both and adopt a different 
result.

The California Utilities had been equally sharing between ratepayers 
and shareholders the estimated savings for the 1998 business 
combination that created Sempra Energy. Pursuant to an October 2001 
CPUC decision, that sharing has ceased and all merger savings go to 
ratepayers beginning with 2003.

Performance-Based Regulation 

PBR consists of three primary components. The first is a mechanism to 
adjust rates in years between general rate cases or cost of service 
cases. It annually adjusts base rates from those of the prior year to 
provide for inflation, changes in the number of customers and 
efficiencies.

The second component is a mechanism whereby any earnings in excess of 
those authorized plus a narrow band above that are shared with 
customers in varying degrees depending upon the amount of the 
additional earnings.

The third component consists of a series of measures of utility 
performance. Generally, if performance is outside of a band around the 
specified benchmark, the utility is rewarded or penalized certain 
dollar amounts.

The three areas that have been eligible for PBR rewards or penalties 
are operational incentives based on measurements of safety, reliability 
and customer satisfaction; demand-side management (DSM) rewards based 
on the effectiveness of the programs; and natural gas procurement 
rewards or penalties. However, as noted under "Cost of Service," Phase 
II of the California Utilities' current cost of service proceeding is 
not complete. As a result, these safety, reliability and customer 
satisfaction incentive mechanisms (i.e., those that are reviewed in the 
Cost of Service proceeding) were not in effect during 2004. However, it 
is not expected that the effect would be other than a one-year 
moratorium of the mechanisms. 

PBR, DSM and Gas Cost Incentive Mechanism (GCIM) rewards are not 
included in the company's earnings before CPUC approval is received. 
The only incentive reward approved during 2004 consisted of $6.3 

61

million related to SoCalGas' Year 9 GCIM, which was approved in 
February 2004. This reward was awarded by the CPUC subject to refund 
based on the outcome of the Border Price Investigation discussed below. 
The cumulative amount of rewards subject to refund based on the outcome 
of the Border Price Investigation is $56.9 million, substantially all 
of which has been included in net income in 2004, or previously.  

On December 30, 2004, a joint settlement agreement between the 
California Utilities and the ORA (collectively, the joint parties) was 
filed with the CPUC for approval. The settlement agreement resolves 
all outstanding shareholder earnings claims filed with the CPUC 
commencing in 2000 and those claims that would have been filed through 
2009 associated with DSM, energy efficiency and low-income energy 
efficiency programs. The proposed settlement is for $14 million, 
respectively, for SDG&E and SoCalGas (including interest, franchise 
fees, uncollectible amounts and awards earned in prior years that had 
not yet then been requested). The joint parties requested expeditious 
approval of the settlement agreement, without modification. A CPUC 
decision is expected by the end of the second quarter of 2005.

At December 31, 2004, other performance incentives were pending CPUC 
approval and, therefore, were not included in the company's earnings 
(dollars in millions): 

                       Program             
                       -----------------------------------
                       GCIM Year 10                 $  2.4
                       2003 safety                      .5
                       -----------------------------------
                       Total                        $  2.9
                       -----------------------------------

Cost of Capital

Effective January 1, 2003, SoCalGas' authorized rate of return on 
equity (ROE) is 10.82 percent and its return on ratebase (ROR) is 8.68 
percent. These rates are subject to automatic adjustment if the 12-
month trailing average of 30-year Treasury bond rates and the Global 
Insight forecast of the 30-year Treasury bond rate 12 months ahead vary 
by greater than 150 basis points from a benchmark, which is currently 
5.38 percent. The 12-month trailing average was 5.03 percent and the 
Global Insight forecast was 5.44 percent at December 31, 2004. 
Potential changes in this process are described above in "Cost of 
Service."

Biennial Cost Allocation Proceeding

The BCAP determines the allocation of authorized costs between 
customer classes for natural gas transportation service provided by 
the company and adjusts rates to reflect variances in sales volumes as 
compared to the forecasts previously used in establishing 
transportation rates. SoCalGas filed with the CPUC its 2005 BCAP 
application in September 2003, requesting updated transportation rates 
effective January 1, 2005. In November 2003, an Assigned Commissioner 
Ruling stayed the BCAP application until a decision is issued in the 
GIR implementation proceeding. As a result of the April 1, 2004 
decision on GIR implementation as described in Natural Gas Industry 

62

Restructuring above, in May 2004 the ALJ in the 2005 BCAP issued a 
decision dismissing the BCAP application. The company is required to 
file a new BCAP application after the stay in the GIR implementation 
proceeding is lifted. As a result of the deferrals and the significant 
decline forecasted in noncore gas throughput on SoCalGas' system, in 
December 2002 the CPUC issued a decision approving balancing account 
protection for SoCalGas' risk on local transmission and distribution 
revenues from January 1, 2003 until the CPUC issues its next BCAP 
decision. SoCalGas is seeking to continue this balancing account 
protection in the Natural Gas OIR proceeding. 

CPUC Investigation of Energy-Utility Holding Companies 

The CPUC has initiated an investigation into the relationship between 
California's IOUs and their parent holding companies. The CPUC broadly 
determined that it could, in appropriate circumstances, require the 
holding company to provide cash to a utility subsidiary to cover its 
operating expenses and working capital to the extent they are not 
adequately funded through retail rates. This would be in addition to 
the requirement of holding companies to provide for their utility 
subsidiaries' capital requirements, as the IOUs previously acknowledged 
in connection with their holding companies' formations. In January 
2002, the CPUC ruled that it had jurisdiction to create the holding 
company system and, therefore, retains jurisdiction to enforce 
conditions to which the holding companies had agreed. 

In a May 2004 opinion, the California Court of Appeal upheld the CPUC's 
assertion of limited enforcement jurisdiction, but concluded that the 
CPUC's interpretation of the "first priority" condition (that the 
holding companies could be required to infuse cash into the utilities 
as necessary to meet the utilities' obligation to serve) was not ripe 
for review. In September 2004, the California Supreme Court declined to 
review the California Court of Appeal's decision. 

CPUC Investigation of Compliance With Affiliate Rules 

In February 2003, the CPUC opened an investigation of the business 
activities of SDG&E, SoCalGas and Sempra Energy to determine if they 
have complied with statutes and CPUC decisions in the management, 
oversight and operations of their companies. In September 2003, the 
CPUC suspended the procedural schedule until it completes an 
independent audit to evaluate energy-related holding company systems 
and affiliate activities undertaken by Sempra Energy within the service 
territories of SDG&E and SoCalGas. The audit, covering years 1997 
through 2003, is expected to be completed by the third quarter of 2005. 
The scope of the audit will be broader than the annual affiliate audit. 
In accordance with existing CPUC requirements, the California 
Utilities' transactions with other Sempra Energy affiliates have been 
audited by an independent auditing firm each year, with results 
reported to the CPUC, and there have been no material adverse findings 
in those audits.

63

NOTE 10. COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES 

Natural Gas Contracts 

SoCalGas buys natural gas under short-term and long-term contracts. 
Purchases are from various suppliers and are primarily based on monthly 
spot-market prices. SoCalGas transports natural gas primarily under 
long-term firm pipeline capacity agreements that provide for annual 
reservation charges, which are recovered in rates. SoCalGas has 
commitments with pipeline companies for firm pipeline capacity under 
contracts that expire at various dates through 2007. 

At December 31, 2004, the future minimum payments under existing 
natural gas contracts were: 



                                                   Natural
(Dollars in millions)       Transportation           Gas             Total
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                           
2005                                $  183         $  738          $   921
2006                                   104             19              123
2007                                     2              3                5
2008                                    --              3                3
2009                                    --              2                2
Thereafter                              --             --               --
                               -------------------------------------------
Total minimum payments              $  289         $  765          $ 1,054
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------


Total payments under natural gas contracts were $2.3 billion in 2004, 
$1.8 billion in 2003 and $1.2 billion in 2002.

Leases 

PE and SoCalGas have operating leases on real and personal property 
expiring at various dates from 2005 to 2030. Certain leases on office 
facilities contain escalation clauses requiring annual increases in 
rent ranging from 4 percent to 5 percent. The rentals payable under 
these leases are determined on both fixed and percentage bases, and 
most leases contain extension options which are exercisable by the 
companies. 

64

At December 31, 2004, the minimum rental commitments payable in future 
years under all noncancellable leases were as follows: 


-----------------------------------------------------------------
(Dollars in millions)                            PE      SoCalGas
-----------------------------------------------------------------
2005                                         $   56     $   43    
2006                                             56         43
2007                                             59         46
2008                                             60         46
2009                                             60         46
Thereafter                                       98         91
                                            ---------------------
Total future rental commitments              $  389     $  315 
-----------------------------------------------------------------

In connection with the quasi-reorganization described in Note 1, PE 
recorded liabilities of $102 million to adjust to fair value the 
operating leases related to its headquarters and other facilities at 
December 31, 1992. The remaining amount of these liabilities was $30 
million at December 31, 2004. These leases are included in the above 
table at the amounts provided in the lease. 

