Georgia Power amends its rate hike request

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The final fuel assembly is loaded into Plant Vogtle Unit 3 in October, 2022.
Georgia Power

Georgia Power officials signed off on an agreement that would lower the utility’s rate hike request before the state Public Service Commission (PSC) by nearly 40%.

The company, the PSC’s Public Interest Advocacy Staff, and intervenors in the rate case agreed on a rate hike that would raise $1.8 billion from Georgia Power customers during the next three years. The proposal is being presented to the PSC’s Energy Committee today.

Unlike the original proposal the utility submitted to the commission in June, the new agreement would not front-load the rate increase. Instead, it would lower the impact on the average residential customer during the first year to $3.60 per month, down from the original request of $14.90.

That 2.6% increase in customer bills, effective Jan. 1, would jump to 4.5% in both the second and third years.

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