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Duke Energy to increase NC electricity rates for the next 3 years


Aerial picture of Duke Energy's Sutton Plant, which runs on natural gas, north of Wilmington.

Playing under the bright Friday night lights just got a whole lot more expensive. So did just keeping the lights on and air conditioners powered for a big chunk of North Carolina.

Effective June 1, Duke Energy raised electricity rates for customers in Wilmington, Fayetteville, Eastern North Carolina and Asheville, with residential customers seeing a 4.8% hike in their bills. The increase, approved by the N.C. Utilities Commission, includes a temporary 2.8% hike and another 2% increase because of the expiration of a federal tax refund. Rates for other customers also are increasing, but by smaller amounts.

By far the largest increase is being absorbed by schools and others that operate athletic fields at night, with Duke raising the rates for sports field lighting by 22.2% as of Oct. 1. That’s when the increases covering customers served by Duke Energy Progress − the old Carolina Power & Light utility area − will take full effect without further action by the utilities commission.

But despite the steep increases, more hikes could be coming down the pike − and soon.

Crews with Duke Energy fix a power outage due to ice on Church St. in downtown Wilmington, N.C., Saturday Jan. 22, 2022. A wintry mix fell throughout the night over the Wilmington area and created dangerous conditions.    [MATT BORN/STARNEWS]

Why Duke says it needs to raise rates

Duke has said it needs to raise rates to generate additional revenue to add resiliency and reliability to the state’s power grid in the face of the growing threat from severe weather. It also needs to make significant investments to prepare for the adoption of a slew of new power sources, such as wind and solar, to help North Carolina meet its aggressive carbon-reduction goals laid out in bipartisan legislation approved by Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and the GOP-controlled General Assembly.



Read More: Duke Energy to increase NC electricity rates for the next 3 years

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