It feels like one of those logic puzzles high school students grapple with on the SAT: If Delegate Sally passes a law to require utilities in her state to generate all their electricity from renewable, carbon-free energy sources like wind and solar by 2045, what is the latest year CEO Tom’s power plant can stop running on natural gas?
Like many things in life, business and especially government, the answer to this question is hardly clear-cut. It lies somewhere within the intersection of the Venn diagram formed by the overlap of Virginia’s fast-growing energy and data centers industries — topics well covered by two of our feature stories in this month’s issue.
As reported by contributing writer Stephenie Overman in her April story, “Natural selection,” the state’s primary electric utility, Dominion Energy, is seeking to build a $600 million-plus, 1,000-megawatt natural gas power plant in Chesterfield County even though it’s under a state mandate from the Virginia Clean Economy Act to eliminate fossil fuels as an energy source by 2045.
This comes amid a tidal wave of data center development in the commonwealth that has sparked pushback from some local politicians, state legislators and citizens’ groups, reports contributor Elizabeth Cooper in her story, “Digital Divide.”
Between 2011 and 2020, Amazon Web Services alone spent $35 billion building data centers in Virginia, a figure the company plans to double by 2040. And recent rapid advancements in artificial intelligence are expected to grow demand for data centers even more. By some estimates, these electricity-chomping facilities, which support modern staples of life like streaming entertainment media, cloud computing and videoconferencing, could quadruple their power usage by 2038, accounting for about half the state’s electricity use.
Meanwhile, the automotive industry is also trying to boost adoption of electric vehicles instead of gas-burning cars, putting more strain on the grid. (A California government study estimated that by 2035 EVs could siphon 10% of that state’s electricity during peak periods.) And of course, people are cranking up their AC amid record hot summers caused by climate change.
A group of nine Democratic Central Virginia state legislators who put out a statement in March opposing the proposed Chesterfield natural gas power plant noted that Dominion notified the State Corporation Commission last year that the utility expects its carbon emissions will increase to as much as 43.8 million metric tons by 2048 — more than twice its emissions as of 2021. Needless to say, that’s not the trend the legislature had in mind when it passed its carbon-free power mandate.
For its part, though, Dominion has said that it’s trying to meet the 2045 deadline through massive investments in solar farms and the $9.8 billion offshore wind farm it’s developing off the Virginia Beach coast. But it also says that current technological limits on battery storage of renewable energy may mean that natural gas has to remain in the power generation mix past 2045 to ensure grid stability. Dominion is also considering other potential carbon-free solutions such as small modular nuclear reactors, but those are still very much experimental, with none yet operating outside of Russia and China.
Virginia is hardly alone in facing this power conundrum. Just in the Southeast U.S., utilities are proposing about 33,000 megawatts of new natural gas projects, according to the Southern Environmental Law Center. One of its senior attorneys noted to The New York Times in March that this is “completely at odds” with cutting carbon emissions to stem climate change.
It’s not clear what the solution is, but the answer will need to be found at the intersection of science, industry and government. And quickly.
Natural gas as a source of energy for Virginia power plants is set to reach its final days by the middle of the century — or is it?
The Virginia General Assembly set that deadline in 2020 when it passed the Virginia Clean Economy Act, which requires the state’s two major electric utilities to shift to carbon-free, renewable energy sources such as wind and solar power for electricity generation, seemingly leaving no place for fossil fuels such as natural gas or coal.
Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin has advocated for revisions to the act to include other power sources such as natural gas, a nonstarter for the Democratic-majority General Assembly. But Dominion Energy’s proposal to put a natural gas plant in Chesterfield County has raised questions about whether the company, which serves 64.4% of Virginia, will meet the state mandate to produce all power for Virginia customers from renewable energy sources by 2045.
West Virginia-based Appalachian Power must meet the same carbon-free target by 2050, but “we’re a small player in Virginia,” says Teresa Hamilton Hall, senior corporate communications consultant. The company, which serves about 20% of the commonwealth, has only one natural gas plant in Virginia. “The majority of our electricity generation,” Hall says, “is still from coal.”
