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Canary Media: Virginia Regulators Rebuke Dominion’s Long-Term Plan, but OK it Anyway

Posted by Elizabeth Ouzts on Jul 18, 2025

Virginia's State Corporation Commission conditionally approved Dominion Energy's proposed 15-year energy plan, but noted that it fails to address Virginia's statutory requirement for 100% carbon-free electricity by 2045. Canary Media spoke with United's Shawn Kelly, who stated that the proposal must support a reliable, affordable, and sustainable energy future by making use of proven advanced energy solutions, such as energy efficiency and battery storage.

Virginia regulators sent mixed signals on the state’s clean energy transition this week — accepting utility Dominion Energy’s plan for new fossil-fueled plants on one hand but ordering the company’s future blueprints to better account for the state’s carbon-free electricity law on the other.

Dominion’s forecast represents its strategy for meeting electricity demand over 15 years and doesn’t lock the company into building specific power plants — a nuance the State Corporation Commission was careful to note in its July 15 ruling. But the regulatory panel could still factor in the plan as it mulls Dominion’s bid to build a massive gas-burning complex outside of Richmond.

This order rightfully notices a lot of problems with Dominion’s planning process and is rightfully requiring them to fix it,” said Nate Benforado, senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center. The real question is: What’s going to happen in the meantime? We certainly shouldn’t be relying on a flawed plan when billions of customer dollars are at stake.”

Benforado and other advocates had urged the State Corporation Commission to reject Dominion’s plan outright, an action it’s taken before. Instead, the panel OK’d the resource plan with only faint praise, calling it merely legally sufficient” and directing Dominion to change its approach for its next forecast, due October 2026.

The accepted plan stops six years shy of 2045, the year by which Dominion is supposed to generate 100% carbon-free electricity, according to the 2020 Virginia Clean Economy Act. The road map does not address how the utility expects to meet the decarbonization requirement.

In light of what Benforado and other advocates called this fundamental flaw,” the commission ordered future schemes to span 20 years — not 15 — and include at least one scenario where all fossil-fueled plants are shuttered by the law’s deadline.

Year after year, Dominion files plans that ignore clean energy requirements, lock in expensive fossil-fuel infrastructure, and drive up electric bills,” Dyanna Jaye, deputy director of strategy and governance at nonprofit Clean Virginia, said in a statement. By recognizing the harm this process can cause to Virginia families and businesses, the Commission has taken a step in the right direction by calling for significant reforms moving forward.”

Regulators also directed Dominion’s future plans to include additional battery storage, discuss grid-enhancing technologies, and aim to shave more power demand through energy-efficiency measures. The commission called the utility’s proposal to achieve 2.73% energy savings by 2028 the low end of feasible,” and said a 5% target would be more reasonable.

Dominion’s long-term plan should serve Virginia customers — not stand in the way of progress,” Shawn Kelly, Virginia-based regulatory director at industry group Advanced Energy United, said in a statement. The [proposal] needs to reflect the law, plan for a reliable clean energy future, and make use of proven tools like energy efficiency and storage to meet customer needs affordably.”

Though they didn’t call out the proposed 944-megawatt gas complex in Chesterfield County by name, regulators stressed that they will still debate Dominion’s plans for it and roughly 5 more gigawatts of new gas-burning plants before green-lighting any actual construction.

Read the full article here.

Topics: Virginia, United In The News, Shawn Kelly