Tennessee Valley Authority Announces $3 Billion in Fourth-Quarter Revenue as Investigation into Blackouts Continues

by Jon Styf

 

The Tennessee Valley Authority announced Tuesday it made $3 billion in operating revenue in the final three months of 2022.

The revenue came as TVA faced what it called the first temporary blackouts in the energy company’s 90-year history in late December, something the company apologized for and has vowed that it is fully investigating.

President & CEO Jeff Lyash discussed the storm and the outages on Tuesday’s first quarter earnings call, saying temperatures dropped by 40 degrees in a “matter of hours” accompanied by gale force winds.

“The intensity of scale and duration of this event was significant,” Lyash said.

Lyash noted power demand records were set Dec. 23 with 740 gigawatt hours of energy, enough power to serve 70,000 homes for an entire year.

“We’ll be highly self-critical and we’ll identify all the actions we can take to minimize the likelihood of this again,” Lyash said of the investigation. “Or if it does occur, which is always a possibility, that we perform better and that we coordinate better with our local power companies.”

Yes, Every Kid

The TVA power issues led it to demand local power companies reduce electricity load by 5% for two hours and 15 minutes on Friday and then 5% to 10% reductions on Saturday for five hours and 40 minutes.

TVA is the largest public power corporation in the country, generating 90% of the state’s electric generating capacity and three-fifth of its power plants. It is federally owned and serves 10 million by providing electricity to 153 local power companies.

The top source of electricity generation in Tennessee is nuclear power plants, which provide 47% of the state’s electricity while 20% comes from natural gas and 18% from coal. All three of the TVA nuclear plants — Brown’s Ferry (Alabama) and Sequoyah and Watts Bar (Tennessee) — were generating power at 100% capacity during the cold snap, according to data from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Meanwhile, the fourth-quarter revenue numbers were a 17% increase over the same timeline in 2021.

Lyash noted that TVA recently announced that it will be retiring the Cumberland Fossil Plant in two stages, with one unit shut down by the end of 2026 and the other by the end of 2028.

TVA will replace the first unit with a 1,450-megawatt natural gas facility by 2026 and will announce a replacement for the second unit in the future.

The Cumberland plant, in Stewart County, is the final coal plant operated by TVA. It currently powers 1.1 million homes.

“TVA selected gas to replace the first unit as the best overall solution because it provides low cost, reliable and cleaner energy to the system,” Lyash said, adding that the transition will reduce carbon emissions by up to 60%.

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Jon Styf is an award-winning editor and reporter who has worked in Illinois, Texas, Wisconsin, Florida and Michigan in local newsrooms over the past 20 years, working for Shaw Media, Hearst and several other companies. Styf is a reporter for The Center Square. 
Photo “Tennessee Valley Authority Control Room” by Tennessee Valley Authority.

 

 

 

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2 Thoughts to “Tennessee Valley Authority Announces $3 Billion in Fourth-Quarter Revenue as Investigation into Blackouts Continues”

  1. John Hames

    Well it’s a good thing they had that huge of a income, because it will take that to pay Jeff Lyash salaries. They’re millions dollars salaries.
    The $1.15 million salary of the TVA CEO in 2022 was nearly triple the $400,000 salary given to the president of the United States.

  2. Bruce T Williams

    TVA has been a joke for many years., They admitted in the 80s hearing that there had never been a season that they couldn’t handle the rain and run off with 20 ft of free base . And yet they continue to draw the lakes to almost dry . They drop Douglas to 950 , then rain and drainage from the broad river system could be used to prevent blackouts- but when Douglas is below 965 they cannot generate , would burn up generators . All they do is violate the Clean Water Act
    . Maybe new board will revise policy and stop their craziness. .

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