US 50: the 4 Most Represented Sectors
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Fact Book 2020
2020 AEP FACT BOOK 55th EEI Financial Conference November 9-10, 2020 “Safe Harbor” Statement Under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 This presentation contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Although AEP and each of its Registrant Subsidiaries believe that their expectations are based on reasonable assumptions, any such statements may be influenced by factors that could cause actual outcomes and results to be materially different from those projected. Among the factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements are: changes in economic conditions, electric market demand and demographic patterns in AEP service territories, The impact of pandemics, including COVID-19, and any associated disruption of AEP’s business operations due to impacts on economic or market conditions, electricity usage, employees, customers, service providers, vendors and suppliers, inflationary or deflationary interest rate trends, volatility in the financial markets, particularly developments affecting the availability or cost of capital to finance new capital projects and refinance existing debt, the availability and cost of funds to finance working capital and capital needs, particularly during periods when the time lag between incurring costs and recovery is long and the costs are material, decreased demand for electricity, weather conditions, including storms and drought conditions, and the ability to recover significant -
Case No. Pur-2020-00074
200430141 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION AT RICHMOND, APRIL 29, 2020 Document Control Center 04/29/[email protected] PM COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, ex rel. STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION CASE NO. PUR-2020-00074 Ex Parte: Authority to create regulatory asset ORDER On April 21, 2020, the following public utilities filed a letter request ("Letter") with the Clerk of the State Corporation Commission ("Commission"): Washington Gas Light Company; Columbia Gas of Virginia, Inc.; Roanoke Gas Company; Virginia Natural Gas, Inc.; Atmos Energy Corporation; Appalachian Natural Gas Distribution Company; Southwestern Virginia Gas Company; Aqua Virginia, Inc.; and Virginia-American Water Company. The Letter seeks the Commission's approval "to create a [r]egulatory [a]ssetto record incremental prudently incurred costs and suspended late payment fees attributable to the COVID-19 pandemic."1 The Letter notes that the Commission has issued orders2 taking judicial notice of the ongoing public health emergency related to the spread of the coronavirus, or COVID-19, and the 1 Letter at 1. On April 27, 2020, Massanutten Public Service Corporation filed comments supporting the Letter and asking for the same relief. 2 See, e.g., Commonwealth of Virginia, ex rel. State Corporation Commission, Ex Parte: Electronic Service of Commission Orders, Case No. CLK-2020-00004, Doc. Con. Cen. No. 200330035, Order Concerning Electronic Service of Commission Orders (Mar. 19, 2020); Commonwealth of Virginia, ex rel. State Corporation Commission, Ex Parte: Revised Operating Procedures During COVID-19 Emergency, Case No. CLK-2020-00005, Doc. Con. Cen. No. 200330042, Order Regarding the State Corporation Commission's Revised Operating Procedures During COVID-19 Emergency (Mar. -
Efficient Electrification at Epri August 2018 Newsletter
EFFICIENT ELECTRIFICATION AT EPRI AUGUST 2018 NEWSLETTER Efficient electrification is about innovation. It’s about creative solutions that benefit a broad range of stakeholders–utility customers, utilities, private industry, and society. This issue of Efficient Electrification highlights a few of the many innovative solutions that industry leaders are proposing: • To help customers learn about the benefits of using electricity and make more informed energy choices, American Electric Power (AEP) recently launched its Energy Conversion Hub. • To facilitate coordinated planning among energy and water utilities, the Water Resource Foundation is pioneering an innovative approach using a competitive tournament. • EPRI is demonstrating an innovative, low-cost solution to end-use monitoring and control called the energy management circuit breaker. • In its Electrification Futures Study, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) examines how potential electrification could transform the U.S. energy system. Learn about the key findings of the most recent report. • Global experts from utilities, private industry, regulators, EPRI, and others will cover many “big ideas” planned for the Electrification 2018 Conference plenary sessions. You will hear much more about innovative solutions in the many keynote talks, technical sessions, and exhibits at the upcoming Electrification 2018 International Conference & Exposition, August 20–23, 2018, in Long Beach, California. Remember to check out the list of recent news, events, and EPRI resources at the -
2019 Annual Meeting • Proxy Statement American Electric Power 1 Riverside Plaza Columbus, OH 43215
