NextEra, Dominion announce merger to create U.S. power behemoth
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U.S. power giants NextEra Energy and Dominion Energy announced plans Monday to merge in the largest electricity deal — by far — since the mainstreaming of AI.
Why it matters: The deal, if approved by regulators, would enable massive scale as the industry looks to expand generation and related infrastructure to meet rising demand.
- The all-stock merger "creates the world's largest regulated electric utility business by market capitalization and one of the world's largest energy infrastructure companies," the companies said in a joint announcement.
- The potential merger would expand NextEra's presence in the fast-growing PJM grid region of the Midwest and mid-Atlantic.
Stunning stats: The combined company would serve about 10 million utility customer accounts across Florida, Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina, and own 110 gigawatts of generation from a wide array of energy sources, the announcement states.
- It would be the world's largest player in renewables and battery storage, and would lead the U.S. in total power generation, the companies said.
- That means it would be the largest company in natural gas-fired power, and No. 2 in nuclear.
Driving the news: NextEra — which has a market capitalization of $195 billion — owns the utility Florida Power & Light, and has renewables, battery, gas and other projects nationwide.
- Richmond-based utility Dominion serves what's currently the largest data center market — Virginia — and operates in several other states. Its current market cap is $54 billion.
The big picture: The deal lands amid U.S. electricity demand that's rising thanks to AI, re-shoring of manufacturing and the growth of electric cars, among other reasons.
- Power prices are also rising in many areas, putting pressure on utilities and regulators to enact new consumer protections.
- The companies said customers would benefit from increased scale and efficiency.
- They're also proposing to provide $2.25 billion in electric bill credits spread over two years for Dominion customers in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina.
Catch up quick: It would be the latest in a growing number of very large deals, notably Constellation's $29 billion acquisition of Calpine completed in January that greatly expanded its gas-fired fleet.
- Scale is becoming increasingly important, "not only to compete but also to access capital and execute transactions efficiently," Deloitte analysts wrote in a report on U.S. power deals.
What they're saying: While both NextEra and Dominion have a range of assets and project pipelines, power entrepreneur Jigar Shah says the deal would be important for expanding NextEra's battery storage skillset.
- "Dropping NextEra's storage expertise onto Virginia's data center load could be transformative," Shah, who led the Energy Department's loan program in the Biden-era, posted on X over the weekend.
What we're watching: The deal could face legal and regulatory challenges getting approved by federal and state officials.
- The companies hope to close the transaction in 12 to 18 months.
