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    You are at:Home » Florida planned ahead on data centers – and families are better off for it Scott Bores, president of Florida Power & Light Company
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    Florida planned ahead on data centers – and families are better off for it Scott Bores, president of Florida Power & Light Company

    May 13, 20262 Mins Read1 Views
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    Scott Bores
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    By Kristine Janata

    Large energy users – including manufacturing facilities, industrial operations, or emerging sec-tors like data centers – can play an important role in a growing economy. The key is making sure that growth happens responsibly and does not shift costs or risks onto families and small businesses.

    Florida has developed a straightforward solution to move the state’s economy forward: Require growth to pay its own way.

    Governor Ron DeSantis recently signed legislation requiring all of Florida’s regulated utilities to develop rate structures ensuring large-scale data centers bear their electric service costs and that risks are not passed on to other customers.

    This is another great example of Florida getting things right.

    At Florida Power & Light Company, we already put this principle into action with a large-load rate structure approved by the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC). Under this framework, companies connecting significant new demand to the grid are responsible for paying the costs associated with serving their projects, including 100% of any new power generation required to serve their needs.

    This structure also includes strong protections – engineering reviews, financial collateral, minimum monthly payments, long-term commitments, and protections if a project shuts down early.

    The goal is simple: make sure the cost stays with the company driving the demand, not with Florida families.

    Just as important, this framework delivers real benefits to customers.

    Our grid is built to reliably serve customers during peak demand and extreme weather, while also planning for continued growth. When a large customer connects to the system and uses power steadily, it will pay its costs and add significant revenue that helps cover fixed system costs. Over time, that creates downward pressure on rates while maintaining reliability and resilience.

    By planning ahead and putting the right policies in place, Florida and the PSC have created a model that both protects customers and supports responsible economic growth. That’s how you build a stronger economy—while keeping energy reliable and affordable for the people who call Florida home.

     

    By planning ahead and putting the right policies in place
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    Carma Henry

    Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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