Notice of 2019 Annual Meeting • Proxy Statement American Electric Power 1 Riverside Plaza Columbus, OH 43215 Nicholas K. Akins Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer March 13, 2019 Dear Shareholders: This year’s annual meeting of shareholders will be held at The Omni Hotel, 900 North Shoreline Blvd., Corpus Christi, Texas on Tuesday, April 23, 2019, at 9:00 a.m. Central Standard Time. Your Board of Directors and I cordially invite you to attend. Registration will begin at 8:00 a.m. Only shareholders who owned shares on the record date, February 25, 2019, are entitled to vote and attend the meeting. To attend the meeting, you will need to present an admission ticket or the notice you received. If your shares are registered in your name, and you received your proxy materials by mail, your admission ticket is attached to your proxy card. A map and directions are printed on the admission ticket. If your shares are registered in your name and you received your proxy materials electronically via the Internet, you will need to print an admission ticket after you vote by clicking on the “Options” button. If you hold shares through an account with a bank or broker, you will need to contact them and request a legal proxy, or bring a copy of your statement to the meeting that shows that you owned the shares on the record date. Each ticket will admit a shareholder and one guest. We are mailing to many of our shareholders a notice of Internet availability instead of a paper copy of the proxy materials. -
New Strategies for Utility Growth
New Strategies for Utility Growth As electricity use levels off, utility executives will need to explore new ways to meet investor growth expectations. By Grant Dougans and Joe Scalise Grant Dougans is a partner in Bain’s Utilities practice, and Joe Scalise leads the practice globally. Joe also leads the fi rm’s Energy & Natural Resources practice in the Americas. Copyright © 2019 Bain & Company, Inc. All rights reserved. New Strategies for Utility Growth At a Glance Investors remain confident in the regulated utility model, and most expect earnings growth of at least 6% annually—a daunting challenge given that electricity load growth is nearly flat for many utilities. In the core regulated utility business, every function has a role to play in supporting growth at a time of increasing competitive pressure and heightened scrutiny from regulators and stakeholders. Winners will use M&A to access new capital investment opportunities, build scale and realize cost savings. Some executive teams will develop second engines of growth outside of the regulated utility, in adjacencies that make use of their engineering and infrastructure expertise. Several utilities are exploring investments in new energy technologies, though success is far from guaranteed. Investors expect utilities to grow the size of their businesses by 70% over the next decade in the face of flat electric load growth. That is the stark message from new research by Bain & Company and Rivel Research Group, surveying utilities investors in North America. Our survey confirms investors’ extraordinary faith in the traditional regulated utility model(see Figure 1). Nearly three quarters of investors have a positive outlook on the sector, and more than 80% believe that the vertically integrated utility model remains sustainable. -
YOUR DONATION to PHCA Ashland Bellsouth Corp
Argonaut Group. Bass, Berry and Sims, PLC Butler Manufacturing Co. Ariel Capital Management Baxter International Cadence Design Systems Aristokraft Bay Networks Calex Manufacturing Co. Arkema BEA Systems Calpine, Corp. Armstrong World Industries Bechtel Group CambridgeSoft Armtek, Corp. Becton Dickinson and Co. Campbell Soup Foundation Arrow Electronics Belden Wire and Cable Co. Canadian Pacific Railway YOUR DONATION to PHCA Ashland BellSouth Corp. Capital Group Cos. Aspect Telecommunications Bemis Co. Capital One Services Companies with Matching Gift Programs Associates Corp. of North BeneTemps Cardinal Health (contact your HR Dept. for instructions) America L.M. Berry and Co. Cargill Assurant Health BHP Minerals International Carnegie Corp. of New York Astoria Federal Savings Binney and Smith Castrol North America AAI Corp. Amerada Hess Corp. AstraZenca Bituminous Casualty Corp. Carson Products Co. Abbott Laboratories Ameren Corp. AT&T Black and Decker Corp. Catalina Marketing, Corp. ABN AMBRO North American Electric Power Atlantic City Electric Co. Blount Foundation Catepillar America American Express Co. Atlantic Data Services Blue Bell Central Illinois Light Co. Accenture American General Corp. Autodest BMC Industries Chesapeake Corp. ACF Industries American Honda Motor Corp. Automatic Data Processing BMO Financial Group, US ChevronTexaco Corp. Acuson American International Group AVAYA BOC Group Chicago Mercantile Exchange ADC Telecommunications American National Bank Avery Dennison, Corp. Boeing Co. Chicago Title and Trust Co. Addison Weley Longman American Optical Corp. Avon Products Bonneville International Corp. Chicago Tribune Co. Adobe Systems American Standard AXA Financial Borden Family of Cos. Chiquita Brands International Advanced Micro Devices American States Insurance Baker Hughes Boston Gear Chubb and Sone AEGON USA American Stock Exchange Ball Corp. -
Dominion Energy, Inc.; Rule 14A-8 No-Action Letter