Over the past two decades, Dominion has reduced its greenhouse gas emissions substantially, according to the company. Through 2022, Dominion says, it “reduced carbon emissions from power generation by 47% (compared with a 2005 baseline), and methane emissions from gas operations are down 38% (from a 2010 baseline).”
“We’re all-in on renewables,” says spokesperson Aaron F. Ruby. “About 95% of our new power plants are carbon-free. We’re currently building an offshore wind project off Virginia Beach. There’s a call for a second. We’re expanding our battery storage fleet, [and] that allows us to store from wind and solar during periods of low demand.”
Dominion has divested much of its natural gas transmission and storage assets in recent years, following the cancellation of its proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline project with Duke Energy in 2020. The aborted 600-mile natural gas pipeline, which faced long delays amid legal challenges, was supposed to run from West Virginia to eastern North Carolina through Virginia.
In 2020, Dominion sold the majority of its gas transmission and storage assets to Berkshire Hathaway Energy for $8 billion. The Richmond-based Fortune 500 utility sold its remaining interest in the Cove Point natural gas liquefaction facility in Maryland to Berkshire Hathaway for $3.5 billion in July 2023. Two months later, Dominion announced it was selling its three natural gas distribution companies to Canadian pipeline and energy company Enbridge for $14 billion. The $6.6 billion sale of East Ohio Gas closed in March, with the other sales expected later this year.
All of this comes at the same time as the Biden administration has paused approvals on new liquefied natural gas export facilities while the Energy Department examines the environmental, economic and political impacts. The United States was the world’s largest LNG exporter last year, and the Cove Point facility Dominion sold exported LNG to nearly 30 nations.
That’s not to say that Dominion is completely done with natural gas, however. The company has about a dozen natural gas plants in Virginia that generate about 35% of its electricity in the state.
And the demand for that power is only expected to grow. It’s been projected that the demand for energy from Virginia’s fast-growing data centers industry could quadruple by 2038, accounting for about 50% of Virginia’s total electricity supply.
Plans for Chesterfield
Last summer, Dominion revived plans first proposed in 2019 to build a natural gas peaker plant — a plant that would run only during periods of high demand or during extreme weather — in Chesterfield County. (Chesterfield was previously home to two Dominion coal plants that were deactivated in 2023 after more than 50 years.)
Consisting of four natural gas-powered turbines, the company says the proposed Chesterfield Energy Reliability Center would serve as “an ‘always ready’ generation resource that can be quickly deployed on the hottest and coldest days and serve as backup generation when other resources are unavailable or insufficient to meet customer needs.”
Construction on the plant is planned to begin in 2025 and be completed in 2027, according to Dominion. The cost hasn’t been released, but the project was estimated at $600 million in 2019. Dominion has applied for state and local permits for the facility, which requires approval from the State Corporation Commission, a process expected to take about nine months.
Once fully operational, the project would generate approximately 1,000 megawatts — enough energy to power up to 250,000 homes.
In late February, Chesterfield residents and regional activists opposed to the project gathered for a town hall led by state Sen. Ghazala Hashmi, D-Chesterfield County. It included members of Friends of Chesterfield, a community group that opposes the project on multiple grounds, including health concerns for area residents, about 44% of whom are people of color, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
In mid-March, a coalition of nine Democratic state legislators from Central Virginia, including Hashmi, issued a statement in opposition to the plant. “Dominion Energy’s current pursuit of permits to build a new gas-fired power plant in Chesterfield County undermines the state’s transition to clean and renewable energy,” the legislators wrote. They also pointed out that, according to a May 2023 SCC filing from the utility, Dominion expects that its carbon emissions will increase from the 21.8 million metric tons it emitted in 2021 to as much as 43.8 million metric tons by 2048.
Nicole Martin, president of the Chester-field NAACP and a member of Friends of Chesterfield, questions whether the plant, once built, will shut down in 2045. “If they invest $600 million, as was estimated in 2019, how long are they going to keep it going?”
Additionally, Martin says, she’s concerned that Dominion’s residential customers are being asked “to foot the bill” for power-hungry data centers in Northern Virginia.
Martin also wonders why Dominion Energy needs to build a new natural gas plant when the company is making advances in renewable power. As an example, she cites a battery storage pilot project the company launched with Virginia State University to provide backup power to the VSU Multi-Purpose Center.
