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I&M Power asks state regulators to approve rate increase

(Photo supplied/Indiana-Michigan Power)
Indiana Michigan Power has asked state regulators to approve a rate increase that could raise your power bill nearly 7 percent.
The utility says the rate hike is needed to help fund their initiative they call “Powering Our Future/”
They say the plan improves reliability by replacing old equipment, continues tree trimming and helps install new grid technologies, so there are fewer and shorter power outages, among other items.
The utility requested a rate increase of 6.8%, or more than $116 million dollars.
The new rates  would be phased-in over two years, with the first in mid-2024 and the second in early 2025.
When fully implemented the average homeowner would see their power bill go from $162 dollars to $176 dollars per month.

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2 comments

Charles U Farley August 15, 2023 at 8:33 am

As if the regulators will say no… It’s an incestuous relationship between the regulators and the utilities!

What we really need is to remove government enforcement of “natural” monopolies and let utilities compete against each other for a change.

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Robin Phillips August 15, 2023 at 11:28 am

I&M has raised our electric bill for the last 40 years. With the same reasons, “Powering Our Future/”
They say the plan improves reliability by replacing old equipment, continues tree trimming and helps install new grid technologies, so there are fewer and shorter power outages, among other items. It never stops and improvement is not good enough.

Decommission, Shut downs of power plants. What about Geothermal energy?

This is from eia U.S. Energy Information Administration
FEBRUARY 7, 2023
Coal and natural gas plants will account for 98% of U.S. capacity retirements in 2023
U.S. planned utility-scale electric-generating capacity retirements (2023)
Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory, December 2022
In 2023, operators plan to retire 15.6 gigawatts (GW) of electric-generating capacity in the United States, mostly natural gas-fired (6.2 GW) and coal-fired (8.9 GW) power plants, according to our Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory.

Coal. Substantial U.S. coal-fired capacity has retired over the past decade, and a record 14.9 GW was retired in 2015. Annual coal retirements averaged 11.0 GW a year from 2015 to 2020, decreased to 5.6 GW in 2021, and then increased to 11.5 GW in 2022. This year, power plant owners and operators plan to retire 8.9 GW of coal-fired capacity, which is 4.5% of the total coal-fired capacity at the start of the year.

Most coal-fired power plants operating in the United States were built in the 1970s and 1980s. As these aging coal-fired power plants compete with a growing number of highly efficient, modern natural gas-fired power plants and low-cost renewables, such as wind and solar, more of these coal-fired power plants are being retired.

The largest coal-fired power plant expected to retire this year is the 1,490 MW W.H. Sammis Power Plant in Ohio. The oldest four of the plant’s seven coal-fired units were retired in 2020; the last three units will be shut down this year, along with the plant’s five petroleum-fired units (13 MW of combined capacity).

Pleasants Power Station (1,278 MW) is the second-largest coal-fired power plant retirement expected this year. Energy Harbor, which plans to become a 100% carbon-free electricity supplier by the end of this year, owns both W.H. Sammis and Pleasants.

Natural gas. This year, 6.2 GW of U.S. natural gas-fired capacity is scheduled to retire, representing 1.3% of the operating natural gas fleet as of January. Most of the retiring natural gas capacity is made up of older steam and combustion turbine units, which produce electricity less efficiently than many of the newer combined-cycle natural gas units.

Three aging natural gas-fired plants in California (Alamitos, Huntington Beach, and Redondo Beach), with a combined 2.2 GW of capacity, are scheduled to retire by the end of this year. These plants were originally slated to retire in 2020; they were granted a three-year extension to maintain grid reliability.

Planned U.S. utility-scale electric generator retirements, 2023
Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory, December 2022
Petroleum. Petroleum-fired power plants make up a small portion of generating capacity in the United States at around 2.2%. Most of these plants are seldom run and serve as peaker plants—plants that only supply electricity during higher-than-normal electricity demand, such as during snowstorms and extreme heatwaves. This year, 0.4 GW of U.S. petroleum-fired capacity is scheduled to retire.

Power plant owners and operators report planned capacity retirements, as well as planned additions, to EIA in our annual and monthly electric generator surveys. A previous Today in Energy article describes the 54.5 GW of generating capacity that developers plan to bring online in 2023.

Principal contributors: Elesia Fasching, Suparna Ray

Tags: coal, natural gas, electric generation, retirements, capacity

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