Now We Will Enrich Dominion’s Creditors, Too

Who gets rich when debtors make smaller payments over longer periods of time? The lenders, that’s who.

by Steve Haner

Facing the prospect of a jaw-dropping jump in electricity prices because of fuel price hikes last year, the State Corporation Commission approved Dominion Energy Virginia’s request to defer most of those costs for future collection. The unpaid bill for fuel already burned is now about $1.5 billion, apparently, and Dominion has a new plan on how to collect it from you.

Have you ever made the mistake of running up a big credit card bill, and then trying to pay it off by making just the minimum payment? The banks behind the credit cards love it when you do that, because of all the interest they collect over the years it takes you to pay down to zero. Dominion is proposing to do exactly that with that unpaid $1.5 billion in fuel costs.

So far, the General Assembly seems to be going along. Dominion lobbyists have said that paying off the unpaid bill in cash over one year would add $17 per month on that illustrative 1,000 kilowatt hour bill. It will start to be collected when the fuel factor is adjusted next summer, a process known as a true-up. In general, the fuel factor is a bigger hit on the largest industrial users.

That jump in prices would show up just before the 2023 elections. This new scheme, if approved by regulators as well, greatly reduces the immediate cost. But how much will the total bill turn into over years and years? For fuel that was burned years before. Will interest costs equal or exceed the principal?

Basically, Dominion is proposing to securitize the fuel debt with a long-term bond. It has rolled the language authorizing this approach into its omnibus regulatory bill, the one mainly focused on increasing its allowed profit margin. The language on the bond appeared in the most recent substitute for that bill. Nothing like this has been inserted in the utility regulatory statutes before, so it takes more than 450 lines of small type to create (lines 16-472 on the substitute reached by the link.)

The entire bill, Senate Bill 1265, has been approved by the Senate Commerce and Labor Committee on a 12-3 vote and is now pending on the Senate floor. The House version, House Bill 1770, is on the docket for House Commerce and Energy Committee this afternoon and the same substitute will likely be offered.

In presenting the idea, Dominion’s lobbyist stressed in a committee hearing Monday that the State Corporation Commission will have full authority to say yea or nay on this approach. All the financial data will have to be spelled out in advance – how many years it will take to pay off the debt, at what interest rate, and at what ultimate cost to consumers. The claim is that all the legal verbiage will allow the debt to carry a better credit rating than normally applies to the utility and its parent company.

As with all the other aspects of this major regulatory re-write, legislators signed off without asking for or getting any input from the SCC staff in the room, or hearing from the Office of the Attorney General, charged by law to be the consumer counsel for the state.

After years of complaining about how General Assembly decisions enrich Dominion’s stockholders, we now have a bill where the Assembly is also enriching the company’s creditors. A two-fer. Even with an AAA rating, the debt will pay a nice dividend, far better than average folks get on their own bank accounts or a certificate of deposit.

Government-authorized debt to pay for a capital asset – a school, library or road – allows the citizens to benefit from the project while paying it off. Government-authorized debt for a long-gone consumable, for fuel already burned, is harder to justify.

Fuel costs began to explode a year ago after Russia invaded Ukraine and started using its oil and gas exports to add economic pressure to its military assault. Soon after his election President Joe Biden began to put pressure on American domestic fossil fuel production, as well, cancelling one major pipeline. His principles on that front disappeared when supply constrictions (both his and the Russians’) had the predictable result on consumer prices. Uranium prices also spiked after the invasion.

Prices have since come down, but in this case past performance has to be viewed as a predictor of the future. Prices could rise again and there could soon be another undigested mass of unpaid fuel costs that are 100-percent passed along to customers. A fuel cost bond for 2023 might be just the start. In many European countries, the government is directly intervening to either pay those fuel bills with tax revenues or to make the utilities eat them with lower profits.

This might be a third bad alternative to just paying what we owe when we owe it.


Share this article



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)



ADVERTISEMENT

(comments below)


Comments

43 responses to “Now We Will Enrich Dominion’s Creditors, Too”

  1. DJRippert Avatar

    Same old story, same old song and dance.

    Corporations and individuals can provide unlimited campaign contributions to Virginia politicians. Those politicians can use the contributed funds for whatever they want, including personal expenses like country club memberships.

    Every year, a bill is put forward with bi-partisan support to reign in the personal use of contributed funds. Every year the Republicans kill the bill.

