Utility CEOs expect climate law to boost profits, lower rates

By Jeffrey Tomich, Kristi E. Swartz | 10/28/2022 06:55 AM EDT

In calls with analysts and investors, leaders of the nation’s largest utilities said the law’s clean energy tax credits will save consumers money and enable greater investments in renewable energy projects.

A wind turbine is viewed at a wind farm

CEOs of some of the nation's largest utilities laid out details Thursday of how the climate law will drive down costs of clean energy projects. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Some of the nation’s largest utilities are firming up plans to leverage the climate law’s clean energy tax credits to bolster investments in renewable energy and battery storage.

CEOs of companies such as DTE Energy Co., Xcel Energy Inc. and CMS Energy Corp. briefed analysts and investors Thursday on how the Inflation Reduction Act will boost profitability. The new law’s provisions, they said, will reduce the cost of new energy projects, resulting in savings that will hold down electric rates and enable even greater investments.

“The extension of tax credits for both wind and solar provide economic certainty and lowers costs for our robust renewable backlog,” Garrick Rochow, CEO of Jackson, Mich.-based CMS Energy said during the company’s quarterly earnings call Thursday.

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Rochow estimated the new law’s production tax credits (PTC) will reduce solar deployment costs by 15 percent. That could lead to $60 million in consumer savings, compared to the original estimated cost of the deployment plan from CMS Energy’s public utility Consumers Energy. That plan includes 8 gigawatts of new solar development.

DTE Energy likewise said Inflation Reduction Act tax credits will reduce costs for a variety of clean energy projects. The Detroit-based company said provisions of the climate law will be fully reflected in its next integrated resource plan, which it plans to file with Michigan regulators next week.

CEOs said they are eager to tap tax credits for not only wind, solar and battery storage but also for nuclear, hydrogen, carbon capture and renewable natural gas as well as for methane derived from waste to help their utilities achieve emissions reduction goals.

Xcel Energy CEO Bob Frenzel said the solar tax credit in the Inflation Reduction Act will lower the “levelized” cost of the company’s Sherco solar project in Minnesota by 30 percent, even accounting for inflation and supply chain pressures.

The company, which operates utilities across the Upper Plains, Colorado and the Southwest, is building the project on the site of Minnesota’s largest coal plant. That means the project will benefit not just from the PTC, but will also receive a bonus incentive for reinvesting in a federally defined energy community.

Xcel also expects the new law could lead to incremental clean energy investments of $2 billion to $4 billion over the next five years, helping the company grow its rate base — or the capital investments on which it earns a profit.

Utilities also benefit from solar production tax credits in the Inflation Reduction Act because they incentivize company ownership of projects rather than contractual power purchases. This likewise helps utilities grow their rate bases.

While some utilities are rushing to take advantage of the IRA, others are taking a longer-term view.

Atlanta-based Southern Co., whose operations include three Southeast utilities, said it likely won’t tap into the climate law’s tax credits for a few years. The company already has signed contracts for the new generating resources needed during the next few years, said Dan Tucker, Southern’s chief financial officer.

“You’re really talking about the back half or last couple of years of our five-year forecasts where this opportunity may manifest itself potentially as base rate assets,” Tucker said.

Southern is eyeing tax credits for hydrogen and carbon sequestration, two emerging technologies that CEO Tom Fanning has said will be key to achieving the company’s 2050 net-zero carbon emissions goal.