Rent expense for operating leases totaled $57 million in 2004, $56 
million in 2003 and $54 million in 2002, which included rent expense 
for SoCalGas of $44 million, $43 million and $42 million, respectively. 

Guarantees

As of December 31, 2004, SoCalGas did not have any outstanding 
guarantees. 

Environmental Issues 

The company's operations are subject to federal, state and local 
environmental laws and regulations governing hazardous wastes, air and 
water quality, land use, solid waste disposal and the protection of 
wildlife. As applicable, appropriate and relevant, these laws and 
regulations require that the company investigate and remediate the 
effects of the release or disposal of materials at sites associated 
with past and present operations, including sites at which the company 
has been identified as a Potentially Responsible Party (PRP) under the 
federal Superfund laws and comparable state laws. The company is 
required to obtain numerous governmental permits, licenses and other 
approvals to construct facilities and operate its businesses. 
Additionally, to comply with these legal requirements, it must spend 
significant sums on environmental monitoring, pollution control 
equipment and emissions fees. In addition, existing environmental 
regulations could be revised or reinterpreted and other new laws and 
regulations could be adopted or become applicable to the company and 
its facilities. Costs incurred to operate the facilities in compliance 
with these laws and regulations generally have been recovered in 
customer rates.  
 
Significant costs incurred to mitigate or prevent future environmental 

65

contamination or extend the life, increase the capacity or improve the 
safety or efficiency of property utilized in current operations are 
capitalized. The company's capital expenditures to comply with 
environmental laws and regulations were $2 million in 2004, $6 million 
in 2003 and $4 million in 2002. The cost of compliance with these 
regulations over the next five years is not expected to be significant.  

Costs that relate to current operations or an existing condition caused 
by past operations are generally recorded as a regulatory asset due to 
the assurance that these costs will be recovered in rates.  
 
The environmental issues currently facing the company or resolved 
during the last three years include investigation and remediation of 
its manufactured-gas sites (27 completed as of December 31, 2004 and 15 
to be completed), and cleanup of third-party waste-disposal sites used 
by the company, which has been identified as a PRP (investigations and 
remediations are continuing).
  
Environmental liabilities are recorded when the company's liability is 
probable and the costs are reasonably estimable. In many cases, 
however, investigations are not yet at a stage where the company has 
been able to determine whether it is liable or, if the liability is 
probable, to reasonably estimate the amount or range of amounts of the 
cost or certain components thereof. Estimates of the company's 
liability are further subject to other uncertainties, such as the 
nature and extent of site contamination, evolving remediation standards 
and imprecise engineering evaluations. The accruals are reviewed 
periodically and, as investigations and remediation proceed, 
adjustments are made as necessary. Costs of future expenditures for 
environmental remediation obligations are not discounted to their 
present value. At December 31, 2004, the company's accrued liability 
for environmental matters was $41.9 million, of which $40.5 million is 
related to manufactured-gas sites, $0.9 million to waste-disposal sites 
used by the company (which has been identified as a PRP) and $0.5 
million to other hazardous waste sites. These accruals are expected to 
be paid ratably over the next three years. 

Legal Proceedings

Except for the matters referred to below, neither the company nor its 
subsidiaries are party to, nor is their property the subject of, any 
material pending legal proceedings other than routine litigation 
incidental to their businesses. At December 31, 2004, the company had 
accrued approximately $89 million to provide for the costs of legal 
proceedings, of which $77 million related to cases arising from the 
2000-2001 California energy crisis. Management believes that none of 
these matters will have further material adverse effect on the 
company's financial condition or results of operations.

California Energy Crisis 

In 2000 and 2001, California experienced a severe energy crisis 
characterized by dramatic increases in the prices of natural gas. The 
energy crisis has generated many, often duplicative, governmental 
investigations, regulatory proceedings and lawsuits involving numerous 
energy companies seeking recovery of tens of billions of dollars for 
allegedly unlawful activities asserted to have caused or contributed to 

66

the energy crisis. The material proceedings arising out of the energy 
crisis that involve the company are summarized below.

Class-action and individual antitrust and unfair competition lawsuits 
filed in 2000 and thereafter, and currently consolidated in San Diego 
Superior Court, seek damages, alleging that Sempra Energy, SoCalGas and 
SDG&E, along with El Paso Natural Gas Company (El Paso) and several of 
its affiliates, unlawfully sought to control natural gas and 
electricity markets. In December 2003, the Court approved a settlement 
whereby the applicable El Paso entities will pay approximately $1.6 
billion to resolve these claims (including cases involving unrelated 
claims not applicable to Sempra Energy, SoCalGas or SDG&E). The 
proceeding against Sempra Energy and the California Utilities has not 
been settled and continues to be litigated. In October 2004, certain of 
the plaintiffs issued a news release asserting that they could recover 
as much as $24 billion from Sempra Energy and the California Utilities 
if their allegations were upheld at trial. During the third quarter of 
2004, the court denied motions for summary judgment in favor of Sempra 
Energy and the California Utilities. The Court of Appeal has declined 
to review the summary judgment denial and the companies have petitioned 
for review by the California Supreme Court. Interim review pending a 
final decision on the merits of the case is entirely at the discretion 
of the California Supreme Court. On January 18, 2005, the judge stated 
that pre-trial motions will be heard on June 3, 2005, and set a trial 
date of September 2, 2005. 

Similar lawsuits have been filed by the Attorneys General of Arizona 
and Nevada, alleging that El Paso and certain Sempra Energy 
subsidiaries unlawfully sought to control the natural gas market in 
their respective states. The claims against the Sempra Energy 
defendants in the Arizona lawsuit were settled in September 2004 for 
$150,000 and have been dismissed with prejudice. The Nevada Attorney 
General's lawsuit remains pending.

The company is cooperating with an investigation being conducted by the 
California Attorney General into possible anti-competitive behavior in 
the natural gas and electricity markets during the 2000-2001 energy 
crisis. In December 2004, several of the company's senior officers 
testified at investigational hearings conducted by the California 
Attorney General's Office. The company expects additional hearings to 
take place in early 2005.

In April 2003, Sierra Pacific Resources and its utility subsidiary 
Nevada Power filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Las Vegas 
against major natural gas suppliers, and included Sempra Energy, the 
California Utilities and other company subsidiaries, seeking recovery 
of damages alleged to aggregate in excess of $150 million (before 
trebling) from an alleged conspiracy to drive up or control natural gas 
prices, eliminate competition and increase market volatility, breach of 
contract and wire fraud. On January 27, 2004, the U.S. District Court 
dismissed the Sierra Pacific Resources case against all of the 
defendants, determining that this is a matter for the FERC to resolve. 
However, the court granted plaintiffs' request to amend their 
complaint. Sempra Energy filed another motion to dismiss on plaintiffs' 
amended complaint. After argument on November 29, 2004, the federal 
court dismissed the Sierra Pacific case with prejudice. Plaintiffs have 
filed a notice of appeal with the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

67

In July 2004, the City and County of San Francisco, the County of Santa 
Clara and the County of San Diego brought actions, alleging that energy 
prices were unlawfully manipulated by defendants' reporting 
artificially inflated natural gas prices to trade publications and by 
entering into wash trades and by engaging in "churning" transactions 
with Reliant Energy, in San Diego Superior Court against various 
entities, including Sempra Energy, Sempra Commodities, SoCalGas and 
SDG&E. 

CPUC Border Price Investigation

In November 2002, the CPUC instituted an investigation into the 
Southern California natural gas market and the price of natural gas 
delivered to the California - Arizona border between March 2000 and May 
2001. The California Utilities are the parties to the first phase of 
the investigation. If the investigation were to determine that the 
conduct of either of the California Utilities contributed to the 
natural gas price spikes that occurred during the investigation period, 
the CPUC may modify the party's natural gas procurement incentive 
mechanism, reduce the amount of any shareholder award for the period 
involved, and/or order the party to issue a refund to ratepayers. At 
December 31, 2004, the cumulative amount of shareholder awards, 
substantially all of which has been included in net income, was $56.9 
million. 

On November 16, 2004, the CPUC Administrative Law Judge assigned to the 
investigation issued a proposed decision for consideration by the full 
CPUC in the first phase of the investigation that was highly critical 
of SoCalGas' natural gas purchase, sales, hedging and storage 
activities and would find that SoCalGas exercised market power and 
manipulated the natural gas market, significantly contributing to 
natural gas price spikes that also increased electricity prices. The 
proposed decision did not include any adverse findings or make any 
adverse recommendations regarding SDG&E.