SANFORD J. LEWIS, ATTORNEY February 10, 2020 VIA e-mail: [email protected] Office of Chief Counsel Division of Corporation Finance U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission 100 F Street, N. E. Washington D.C. 20549 Via email: [email protected] Re: Dominion Energy, Inc.’s December 30th Request to Exclude Shareholder Proposal of As You Sow regarding natural gas infrastructure asset stranding risk analysis. Ladies and Gentlemen: The Stewart Taggart & Rebecca W Taggart JT REV TR UAD 08/29/17 (the “Proponent”) is beneficial owner of common stock of Dominion Energy, Inc.’s (the “Company”). As You Sow has submitted a shareholder proposal (the “Proposal”) on behalf of the Proponent to the Company. This letter hereby responds to the letter dated December 30th, 2019 ("Company Letter") sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission by Katherine K. DeLuca, McGuireWoods LLP. In that letter, the Company contends that the Proposal may be excluded from the Company’s 2020 proxy statement. Based upon a review of the Proposal, the letter sent by the Company, and the relevant rules, the Proposal is not excludable and must be included in the Company’s 2020 proxy materials under Rule 14a-8. A copy of this letter is being emailed concurrently to Katherine K. DeLuca, McGuireWoods LLP. SUMMARY The Proposal asks the Company to issue a report describing how it is responding to the risk of stranded assets of current and planned natural gas-based infrastructure and assets in the face of an intensifying global response to stabilizing climate change. The Company asserts that it has largely implemented the Proposal by addressing its underlying concerns and satisfying its essential objective. -
AEP Proxy Statement and Appendix A
Notice of 2004 Annual Meeting Š Proxy Statement American Electric Power 1 Riverside Plaza Columbus, OH 43215 Michael G. Morris Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer March 19, 2004 Dear Shareholder: This year’s annual meeting of shareholders will be held at The Ohio State University’s Fawcett Center, 2400 Olen- tangy River Road, Columbus, Ohio, on Tuesday, April 27, 2004, at 9:30 a.m. Your Board of Directors and I cordially invite you to attend. Registration will begin at 8:00 AM. PLEASE NOTE THAT YOU WILL NEED TO PRESENT AN ADMISSION TICKET TO ATTEND THE MEETING. If your shares are registered in your name, and you received your proxy materials by mail, your admission ticket is attached to your proxy card. A map and directions are printed on the admission ticket. If your shares are registered in your name and you received your proxy materials electronically via the internet, you will need to print an admission ticket after you vote by click- ing on the “Options” button. If you hold shares through an account with a bank or broker, you will need to contact them and request a legal proxy, or bring a copy of your statement to the meeting that shows that you owned the shares on the record date. Each ticket will admit a shareholder and one guest. Only those shareholders who owned shares on the record date, March 3, 2004, are entitled to vote and attend the meeting. If you are unable to attend the meeting, you can listen to it live or replay over the Internet. -
04/13/2021 Category: Information Meeting with a Question and Answer Session
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Public Meeting Summary May 10, 2021 Title: Fitness for Duty Drug Testing Requirements Final Rule (Cumulative Effects of Regulation) Meeting Identifier: 20210348 Date of Meeting: April 13, 2021 Location: Webinar Type of Meeting: Information Meeting with a Question and Answer Session. Purpose of the Meeting: To discuss the proposed effective date of the draft final rule for Fitness for Duty Drug Testing Requirements and to provide a summary of substantive public comments received on the proposed rule resulting in changes to the final rule. This meeting also provided an opportunity for the NRC staff to obtain feedback from members of the public on the effective date of the final rule as it pertains to the cumulative effects of regulation. General Details: The NRC conducted a public meeting scheduled from 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. eastern standard time that ran approximately 1 hour. The meeting was attended by 93 individuals, including 19 NRC staff and 74 members of the public. All attendees participated via WebEx and teleconference. Meeting participants included nuclear power reactor licensees (e.g., Energy Harbor, Exelon, Duke Energy), representatives from the nuclear industry (e.g., Nuclear Energy Institute), other stakeholders (e.g., Curtiss-Wright, Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP), and a private citizen. The meeting was transcribed, and the transcript is available in the NRC’s Agencywide Document Access and Management System (ADAMS) under Accession No. ML21096A011, and at Regulations.gov under Docket No. NRC-2009-0225. A list of attendees is provided as an attachment to this meeting summary. Summary of NRC Presentation: The meeting began with an NRC presentation on the rulemaking background and final rule schedule. -
1 American Electric Power Service Corporation Order No. EA-200 I
