Florida Power & Light asking for rate increases from 2017-20


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  • | 12:00 p.m. January 18, 2016
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The state’s largest electricity provider wants Florida regulators to approve a four-year funding package that would raise the base rate on a typical monthly bill by about $8.50 starting in 2017, with the hike reaching $14 by 2020.

Juno Beach-based Florida Power & Light notified the Public Service Commission on Friday that a proposal will be filed in March asking to increase the monthly charge on a customer using 1,000 kilowatt hours of electricity from $93 to $107 by 2020.

The proposal would help cover nearly $16 billion the power company has been investing since 2014 to improve its electricity service, reduce emissions, improve fuel efficiency and strengthen the system so it can better handle severe weather and more customers.

The request also would cover the $1.3 billion needed for a natural gas-fired power plant — proposed in rural Okeechobee County — that has been promoted as meeting the demands of the state’s growing population.

“What we’re asking for is the ability to continue to do what we’re doing, and that is to make these investments in technology,” said FPL President and CEO Eric Silagy.

The base rate for the company’s 4.8 million customer accounts has dropped nearly $5 a month over the past two years, and Silagy said the company’s rates have been the lowest in the state for five years.

The request will face close scrutiny from industry watchdogs, said Jon Moyle, who represents the Florida Industrial Power Users Association, a business organization that frequently intervenes in utility cases.

State regulators are expected to make a decision on the request by the end of November. Public hearings throughout FPL’s coverage area are expected to be held by early summer.

The Public Service Commission agreed on Jan. 5 the $1.3 billion requested for the Okeechobee facility is needed for the plant, which would open in mid-2019 under FPL’s proposal.

The project must still get approval from Gov. Rick Scott and Florida Cabinet members, who act as a power-plant siting board.

 

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