But battery storage is currently a weak link in the renewable energy chain, according to Dominion spokesperson Ruby. “The prevailing battery technology is only capable of storing energy for four to six hours,” he says. “We need to see battery storage advance into multiday duration. That’s one of the advances we’re going to need to see to reduce reliance on natural gas.”
The proposed Chesterfield peaker plant is needed because current battery storage is not sufficient to meet demands during emergencies such as winter storms, Ruby says, citing a Christmas 2022 storm with temperatures so low that Dominion “had to operate power plants at maximum.
“For the next couple of decades natural gas will play a critical role in empowering Virginia — it’s always available, always reliable,” Ruby says. “It’s an essential partner with renewables.”
And what happens after that?
Dominion Energy does lots of long-term planning, Ruby notes, and “we have to do that with a healthy dose of humility about what we know and do not know. The further out you go, the more variables [exist]. It’s premature to make long-term decisions. We don’t know what’s going to happen with advances in clean technology, such as longer battery storage” and hydrogen.
Given the unprecedented demand and limitations, “there’s the potential that we may need to operate some of our natural gas plants longer than planned,” he says. While the Virginia Clean Economy Act sets a 2045 deadline, there are “important provisions of the law that would allow us to petition for beyond that date. It depends on whether [natural gas plants are] needed for grid reliability. It’s not a decision we can make today,” he says, but will probably be determined in the late 2030s or early 2040s.
Patrolling pipelines
Natural gas doesn’t just power giant electrical plants, though. While electric power utilities accounted for 57% of Virginia’s natural gas usage in 2022, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, commercial and residential customers using natural gas for heating and cooking accounted for about 25% of natural gas usage in the state.
Accordingly, natural gas companies and utilities are looking for ways to expand pipeline systems, a process that has sometimes hit major roadblocks and court challenges from residents and environmental groups.
Like Dominion’s canceled Atlantic Coast Pipeline, the 303-mile, $7.5 billion-plus Mountain Valley Pipeline, which would run through the Roanoke and New River valleys, has been plagued by delays over the past 10 years from lawsuits, protests and regulatory hurdles. Meanwhile, natural gas concern Williams Cos. announced plans in March to boost its volume by adding 26 miles to its Transco pipeline system in Pittsylvania County.
The VCEA doesn’t contain provisions impacting natural gas for heating or cooking. Nevertheless, companies such as Virginia Natural Gas are continually working to modernize pipeline systems to improve efficiency and reduce carbon emissions, according to Robert Duvall, president of the Virginia Beach-based natural gas distributor, which serves more than 300,000 residential customers across southeastern Virginia.
“Our mission is to keep the gas in the pipeline. We want it to come out at the burner tip only when the customer needs it,” Duvall says. “Our goal is to keep emissions at less than 1%. We’re at 0.4% and getting even better.”
Virginia Natural Gas has been replacing aging cast-iron pipelines with more durable materials such as plastics that are less expensive to maintain. From 2012 to 2023, it invested more than $475 million on infrastructure projects authorized under a state program, resulting in a more than 32% reduction in methane emissions from pipeline leaks, the company says.
The amount of pipeline replaced and upgraded in VNG’s system in the past decade “is the approximate driving distance from Virginia Beach to Savannah, Georgia,” according to Amanda Bouchonville, VNG’s Steps to Advance Virginia’s Energy (SAVE) program manager.
Duvall sees natural gas pipelines as key to Virginia’s energy future. “Natural gas [is] a foundation fuel that is able to underpin wind and solar,” he says. “It can be put in service very quickly. It has affordability [and] reliability.”
VNG is one of four natural gas distribution companies of Southern Company Gas, a wholly owned subsidiary of Southern Co.
Columbia Gas of Virginia, with more than 290,000 customers across a broad swath of the state, also is committed to finding leaks and replacing aged pipes, says Jennifer Montague, president and chief operating officer. “We have a car that drives around detecting gas leaks. We’re trying to keep more of the gas in our system.”
Its parent company, NiSource, is actively “exploring new technology,” according to Montague. For example, Columbia Gas of Pennsylvania, another NiSource subsidiary, has a pilot hybrid program that allows for blending of hydrogen into the natural gas system at various percentages, ranging from 2% to 20%. According to NiSource, hydrogen can be a zero-carbon fuel “because when combusted, hydrogen produces water vapor, not greenhouse gas emissions.”