On December 16, 2004, the CPUC rejected the proposed decision by a 3-2 
vote. The two commissioners who voted in favor of the proposed decision 
were Commissioners Lynch and Wood, whose terms on the CPUC expired at 
year end. It is now up to the remaining commissioners plus any new 
appointees to determine whether to issue an alternate proposed 
decision, hold additional hearings, or issue an order terminating the 
investigation. 

The CPUC may hold additional rounds of hearings to consider whether 
other companies, including other California utilities, contributed to 
the natural gas price spikes. No hearings have yet been scheduled. 

Concentration of Credit Risk 

The company maintains credit policies and systems to manage overall 
credit risk. These policies include an evaluation of potential 
counterparties' financial condition and an assignment of credit limits. 
These credit limits are established based on risk and return 
considerations under terms customarily available in the industry. 
SoCalGas grants credit to customers and counterparties, substantially 

68

all of whom are located in its service territories, which cover most of 
Southern California and a portion of central California. 

NOTE 11. QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED)



                                                        Quarters ended                
(Dollars in millions)                  March 31   June 30   September 30   December 31
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
2004
Operating revenues                     $ 1,148     $ 847        $ 826       $ 1,176   
Operating expenses                       1,082       792          761         1,127   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Operating income                       $    66     $  55        $  65       $    49   
                                      ------------------------------------------------

Net income                             $    59     $  49        $  67       $    61   
Dividends on preferred stock                 1         1            1             1   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Earnings applicable
  to common shares                     $    58     $  48        $  66       $    60   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2003
Operating revenues                     $ 1,008     $ 820        $ 794       $   922   
Operating expenses                         940       768          738           861   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Operating income                       $    68     $  52        $  56       $    61   
                                      ------------------------------------------------

Net income                             $    58     $  36        $  52       $    75   
Dividends on preferred stock                 1         1            1             1   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Earnings applicable
  to common shares                     $    57     $  35        $  51       $    74   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Operating revenues and expenses in the fourth quarter of 2004 included 
the favorable impact of the final cost of service decision and 
operating expenses included litigation costs recorded in the fourth 
quarter. 

Operating revenues in the third quarter of 2003 included the 
recognition of $48 million of natural gas procurement awards. The 
after-tax impact to net income was $29 million. Additionally, operating 
expenses in the third quarter of 2003 were impacted by a $55 million 
before-tax charge for litigation and for losses associated with a 
sublease of portions of the SoCalGas headquarters building. The after-
tax impact was $32 million. 

Net income in the fourth quarter of 2003 included $29 million related 
to the favorable resolution of income tax issues. 

69

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA -- 
Southern California Gas Company

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Southern California Gas 
Company:

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of 
Southern California Gas Company and subsidiaries (the "Company") as of 
December 31, 2004 and 2003, and the related consolidated statements of 
income, shareholders' equity and cash flows for each of the three years 
in the period ended December 31, 2004. These financial statements are 
the responsibility of the Company's management. Our responsibility is 
to express an opinion on these financial statements based on our 
audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable 
assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material 
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence 
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An 
audit also includes assessing the accounting principles used and 
significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the 
overall financial statement presentation. We believe that our audits 
provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, such consolidated financial statements present fairly, 
in all material respects, the financial position of the Company as of 
December 31, 2004 and 2003, and the results of its operations and its 
cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 
2004, in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in 
the United States of America.

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the effectiveness 
of the Company's internal control over financial reporting as of 
December 31, 2004, based on the criteria established in Internal 
Control-Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring 
Organizations of the Treadway Commission and our report dated February 
22, 2005 expressed an unqualified opinion on management's assessment of 
the effectiveness of the Company's internal control over financial 
reporting and an unqualified opinion on the effectiveness of the 
Company's internal control over financial reporting.


/S/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

San Diego, California
February 22, 2005

70

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Southern California Gas 
Company: 

We have audited management's assessment, included in the accompanying 
Management's Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting, that 
Southern California Gas Company and subsidiaries (the "Company") 
maintained effective internal control over financial reporting as of 
December 31, 2004, based on criteria established in Internal Control-
Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring 
Organizations of the Treadway Commission.  The Company's management is 
responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial 
reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal 
control over financial reporting.  Our responsibility is to express an 
opinion on management's assessment and an opinion on the effectiveness 
of the Company's internal control over financial reporting based on our 
audit.

We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States).  Those standards 
require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable 
assurance about whether effective internal control over financial 
reporting was maintained in all material respects.  Our audit included 
obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial 
reporting, evaluating management's assessment, testing and evaluating 
the design and operating effectiveness of internal control, and 
performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the 
circumstances.  We believe that our audit provides a reasonable basis 
for our opinions.

A company's internal control over financial reporting is a process 
designed by, or under the supervision of, the company's principal 
executive and principal financial officers, or persons performing 
similar functions, and effected by the company's board of directors, 
management, and other personnel to provide reasonable assurance 
regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of 
financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally 
accepted accounting principles.  A company's internal control over 
financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1) 
pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, 
accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the 
assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that 
transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of 
financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting 
principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being 
made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors 
of the company; and (3) provide reasonable assurance regarding 
prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or 
disposition of the company's assets that could have a material effect 
on the financial statements.

Because of the inherent limitations of internal control over financial 
reporting, including the possibility of collusion or improper 

71

management override of controls, material misstatements due to error or 
fraud may not be prevented or detected on a timely basis.  Also, 
projections of any evaluation of the effectiveness of the internal 
control over financial reporting to future periods are subject to the 
risk that the controls may become inadequate because of changes in 
conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or 
procedures may deteriorate. 

In our opinion, management's assessment that the Company maintained 
effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 
2004, is fairly stated, in all material respects, based on the criteria 
established in Internal Control-Integrated Framework issued by the 
Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.  Also 
in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, 
effective internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 
2004, based on the criteria established in Internal Control-Integrated 
Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the 
Treadway Commission.

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public 
Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States), the consolidated 
financial statements as of and for the year ended December 31, 2004 of 
the Company and our report dated February 22, 2005 expressed an 
unqualified opinion on those financial statements. 

/s/  DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

San Diego, California 
February 22, 2005

72
 


 
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED INCOME
(Dollars in millions)


                                                     Years ended December 31, 
                                                     2004      2003      2002 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
                                                              
Operating revenues                                 $ 3,997   $ 3,544   $ 2,858 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
Operating expenses
  Cost of natural gas                                2,283     1,830     1,192 
  Other operating expenses                             950       954       872 
  Depreciation                                         255       289       276 
  Income taxes                                         157       142       183 
  Franchise fees and other taxes                       114       106        93 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
    Total operating expenses                         3,759     3,321     2,616 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
Operating income                                       238       223       242 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 

Other income and (deductions)
  Interest income                                        4        34         5 
  Regulatory interest - net                              9         3        (4)
  Allowance for equity funds used during 
    construction                                         5         9        10 
  Income taxes on non-operating income                   3        (8)        5 
  Gain on sale of partnership assets                    15        --        -- 
  Other - net                                           (2)       (6)       (1)
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
    Total                                               34        32        15 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
Interest charges
  Long-term debt                                        35        41        40 
  Other                                                  5         7         7 
  Allowance for borrowed funds used during
    construction                                        (1)       (3)       (3)
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
    Total                                               39        45        44 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
Net income                                             233       210       213 
Preferred dividend requirements                          1         1         1 
                                                   -------   -------   ------- 
Earnings applicable to common shares               $   232   $   209   $   212 
                                                   =======   =======   ======= 

See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


73


SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Dollars in millions)
                                                      
                                                        
                                                        December 31,     December 31,
                                                            2004             2003
                                                        -------------    ------------
                                                                        
ASSETS
Utility plant - at original cost                           $ 7,254           $ 7,007 
Accumulated depreciation                                    (2,863)           (2,739)
                                                           -------           ------- 
    Utility plant - net                                      4,391             4,268 
                                                           -------           ------- 

Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents                                     34                32 
  Accounts receivable - trade                                  673               509
  Accounts receivable - other                                   13                36
  Interest receivable                                           31                30
  Due from unconsolidated affiliates                            --                22
  Income taxes receivable                                       --                 1
  Deferred income taxes                                         17                --
  Regulatory assets arising from fixed-price contracts 
    and other derivatives                                       97                85 
  Other regulatory assets                                       26                 8 
  Inventories                                                   72                74 
  Other                                                         10                 9 
                                                           -------           ------- 
    Total current assets                                       973               806
                                                           -------           ------- 
Other assets:
  Regulatory assets arising from fixed-price contracts
    and other derivatives                                       52               148 
  Sundry                                                        86               127 
                                                           -------           ------- 
    Total other assets                                         138               275 
                                                           -------           ------- 
Total assets                                               $ 5,502           $ 5,349 
                                                           =======           ======= 

See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


74


SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS
(Dollars in millions)                            
                                                      
