JUNO
BEACH, Fla., Oct. 29,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Florida Power & Light
Company today asked the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) to
approve a temporary surcharge on customer bills in 2025 to recover
restoration costs after four hurricanes battered Florida in less
than 14 months.
FPL's plan: The petition filed with the PSC seeks to
recover restoration expenses for Hurricanes Debby, Helene and
Milton, which ripped through
Florida this year. It also seeks $150
million to replenish the company's storm reserve, which was
primarily depleted by Hurricane Idalia last year and then wiped out
after Hurricane Debby in August. If approved by the PSC, the
temporary surcharge would reimburse FPL about $1.2 billion and would likely add $12.02 a month to a typical 1,000-kWh residential
customer bill from January through December next year.
How we got here: Category 3 Idalia struck Florida in
August 2023. This year, Category 1
Debby hit Florida in August, then Category 4 Helene and Category 3
Milton pounded the state less than two weeks apart in September and
October. The four hurricanes caused more than 3 million combined
outages to FPL customers with damaging winds, storm surge and – in
the case of Milton – dozens of
unusually powerful, long-track tornadoes.
Rapid response: For each hurricane, FPL assembled
and strategically pre-positioned thousands of restoration workers
from around the U.S. The crews worked around the clock to quickly
restore all impacted customers. Importantly, FPL's sustained
investments to build a stronger, smarter and more resilient energy
grid avoided nearly 900,000 outages and enabled faster
restorations.
By the numbers:
- More than 3 million outages
- More than 52,000 men and women in restoration
workforce
- Nearly 900,000 outages avoided through smart grid
technology
- Timeline to essentially complete restoration
- Idalia (2023) (Category 3): 1 day
- Debby (2024) (Category 1): 1 day
- Helene (2024) (Category 4): 3 days
- Milton (2024) (Category 3): 5
days
A word from FPL President and CEO Armando Pimentel: "FPL worked
relentlessly to quickly restore power to our customers in the
aftermath of each of these hurricanes. We're mindful that customers
pay these restoration costs, which is why we continue to invest in
storm hardening and smart grid technology. This avoids many
outages, speeds restoration and reduces restoration costs while
helping customers bounce back faster, from getting kids back to
school to getting Florida's economy back up and running."
Estimated 2025 bills: Even with the temporary
surcharge, FPL bills in 2025 will remain well below the national
average.
Typical 1,000-kWh
residential customer bill
|
FPL
|
FPL
Northwest
|
Current
|
Jan.
2025
(proposed)
|
Current
|
Jan.
2025
(proposed)
|
$121.19
|
$133.99
|
$135.38
|
$143.45
|
Note: Jan. 2025 bill
includes proposed storm surcharge and other annual adjustments to
cost-recovery clauses
|
Why a 12-month surcharge? Electric bills in Florida do not include the cost of responding
to hurricanes and tropical storms. Instead, a temporary surcharge
is applied after storms. Adding this temporary surcharge to bills
for 12 months, rather than spreading it out over a longer period,
reduces the chance of overlapping surcharges if additional storms
hit Florida in 2025.
Editor's Note: Download visuals of FPL's
hurricane restoration
Florida Power and Light
Company
As America's largest electric utility,
Florida Power & Light Company
serves more customers and sells more power than any other utility,
providing clean, affordable, reliable electricity to approximately
5.9 million accounts, or more than 12 million people. FPL operates
one of the most fuel efficient and cleanest power generation fleets
in the U.S and in 2022 won the
ReliabilityOne® National Reliability Award for the seventh time in
the last nine years. The company was also recognized by Escalent in
2022 as one of the most trusted U.S. electric utilities for the
ninth consecutive year. FPL is a subsidiary of Juno Beach, Florida-based NextEra Energy, Inc.
(NYSE: NEE), a clean energy company widely recognized for its
efforts in sustainability, corporate responsibility, ethics and
compliance, and diversity. NextEra Energy is also the parent
company of NextEra Energy Resources, LLC, which, together with its
affiliated entities, is the world's largest generator of renewable
energy from the wind and sun and a world leader in battery storage.
For more information about NextEra Energy companies, visit these
websites: www.NextEraEnergy.com, www.FPL.com,
www.NextEraEnergyResources.com.
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SOURCE Florida Power & Light
Company