NV Energy explained

NV Energy, Inc.
Type:Subsidiary
Industry:Public utilities
Foundation:Reno, Nevada, United States
Location City:Las Vegas, Nevada
Location Country:United States
Key People:Doug Cannon (President and CEO)[1]
Products:Electricity, natural gas
Revenue:US$ 3.016 billion (2017)[2]
Operating Income:US$ 755 million (2017)[3]
Net Income:US$ 344 million (2017)[4]
Assets:US$ 00.billion (2013)[5]
Owner:Berkshire Hathaway (92%)
Walter Scott Jr. family (8%)
Num Employees: 2,500[6]
Parent:Berkshire Hathaway Energy

NV Energy is a public utility which generates, transmits and distributes electric service in northern and southern Nevada, including the Las Vegas Valley, and provides natural gas service in the Reno–Sparks metropolitan area of northern Nevada. Based in Las Vegas, Nevada, it serves about 1.3 million customers and over 40 million tourists annually.[7]

MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company (now Berkshire Hathaway Energy), a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, acquired NV Energy in a transaction completed on December 19, 2013.[8] When the merger was announced, the companies stated that NV Energy would continue to be based in Las Vegas under its then-current name.[9] Prior to the acquisition by MidAmerican, the company's common stock was listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol NVE.

History

NV Energy is the product of the 1998 merger of the two major utilities in Nevada—northern Nevada's Sierra Pacific Power, based in Reno, and Las Vegas's Nevada Power.

Sierra Pacific Power was founded in 1928 from a merger of several companies dating back to the gold rush of the 1850s. In 1984, it reorganized as a holding company, Sierra Pacific Resources. Nevada Power was formed in 1906 as the Consolidated Power and Telephone Company of Nevada. It sold off its telephone operations in 1929 and became Southern Nevada Power, changing its name to Nevada Power in 1961. A year later, it became the first Nevada-based company listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

In 1999, Sierra Pacific and Nevada Power merged.[10] Sierra Pacific Resources was the nominal survivor, with Nevada Power joining Sierra Pacific Power as one of its operating companies. However, headquarters moved from Reno to Nevada Power's old campus in Las Vegas. The merger created a company with a service territory stretching over 44,400 square miles—nearly all of Nevada's densely populated area.

On September 22, 2008, Nevada Power and Sierra Pacific Power began doing business as NV Energy. This is the result of the corporate decision to unify its image under a single brand. Later, Sierra Pacific Resources changed its corporate name to NV Energy, Inc.[11]

In 2009, NV Energy sold its California operations to a partnership of Algonquin Power & Utilities and Emera.[12] Algonquin later bought out Emera.[13] In February 2010, NV Energy entered a 20-year agreement with Pattern Energy to be the sole purchaser of power generated by Pattern's Spring Valley Wind Farm, which opened in August 2012.[14] [15] The wind farm generates power for NV Energy customers in northern Nevada and the Las Vegas Valley.[16]

In July 2018, NV Energy launched an electric vehicle infrastructure program. The Nevada Public Utilities Commission authorized the company to invest $15 million to incentivize the development of publicly available charging stations. The program was authorized by the state legislature (Senate Bill 145) and "integrated with a broad, years-old $295 million legislative mandate that includes solar incentives and other renewables."[17]

Service reliability

Based on the reliability of electric distribution service, NV Energy ranked among the best 10% of electric utilities nationwide in 2012, 2011 and 2010, and was the best in the nation in 2009.[18] The rankings are based on interruption frequency[19] and interruption duration[20] compared to a peer group constructed by the Edison Electric Institute.