                                                        
                                                        December 31,     December 31,
                                                            2004             2003
                                                        -------------    ------------
                                                                       
CAPITALIZATION AND LIABILITIES
Capitalization:
  Common stock (100 million shares authorized;
    91 million shares outstanding)                           $   866          $   866 
  Retained earnings                                              523              491 
  Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)                   (4)              (3)
                                                             -------          ------- 
    Total common equity                                        1,385            1,354 
  Preferred stock                                                 22               22 
                                                             -------          ------- 
    Total shareholders' equity                                 1,407            1,376 
  Long-term debt                                                 864              762 
                                                             -------          ------- 
    Total capitalization                                       2,271            2,138 
                                                             -------          ------- 

Current liabilities:
  Short-term debt                                                 30               --
  Accounts payable - trade                                       314              227 
  Accounts payable - other                                        65               44 
  Due to unconsolidated affiliates                                55               55 
  Interest payable                                                10               18
  Income taxes payable                                            63               --
  Deferred income taxes                                           --               15
  Regulatory balancing accounts - net                            178               86 
  Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives                     97               86
  Customer deposits                                               49               43
  Current portion of long-term debt                               --              175
  Other                                                          257              262 
                                                             -------          ------- 
    Total current liabilities                                  1,118            1,011 
                                                             -------          ------- 

Deferred credits and other liabilities:
  Customer advances for construction                              55               40 
  Postretirement benefits other than pensions                     64               --
  Deferred income taxes                                          147              136 
  Deferred investment tax credits                                 41               44
  Regulatory liabilities arising from cost
    of removal obligations                                     1,446            1,392    
  Other regulatory liabilities                                    67              181 
  Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives                     52              148 
  Deferred credits and other                                     241              259 
                                                             -------          ------- 
    Total deferred credits and other liabilities               2,113            2,200
                                                             -------          ------- 
Commitments and contingencies (Note 10)

Total liabilities and shareholders' equity                   $ 5,502          $ 5,349
                                                             =======          =======

See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


75



SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOWS
(Dollars in millions)

                                                     Years ended December 31, 
                                                     2004      2003      2002 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
                                                              
  CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES                                           
  Net income                                       $   233   $   210   $   213 
  Adjustments to reconcile net income to net                                      
   cash provided by operating activities:                                         
    Depreciation                                       255       289       276 
    Deferred income taxes and investment tax credits   (17)       44        23
    Gain on sale of partnership assets                 (15)       --        --
  Changes in other assets                                1        (4)       12 
  Changes in other liabilities                         (24)      (39)        8 
  Changes in working capital components:                                          
    Accounts receivable                               (144)      (44)      (67)
    Interest receivable                                 (1)      (30)       --
    Fixed-price contracts and other derivatives         (2)       (2)        6 
    Inventories                                          2         2       (34) 
    Other current assets                                 1        13        (4)
    Accounts payable                                   107        36        (5) 
    Income taxes                                        62        42       (52) 
    Due to/from affiliates - net                       (26)       37        12
    Regulatory balancing accounts                       93       (99)       80 
    Regulatory assets and liabilities                  (23)      (24)        1
    Customer deposits                                    6       (64)       66 
    Other current liabilities                           (7)       18        (8) 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net cash provided by operating activities        501       385       527 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES                                              
  Expenditures for property, plant and equipment      (311)     (318)     (331)
  Affiliate loan                                        51        34       (86)
  Net proceeds from sale of assets                       7         5        -- 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net cash used in investing activities           (253)     (279)     (417)
                                                   -------   -------   -------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES                                              
  Common dividends paid                               (200)     (200)     (200)
  Preferred dividends paid                              (1)       (1)       (1)
  Issuance of long-term debt                           100       500       250 
  Payments on long-term debt                          (175)     (395)     (100)
  Increase (decrease) in short-term debt                30        --       (50) 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net cash used in financing activities           (246)      (96)     (101)
                                                   -------   -------   -------
Increase in cash and cash equivalents                    2        10         9 
Cash and cash equivalents, January 1                    32        22        13 
                                                   -------   -------   -------
Cash and cash equivalents, December 31             $    34   $    32   $    22 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE OF CASH FLOW INFORMATION                                  
  Interest payments, net of amounts capitalized    $    43   $    47   $    36 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
  Income tax payments, net of refunds              $   111   $    99   $   206 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
SUPPLEMENTAL SCHEDULE OF NON-CASH INVESTING 
  AND FINANCING ACTIVITIES
    Assets contributed by Sempra Energy            $    --   $    48   $    --
    Liabilities assumed                                 --       (18)       --
                                                   -------   -------   -------
      Net assets contributed by Sempra Energy      $    --   $    30   $    -- 
                                                   =======   =======   =======
See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.



76




SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
STATEMENTS OF CONSOLIDATED CHANGES IN SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY 
Years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002
(Dollars in millions)

 

                                                                                 Accumulated  
                                                                                 Other          Total
                                Comprehensive  Preferred    Common    Retained   Comprehensive  Shareholders'
                                Income         Stock        Stock     Earnings   Income(Loss)   Equity
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                            
Balance at December 31, 2001                    $  22       $ 835      $ 470        $ --       $ 1,327 
Net income/comprehensive income       $ 213                              213                       213 
                                      =====  
Preferred stock dividends declared                                        (1)                       (1)
Common stock dividends declared                                         (200)                     (200)
Capital contribution                                            1                                    1 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 2002                       22         836        482          --         1,340 
Net income                            $ 210                              210                       210 
Other comprehensive income 
  adjustment - pension                   (3)                                          (3)           (3)
                                      -----                                                            
Comprehensive income                  $ 207                                                            
                                      =====
Preferred stock dividends declared                                        (1)                       (1)
Common stock dividends declared                                         (200)                     (200)
Capital contribution                                           30                                   30 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 2003                       22         866        491          (3)        1,376 
Net income                            $ 233                              233                       233 
Other comprehensive income 
  adjustment - pension                   (1)                                          (1)           (1)
                                      -----                                                            
Comprehensive income                  $ 232                                                            
                                      ===== 
Preferred stock dividends declared                                        (1)                       (1)
Common stock dividends declared                                         (200)                     (200)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Balance at December 31, 2004                    $  22       $ 866      $ 523        $ (4)      $ 1,407 
=============================================================================================================

See notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.


77



NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY

The following notes to Consolidated Financial Statements of 
Pacific Enterprises are incorporated herein by reference insofar 
as they relate to Southern California Gas Company:

Note  1 - Significant Accounting Policies
Note  2 - Short-term Borrowings
Note  3 - Long-term debt
Note  5 - Employee Benefit Plans
Note  6 - Stock-based Compensation
Note  7 - Financial Instruments
Note  9 - Regulatory Matters
Note 10 - Commitments and Contingencies

The following additional notes apply only to Southern California Gas 
Company: 

NOTE 4.  INCOME TAXES 

The reconciliation of the statutory federal income tax rate to the 
effective income tax rate is as follows: 
                                               Years ended December 31,
                                                2004     2003     2002  
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Statutory federal income tax rate               35.0%    35.0%    35.0% 
Depreciation                                     5.2      6.1      5.1  
State income taxes - net of 
  federal income tax benefit                     5.8      5.9      7.0  
Tax credits                                     (0.7)    (0.8)    (0.8) 
Settlement of Internal Revenue Service audit      --     (3.1)      --
Equity AFUDC					(3.7)    (1.0)    (1.0)
Other, net                                      (1.8)    (0.4)     0.2
                                           ----------------------------
    Effective income tax rate                   39.8%    41.7%    45.5% 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

78

The components of income tax expense are as follows: 

                                             Years ended December 31,
(Dollars in millions)                         2004    2003     2002  
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Current:
  Federal                                     $ 127   $  76    $ 117
  State                                          44      30       38
                                             ------------------------
    Total                                       171     106      155
                                             ------------------------
Deferred:
  Federal                                        (3)     42       24
  State                                         (11)      5        2
                                             ------------------------
    Total                                       (14)     47       26
                                             ------------------------
Deferred investment tax credits                  (3)     (3)      (3)
                                             ------------------------
    Total income tax expense                  $ 154   $ 150    $ 178  
---------------------------------------------------------------------

On the Statements of Consolidated Income, federal and state income 
taxes are allocated between operating income and other income. SoCalGas 
is included in the consolidated income tax return of Sempra Energy and 
is allocated income tax expense from Sempra Energy in an amount equal 
to that which would result from SoCalGas' having always filed a 
separate return.