“It’s not much of a difference. It dries your clothes the same,” Montague says.
Montague also sees natural gas as an essential part of Virginia’s energy future. “The electric grid is not ready without the inclusion of natural gas,” she says. “I hope it doesn’t have to be either/or.”
Dominion Energy announced Feb. 22 it had reached an agreement with investment firm Stonepeak to sell a 50% noncontrolling stake in the utility’s Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project for nearly $3 billion.
The deal is expected to close by the end of 2024, if approved by the Virginia State Corporation Commission and the North Carolina Utilities Commission, as well as federal regulatory agencies. Richmond-based Dominion would retain full operational control over the $9.8 billion CVOW project, which is under development 27 miles off the Virginia Beach coast. The 176-turbine offshore wind farm received final federal approvals in January and is expected to begin construction in May.
“The Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project continues to proceed on time and on budget and consistent with our previously communicated timing and cost expectations,” Dominion Chair, President and CEO Bob Blue said in a statement. “A competitive partnership process attracted high-quality interest, resulting in a compelling partner for CVOW.”
Under the deal, Dominion Energy expects to receive $3 billion — representing 50% of the offshore wind farm’s construction costs through the anticipated closing of the deal by Dec. 31, minus $145 million, the initial withholding amount. If total construction costs remain at the current budget of $9.8 billion or less, excluding financing costs, Dominion will get back $100 million from the withholding amount.
However, if construction costs more than $11.3 billion, the Fortune 500 utility will receive no money back from the withheld $145 million. If the project costs reach $11.3 billion, Stonepeak and Dominion would each contribute 50% of additional capital costs needed to fund construction, but if the project costs between $11.3 billion and $13.7 billion, Stonepeak would not be required to contribute more capital to pay the additional costs, although it has the option to do so.
In terms of structure, Stonepeak would invest in a newly formed Virginia-based utility subsidiary of Dominion Energy Virginia. The transaction is expected to improve Dominion’s estimated 2024 consolidated funds from operations-to-debt ratio by approximately 1% and reduce the utility’s overall financing needs during construction.
In September 2023, Dominion said it intended to sell a noncontrolling interest in the CVOW to lower risk in the project and solidify the company’s balance sheet. In November 2023, Dominion officials said during its third-quarter earnings call that the utility was in the advanced stages of finding a co-investor.
Richmond-based Fortune 500 utility Dominion Energy closed on its sale of East Ohio Gas to Canadian pipeline and energy company Enbridge in a $6.6 billion deal, the utility announced Thursday.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio approved the sale to Enbridge.
The Cleveland-based natural gas company, which will now be known as Enbridge Gas Ohio, has 1,500 employees and serves 1.2 million homes and businesses in the Buckeye state, according to Dominion.
“Natural gas utilities have long useful lives and are ‘must-have’ infrastructure for providing safe, reliable and affordable energy,” Michele Harradence, Enbridge executive vice president and president of gas distribution and storage, said in a statement. “This gas utility will help blend and extend our cash flow growth outlook through the end of the decade by adding a steady, regulated investment that supports our long-term dividend profile.”
In September 2023, Enbridge announced plans to acquire Public Service Co. of North Carolina and Questar Gas and its related Wexpro companies, which serve customers in Utah, Wyoming and Idaho, in addition to East Ohio Gas. Dominion valued the three transactions at $14 billion.
In a September 2023 statement, Dominion said Enbridge would pay $4.3 billion for East Ohio Gas and assume $2.3 billion of debt.
The sale will create the largest natural gas utility franchise in North America, Enbridge said in September 2023.
Enbridge expects to close on the purchases of the other gas distribution companies following regulatory approvals later in 2024, according to its statement.
John C. Lee Jr. will stay on as Old Dominion Electric Cooperative’s permanent president and CEO after serving in an interim capacity since Sept. 8, 2023, the Glen Allen-based not-for-profit power cooperative announced Monday.
In October 2023, ODEC began its search for a new president and CEO after Marcus Harris resigned in September. He’s now senior vice president of planning and power supply for Central Electric Power Cooperative in South Carolina.
