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After winter cold snap drove up natural gas prices, utilities grapple with who should pay

After winter cold snap drove up natural gas prices, utilities grapple with who should pay
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Missouri law allowing more frequent water, sewer rate hikes bad for ratepayers : Consumers group

Missouri law allowing more frequent water, sewer rate hikes bad for ratepayers : Consumers group

Missouri law allowing more frequent water, sewer rate hikes bad for ratepayers : Consumers group John Haughey, The Center Square © Provided by Washington Examiner Proponents say a bill adopted by Missouri lawmakers and waiting Gov. Mike Parson’s signature will “save ratepayers money.” Opponents disagree, saying it s bad for ratepayers and jobs. Under Senate Bill 44, the Missouri Water and Infrastructure Act, sponsored by Sen. Bill White, R-Joplin, utilities serving more than 8,000 water/sewer customers can request a slight increase every six months through a new water and sewer infrastructure rate (WSIRA) surcharge to maintain equipment and recover growing costs. Current Missouri law requires an 11-month process for water and sewer utilities to submit proposed non-emergency rate hikes, a cycle that can take up to three years of evaluation and hearings before the state’s Public Service Commission (PSC) approves a rate adjustment.

ENERGY TRANSITIONS: Can a 1990s strategy help states quit coal?

Published: Tuesday, January 12, 2021 Coal power plant in Michigan. Photo credit: Consumers Energy/Flickr Michigan utility company Consumers Energy plans to shutter the last two units of its coal-burning D.E. Karn generating station in 2023. The power plant, pictured here in 2010, is located on the shore of Saginaw Bay in Hampton Township. Consumers Energy/Flickr Michigan utility Consumers Energy will take another step toward meeting its carbon-reduction goals in the spring of 2023 when it pulls the plug on the last two units at the coal-burning D.E. Karn generating station on the shore of Saginaw Bay. But shutting down the 544-megawatt plant doesn t eliminate almost $700 million in unrecovered investments in Karn costs that will fall to the utility s 1.8 million customers even after the plant is no longer generating electricity.

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