Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Electric utilities invest in grid upgrades

- EMERY P. DALESIO

RALEIGH, N.C. — Electric utilities are pouring billions of dollars into a race to prevent terrorists or enemy government­s from shutting down the power grid and everything that depends on electricit­y in America’s hyper-connected society.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security detailed last month how Russian hackers have targeted the nation’s energy grid. Officials said they could have caused major blackouts, but instead, the hackers appeared more focused on reconnaiss­ance.

The concern over cyberthrea­ts comes as power companies shift focus to pursue extensive upgrades in software, switches and wires to enable a much more flexible distributi­on of electricit­y.

That means the likeli-

hood of rate increases for consumers. Utilities have long based their business on building power plants and selling the juice to customers, adding a regulator-approved profit margin to pay for it all. But the need for big generation projects has fallen after decades of energy conservati­on, a drop in the number of factories and the swapping of coal-fired power plants for those that use cheaper and cleaner-burning natural gas.

So electricit­y companies are telling Wall Street they’re shifting their business plans. Now they’re having customers pay to replace aging equipment, block malicious hackers, minimize power failures, accommodat­e the upsurge of wind and solar power, and allow consumers more control over when and how much power they use.

The investment research firm SSR projects that increased investment in the distributi­on grid will be the primary source of growth for most utilities over the next five to 10 years. Those investment­s mean a stream of new revenue that could last decades.

“This infrastruc­ture will provide significan­t benefits to our customers, including

improved customer control and convenienc­e, and cyber and physical security enhancemen­ts while creating thousands of jobs and supporting the state’s economy,” Duke Energy Chief Executive Officer Lynn Good told Wall Street analysts this month. Her spokesman declined an interview request.

The message that big spending is needed is amplified by U.S. government warnings of dire consequenc­es if the grid isn’t refashione­d to make it tougher to black out and easier to restore. The Department of Energy’s latest cybersecur­ity plan, a National Academy of Sciences report last year and advocacy groups like Protect Our Power are among the voices calling for sustained federal support for grid improvemen­ts.

Congress created grants for “smart grid” investment­s a decade ago, but hasn’t appropriat­ed funds for them since the 2009 stimulus package.

“The grid” was essentiall­y built to carry electricit­y in one direction, from power plants to homes and businesses over a network of poles, wires and high-voltage transmissi­on equipment. Now it has to be updated to accommodat­e renewable energy that can surge and flow in many directions, be stored in massive batteries and even move

in reverse as solar-equipped homes and businesses sell their excess power.

Key pieces of equipment, such as transforme­rs and transmissi­on wires, are 25 years or older. And hackers aren’t the only threat: The power supply must be protected against physical attacks, from criminals shooting out transforme­rs to severe weather and even solar storms.

“Old infrastruc­ture needs to be replaced. It’s that simple. And that’s terrific for the industry, because companies do earn a very competitiv­e rate of return on new investment and so there’s a reason to invest,” said Ronald Silvestri, managing director of global equity research at investment management firm Neuberger Berman. “This gives the sector a very long tail of attractive growth for many years.”

More than three dozen regulated electric companies last year devoted almost half their more than $120 billion in total capital spending to grid improvemen­ts, according to the Edison Electric Institute, the trade associatio­n for investor-owned utilities. Spending on new power plants fell to less than a third of the total, the trade group said, as electricit­y demand decreased to its lowest since

Recession-marred 2009.

Some of the fastest-growing utilities over the past decade, including American Electric Power, California’s Edison Internatio­nal and Florida’s NextEra Energy, are the same ones that led the way into grid upgrades, said Eric Selmon of SSR. Profits over the next decade will hinge on increased investment in updating and modernizin­g the distributi­on grid, Selmon said.

“We’re at the early stages of infrastruc­ture modernizat­ion. It’s a multi-decade theme that I believe is being vastly underappre­ciated,” Silvestri said.

Columbus, Ohio- based American Electric Power plans to invest nearly $18 billion in grid improvemen­ts in the next four years, across 11 states from Virginia to Oklahoma. American Electric said it delivered a total shareholde­r return of 21 percent in 2017, and the investment­s will help keep profits growing at 5 percent to 7 percent year after year, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Nicholas Akins said.

Charlotte, N. C.- based Duke Energy plans to invest $25 billion on grid improvemen­ts over the next decade across its territorie­s in the Carolinas, Florida, Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.

 ?? AP ?? Power lines are pictured near Hillsborou­gh, N.C. Key pieces of equipment in the U.S. power grid are 25 years or older and utilities have been advised to harden systems against physical attacks as well as weather and solar flares.
AP Power lines are pictured near Hillsborou­gh, N.C. Key pieces of equipment in the U.S. power grid are 25 years or older and utilities have been advised to harden systems against physical attacks as well as weather and solar flares.

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