Electric sources

The company serves its customers through a variety of sources including company-owned power plants (most of which are fueled by natural gas), purchased power and renewable energy.[21] [22] The company is currently exceeding Nevada's renewable portfolio standard,[23] of 18 percent of its total energy sales. NV Energy's northern Nevada operating company achieved a 33.6 percent renewable energy and renewable energy credit level, and southern Nevada achieved a 20.2 percent renewable portfolio standard.[24]

In April 2019, the Nevada legislature passed a bill that requires 50% of electricity in the state to be generated from renewable resources by 2030. The bill also sets a goal of 100% carbon-free generation resources by 2050. The new law applies to all electricity providers, including cooperatives and power marketers.[25]

Solar energy

NV Energy buys power from the 100 MW Playa Solar 2 project at $0.0378/kWh under a 20-year power purchase agreement.[26]

In 2018, NV Energy announced plans to purchase power from the Eagle Shadow Mountain Solar Project,[27] a 300 MW solar photovoltaic project which is being developed by 8minutenergy Renewables.[28]

In June 2019, NV Energy announced three new solar power projects with total generating capacity of 1,200 MW paired with 590 MW of battery storage. The projects will be developed by 8minute Solar Energy, EDFG Renewables, Quinbrook Infrastructure and Arevia Power, and are set to be completed by 2023.[29] [30] [31] They consist of:

Other projects

In 2006, the company announced plans to construct the Ely Energy Center near Ely, Nevada. The project would initially consist of two 750 megawatt pulverized coal generation units, but was delayed for approximately 10 years in February 2009.

In May 2011, the company completed construction of the Harry Allen gas-fired generating plant below budget and ahead of schedule.Prior to 2013, the company's northern and southern Nevada electric grids were not connected, and ran as separate systems. This changed in late 2013, when the company completed a transmission line running from the Harry Allen plant north to Ely, Nevada. The 500-kilovolt One Nevada Transmission Line (ONLine) is expected to improve electric service reliability, reduce costs and allow development of renewable energy sources, such as wind, solar and geothermal generating units, in remote parts of the state.[35] [36] [37] [38]

"Energy Choice" initiative

In 2016 and 2018, Nevada voters considered a proposal to establish a competitive retail energy market in the state in place of the traditional one-utility model. Voters ultimately rejected that proposal in the 2018 election.[39] Nevertheless, six major commercial customers left NV Energy's system during 2016 through 2018 and began buying power from other sources, exercising their right to do so under a 2001 state law.[40]