    The same is happening again this year.

    By and large, the opposition to these sensible bills is centered on rural Republican members of the General Assembly who have apparently watched too many Dukes of Hazard reruns and fancy themselves modern day Roscoe P. Coltranes.

    Until this fundamental flaw in Virginia’s governance approach is fixed, companies like Dominion will continue to get whatever they want from the General Assembly … whether or not it is in the best interests of the citizen / taxpayers of Virginia.

    Virginia really is America’s Most Corrupt State.

    https://www.wric.com/news/politics/capitol-connection/bipartisan-push-to-ban-personal-use-of-campaign-money-in-virginia-fails/

    1. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      Boss Hogg was the character in Dukes of Hazard that probably most closely resembles the average Virginian politician.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar

        Virginia pols are much “slicker” IMO.

        1. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          I know a city in Virginia that had a mayor that looked and talked like Boss Hogg, and had about the same ethics.

      2. DJRippert Avatar

        You are right! I forgot my Dukes of Hazard trivia.

        1. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
          James Wyatt Whitehead

          Boss Hogg once tried to swindle Mel out of his diner in an episode of “Alice”.
          https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/edb2c848d58dc3dac9edc59373c42b5e3b3865b20fb1804f5bbe412aceecad33.jpg

          1. Now that’s good trivia…

          2. Now that’s good trivia…

    2. I’m curious, who killed it in 2020 and 2021?

    3. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
      energyNOW_Fan

      Wow that’s the best BR comment of 2023….who knew?

  2. f/k/a_tmtfairfax Avatar
    f/k/a_tmtfairfax

    North Carolina seems to have its share of political problems. But I’ve not seen any legislation that neuters the NC Utility Commission, even though Dominion operates in the state. But it’s a small fish compared to the two Duke entities and the Co-ops seem fairly strong too.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Not a very tight limit, but NC law does place limits on political contributions. Perhaps $12K per cycle, primary and general. Peanuts for Dominion….

      1. f/k/a_tmtfairfax Avatar
        f/k/a_tmtfairfax

        The campaign limit for a person or PAC is $6,400 per election per candidate or per issue. Dominion’s NC PAC spent $149,500 on campaign contributions in 2022. Duke’s PAC’s report did not provide the specific data like Dominion did. So, I took the annual summary’s beginning balance and subtracted the ending balance. The difference was $279,634. But that is clearly understated because contributions came in as well. My gut tells me, quite understated.

        The Association of NC Electric Coops spent $310,540 in campaign contributions. My source is the NC State Board of Elections.

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      And it was the Democrat majority that killed them in the Senate. Again, you have a patch over one eye, seeing only what you want. This is bipartisan down the line. Your refusal to point fingers at any Democrat for anything, and only blame Republicans, is not the path to change.

      1. Matt Adams Avatar
        Matt Adams

        A Complete and Total Partisan, is gonna partisan.

        He’s Mushroom, at best.

      2. Hey, wait a minute. I’m the one with a patch over one eye…

        😉

  3. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Why can’t the SCC just credit Dominion $1.7 billion against its excess profits and call it a day?

    Committee chairmen generally ask if there is anyone in the audience who wants to speak to the bill. I realize that that no one in the committee audience from the SCC is going to pop up and make comments without being called upon. Why did not one of those legislators voting against the bill ask for SCC input? Why did the representative from the AG’s office, who is supposed to representing consumers not get up to speak when there was a chance? Perhaps it is because his boss, Jason Miyares has his eye on campaign contributions a few years from now. Why didn’t someone from TJIP get up and tell them what a bad bill this is? It probably would not have mad much difference, but at least the objections would have been made public.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      exactly! When do they pay back the excess profits from before?

  4. how_it_works Avatar
    how_it_works

    “After years of complaining about how General Assembly decisions enrich Dominion’s stockholders”

    Yea…

    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/ddfc43f743eaf6a4238982d8f2bbcdb9700729d0aefbe805e7f46417427c6f06.png

    1. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      I guess we can conclude from this that the management of Dominion is so incompetent that they can’t keep their stock price up even when they are the incumbent utility in a state where they have the legislature in their back pocket.

      Oh, and they also stink at keeping the lights on.