Lee had also been president and CEO of Mecklenburg Electric Cooperative and Empower Broadband, but he will retire from those roles to focus his attention on ODEC, according to a news release. He was CEO of Mecklenburg Electric Cooperative since January 2008 and since then has also served on ODEC’s board of directors, including as chair from 2020 to 2023. He will resign from his board position with his new role.
Lee had been with Empower Broadband since 2018, and he held several roles at ODEC beginning in 1992.
“I am honored to be selected as the CEO of one of the nation’s premier generation and transmission cooperatives and will work diligently to maintain ODEC’s powerful legacy of outstanding service to its members,” Lee said in a statement. “ODEC and its dedicated board of directors are focused squarely on the needs of those we serve, and it will be a privilege to work alongside the outstanding team of employees at ODEC as we tackle imposing issues that face our industry, while keeping the electrons reliably flowing to our 11 member electric cooperatives.”
Lee has also served on other electric cooperative boards, including the Virginia, Maryland and Delaware Association of Electric Cooperatives, National Rural Electric Cooperative Association, National Cooperative Services Corp. and others.
He has a bachelor’s degree in business from Mississippi State University.
“John has served as ODEC’s interim CEO extremely well over the past five months, and the board is completely confident that this continued transition to his full-time service will proceed without the cooperative missing a beat,” ODEC board Chairman Steven Harmon said in a statement. “We are extremely optimistic about the future of the organization due to John’s leadership and ODEC’s talented staff.”
In January, ODEC named Jack Robb its chief legal officer and senior vice president and Chris Cosby its chief operations officer.
ODEC is a not-for-profit. member-owned power supply cooperative that supplies wholesale power requirements to its 11 member electric distribution cooperatives that provide electricity to 1.5 million people in Maryland, Virginia and Delaware.
Dominion Energy has passed another critical federal hurdle on its way to gaining approval to begin construction on its $9.8 billion, 176-turbine offshore wind farm 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach.
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management granted a favorable record of decision for the Richmond-based Fortune 500 electric utility’s 2.6-gigawatt Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project Tuesday. The decision represents the final step in the National Environmental Policy Act review process for its construction and operations plan.
“Today’s decision balances the orderly development of OCS renewable energy with the prevention of interference with other uses of the OCS and the protection of the human, marine and coastal environments,” BOEM said in the record of decision. “A decision that balances these goals where they conflict and does not hold one as controlling over all others is consistent with the duties required.”
Also Tuesday, Dominion earned approval from the Department of the Interior for its construction and operation plan.
“The Interior Department is committed to the Biden-Harris administration’s all-of-government approach to the clean energy future, which helps respond to the climate crisis, lower energy costs, and create good-paying union jobs across the manufacturing, shipbuilding and construction sectors,” Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said in a statement. “Today’s approval of the largest offshore wind project in U.S. history builds on the undeniable momentum we are seeing. Together with the labor community, industry, trribes and partners from coast to coast, we are aggressively working toward our clean energy goals.”
The final approval for the wind farm’s construction and operations plan is expected to come from BOEM on Jan. 29, 2024, with Dominion slated to begin construction in May 2024. Once fully constructed in late 2026, the turbines will power up to 660,000 homes.
“Receiving a favorable record of decision from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management is a monumental achievement for Dominion Energy and the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind team,” Dominion CEO, Chair and President Bob Blue said in a statement. “More than a decade of work has gone into the development, design and permitting of CVOW. Offshore wind is a vital part of our strategy to provide our customers with a diverse fuel mix that delivers reliable, affordable and increasingly clean energy.”
The project will be the nation’s largest offshore wind farm and aligns with a state mandate that the Richmond-based Dominion go carbon-free by 2045.
In mid-October, the first eight monopiles, the foundation posts for the massive wind turbines, arrived at Portsmouth Marine Terminal and state officials and Dominion executives celebrated their arrival from Germany Friday.
The monopiles, which are each about 272 feet long — about the length of a football field — and 31 feet in diameter, will be driven into the seabed. Each turbine, when fully assembled, will be 836 feet high.