American Electric Power Service Corporation Order No. EA-200 I. BACKGROUND Exports of electricity from the United States to a foreign country are regulated and require authorization under section 202(e) of the Federal Power Act (FPA) (16 U.S.C. §824a(e)). On December 22, 1998, as supplemented on February 3, 1999, American Electric Power Service Corporation (AEPSC), on behalf of its seven public utility affiliates, collectively known as the “AEP Operating Companies,” applied to the Office of Fossil Energy (FE) of the Department of Energy (DOE) for authorization to transmit electric energy to Canada. The AEP Operating Companies are each investor-owned public utilities that serve retail and wholesale customers in Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. They include: Appalachian Power Company; Columbus Southern Power Company; Indiana Michigan Power Company; Kentucky Power Company; Kingsport Power Company; Ohio Power Company; and Wheeling Power Company. AEPSC and the AEP Operating Companies are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the American Electric Power Company, Inc., a registered holding company. In its February 3, 1999 supplemental filing, AEPSC indicated that an export authorization was being sought only for each of its generation-owning affiliates, thus excluding Kingsport Power Company and Wheeling Power Company from the application. The energy and capacity to be exported will be from either surplus generation to the AEP Operating Companies or from purchases on the wholesale market. The energy to be exported would be delivered to Canada over the international electric transmission facilities owned and operated by the following: Basin Electric Power Cooperative Maine Public Service Company Bonneville Power Administration Minnesota Power Inc. -
Atlantic Coast Pipeline Overview
ACCEPTED FOR PROCESSING - 2019 December 16 4:57 PM - SCPSC - ND-2019-35-G - Page 1 of 15 Gas Piedmont Natural G DUKE ENERGY, - 35 - December 11, 2019 December 11, Public ServiceCommission SouthCarolina of (PSCSC) Allowable Ex Parte Briefing Communication NDI 2019 Update on AtlanticCoastPipelineUpdate on ACCEPTED of 15 Ex Parte Briefing: ACP Project Update ENERGY. 5%I N t I G., FOR INTRODUCTION Harrison Co., WV . ACP is a proposed 600 mile interstate pipeline project PROCESSING designed to bring critical natural gas infrastructure and supply to the southeast/mid-Atlantic region. Owners: - 2019 . Dominion Energy . Duke Energy December . Southern . Primary Customers 16 4:57 . Duke Energy – Duke Energy Carolinas/Duke Energy Progress PM - – Piedmont Natural Gas SCPSC . Dominion - – Virginia Power ND-2019-35-G – PSNC . Southern Robeson Co., NC - – Virginia Natural Gas Page 2 2 ACCEPTED FOR PROCESSING - 2019 December 16 4:57 PM - SCPSC - ND-2019-35-G - Page 3 of 15 3 G., I t N 5%I ENERGY. Brian S. Heslin Deputy General Counsel Legal Update ACCEPTED of 15 Legal Update ENERGY. 5%I N t I G., FOR Overview of Notable Legal Challenges in the Courts and Regulatory Agencies PROCESSING 4th Circuit Panel Cases (Richmond, VA) Appalachian Trail Crossing - . Agency: U.S. Forest Service 2019 th . On December 13, 2018, the 4 Circuit vacated the Special Use Permit, Plan Amendments and December authorization to cross the Appalachian Trail . Opinion: http://www.ca4.uscourts.gov/opinions/181144.P.pdf . On October 4, 2019, the U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) agreed to hear petitions of the U.S. -
Dominion Energy, Inc. - Exclusion of Shareholder Proposal Submitted by As You Sow Pursuant to Rule 14A-8
McGuireWoods LLP Gateway Plaza 800 East Canal Street Richmond, VA 23219-3916 Phone: 1.804.775.1000 www.mcguirewoods.com Katherine K. DeLuca Direct: 1.804.775.4385 [email protected] McGUIREWCDDS Fax: 1.804.698.2084 February 2, 2021 VIA E-MAIL ([email protected]) U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Corporation Finance Office of Chief Counsel 100 F. Street, N.E. Washington, D.C. 20549 Re: Dominion Energy, Inc. - Exclusion of Shareholder Proposal Submitted by As You Sow Pursuant to Rule 14a-8 Ladies and Gentlemen: In a letter dated December 28, 2020, we requested that the Staff of the Division of Corporation Finance concur that our client Dominion Energy, Inc. could exclude from its proxy statement and form of proxy for its 2021 annual meeting of shareholders a proposal (the “Proposal”) submitted by As You Sow (the “Representative”) on behalf of John B & Linda C Mason Comm Prop (S) and the Jennifer Perini Trust (the “Proponents”). Attached as Exhibit A is a signed letter from the Representative, dated January 29, 2021, agreeing to withdraw the Proposal. In reliance on this letter, we hereby withdraw the December 28, 2020 no-action request relating to Dominion Energy’s ability to exclude the Proposal pursuant to Rule 14a-8 under the Exchange Act of 1934. Please do not hesitate to call me at (804) 775-4385 if I may be of further assistance in this matter. Sincerely, Katherine K. DeLuca Enclosures cc: Meredith Sanderlin Thrower, Senior Assistant General Counsel – Securities, M&A and Project Development Karen W. Doggett, Assistant Corporate Secretary and Director – Governance Hannah Frank, Esquire, McGuireWoods LLP Lila Holzman, As You Sow John B & Linda C Mason Comm Prop (S), Proponent (c/o Ms.