Subsidiaries

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: NV Energy.
  2. Web site: Consolidated Financial Statements.
  3. Web site: Consolidated Financial Statements. 19 July 2014.
  4. Web site: Consolidated Financial Statements. 19 July 2014.
  5. Web site: NV Energy Bondholder Report, March 7, 2014. 19 July 2014.
  6. Web site: Annual Reports on SEC Form 10-K for period ending Dec. 31, 2013, Nevada Power Company and Sierra Pacific Power Company. 19 July 2014.
  7. source: 2012 Annual Report on Form 10-K
  8. Web site: 8-K . 2022-03-31 . www.sec.gov.
  9. Web site: News Releases . 2022-03-31 . nvenergy.mediaroom.com . en.
  10. News: 0099-9660 . Journal . Kathryn Kranhold Staff Reporter of The Wall Street . Nevada Power, Sierra Pacific Plan Merger Deal of at Least $1 Billion . Wall Street Journal . 2014-09-09 . 1998-05-01 .
  11. Nevada Power and Sierra Pacific Power Renamed NV Energy . Sierra Pacific Resources . 2008-09-22 . 2008-09-22 .
  12. News: UPDATE 2-Algonquin, Emera to jointly buy some NV Energy assets . Reuters . 2014-09-16 . 2009-04-23 .
  13. Web site: Algonquin and Emera announce a Strategic Investment Agreement and the transfer of California Utility to Algonquin . 2014-09-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140203211437/http://www.emera.com/en/home/mediacentre/archivedpr/2011/newsreleasedetails.aspx?SourceParams=reqid-1557442 . 2014-02-03 .
  14. News: Robison. Jennifer. NV Energy agrees to deal with wind farm. 2017-09-17. Las Vegas Review-Journal. 2010-02-09.
  15. News: Brean. Henry. Second golden eagle found dead at Nevada wind farm. 2017-09-17. Las Vegas Review-Journal. 2015-02-24. The $225 million facility went online in August 2012 as the first utility-scale wind farm in Nevada. It is designed to generate enough electricity to supply about 40,000 homes, with NV Energy as its only customer for the first 20 years of operation..
  16. News: Brean. Henry. Wind energy project gearing up after lawsuit settled. 2017-09-17. Las Vegas Review-Journal. 2012-04-17. Early on, the turbines will serve only NV Energy customers in Northern Nevada. The power eventually will find its way south to the Las Vegas Valley with the completion of a new transmission line now being built from Ely to Apex..
  17. News: Nevada regulators approve NV Energy's first EV infrastructure program. Utility Dive. 2018-11-27. en-US.
  18. NV Energy investor presentation, March 2013, company website
  19. [SAIFI]
  20. [SAIDI]
  21. Web site: NV Energy-Owned Generating Resources . NV Energy company web site . 12 April 2020.
  22. Web site: Form 10-K for 12 Months Ended Dec. 31, 2019 . Generating Facilities and Fuel Supply . EDGAR . U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission . 13 April 2020.
  23. Web site: News Releases. nvenergy.mediaroom.com. en. 2019-01-31.
  24. Web site: News Releases. nvenergy.mediaroom.com. en. 2019-01-31.
  25. Web site: Morehouse . Catherine . Nevada passes bill for 50% renewables by 2030, 100% carbon free by 2050 . Utility Dive . 12 April 2020.
  26. Web site: First Solar Signs PPA With A Record Low Rates . Forbes . . July 13, 2015 .
  27. Web site: Misbrener . Kelsey . Capital Dynamics acquires 300-MW Eagle Shadow Mountain Solar Project . Solar Power World . 9 January 2020 . 12 April 2020.
  28. Web site: NV Energy 2.3-cent solar contract could set new price record. Utility Dive. en-US . 2019-01-31.
  29. Web site: NV Energy Announces 'Hulkingly Big' Solar-Plus-Storage Procurement. Merchant. Emma . 2019-06-25. www.greentechmedia.com. 2019-11-19.
  30. Web site: Pickerel . Kelly . NV Energy announces 1.2 GW of new solar and 590 MW of energy storage coming to Nevada . Solar Power World . 25 June 2019.
  31. Web site: Morehouse . Catherine . NV Energy to add 1.2 GW solar, 2.3 GWh storage as large customer dash slows . Utility Dive . 25 June 2019.
  32. Web site: Trump Administration approves NV Energy's 690 MW, 1.5 GWh Gemini solar+storage project . Utility Dive . https://web.archive.org/web/20200216094523/https://www.utilitydive.com/news/trump-administration-set-to-approve-nv-energys-690-mw-solar-farm-largest/569676/ . 16 February 2020 . 22 January 2020 . live.
  33. Web site: Dept. of Interior approves plans for 690-MW Gemini solar project with 1,400-MWh battery . Solar Power World . https://web.archive.org/web/20200515100149/https://www.solarpowerworldonline.com/2020/05/dept-of-interior-approves-plans-for-690-mw-gemini-solar-project-with-1400-mwh-battery/ . 15 May 2020 . 11 May 2020 . live.
  34. Web site: US$1.9 billion financing secured for 'milestone' Nevada solar-plus-storage project . Energy Storage News . 26 April 2022.
  35. Web site: 2014-01-24 . Officials dedicate line connecting Northern, Southern Nevada electricity grids . 2022-03-31 . Las Vegas Review-Journal . en-US.
  36. News: Hot topic? How does ONLine grab you?: PUC hears all about plan for $510 million power line . Jennifer Robison . . 2010-06-03 .
  37. http://www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/info/newsroom/2010/october/NR_10_19_2010.html Bureau of Land Management news release
  38. Web site: One Nevada Transmission Line Begins Serving Customers - Jan 23, 2014.
  39. Web site: Snyder, Riley and Rindels, Michelle . Voters Reject Energy Choice Ballot Question . The Nevada Independent . 7 November 2018 . 13 April 2020.
  40. News: Schulz . Bailey . Companies leaving NV Energy could affect remaining customers . 13 April 2020 . Las Vegas Review-Journal . January 26, 2019.