Dominion is already operating two wind turbines off the Virginia Beach coast as part of a pilot project. The company said that more than 750 Virginia-based workers, about 530 of whom are in Hampton Roads, are working on the project or with businesses supporting it. Another 1,000 jobs are expected to be created to operate and maintain the turbines.
The record of decision will be published in the Federal Register later this week.
The first eight monopiles, the wind-turbine foundation posts for Dominion Energy’s $9.8 billion offshore wind farm, arrived at Portsmouth Marine Terminal on Oct. 19, and state officials and Dominion executives celebrated their arrival from Germany Friday.
In a ceremony Friday, Gov. Glenn Youngkin, Dominion Chair, President and CEO Bob Blue and state and local dignitaries marked the arrival of the monopiles, instrumental components in the construction of the planned 176 wind turbines to be erected 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach, making up a 2.6-gigawatt wind farm that will power 660,000 homes.
Dominion’s proposed Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind Project will be the nation’s largest offshore wind farm and aligns with a state mandate that Richmond-based utility Dominion Energy generate all power from carbon-free sources by 2045. The Biden administration also has a goal of reaching 30 gigawatts of offshore wind energy capacity by 2030.
The monopiles, which are each about 272 feet long — about the length of a football field — and 31 feet in diameter, will be driven into the seabed. Each turbine, when fully assembled, will be 836 feet high.
Construction on the wind farm is set to begin in May, and the turbines will be operational by the end of 2026, Blue said.
“This is the real beginning of the offshore construction part of the project,” Blue said. “To get the first delivery of them, on time and on budget, is critical for our company, for our customers, for the state, and we’re very excited to have all those partners here,” he said.
He described seeing the monopiles arrive at Portsmouth Marine Terminal as “a great moment. … Seeing these and seeing the size makes it even more real.”
Massive single vertical steel cylinders, the monopiles are manufactured in Germany by EEW SPC, and the trip to ship the. across the Atlantic takes about 2 1/2 weeks. Eight will be delivered at a time until all 176 arrive in Hampton Roads.
Should the project attain approval, Dominion would still be required to receive BOEM’s final OK for its construction and operations plan, which could occur by February 2024. Virginia’s State Corporation Commission approved the project in August 2022.
Dominion is already operating two wind turbines off the Virginia Beach coast as part of a pilot project. The company said that more than 750 Virginia-based workers, about 530 of whom are in Hampton Roads, are working on the project or with businesses supporting it. Another 1,000 jobs are expected to be created to operate and maintain the turbines.
Dominion Energy is pitching the State Corporation Commission on several solar projects that could generate enough carbon-free electricity to power nearly 200,000 homes.
The projects, presented in the Fortune 500 utility’s fourth annual clean energy filing with the state, include six solar projects totaling 337 megawatts and 13 power purchase agreements totaling 435 megawatts with independent solar projects that were picked through competitive solicitation, Dominion said in a news release Wednesday.
“These projects support our ongoing efforts to deliver reliable, affordable and increasingly clean energy to our customers,” Ed Baine, president of Dominion Energy Virginia, said in a statement. “They will also bring jobs and economic benefits to communities across the commonwealth.”
If approved, the company will surpass 4,600 megawatts of solar across the state, enough to power more than 1.1 million homes at peak output.
Construction of the projects would be complete between 2024 and 2026 and would support more than 1,600 jobs while generating more than $570 million in economic benefits across Virginia, Dominion said. Projects include:
Alberta Solar, 3 megawatts, Brunswick County;
Beldale Solar, 57 megawatts, Powhatan County;
Blue Ridge Solar, 95 megawatts, Pittsylvania County;
Michaux Solar, 50 megawatts, Henry and Pittsylvania counties;
Peppertown Solar, 5 megawatts, Hanover County.
Dominion said the costs of the projects would add an estimated $1.54 to the average residential customer’s monthly bill.
The company’s latest proposal to the state follows news in late September that the federal Bureau of Ocean Energy Management had completed its environmental assessment of Dominion’s proposed $9.8 billion, 2.6-gigawatt Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project, planned for construction 27 miles off the coast of Virginia Beach. The nearly 700-page report was published Sept. 29 in the Federal Register, which kicked off a minimum 30-day waiting period before the BOEM could issue its final decision on whether to approve the project. The SCC approved the project in August 2022.
