Mississippi utility inks deal on troubled $7.5B power plant
JACKSON, Miss. — Regulators have reached a settlement with Mississippi Power Co. on how much customers should pay for a troubled $7.5 billion power plant once touted as a model for the future of coal. The unit of Atlanta-based Southern Co. is agreeing to lower the price tag on its Kemper County power plant by $85 million, its second round of concessions in the last two weeks, after shareholders earlier absorbed $6 billion in losses.
Virden Jones, executive director of the state Public Utilities Staff, said the final parties signed the deal Friday. It was hammered out at the last minute before rate hearings were scheduled to begin Monday. Those hearings will now be postponed to allow people to comment on the plan, with the Public Service Commission likely to decide on the new plan in January.
“I think it’s going to save everyone a lot of time and money and give the company a chance to move on,” said Commissioner Cecil Brown, a Democrat representing the central third of the state.
The move means residential customers could soon pay about $1 less per month than they’re currently paying for the part of the power plant that burns natural gas.