79

Accumulated deferred income taxes at December 31 relate to the 
following: 


(Dollars in millions)                             2004        2003  
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Deferred tax liabilities:
  Differences in financial and
    tax bases of utility plant                    $ 268       $ 273  
  Regulatory balancing accounts                      50          76  
  Global settlement                                  --          (1)  
  Loss on reacquired debt                            18          17    
  Other                                               4           1  
                                                  --------------------
     Total deferred tax liabilities                 340         366  
                                                  --------------------
Deferred tax assets:
  Investment tax credits                             29          31 
  Postretirement benefits                            40          45
  Deferred compensation                              15          14
  State income taxes                                 23          19
  Workers compensation                               21          20
  Contingent liabilities                             79          82
  Other                                               3           4
                                                  -------------------- 
     Total deferred tax assets                      210         215  
                                                  --------------------
Net deferred income tax liability                 $ 130       $ 151  
----------------------------------------------------------------------

The net deferred income tax liability is recorded on the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets at December 31 as follows: 

(Dollars in millions)                              2004        2003  
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Current (asset) liability                         $ (17)      $  15  
Noncurrent liability                                147         136  
                                                  -------------------- 
Total                                             $ 130       $ 151  
----------------------------------------------------------------------

NOTE 5. EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS

Pension and Other Postretirement Benefits 

The following tables present separate data for SoCalGas related to 
employee benefit plan information in PE's Note 5.

December 31 is the measurement date for the pension and other 
postretirement benefit plans. The following table provides a 
reconciliation of the changes in the plans' projected benefit obligations 
during the latest two years, the fair value of assets and a statement of 
the funded status as of the latest two year ends: 

80



                                                                           Other         
                                              Pension Benefits    Postretirement Benefits
                                              ----------------    -----------------------
(Dollars in millions)                          2004      2003          2004      2003    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                    
CHANGE IN PROJECTED BENEFIT OBLIGATION:
Net obligation at January 1                 $ 1,551   $ 1,368        $  820    $  682   
Service cost                                     30        27            17        15    
Interest cost                                    93        90            43        47    
Actuarial loss (gain)                            84       172           (74)      103    
Transfer of liability from Sempra Energy          2         6            --        --    
Benefit payments                               (135)     (112)          (34)      (27)   
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Net obligation at December 31                 1,625     1,551           772       820    
                                            ---------------------------------------------

CHANGE IN PLAN ASSETS:
Fair value of plan assets at January 1        1,473     1,289           471       370    
Actual return on plan assets                    176       294            53        83   
Employer contributions                           --         2            42        45    
Transfer of assets from Sempra Energy             2        --            --        --    
Benefit payments                               (135)     (112)          (34)      (27)   
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Fair value of plan assets at December 31      1,516     1,473           532       471    
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Benefit obligation, net of plan assets
  at December 31                               (109)      (78)         (240)     (349)   
Unrecognized net actuarial loss                  74        71           176       277    
Unrecognized prior service cost                  65        71            --        --    
Unrecognized net transition obligation           --         1            --        72 *   
                                            ---------------------------------------------
Net recorded asset (liability)
  at December 31                            $    30    $   65        $  (64)   $   --    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


* Prior to 2004, the company's net transition obligation was recorded 
at the company's parent, Pacific Enterprises.

The following table provides the amounts recognized on the Consolidated 
Balance Sheets at December 31:



                                                                           Other         
                                              Pension Benefits    Postretirement Benefits
                                              ----------------    -----------------------
(Dollars in millions)                          2004      2003         2004       2003    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     
Prepaid benefit cost                          $  46     $  78        $  --      $  --    
Accrued benefit cost                            (16)      (13)         (64)        --    
Additional minimum liability                     (7)       (6)          --         --    
Accumulated other comprehensive 
  income (pretax)                                 7         6           --         --    
                                              -------------------------------------------
Net recorded asset (liability)                $  30     $  65        $ (64)     $  --    
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


81

NOTE 8.  PREFERRED STOCK 

                                                     December 31,
                                                    2004     2003
------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    (in millions)
  $25 par value, authorized 1,000,000 shares
    6% Series, 79,011 shares outstanding           $   3    $   3
    6% Series A, 783,032 shares outstanding           19       19
  Without par value, authorized 10,000,000 shares     --       --
                                                  ---------------
     Total preferred stock                         $  22    $  22
-----------------------------------------------------------------

None of SoCalGas' preferred stock is callable. All series have one vote 
per share and cumulative preferences as to dividends, and have a 
liquidation value of $25 per share plus any unpaid dividends.

NOTE 11. QUARTERLY FINANCIAL DATA (UNAUDITED)




                                                        Quarters ended                
(Dollars in millions)                  March 31   June 30   September 30   December 31
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                
2004
Operating revenues                     $ 1,148      $ 847       $ 826       $ 1,176   
Operating expenses                       1,080        792         759         1,128   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Operating income                       $    68      $  55       $  67       $    48   
                                      ------------------------------------------------

Net income                             $    56      $  51       $  68       $    58   
Dividends on preferred stock                --          1          --            --   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Earnings applicable
  to common shares                     $    56      $  50       $  68       $    58   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2003
Operating revenues                     $ 1,008      $ 820       $ 794       $   922   
Operating expenses                         938        772         736           875   
                                       -----------------------------------------------
Operating income                       $    70      $  48       $  58       $    47   
                                      ------------------------------------------------

Net income                             $    58      $  38       $  53       $    61   
Dividends on preferred stock                --          1          --            --   
                                      ------------------------------------------------
Earnings applicable
  to common shares                     $    58      $  37       $  53       $    61   
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Operating revenues and expenses in the fourth quarter of 2004 included 
the favorable impact of the final cost of service decision and 
operating expenses included litigation costs recorded in the fourth 
quarter. 

Operating revenues in the third quarter of 2003 included the 
recognition of $48 million of natural gas procurement awards. The 

82

after-tax impact to net income was $29 million. Additionally, operating 
expenses in the third quarter of 2003 were impacted by a $55 million 
before-tax charge for litigation and for losses associated with a 
sublease of portions of the SoCalGas headquarters building. The after-
tax impact was $32 million. 

Net income in the fourth quarter of 2003 included $29 million related 
to the favorable resolution of income tax issues. 

ITEM 9. CHANGES IN AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON 
ACCOUNTING AND FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES

None.

ITEM 9A.  CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures - Management has 
established disclosure controls and procedures to ensure that material 
information relating to the company and its consolidated subsidiaries 
is made known to the officers who certify the company's financial 
reports and to other members of senior management and the Board of 
Directors. In designing and evaluating these controls and procedures, 
management recognizes that any system of controls and procedures, no 
matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable 
assurance of achieving the desired objectives and necessarily applies 
judgment in evaluating the cost-benefit relationship of other possible 
controls and procedures.

Based on their evaluation as of December 31, 2004, the principal 
executive officer and principal financial officer of the company have 
concluded that the company's disclosure controls and procedures (as 
defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Securities Exchange 
Act of 1934) are effective, at the reasonable assurance level, to 
ensure that the information required to be disclosed by the company in 
the reports that it files or submits under the Securities Exchange Act 
of 1934 is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time 
periods specified by Securities and Exchange Commission rules and 
forms.

Management's Report on Internal Control Over Financial Reporting - 
Company management is responsible for establishing and maintaining 
adequate internal control over financial reporting, as defined in 
Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(f).  Under the supervision and with the 
participation of company management, including the principal executive 
officer and principal financial officer, the company conducted an 
evaluation of the effectiveness of its internal control over financial 
reporting based on the framework in Internal Control - Integrated 
Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the 
Treadway Commission.  Based on the company's evaluation under the 
framework in Internal Control - Integrated Framework, management 
concluded that the company's internal control over financial reporting 
was effective as of December 31, 2004.  Management's assessment of the 
effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting as of 
December 31, 2004 has been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP, an 
independent registered public accounting firm, as stated in its report, 
which is included herein.

83

ITEM 9B.  OTHER INFORMATION

In February 2005, Sempra Energy entered into a severance pay agreement 
with each executive officer of Pacific Enterprises (other than Stephen 
L. Baum and Neal E. Schmale whose continuing employment and employment-
related agreements have been previously filed with the Securities and 
Exchange Commission) and each executive officer of SoCalGas to replace 
the previously reported similar agreements. The agreements are for an 
initial term of three years and are subject to automatic one year 
extensions on each anniversary of the effective date (commencing with 
the second anniversary) unless Sempra Energy or the executive elects not 
to extend the term.

The agreements provide severance benefits to the executive in the event 
that Sempra Energy or its subsidiaries terminates the executive's 
employment (other than for cause, death or disability) or the executive 
does so for good reason.