Richmond-based electricity and natural gas provider Dominion Energy has about 7 million customers in 15 states. Its Virginia division has about 2.7 million customers in Virginia and northeastern North Carolina.
Carter Reid, executive vice president, chief of staff and corporate secretary of Dominion Energy, as well as president of Dominion Energy Services, will retire Jan. 1, 2024, the Richmond-based utility announced Monday.
Carlos Brown, Dominion’s senior vice president, chief legal officer and general counsel, will be promoted to president of Dominion Energy Services and Dominion Energy executive vice president, chief legal officer and corporate secretary.
Reid joined Dominion in 1996 as its assistant general counsel and held roles in its law department and at Dominion Energy Services, one of the utility’s subsidiaries. She was promoted to her current role in 2019. She’s a graduate of James Madison University and the University of Richmond School of Law, and previously was an associate at McGuireWoods and Hunton & Williams (now Hunton Andrews Kurth).
“Carter Reid has been a key executive and faithful friend for the company as a whole, for her own team at the Services company, and for our board,” Dominion Chair, President and CEO Robert Blue said in a statement. “She helped the company maintain best-in-class governance, relentlessly focused on recruiting and retaining the best talent, and built an unparalleled security and cybersecurity organization, among her many other accomplishments. The company will miss her as she enjoys her retirement years.
“When Carter retires, Carlos Brown will pick up most of her duties. Carlos has a depth and breadth of experience that will serve him well as he leads Dominion Energy’s law, corporate governance, environmental, IT, supply chain, corporate facilities and corporate safety and security teams.”
Brown, who holds two degrees from the University of Virginia, joined Dominion as senior counsel in 2007 and has served as chief compliance officer and general counsel, among other positions.
Regina J. Elbert, senior vice president of human resources, also will be promoted, becoming vice president and chief human resources officer, effective Jan. 1, 2024. She has been at Dominion since 2011, holding leadership roles in HR and the law department. Elbert has a bachelor’s degree from U.Va. and a law degree from Harvard.
Dominion Energy is urging its shareholders to reject a “mini-tender” offer from TRC Capital Investment, the Richmond-based Fortune 500 utility announced Monday.
Toronto-based investment firm TRC Capital offered to purchase up to 2 million shares of Dominion Energy’s common stock for $44 per share in cash, approximately 4.47% below the closing price of Dominion common stock on Sept. 26, which was the last trading day before the unsolicited offer.
Mini-tenders are offers for less than 5% of a company’s outstanding shares. Because these offers are below the 5% threshold, Securities and Exchange Commission tender offer regulations do not apply.
According to the SEC, “some bidders make mini-tender offers at below-market prices, hoping that they will catch investors off guard if the investors do not compare the offer price to the current market price. Others make mini-tender offers at a premium – betting that the market price will rise before the offer closes and then extending the offer until it does or improperly canceling if it doesn’t.”
This is not TRC Capital’s first mini-tender offer to Dominion. In January 2016, the firm offered to purchase up to 2 million shares at $66.50 per share in cash, approximately 4.19% below the closing price of the trading day before the offer. Dominion also recommended shareholders reject that offer.
TRC Capital’s offer currently closes at 12:01 a.m. EST on Oct. 27, but the company can extend it if it chooses. Shareholders who tendered their shares can withdraw them before the offer expires through written notice.
TRC Capital made a slate of mini-tender offers, including an offer for up to 1 million Moderna common stock shares, in early September, according to TRC news releases. The firm offered $107.56 per share, approximately 4.44% lower than the closing price of common stock in Moderna, the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based maker of a COVID-19 vaccine, on Sept. 1, the last trading day before the offer. On Sept. 29, the firm decreased its offer price to $99 per share.
On Aug. 2, TRC Capital made a mini-tender offer to buy up to 3 million shares of Verizon Communications common stock at $31.95 per share, about 4.4% below the closing price of the stock on Aug. 1.
In May, TRC Capital terminated its offer to buy up to 1 million shares of Canadian fertilizer company Nutrien and returned tendered shares to their holders. Conditions in its offer, made April 5, were not met, according to a news release, including the market price it stipulated shares needed to hit during the offer period.
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