      1. DJRippert Avatar

        Excelon:

        Revenue – $36.347B
        Employees – 31,518
        Rev per employee – $1.15m

        Dominion

        Revenue – $16.572
        Employees – 21,000
        Rev per employee – $789k

        I don’t know enough about the energy sector to explain the difference but the numbers are pretty striking.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          Interesting metric…

        2. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          Exelon has 10 million customers while Dominion has 7 million, but it appears that Exelon’s revenue is double.

          Perhaps Exelon has more larger commercial customers than Dominion (as a percentage of their total customer base) which accounts for the additional revenue?

          1. LarrytheG Avatar

            Right, but is this metric a fair (correct) way to access the quality/value of a corporation?

            If we used this metric with other companies… say like Amazon or WalMart or HomeDepot or are some companies just in fields that are far more profitable than others?

          2. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            The best metric is probably the stock price. The investors clearly think that Exelon is doing a better job than Dominion.

          3. LarrytheG Avatar

            naw. Stock price is what people think and believe, not what is real and measurable. Look at FTX or even Tesla.

          4. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            Those are companies with a lot of hype. Exelon and Dominion are boring utilities.

          5. LarrytheG Avatar

            Right. But I’m talking about actual measures, real data, as opposed to what people believe.

            I knew a McDonalds executive in the past and he said one of their core metrics was profit per
            square foot. That measure drove their strategic planning of where to locate or not – not only
            zip code but actual street location. You’ll seldom see a McDonald location that has a problematical
            access issue. There are some but they are few and far between.

          6. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            The institutional investors do the same thing when they determine what stocks to buy or sell. When you see stock price declines as bad as Dominion’s that don’t seem to be affecting the entire sector, it’s probably that investors don’t like Dominion’s numbers.

          7. LarrytheG Avatar

            I don’t know much about it at all but it would seem that a company that is a regulated monopoly would not be perceived the same way as companies that are not so encumbered. They got a guaranteed profit and will generate dividends but prospects for growth would be the parts of the company that are not
            regulated monopolies… maybe… don’t really know.

          8. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            Well, there’s at least one energy utility whose stock is doing worse than Dominion’s—that’s PG&E. Given the news about PG&E over the last few years, it doesn’t come as a surprise to me.

          9. energyNOW_Fan Avatar
            energyNOW_Fan

            Maybe the opposite is true…Virginia gives larger discount to business than most, and we get all the text message traffic, which according to Bill Maher is an electron “cookie monster” (cookie monster is my wordsmithing)
            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63KXfwC9BdU

        3. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          Exelon has 10 million customers while Dominion has 7 million, but it appears that Exelon’s revenue is double.

          Perhaps Exelon has more larger commercial customers than Dominion (as a percentage of their total customer base) which accounts for the additional revenue?

  5. William Chambliss Avatar
    William Chambliss

    Notice how THIS bill empowers the SCC to make the choice. Either $17/month increase for the customers who used the power or 10 years of recovery of these costs (remember fuel in an on-going expense that may fluctuate wildly over this next decade) from customers and customers to be….no wonder the GA wants nothing to do with making this choice.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      Well, they can’t seem to make up their mind. They gutted the SCC before AND they DID give sweet deals to Dominion on excess profits, tax rebates, coal ash cleanup and wind turbines.

      And now.. they want to “empower” the SCC to approve rate increases?

      Is it as bad as it sounds?

      1. William Chambliss Avatar
        William Chambliss

        The point is, either way this will result in a big (or prolonged) increase in customer bills. THAT’s why the SCC is put in charge of it.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar

          You mean that earlier when the SCC was gutted and the GA took over and imposed legislation that benefited Dominion, they then turned things back over to the SCC to get the blame for high rates?
          😉

    2. f/k/a_tmtfairfax Avatar
      f/k/a_tmtfairfax

      What I expect Dominion did was to book costs that anticipated higher natural gas prices and now is still using the higher price “to use up its inventory or committed purchases.” A potential use of forward-looking costs and actual costs for whatever gets it more cash. Proper utility accounting would use one method or another. It would be interesting to see what an audit would show.

  6. Dr. Havel nos Spine' Avatar
    Dr. Havel nos Spine’

    The present value of any expected cash flow will be different for different entities depending on their own corporate discount rate. The legislation appears to contemplate the sale of the right to receive this cash flow over time to the highest bidder. This would help Dom raise cash in the near term to fund the various commitments it has made. Fun with finance.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar

      Is this a “need”? Why does Dom “need” this?

Leave a Reply