Severance benefits under the agreements vary with the executive's 
position and include (i) a lump sum cash severance payment varying from 
50% to 100% of the sum of the executive's annual base salary plus the 
greater of the executive's average annual bonus or average annual target 
bonus for the two years prior to termination; (ii) continuation of 
health insurance benefits for a period varying from six months to one 
year; and (iii) financial planning and outplacement services for a 
period varying from 18 months to two years. If the termination were to 
occur within two years after a change in control of the company, (i) the 
lump sum cash severance payment would be multiplied by two; (ii) an 
additional lump sum payment would be paid equal to the pro rata portion 
for the year of termination of the target amount payable under any 
annual incentive compensation award for that year or, if greater, the 
average of the three highest gross annual bonus awards paid to the 
executive in the five years preceding the year of termination; (iii) all 
equity-based incentive compensation awards would immediately vest and 
become exercisable or payable and any restrictions on the awards would 
automatically lapse; (iv) a lump sum cash payment would be made equal to 
the present value of the executive's benefits under supplemental 
executive retirement plans calculated on the basis of the greater of 
actual years of service or years of service that would have been 
completed upon attaining age 62 and applying certain early retirement 
factors; (v) life, disability, accident and health insurance benefits 
would be continued for a period varying from one year to two years; and 
(vi) financial planning and outplacement services would be provided for 
a period varying from two years to three years.

The agreements also provide that if the terminated executive agrees to 
provide consulting services for two years and abide by certain covenants 
regarding non-solicitation of employees and information confidentiality, 
the executive would receive (i) an additional lump sum payment equal to 
the executive's annual base salary and the greater of the executive's 
target bonus for the year of termination or the average of the two or 
three highest gross annual bonus awards paid to the executive in the 
five years prior to termination and (ii) health insurance benefits would 
be continued for an additional one year. 

84

The agreements also provide for a gross-up payment to offset the effects 
of any excise tax imposed on the executive under Section 4999 of the 
Internal Revenue Code.

Good reason is defined in the agreements to include the assignment to 
the executive of duties materially inconsistent with those appropriate 
to a senior executive of Sempra Energy and its subsidiaries; a material 
reduction in the executive's overall standing and responsibilities 
within Sempra Energy and its subsidiaries; and a material reduction in 
the executive's annualized compensation and benefit opportunities other 
than across-the-board reductions affecting all similarly situated 
executives of comparable rank. Following a change in control, good 
reason is defined to include an adverse change in the executive's title, 
authority, duties, responsibilities or reporting lines; reduction in the 
executive's annualized compensation opportunities other than across-the-
board reductions of less than 10% similarly affecting all similarly 
situated executives of comparable rank; relocation of the executive's 
principal place of employment by more than 30 miles; and a substantial 
increase in business travel obligations. A change in control is defined 
to include the acquisition by one person or group of 20% or more of the 
voting power of Sempra Energy's shares; the election of a new majority 
of the board of Sempra Energy comprised of individuals who are not 
recommended for election by two-thirds of the current directors or 
successors to the current directors who were so recommended for 
election; certain mergers, consolidations or sales of assets that result 
in the shareholders of Sempra Energy owning less than 60% of the voting 
power of Sempra Energy or of the surviving entity or its parent; and 
approval by shareholders of the liquidation or dissolution of the 
company. 

85

                                PART III

ITEM 10. DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT

The information required on Identification of Directors is incorporated 
by reference from "Election of Directors" in the Information Statement 
prepared for the May 2005 annual meeting of shareholders. The 
information required on the companies' executive officers is set forth 
below.

EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT
Name                        Age*    Position
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Pacific Enterprises --
Stephen L. Baum              63     Chairman, Chief Executive
                                    Officer and President

M. Javade Chaudhri           52     Executive Vice President and
                                    General Counsel

Neal E. Schmale              58     Executive Vice President and
                                    Chief Financial Officer

Frank H. Ault                60     Senior Vice President and
                                    Controller

Charles A. McMonagle         54     Vice President and Treasurer

Thomas C. Sanger             61     Corporate Secretary

Southern California Gas Company --
Edwin A. Guiles              55     Chairman and Chief Executive
                                    Officer

Debra L. Reed                48     President and Chief Operating
                                    Officer

Steven D. Davis              48     Senior Vice President, External    
                                    Relations and Chief Financial       
                                    Officer

Margot A. Kyd                51     Senior Vice President, Corporate
                                    Business Solutions

William L. Reed              52     Senior Vice President, Regulatory
                                    and Strategic Planning

Anne S. Smith                51     Senior Vice President, Customer
                                    Service

Lee M. Stewart               59     Senior Vice President, Gas
                                    Transmission

Terry M. Fleskes             48     Vice President and Controller

*  As of December 31, 2004.

86


Each Executive Officer has been an officer or employee of Sempra Energy 
or one of its subsidiaries for more than five years, with the exception 
of Mr. Chaudhri. Prior to joining the company in 2003, Mr. Chaudhri was 
Senior Vice President and General Counsel of Gateway, Inc. Each 
executive officer of Southern California Gas Company holds the same 
position at San Diego Gas & Electric Company.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

The information required by Item 11 is incorporated by reference from 
"Election of Directors" and "Executive Compensation" in the Information 
Statement prepared for the May 2005 annual meeting of shareholders.

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT 
AND RELATED STOCKHOLDER MATTERS

The security ownership information required by Item 12 is incorporated 
by reference from "Share Ownership" in the Information Statement 
prepared for the May 2005 annual meeting of shareholders.

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

None.

ITEM 14.  PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

Information regarding principal accountant fees and services as 
required by Item 14 is incorporated by reference from "Proposal 3: 
Ratification of Independent Auditors" in the Information Statement 
prepared for the May 2005 annual meeting of shareholders.

87


                                PART IV
ITEM 15. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

(a) The following documents are filed as part of this report:

1. Financial statements                                                
                                                             Page in  
                                                           This Report
Reports of Independent Registered Public Accounting
  Firm for Pacific Enterprises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27  

Pacific Enterprises Statements of Consolidated Income 
  for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 . . . . . . 30 

Pacific Enterprises Consolidated Balance Sheets 
  at December 31, 2004 and 2003. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31  

Pacific Enterprises Statements of Consolidated Cash Flows 
  for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 . . . . . . 33  

Pacific Enterprises Statements of Consolidated Changes in
  Shareholders' Equity for the years ended
  December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34  

Pacific Enterprises Notes to Consolidated 
  Financial Statements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 

Reports of Independent Registered Public Accounting
  Firm for Southern California Gas Company . . . . . . . . . . . . 69

SoCalGas Statements of Consolidated Income for the years
  ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72  

SoCalGas Consolidated Balance Sheets at December 31, 
  2004 and 2003. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73  

SoCalGas Statements of Consolidated Cash Flows for the
  years ended December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 . . . . . . . . . . 75  

SoCalGas Statements of Consolidated Changes in
  Shareholders' Equity for the years ended
  December 31, 2004, 2003 and 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76  

SoCalGas Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. . . . . . . . 77

2. Financial statement schedules

The following document may be found in this report at the indicated 
page number.

Schedule I--Condensed Financial Information of Parent. . . . . . . 90

88

Other schedules for which provision is made in Regulation S-X are not 
required under the instructions contained therein, are inapplicable or 
the information is included in the Consolidated Financial Statements 
and notes thereto.

3. Exhibits

See Exhibit Index on page 94 of this report.

(b) Reports on Form 8-K

The following reports on Form 8-K were filed after September 30, 2004:

Current Report on Form 8-K filed October 27, 2004, discussing the 
current status of the California Utilities' Cost of Service Proceedings 
and the Border Price Investigation.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed November 4, 2004, filing as an exhibit 
Sempra Energy's press release of November 4, 2004, giving the financial 
results for the quarter ended September 30, 2004.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed November 5, 2004, discussing the 
current status of the California Utilities' Cost of Service 
Proceedings, including a proposed decision and an alternate proposed 
decision issued by CPUC commissioners on November 4, 2004.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed November 17, 2004, discussing the 
current status of the Border Price Investigation, including the 
proposed decision issued by the CPUC Administrative Law Judge on 
November 16, 2004.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed December 3, 2004, discussing the 
current status of the California Utilities' Cost of Service 
Proceedings, including the CPUC decision issued on December 2, 2004.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed December 7, 2004, discussing and 
filing as an exhibit the 2005 Deferred Compensation Plan.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed December 10, 2004, reporting the 
closing of SoCalGas' public offering and sale of $100,000,000 of bonds 
and filing as exhibits the underwriting agreement and pricing agreement 
dated December 7, 2004, the supplemental indenture dated December 10, 
2004, and the form of the bond.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed December 17, 2004, discussing the 
current status of the Border Price Investigation.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed January 11, 2005, discussing the 
current status of energy crisis litigation.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed January 18, 2005, discussing the 
current status of energy crisis litigation.

Current Report on Form 8-K filed February 23, 2005, filing as an 
exhibit Sempra Energy's press release of February 23, 2005, giving the 
financial results for the three months ended December 31, 2004.

