Yer right, I didn't know about and haven't noticed the power company's neutral (I'll have to count the wires on the vertical drop into one of my houses). There must be three wires to carry electricity into your house (unless you have only 120 volt service not 240 volt but I don't know if 120 volt service even exists). Two 120 volt hots that are 180 out of phase and a neutral. If your load is unbalanced the unbalanced part will flow over the neutral. But, the neutral and ground are connected in the main panel of your house and the ground to earth. In some instances the power company, however, does use the earth as a conductor on some DC transmission services during emergencies. A friend works for a power plant on the Columbia River, they transmit DC here to So.Cal., and for a while they used the earth as the return. Apparently, they were eating up docks in lakes and all sorts of stuff due to the electrolysis. They, according to my friend, stopped this practice for normal operation. One might argue that if the path through ground/earth is better than the neutral, the electrons could flow that way, but it isn't likely or I guess desireable under normal circumstances.
Thanks for setting me straight.
Cheers,
Gus