The all-stock takeover, the largest power acquisition ever, gives NextEra the utility that runs Northern Virginia’s data-centre belt and consolidates the bidding power on the demand side of the AI-electricity trade.
NextEra Energy has agreed to acquire Dominion Energy for about $67bn in an all-stock deal, Bloomberg reported on Monday, in what would be the largest power-sector acquisition on record.
NextEra shareholders will own 74.5% of the combined company, Dominion shareholders 25.5%, with each Dominion share exchanged for roughly eight-tenths of a NextEra share.
The combined entity will trade under the NextEra name on the New York Stock Exchange and serve around 10 million utility customers across Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
The strategic logic is the one every utility-sector trade has been running on for 18 months. Dominion is the utility that powers Northern Virginia, which is the world’s largest data-centre market by a long margin and the regional grid most exposed to the AI-training and inference build-out.
NextEra brings the largest US renewable-generation fleet, an existing nuclear position, and Florida Power & Light’s regulated customer base.
The combined company will, on the deal’s own claims, be the world leader in renewables and battery storage, the US leader in natural-gas generation, and the second-largest US nuclear operator.
The merged entity will be selling, in effect, every form of generation that an AI hyperscaler is now contracting for.
The macro thesis under the trade is a part of the AI infrastructure cycle that has become unavoidable. US utilities have, on the running aggregated capex guidance, committed roughly $1.4 trillion of electricity-infrastructure investment by 2030, almost all of it driven by AI data-centre load growth.
Northern Virginia is the densest concentration of that demand, and it is also the grid where the supply constraint has been most acute, with new data-centre interconnection queues running multiple years.
The cooling-driven AWS US-EAST-1 outage earlier this year was the most visible operational example of what happens when the load curve grows faster than the substations can absorb.
NextEra and Dominion combined become, by some distance, the single largest counterparty that hyperscalers will be negotiating new long-term power purchase agreements within the affected geographies.
NextEra chief executive John Ketchum will run the combined company; Dominion’s Robert Blue will run the regulated-utilities business and take a board seat. The combined dividend and rate-base footprint was not disclosed.
What is visible is that NextEra’s unregulated-generation arm and Dominion’s regulated-Virginia franchise are being put under one roof, the structural piece the AI-power thesis has been arguing for.
The deal also collapses a competitive dynamic that has shaped the past year of utility-sector valuations. Hyperscalers (Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta most prominently) have been negotiating in parallel with multiple utilities across the same regional grids, playing demand-side bidders against each other for long-tenor contracts.
Consolidating two of the largest counterparts on the supply side narrows the negotiating field. Whether that translates into pricing power for the merged utility or into regulatory pushback from state commissions (Florida’s PSC, the Virginia State Corporation Commission, and the North Carolina Utilities Commission all have jurisdictional roles in the approval) is the question the next 18 months of regulatory-filing review will settle.
Antitrust exposure is the second question. Combining the largest US renewable-generation operator with the utility supplying the densest data-centre market is a profile FERC and the DOJ will both have to clear.
Pre-deal analyst commentary had flagged the regulatory path as the most material execution risk.
Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta have committed combined power-procurement and self-build capacity into 2030 that requires roughly the entirety of new US utility-scale generation coming online over the same window.
A combined NextEra-Dominion is the natural single counterparty to coordinate those commitments across the Southeast US grid.
Bloomberg’s full-text coverage describes the deal as creating ‘a utility colossus’ calibrated against precisely that demand curve.
Completion timing has not been disclosed beyond a target close, subject to customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals.
The merged dividend policy, the integration timeline for Dominion’s Virginia regulated franchise, and the disposition of overlapping renewable-development pipelines are the operational details that will determine whether the announced cost-synergy and growth assumptions hold.
The headline figure is the one that has been published. $67bn is the price tag on the largest power deal on record.
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