The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia Power seeks rate hike of nearly 12% over three years

Utility says increase is needed to cover new investment­s.

- By Drew Kann drew.kann@ajc.com

As fears of a recession grow and inflation remains near a 40-year high, Georgia Power announced Friday that it is asking state regulators to approve an electricit­y rate hike of nearly 12% over the next three years for its 2.7 million customers.

The new rates are not final and still would have to be approved by the Georgia Public Service Commission (PSC), but if the roughly $1 billion rate increase receives a greenlight from the PSC, customers would see the change in their electricit­y bills starting in January 2023.

The proposed rates are front-loaded, with the largest increases set to take effect in 2023. If they do, the average household could see its bill climb by $14.32 each month next year, the company said, for a total average annual increase of nearly $172.

Monthly rates would rise in 2024 by an additional $1.35 per month and by another $0.62 per month in 2025.

In an interview Friday, Georgia Power’s Chairman and CEO Chris Womack said the company realizes the economic hardships that are facing many Georgians, but that the increases are needed to further modernize the grid, continue the transition away from fossil fuels and improve customer service.

“We think these invest- ments are critically important,” Womack said. “We acknowledg­e and recognize where overall economic conditions are and this request is very sensitive to those con- ditions.”

The PSC approved a $1.77 billion rate increase in 2019.

And the effects of higher rates won’t be felt evenly.

According to testimony filed with the PSC by Larry

Legg, Georgia Power’s director of pricing and rates, households and small busi- nesses will incur increases

of 11.4% and 12.0%, respective­ly, on their electricit­y bills, after fuel costs are accounted for.

That’s compared to an increase of 9.8% for large businesses and 9.9% for “gov- ernments/institutio­ns.”

Environmen­tal advocates and consumer watchdog

groups criticized the company’s request.

“It’s alarming to see that Georgia Power is proposing to ratchet up their already very high profits and raise customer electric bills,” said Jill Kysor, a senior attorney at the environmen­tal legal advocacy nonprofit the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center.

Liz Coyle, the executive director of the nonprofit consumer watchdog group Georgia Watch, pointed to the high “energy burden” already facing many in the state, particular­ly in low-in- come and African American communitie­s.

A 2018 analysis conducted by Georgia Tech researcher­s found there are only three cities where residents spend more of their total income on electricit­y than customers in Atlanta do.

“People in this state are already struggling to pay their power bills,” Coyle said. “Georgia Power’s custom- ers have some of the high- est energy burden in the country, and adding $15 a month to their power bills starting in January is going to be unaffordab­le for many Georgians.”

Womack said that Geor- gia Power’s new rates strike a balance between allowing continued investment in improving grid reliabilit­y and resiliency, while also keeping customers’ bills down.

“We’re always focused on the cost of our product and how we keep that cost down,” Womack said.

Still more rate increases could be coming for Georgia Power customers to recover the costs of building Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4.

The company says the new nuclear reactors are nearing completion, but remain billions of dollars over budget and are more than five years behind schedule.

According to the compa- ny’s most recent Vogtle status update filed with the PSC, Georgia Power expects future rate increases tied to the

reactors to peak at around 10%, but around 2% of that is already baked into the rates customers are paying today.

Georgia Power is facing lawsuits from two of its Vogtle co-owners over whose responsibi­lity it is to cover the ballooning costs of Units 3 and 4 of the nuclear power plant.

Depending on how the courts rule, Georgia Power could have to absorb an even greater portion of future con- struction costs, which have already climbed to an esti- mated $30 billion.

However, Aaron Abramo- vitz, the company’s CFO and executive vice president, said it will not seek to recover any potential new costs that may result from those lawsuits.

The new request for rate increases comes as Georgia Power is in the final stretch of gaining the commission’s sign-off on its Integrated Resource Plan, the company’s roadmap for generating and delivering electricit­y for the next 20 years.

The PSC is expected to hold a final vote on the plan next month.

Hearings in the compa- ny’s rate case will begin in September and the commission will make a final decision on how much to allow Georgia Power to raise rates in late December.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Chris Womack, chairman and CEO of Georgia Power, said the rate increases are needed to modernize the grid, continue the transition away from fossil fuels and improve customer service.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Chris Womack, chairman and CEO of Georgia Power, said the rate increases are needed to modernize the grid, continue the transition away from fossil fuels and improve customer service.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States