Attorney general urges Va. Power electric-rate cut or refund
Virginia's attorney general is urging the State Corporation Commission to either cut Dominion Virginia Power's electric rates this year or have the company give customers a refund for over-earning last year.
Experts for Attorney General Bill Mims' office told the SCC that Dominion Virginia Power's rates should be reduced by $238 million or customers should receive a refund of $153 million.
Dominion Virginia Power has asked the commission for a $250 million rate increase, the first in base rates in 17 years.
The difference between the attorney general's suggested reduction and the company's proposed increase is $488 million.
As the state's largest electric company with 2.3 million customers, Dominion Virginia Power's rates and services are regulated by the SCC. The rate case is the first conducted under new state law governing electric utilities.
Neither Dominion Virginia Power nor the attorney general's office would say yesterday what the impact on a typical residential customer's bill might be if the attorney general's recommendations were adopted completely.
Dominion Virginia Power and the attorney general's office declined to comment, saying the case is still in litigation.
A hearing is slated for Jan. 20.
Most -- $439 million -- of the $488 million difference between the two proposals stems from four issues in the rate case, with the remaining $49 million from a number of smaller matters.
The big issues:
- The return on equity. The attorney general's office said it was making no recommendation on how much return on equity Dominion Virginia Power should get.
However, the attorney general's experts used a rate of return of 11.12 percent instead of the 14.0 percent Dominion Virginia Power had proposed.
The difference between the two rates of return is worth $198 million for Dominion Virginia Power customers. As a regulated utility, the company is allowed to recover its costs and earn a reasonable rate of return for stockholders.
- The company's annual costs. The attorney general's office says that utility's annual costs in 2008 were actually $104 million lower than the company's calculation.
- Replacing meters. Dominion Virginia Power wants to replace 2.6 million meters with more expensive "smart meters."
But the attorney general's office contended the $600-million plan was premature and recommended the company be required to evaluate the deployment's benefits. That would save customers $61.4 million, the attorney general's office said.
- Employee compensation. About $75.8 million could be avoided by changes to Dominion Virginia Power's compensation plans.
Contact Peter Bacqué at (804) 649-6813 or
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Reader Reactions
Anon, you are correct, but you would have to go back to every other Dominion related article to read his solar comments. Plus if one gets off fossil fuels, there is only solar and wind. Mr. Burger has a history of pushing solar.
Sour grapes. Who was running the state government when the rate increase was approved? Someone might want to ask how much Dominion has had to fork over to fend off frivolous lawsuits from various eco-groups determined to prevent coal-powered plants and licenses for offshore drilling? This is nothing but morning after grandstanding.
AACJ,
For your information, the word solar does not appear once in Scott’s comment.
Scott, apparently since all of your posts don’t suggest any other energy form other than solar, I will assume you have some financial stake in it. Solar will NEVER be a reliable or cost efficient or effective form of electricity over the long haul for a grid the size of ours in North America. If the clouds suddenly disappear, what’s going to happen? There are no batteries that can store that much power. And when a thing that happens every day (called NIGHT) comes along, there will be no solar panels that can turn moonbeams into power. And people don’t really like it when the lights go off.
I am curious to know though Scott, how many solar panels you have on your house right now.
Hopefully this means Dominion will be held more accountable. I can certainly understand citizens wanting their money back, but maybe an alternative should be forcing Dominion to do more with energy conservation and renewable power. I want to see investment to get Virginia off fossil fuels. We are rapidly falling behind other state and other countries when it comes to ending the fossil fuel addiction. The pollution caused by fossil fuels has a big effect on the environment and citizens’ health. There is a HUGE amount of money that can be saved by curtailling this effect by ending the fossil fuel addiction. I plead with fiscal conservatives coming into political office to recognize this.
It is nice to see some good news. I hope this monopoly has to play by the rules of the game.
Why doesn’t anyone complain about Dominion VA. Powers rate increase about a year ago. The avg. cost to customers per kw went from $5.56 to $8.05. That is a very significant increase. I realize the fuel costs had been high before this but they went back down.
This won’t stand. Now that Tom Farrell is selecting members of the next administration, Dominion Power will hold a special place in the hearts of Virginia bureaucrats.
The new governor might just decide to raise Dominion’s rate of return as a thank you gesture to his old friend and contributor.
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