Walker County Messenger

State energy regulators approve Georgia Power rate hike

- By Dave Williams

The state Public Service Commission (PSC) approved a $1.8 billion rate increase requested by Georgia Power Tuesday, Dec. 20, that embraced most of an agreement between the agency’s staff and the company presented.

Commission­ers slightly lowered the upper limit on profits Georgia Power will be allowed to keep and sweetened incentives to be offered to encourage the developmen­t of solar energy and the deployment of electric vehicle charging stations. But the PSC stopped short of more far-reaching changes proposed by Commission­er Lauren “Bubba” McDonald, who provided the lone opposition in the 4-1 vote.

The $1.8 billion rate hike — down from Georgia Power’s original request of $2.9 billion — will raise the average residentia­l customer’s bill by $3.60 per month starting Jan. 1. That’s down significan­tly from the $14.90 monthly increase customers would have seen next year under the original front-loaded three-year request the company proposed in June.

Instead, customer rates will go up by 4.5% in 2024 and again in 2025 under the agreement between Georgia Power and the PSC’s Public Interest Advocacy Staff.

The commission set the return on equity (ROE) for the utility at the staffrecom­mended level of 10.5%, down from the 11% the company sought.

But commission Chair Tricia Pridemore amended the upper limit of the “earnings band” — the range within which the utility can earn profits for its shareholde­rs without sharing them with customers — to 11.9%, slightly below the 12% Georgia Power requested and currently receives. The PSC staff had recommende­d reducing the upper limit to 11.5%.

“In the current environmen­t of increasing interest rates and record inflation, it is important to hold the company close to current band levels in order to maintain the company’s financial integrity and the efficiency incentives to ultimately benefit customers,” Pridemore said.

The commission defeated an alternativ­e amendment McDonald proposed to follow the staff’s suggestion and set the upper limit of the earnings band at 11.5%.

“All those revenues inside the band go to the company, not the ratepayer,” McDonald said.

The commission did approve one customer-friendly amendment Pridemore introduced increasing the percentage of revenues the company brings in above the earnings band that are refunded directly to ratepayers from the 10% contained in the agreement to 40%.

Commission­er Fitz Johnson proposed an amendment to provide 65% of the $81 million Georgia Power had sought for EV charging stations. The agreement had cut that allocation to just 10% of the original request.

The PSC also passed another Johnson amendment to charge residentia­l customers participat­ing in Georgia Power’s community solar program $24 for every “block” of power generated and charge commercial customers $25 per block. That’s less than Georgia Power wanted but more than the PSC staff recommende­d.

“Pricing at this level will allow participat­ing customers the opportunit­y to support the developmen­t of clean energy as well as the opportunit­y to realize fuel savings,” Johnson said.

Finally, the PSC approved an amendment proposed by Commission­er Jason Shaw to increase payments to participan­ts in Georgia Power’s rooftop solar program for the electricit­y they generate beyond what they use.

“This change will improve the economics of rooftop solar for [participat­ing] customers and encourage the adoption of more solar in Georgia,” Shaw said.

However, the commission did not lift the current 5,000-customer cap on the utility’s pilot rooftop solar program, which solar industry advocates have complained threatens the financial health of their business.

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