89

CONSENTS OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM AND REPORT ON 
SCHEDULES 

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Pacific Enterprises: 

We consent to the incorporation by reference in Registration Statement 
Numbers 2-96782, 33-26357, 2-66833, 2-96781, 33-21908 and 33-54055 on 
Form S-8 and Registration Statement Numbers 33-24830, 333-52926 and 33-
44338 on Form S-3 of our reports dated February 22, 2005 relating to 
the financial statements of Pacific Enterprises and management's report 
on the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, 
incorporated by reference in this Annual Report on Form 10-K of Pacific 
Enterprises for the year ended December 31, 2004.

Our audits of the financial statements referred to in our 
aforementioned report also included the financial statement schedule of 
Pacific Enterprises, listed in Item 15.  This financial statement 
schedule is the responsibility of the Company's management.  Our 
responsibility is to express an opinion based on our audits.  In our 
opinion, such financial statement schedule, when considered in relation 
to the basic financial statements taken as a whole, present fairly in 
all material respects, the information set forth therein.

/S/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

San Diego, California 
February 22, 2005

To the Board of Directors and Shareholders of Southern California Gas 
Company:

We consent to the incorporation by reference in Registration Statement 
Numbers 333-70654, 333-45537, 33-51322, 33-53258, 33-59404 and 33-52663 
on Form S-3 of our reports dated February 22, 2005 relating to the 
financial statements of Southern California Gas Company and 
management's report on the effectiveness of internal control over 
financial reporting, incorporated by reference in this Annual Report on 
Form 10-K of Southern California Gas Company for the year ended 
December 31, 2004.

/S/ DELOITTE & TOUCHE LLP

San Diego, California
February 22, 2005

90



Schedule I -- CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION OF PARENT

PACIFIC ENTERPRISES

                        Condensed Statements of Income
                            (Dollars in millions)    


For the years ended December 31              2004      2003      2002 
                                            ------    ------    ------
Interest income                             $   13    $    4    $    6
Expenses, interest and income taxes             13        (4)        9
                                            ------    ------    ------
Income (loss) before subsidiary earnings        --         8        (3)
Subsidiary earnings                            232       209       212
                                            ------    ------    ------
Earnings applicable to common shares        $  232    $  217    $  209
                                            ======    ======    ======



                           Condensed Balance Sheets
                            (Dollars in millions)


Balance at December 31                               2004        2003 
                                                  --------    --------
Assets:
Current assets                                    $   103     $    104
Investment in subsidiary                            1,386        1,354
Due from affiliates - long-term                       396          356
Deferred charges and other assets                      48          111
                                                  --------    --------
     Total assets                                 $ 1,933     $  1,925
                                                  ========    ========
Liabilities and Shareholders' Equity:
   Due to affiliates                              $    72     $     66
   Other current liabilities                           10           10
                                                  --------    --------
     Total current liabilities                         82           76
Other long-term liabilities                            37          152
Common equity                                       1,734        1,617
Preferred stock                                        80           80
                                                  --------    --------
     Total liabilities and shareholders' equity   $ 1,933     $  1,925
                                                  ========    ========




91






Schedule I (continued)


PACIFIC ENTERPRISES
Condensed Financial Information of Parent


                      Condensed Statements of Cash Flows
                          (Dollars in millions)




For the years ended December 31                    2004     2003     2002   
                                                  ------   ------   ------ 
                                                          
Net cash provided by (used in) 
  operating activities                            $  43    $  (9)   $  (5)
                                                  ------   ------   ------ 
Cash provided by investing activities  - 
   dividends received from subsidiaries             200      200      200 
                                                  ------   ------   ------ 
Common dividends paid                              (200)    (250)    (100)
Preferred dividends paid                             (4)      (4)      (4)
Due to/from affiliates - net                        (39)      63      (91) 
Other                                                --       --       --  
                                                  ------   ------   ------ 
Cash flows used in financing activities            (243)    (191)    (195)
                                                  ------   ------   ------ 
Change in cash and cash equivalents                  --       --       --
Cash and cash equivalents, January 1                 --       --       -- 
                                                  ------   ------   ------ 
Cash and cash equivalents, December 31            $  --    $  --    $  -- 
                                                  ======   ======   ====== 




92


                          SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be 
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, hereunto duly authorized. 

                          PACIFIC ENTERPRISES


                              By:    /s/ Stephen L. Baum
                                                                
                                 Stephen L. Baum
                                 Chairman, President
                                 and Chief Executive Officer 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 
this report is signed below by the following persons on behalf of the 
Registrant in the capacities and on the dates indicated. 




Name/Title                              Signature                         Date
                                                          
Principal Executive Officer:
Stephen L. Baum
Chairman, President 
and Chief Executive Officer          /s/ Stephen L. Baum        February 23, 2005

Principal Financial Officer:
Neal E. Schmale
Executive Vice President and
Chief Financial Officer              /s/ Neal E. Schmale        February 23, 2005

Principal Accounting Officer:
Frank H. Ault
Senior Vice President and
Controller                           /s/ Frank H. Ault          February 23, 2005

Directors:
Stephen L. Baum, Chairman            /s/ Stephen L. Baum        February 23, 2005



Frank H. Ault, Director              /s/ Frank H. Ault          February 23, 2005


Neal E. Schmale, Director            /s/ Neal E. Schmale        February 23, 2005


93

                          SIGNATURES

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities 
Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be 
signed on its behalf by the undersigned, hereunto duly authorized. 

                          SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY


                              By:    /s/ Edwin A. Guiles
                                                                  
                                 Edwin A. Guiles
                                 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 
this report is signed below by the following persons on behalf of the 
Registrant in the capacities and on the dates indicated. 


Name/Title                              Signature                         Date

Principal Executive Officer:
Edwin A. Guiles
Chairman and 
Chief Executive Officer              /s/ Edwin A. Guiles       February 23, 2005

Principal Financial Officer:
Steven D. Davis
Sr. Vice President, 
External Relations and
Chief Financial Officer              /s/ Steven D. Davis       February 23, 2005

Principal Accounting Officer:
Terry M. Fleskes
Vice President and
Controller                           /s/ Terry M. Fleskes      February 23, 2005

Directors:
Edwin A. Guiles, Chairman            /s/ Edwin A. Guiles       February 23, 2005



Debra L. Reed, Director              /s/ Debra L. Reed         February 23, 2005


Frank H. Ault, Director              /s/ Frank H. Ault         February 23, 2005


94

EXHIBIT INDEX

The Forms 8-K, 10-K and 10-Q referred to herein were filed under 
Commission File Number 1-14201 (Sempra Energy), Commission File Number 
1-40 (Pacific Enterprises) and/or Commission File Number 1-1402 
(Southern California Gas Company).

Exhibit 3 -- By-Laws and Articles Of Incorporation 

3.01  Articles of Incorporation of Pacific Enterprises (Pacific 
      Enterprises 1996 Form 10-K, Exhibit 3.01).

3.02  Restated Bylaws of Pacific Enterprises dated November 6, 2001.
      (2001 Form 10-K, Exhibit 3.02).

3.03  Restated Articles of Incorporation of Southern California Gas 
      Company (Southern California Gas Company 1996 Form 10-K, Exhibit 
      3.01).

3.04  Restated Bylaws of Southern California Gas Company dated November 
      6, 2001. (2001 Form 10-K, Exhibit 3.04).

Exhibit 4 -- Instruments Defining The Rights Of Security Holders

The Company agrees to furnish a copy of each such instrument 
to the Commission upon request.

4.01  Specimen Common Stock Certificate of Pacific Enterprises (Pacific
      Enterprises 1988 Form 10-K, Exhibit 4.01).

4.02  Specimen Preferred Stock Certificates of Pacific Enterprises 
      (Pacific Lighting Corporation 1980 Form 10-K, Exhibit 4.02).

4.03  Specimen Preferred Stock Certificates of Southern California Gas
      Company (Southern California Gas Company 1980 Form 10-K, Exhibit 
      4.01).

4.04  First Mortgage Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      American Trust Company dated October 1, 1940 (Registration 
      Statement No. 2-4504 filed by Southern California Gas Company on 
      September 16, 1940, Exhibit B-4).

4.05  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      American Trust Company dated as of July 1, 1947 (Registration 
      Statement No. 2-7072 filed by Southern California Gas Company on 
      March 15, 1947, Exhibit B-5).

4.06  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      American Trust Company dated as of August 1, 1955 (Registration 
      Statement No. 2-11997 filed by Pacific Lighting Corporation on 
      October 26, 1955, Exhibit 4.07).

4.07  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      American Trust Company dated as of June 1, 1956 (Registration 
      Statement No. 2-12456 filed by Southern California Gas Company on 
      April 23, 1956, Exhibit 2.08).

95

4.08  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to Wells
      Fargo Bank, National Association dated as of August 1, 1972 
      (Registration Statement No. 2-59832 filed by Southern California 
      Gas Company on September 6, 1977, Exhibit 2.19).

