NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy agree deal

The combined entity will operate under the NextEra name and be 74.5% owned by NextEra Energy shareholders and 25.5% by Dominion Energy shareholders. It will serve around 10 million accounts across Florida, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina.
The combined entity will have 110 GW of generating capacity, including considerable nuclear energy capacity - NextEra Energy Resources, along with its affiliate company Florida Power & Light Company, operates seven nuclear units at four sites: Turkey Point and St Lucie in Florida; Seabrook in New Hampshire; and Point Beach in Wisconsin. Additionally, it plans to restart the Duane Arnold plant in Iowa, which ceased operations in 2020. The plant is scheduled to become operational at the beginning of 2029, pending regulatory approvals. A power purchase agreement with Google was announced last October.
In January NextEra Energy said it could add up to 6 GWe of small modular reactor generating capacity at its existing nuclear power plant sites or potential new sites, primarily to meet demand from data centres.
More than 40% of the electricity Dominion Energy generates is from its nuclear plants - Millstone Nuclear Power Station in Connecticut, North Anna and Surry nuclear power plants in Virginia and VC Summer in South Carolina.
John Ketchum, chairman, president and CEO of NextEra Energy, said: "This is a historic moment for our two companies and for the states we are privileged to serve. Electricity demand is rising faster than it has in decades. Projects are getting larger and more complex. Customers need affordable and reliable power now, not years from now. We are bringing NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy together because scale matters more than ever - not for the sake of size, but because scale translates into capital and operating efficiencies. It enables us to buy, build, finance and operate more efficiently, which translates into more affordable electricity for our customers in the long run."
Robert Blue, chair, president and CEO of Dominion Energy, said: "This combination brings together two strong operating platforms and creates an even stronger energy partner for Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida, with the scale and balance sheet to deliver the generation, transmission and grid investments our customers and economies need."
The proposal is that Ketchum will serve as chairman and CEO of the combined company and Blue will serve as president and CEO of regulated utilities and as a member of the board of directors. The combined company's board of directors will include 10 directors from NextEra Energy and four from Dominion Energy. The announcement includes a proposal for USD2.25 billion in bill credits for Dominion customers in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina over the two years after the deal closes.
The two sides expect the deal to close in 12 to 18 months "subject to customary closing conditions and approvals by the shareholders of NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy, the expiration or termination of the waiting period under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act, approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission under Section 203 of the Federal Power Act and approval by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission".
NextEra-Dominion Energy Merger To Create World’s Largest Electric Utility
Leading clean energy utility, NextEra Energy (NYSE:NEE), has agreed to buy Dominion Energy (NYSE:D) in an all-stock transaction valued at $66.8 billion, marking the largest power utility acquisition on record. The merger unites Florida-based NextEra Energy and Virginia-based Dominion Energy to create the world’s largest regulated electric utility, a power sector titan with an enterprise value exceeding $400 billion including debt.
The historic consolidation is directly driven by the artificial intelligence infrastructure boom, with high-performance AI hardware having triggered a massive surge in electricity demand. NextEra, a global leader in wind and solar power, will leverage its clean energy assets to meet the carbon-free electricity requirements of tech hyperscalers like Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META).
NextEra previously secured high-profile deals, including an agreement with Google to revive Iowa’s Duane Arnold nuclear plant.
Dominion operates in Virginia and the Carolinas, with Northern Virginia home to the world’s largest concentration of data centers, also known as the “Data Center Alley”.
PJM Interconnection, the largest U.S. power grid operator, has projected that summer peak demand in the Dominion Energy zone (encompassing Northern Virginia’s Data Center Alley) to grow by 5.4% annually over the next decade. Because hyperscale data centers run continuously at high load factors, they drive up demand evenly, causing winter peak loads to rise at a 4% annualized rate.
However, the mega-merger faces a complex review process since it requires antitrust clearance and approvals from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) alongside state public utility commissions in Florida, Virginia, and the Carolinas.
Thankfully, Wall Street is generally bullish that the current federal administration’s general openness to corporate mergers may provide a smoother path toward finalization.
By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com
NextEra to Buy Dominion in Landmark U.S. Utility Mega-Merger
Under the agreement, Dominion shareholders will receive 0.8138 shares of NextEra Energy for each Dominion share they own, giving NextEra investors roughly 74.5% ownership of the combined company and Dominion shareholders about 25.5%. The transaction is expected to close within 12 to 18 months, pending shareholder and regulatory approvals.
The combined company would serve around 10 million customer accounts across Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina and control approximately 110 gigawatts of generation capacity spanning natural gas, nuclear, renewables, and battery storage. The companies said more than 80% of the merged business would be regulated operations.
The deal comes as U.S. utilities race to secure scale and capital to meet rapidly rising electricity demand driven by artificial intelligence, data centers, industrial reshoring, and electrification trends. NextEra said the combined company would have more than 130 GW of large-load opportunities in its development pipeline.
To ease regulatory and political concerns over customer impacts, the companies proposed $2.25 billion in bill credits for Dominion customers in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina over two years after closing. They also pledged to retain dual headquarters in Juno Beach, Florida, and Richmond, Virginia, while maintaining Dominion’s regional utility brands.
NextEra Chief Executive John Ketchum said the transaction was designed to improve operating efficiency and lower long-term customer costs as utilities face increasingly complex and capital-intensive infrastructure needs. Dominion CEO Robert Blue said the merger would strengthen the companies’ ability to fund new generation, transmission, and grid upgrades.
The companies expect the merger to immediately boost adjusted earnings per share and project more than 9% annual adjusted EPS growth through 2032. They also said the larger balance sheet could improve credit metrics and lower financing costs.
The merger would significantly expand NextEra’s already dominant position in U.S. power markets. The company is currently the largest renewable energy and battery storage developer in the world through NextEra Energy Resources, while Dominion brings major regulated utility operations and one of the largest offshore wind development portfolios in the United States.
The transaction will require approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and multiple state utility regulators, including commissions in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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