Exelon to intensify push to own Mid-Atlantic power plants, CEO says
By Laila Kearney
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Major U.S. electric utility Exelon plans to step up its push to own power plants in its Mid-Atlantic service area next year, where electricity bills are spiking in the face of rising demand and new supplies are slow to be added, CEO Calvin Butler told Reuters this week.
Exelon’s effort comes as PJM Interconnection, the country’s largest grid providing electricity to over 65 million people in the Midwest to the Mid-Atlantic, faces supply shortfalls amid surging demand from data centers and the electrification of industries like transportation.
Chicago-based Exelon said in July that it was considering its options for building and owning regulated power generation, which electric utilities are legally barred from in about half of U.S. states.
In those states, regulated utilities generally own power lines, while independent power producers own and operate power plants to diversify market power, which can help prevent anti-competitive behavior.
Butler said allowing electric utilities like Exelon to build new regulated power supplies, which is currently barred by state laws in much of PJM’s territory, would ease the grid’s power crunch and bring down prices.
Regulated power generation in the region where Exelon operates would require a series of changes to state law, which Butler said his company is laying the groundwork for by talking to lawmakers and governors ahead of next year’s lawmaking meetings.
“I believe the 2026 legislative sessions are going to be an opportunity for us,” Butler told Reuters at a meeting in New York on Monday. “We’re going to be advocating for it.”
About half of U.S. states are considered deregulated, generally, meaning that electric utilities that own transmission and distribution lines cannot also own regulated power generation. The deregulation effort began in the 1990s in response to rising electricity costs.
As power bills rise again, some of the 13 states in PJM, like Maryland and New Jersey, have considered amending their laws to allow regulated power generation.
“I’m one of the staunchest supporters for competitive markets when they work, but we are seeing that the competitive marketplace in PJM is not working,” Butler said.
U.S. power demand is forecast to hit record highs this year and next, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
FIGHTING RISING BILLS
If allowed by the states, Butler said he would seek to build community solar in low-to-moderate income neighborhoods, which he said would reduce power bills.
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