4.09  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to Wells
      Fargo Bank, National Association dated as of May 1, 1976 
      (Registration Statement No. 2-56034 filed by Southern California 
      Gas Company on April 14, 1976, Exhibit 2.20).

4.10  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to Wells
      Fargo Bank, National Association dated as of September 15, 1981
      (Pacific Enterprises 1981 Form 10-K, Exhibit 4.25).

4.11  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to
      Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company of California, successor to 
      Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, and Crocker National Bank 
      as Successor Trustee dated as of May 18, 1984 (Southern California 
      Gas Company 1984 Form 10-K, Exhibit 4.29).

4.12  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      Bankers Trust Company of California, N.A., successor to Wells 
      Fargo Bank, National Association dated as of January 15, 1988 
      (Pacific Enterprises 1987 Form 10-K, Exhibit 4.11).

4.13  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to First
      Trust of California, National Association, successor to Bankers 
      Trust Company of California, N.A. dated as of August 15, 1992 
      (Registration Statement No. 33-50826 filed by Southern California 
      Gas Company on August 13, 1992, Exhibit 4.37).

4.14  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      U.S. Bank, N.A., successor to First Trust of California, N.A. 
      dated as of October 1, 2002 (2002 Sempra Energy Form 10-K, 
      Exhibit 4.17).

4.15  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      U.S. Bank, N.A., successor to First Trust of California, N.A.,
      Dated as of October 17, 2003 (2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-K,
      Exhibit 4.19).

4.16  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      U.S. Bank, N.A., successor to First Trust of California, N.A.,
      Dated as of December 15, 2003 (2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-K,
      Exhibit 4.20).

4.17  Supplemental Indenture of Southern California Gas Company to 
      U.S. Bank, N.A., successor to First Trust of California, N.A.,
      Dated as of October December 10, 2004 (2004 Sempra Energy Form
      10-K, Exhibit 4.21).

4.18  Specimen 7 3/4% Series Preferred Stock Certificate (Southern 
      California Gas Company 1992 Form 10-K, Exhibit 4.15).

96

Exhibit 10 -- Material Contracts

Compensation

10.01  Form of Severance Pay Agreement (2004 Sempra Energy 10-K
       Exhibit 10.10).

10.02  Sempra Energy 2005 Deferred Compensation Plan (Pacific 
       Enterprises Form 8-K filed on December 07, 2004, Exhibit 10.1).

10.03  Sempra Energy Employee Stock Incentive Plan (September 30, 2004
       Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.1).

10.04  Sempra Energy Amended and Restated Executive Life
       Insurance Plan (September 30, 2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-Q,
       Exhibit 10.2).

10.05  Sempra Energy Excess Cash Balance Plan (September 30, 2004
       Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.3).

10.06  Form of Sempra Energy 1998 Long Term Incentive Plan
       Performance-Based Restricted Stock Award (September 30, 2004
       Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.4).

10.07  Form of Sempra Energy 1998 Long Term Incentive Plan
       Nonqualified Stock Option Agreement (September 30, 2004
       Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.5).

10.08  Form of Sempra Energy 1998 Non-Employee Directors' Stock
       Plan Nonqualified Stock Option Agreement (September 30, 2004
       Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.6).

10.09  Sempra Energy Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (September 
       30, 2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.7).

10.10  Neal Schmale Restricted Stock Award Agreement (September 30, 
       2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.8).

10.11  Severance Pay Agreement between Sempra Energy and
       Donald E. Felsinger (September 30, 2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-Q,
       Exhibit 10.9).

10.12  Severance Pay Agreement between Sempra Energy and Neal Schmale 
       (September 30, 2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.10).

10.13  Sempra Energy Executive Personal Financial Planning Program
       Policy Document (September 30, 2004 Sempra Energy Form 10-Q,
       Exhibit 10.11).

10.14  Sempra Energy 2003 Executive Incentive Plan B (2003 Sempra   
       Energy Form 10-K, Exhibit 10.10).

10.15  Sempra Energy 2003 Executive Incentive Plan (June 30, 2003 
       Sempra Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.1).
	
97

10.16  Amended 1998 Long-Term Incentive Plan (June 30, 2003 Sempra  
       Energy Form 10-Q, Exhibit 10.2).

10.17  Sempra Energy Executive Incentive Plan effective January 1, 2003
       (2002 Sempra Energy Form 10-K, Exhibit 10.09).

10.18  Amended Sempra Energy Retirement Plan for Directors (2002 Sempra 
       Energy Form 10-K, Exhibit 10.10).

10.19  Amended and Restated Sempra Energy Deferred Compensation and
       Excess Savings Plan (Sempra Energy September 30, 2002 Form 10-Q,
       Exhibit 10.3).

10.20  Sempra Energy Executive Security Bonus Plan effective January 1, 
       2001 (2001 Sempra Energy Form 10-K, Exhibit 10.08).

10.21  Form of Sempra Energy Severance Pay Agreement for Executives
       (2001 Sempra Energy Form 10-K, Exhibit 10.07).

10.22  Sempra Energy Deferred Compensation and Excess Savings Plan 
       effective January 1, 2000 (Sempra Energy 2000 Form 10-K,
       Exhibit 10.07).

10.23  Sempra Energy 1998 Long Term Incentive Plan (Incorporated by 
       reference from the Registration Statement on Form S-8 Sempra 
       Energy Registration No. 333-56161 dated June 5, 1998, Exhibit 
       4.1).

10.24  Pacific Enterprises Employee Stock Ownership Plan and Trust 
       Agreement as amended effective October 1, 1992. (Pacific 
       Enterprises 1992 Form 10-K, Exhibit 10.18).

10.25  Amended and Restated Pacific Enterprises Employee Stock Option 
       Plan (Southern California Gas Company 1996 Form 10-K, Exhibit 
       10.10).

Exhibit 12 -- Statement Re: Computation of Ratios

12.01  Pacific Enterprises Computation of Ratio of Earnings to Fixed 
       Charges for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001
       and 2000.

12.02  Southern California Gas Company Computation of Ratio of Earnings 
       to Fixed Charges for the years ended December 31, 2004, 2003,
       2002, 2001 and 2000.
      
Exhibit 21 -- Subsidiaries

21.01  Pacific Enterprises Schedule of Subsidiaries at December 31, 2004.

21.02  Southern California Gas Company Schedule of Subsidiaries at 
       December 31, 2004.

98


Exhibit 23 -- Consents of Independent Registered Public 
      Accounting Firm, page 89.

Exhibit 31 -- Section 302 Certifications

31.1  Statement of PE's Chief Executive Officer pursuant 
      to Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

31.2  Statement of PE's Chief Financial Officer pursuant
      to Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

31.3  Statement of SoCalGas' Chief Executive Officer pursuant 
      to Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

31.4  Statement of SoCalGas' Chief Financial Officer pursuant
      to Rules 13a-14 and 15d-14 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Exhibit 32 -- Section 906 Certifications

32.1  Statement of PE's Chief Executive Officer pursuant 
      to 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1350.

32.2  Statement of PE's Chief Financial Officer pursuant
      to 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1350.

32.3  Statement of SoCalGas' Chief Executive Officer pursuant 
      to 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1350.

32.4  Statement of SoCalGas' Chief Financial Officer pursuant
      to 18 U.S.C. Sec. 1350.

99


GLOSSARY


AFUDC                Allowance for Funds Used During Construction

ALJ                  Administrative Law Judge 

ARB                  Accounting Research Bulletin

BCAP                 Biennial Cost Allocation Proceeding

California 
Utilities            Southern California Gas Company and San Diego Gas 
                     & Electric

CPUC                 California Public Utilities Commission

DSM                  Demand Side Management

El Paso              El Paso Natural gas Company

ERMG                 Energy Risk Management Group

ERMOC                Energy Risk Management Oversight Committee

FASB                 Financial Accounting Standards Board

FERC                 Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

FSP                  FASB Staff Position

GCIM                 Gas Cost Incentive Mechanism

GIR                  Gas Industry Restructuring

ICWUC                International Chemical Workers' Union Counsel

IRS                  Internal Revenue Service

IOUs                 Investor-Owned Utilities

LIBOR                London Interbank Offered Rate

LIFO                 Last in first out inventory costing method

LNG                  Liquefied Natural Gas

MGP                  Manufactured-Gas Plants

mmbtu                Million British Thermal Units (of natural gas)

OIR                  Order Instituting Ratemaking

ORA                  Office of Ratepayer Advocates

PBR                  Performance-Based Ratemaking/Regulation


100

PE                   Pacific Enterprises

PRP                  Potentially Responsible Party

RD&D                 Research Development and Demonstration

ROE                  Return on Equity

ROR                  Return on Ratebase

SDG&E                San Diego Gas & Electric Company

SFAS                 Statement of Financial Accounting Standards

SoCalGas             Southern California Gas Company

UWUA                 Utility Workers' Union of America

VaR                  Value at Risk