Chattanooga Times Free Press

TVA delivers the cheapest power in a decade

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

Colder winter weather pushed up energy use this year compared with the milder 2020 winter, but the Tennessee Valley Authority delivered its cheapest electricit­y prices in a decade to help offset the higher power consumptio­n.

TVA reported Tuesday that its effective power rates in the first three months of 2021 were 7% below the rates charged a year earlier due to both cheaper fuel costs and the impact of rebates TVA offered to its customers for long-term contracts and to cope with the pandemic.

TVA Chief Financial Officer John Thomas said the federal utility benefited by abundant rainfall to drive up hydroelect­ricity generation along with improved performanc­e from its nuclear and solar units to cut overall fuel and purchased power expenses by 8% from the same period a year earlier.

The average rate paid by the municipali­ties and power cooperativ­es that distribute TVA-generated power in the seven-state Tennessee Valley region fell from 6.8 cents per kilowatt-hour in early 2002 to 6.3 cents per kilowatt-hour in the first part of 2021.

TVA cut its rates even as the utility nearly doubled its profits and maintained its 20-year-plus record of delivering electricit­y to local power companies more than 99.999% of the time.

“As we continue to provide reliable power even in the most extreme conditions, the cost of TVA’s electricit­y also remains among the lowest in the industry and the region,” Thomas said. “In fact, TVA’s customers are paying effective wholesale rates in 2021 that are lower than a decade ago and we project our rates will remain stable for the remainder of the decade.”

The federal utility is on pace to top $1 billion in annual profits this year

year for the fourth consecutiv­e year. In a quarterly earnings report released Tuesday, TVA said it earned $456 million during the first three months of 2021 on sales of more than $2.5 billion. In the same period a year ago, TVA reported net income of $256 million on sales of just under $2.5 billion.

For the first half of the current fiscal year that began last October, TVA reported net income of $640 million, up from $447 million a year earlier.

TVA said the pandemic does not appear to be hurting power sales. Electricit­y sales for TVA were 3% higher this winter than a year ago, primarily due to colder weather than the mild winter of 2020. The number of heating degree days was up 8% from a year ago, but the Tennessee Valley did not experience the winter storms that hit Texas and knocked more than 4 million customers out of power, at least temporaril­y, and led to the deaths of at least 111 people from hypothermi­a and other stormrelat­ed causes.

“The industryle­ading reliabilit­y of the TVA power system kept the lights and heat on in the Tennessee Valley region this winter during conditions that caused severe disruption­s in other parts of the country,” TVA President Jeff Lyash said in a statement Tuesday.

As part of the Strategic Financial Plan approved by the TVA board in 2019, TVA began offering a 20-year Valley Partnershi­p Agreement option to local power company customers. As Monday, 142 local power companies had accepted the offer and are now TVA long-term partners. Bill credits available to longterm partners totaled more than $90 million in the first two quarters of fiscal year 2021.

In 2020, the TVA also began a Pandemic Relief Credit that became effective beginning in October 2020 as a 2.5% monthly base rate credit, totaling approximat­ely $200 million for 2021. As of March 31, TVA had provided approximat­ely $104 million in Pandemic Relief Credits.

TVA is also offering the Back-to-Business credit program that provides relief to certain larger customers when returning to operations and the Community Care Fund that partners TVA and LPCs to support local initiative­s that address hardships created by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Lyash said TVA also has only half the carbon footprint of its neighborin­g utilities in the Southeast and its lower rates are helping to attract businesses wanting cheaper and cleaner power.

“TVA’s economic developmen­t efforts, combined with our reliabilit­y and low costs, continue to attract and encourage the expansion of business and industries in the Tennessee Valley, with over $3.9 billion in investment­s and more than 45,200 jobs created or retained through the second quarter of 2021,” he said.

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John Thomas

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