The largest US utility is acquiring a major peer with data-center exposure, creating a 110-gigawatt regulated power operator.
The largest US utility is acquiring a major peer with data-center exposure, creating a 110-gigawatt regulated power operator.

NextEra Energy proposed an all-stock acquisition of Dominion Energy valued at $66.8 billion, combining two of the largest US regulated utilities into a roughly 110-gigawatt power operator with exposure to surging electricity demand from AI data centers and electrification.
"The combined company is expected to become the world's largest regulated electric utility and a global leader in clean energy and battery storage," NextEra Energy said in a statement announcing the deal.
The all-stock transaction values Dominion at a premium to its undisturbed share price, though the exact premium percentage was not immediately disclosed. NextEra, already a dominant player in US renewable energy through its Florida regulated utility and large-scale wind and solar portfolio, would add Dominion's regulated operations across Virginia, the Carolinas and the Midwest, along with its nuclear and natural gas generation fleet. The deal would mark one of the largest utility-sector transactions in US history, surpassing the $47.5 billion merger of Exelon and Constellation Energy in 2022.
For investors, the merger raises questions about integration risk, regulatory approvals across multiple jurisdictions and the capital structure implications of an all-stock deal. Dominion's exposure to data-center demand — particularly in Virginia, the world's largest data-center market — provides a growth angle tied to AI and cloud computing that could attract investors seeking both defensive utility income and tech-adjacent growth. The deal also tests how regulators view further consolidation in a sector already focused on grid reliability, decarbonization and affordability.
Scale and Strategic Rationale
The acquisition lines up with a broader industry narrative that higher electricity demand from AI data centers, electric vehicles and building electrification can support large capital programs in renewables, storage and grid upgrades. NextEra's bigger combined platform could give it more optionality across those areas, competing with peers such as Duke Energy and American Electric Power, which are also planning multibillion-dollar capital programs. OpenAI's recent proposal for a 10-gigawatt AI data center in Ohio backed by Nvidia underscores the scale of demand growth utilities are racing to serve.
At the same time, folding Dominion into the group adds more rate cases, regulators and political scrutiny to manage. The deal would require approvals from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the Federal Trade Commission and state utility commissions in multiple states — a process that could take 12 to 18 months. The last major utility merger, Exelon's combination with Pepco Holdings in 2016, took more than two years to clear all regulatory hurdles.
What's at Stake
The merger creates a new reference point for how large regulated utilities and clean energy platforms might combine. If completed, it would reshape the US power sector at a time when electricity demand growth is accelerating for the first time in two decades, driven by the buildout of AI data centers. First Solar, a leading solar panel maker with 47.9 gigawatts of contracted sales through 2030 and a net cash position of $1.7 billion to $2.3 billion expected by end of 2026, stands to benefit from the combined company's expanded renewable energy procurement.
The all-stock structure means Dominion shareholders would become NextEra shareholders, sharing in both the upside of the combined platform and the execution risk of integrating two large utility operations. NextEra's management will need to demonstrate that the promised scale benefits — in procurement, grid operations and clean energy development — materialize without diluting per-share earnings growth. Over 7 million investors track NextEra through platforms such as Simply Wall St, reflecting the high level of retail interest in the utility sector's consolidation story.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.