The Commercial Appeal

NC consumers could see $5B coal-ash cleanup bill

- Emery P. Dalesio ASSOCIATED PRESS

RALEIGH, N.C. – A string of decisions by North Carolina regulators means electricit­y consumers could be seeing a multibilli­on-dollar bill to clean up mountains of waste Duke Energy created by spending decades burning coal to produce power.

State utilities regulators late last month decided that both North Carolina divisions of the country’s No. 2 power company could charge ratepayers the first $778 million chunk of a cleanup projected to cost about $5 billion.

Cleanup became a priority after a major leak from a Duke Energy site in 2014 left coal ash coating 70 miles of the Dan River on the North Carolina-Virginia border. The waste byproduct contains toxic metals like lead, mercury and arsenic.

The company pleaded guilty to federal environmen­tal crimes in 2015 for its coal-ash handling and thus admitted “pervasive, system-wide shortcomin­gs,” the North Carolina Utilities Commission said in its ruling last month.

North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein said he’s going to court to try to stop Duke Energy from passing along its costs to excavate some ash pits and cover others. Corporate mismanagem­ent increased costs that shareholde­rs should also be forced to bear, he said in an interview. Duke Energy said it followed industry practices and applicable regulation­s.

“This case will ultimately be decided by the North Carolina Supreme Court,” Stein said.

A decision by the state’s highest court isn’t likely before next year, when 3.4 million North Carolina power customers finally learn if they’re on the hook for a bill that’s been accumulati­ng for decades.

Decisions by the North Carolina Utilities Commission last month and in February largely agreed with Duke Energy’s argument that consumers should pay for cleanup as part of the bill for the affordable, consistent electricit­y that burning coal had long provided.

It marks one of the commission’s most controvers­ial regulatory decisions of recent years. But the precedent for passing on coal-ash costs was set last year prior to the Duke Energy decisions in a case involving Virginia-based Do-

minion Energy, which serves North Carolina’s northeast corner, said Don Bailey, who served four years on the commission ending last year.

“The Dominion decision about a year ago may have been some indication of what was going to take place” in the Duke hearings, Bailey said. “It wasn’t anywhere near the kind of money we’re talking about now.”

The two decisions by the utilities commission that Stein promises to challenge involve Duke Energy’s two North Carolina subsidiari­es.

The company’s Duke Energy Carolinas subsidiary, which operates in central and western North Carolina, could charge its customers the $546 million in coal-ash cleanup costs incurred from 2015 to 2017, the commission decided June 22.

But the regulator also found fault with Duke Energy’s practices and assessed a $70 million mismanagem­ent penalty. The company’s “irresponsi­ble management” of its ash pits “has resulted in cost increases greater than those necessary to adequately maintain and operate its facilities,” commission­ers wrote.

Still, consumers will pay about $476 million of the cleanup cost and the company’s shareholde­rs about 13 percent of the subsidiary’s bill so far.

In February, the utilities commission allowed the company’s Duke Energy Progress operating subsidiary, which serves eastern North Carolina and the Asheville area, to charge customers $232 million for coal-ash cleanup costs racked up already.

Regulators simultaneo­usly assessed the company a $30 million mismanagem­ent penalty.

North Carolina is Duke Energy’s most important territory.

The company has 7.6 million customers spread over several states, including South Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio.

 ??  ?? A drainage pipe was the original culprit of the 2014 coal-ash spill at the Dan River Steam Station in Eden, N.C. GERRY BROOME/AP
A drainage pipe was the original culprit of the 2014 coal-ash spill at the Dan River Steam Station in Eden, N.C. GERRY BROOME/AP

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