
Dive Brief:
- Dominion Energy’s 2.6-GW Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project is still on schedule for completion by the end of 2026, and should qualify for Inflation Reduction Act tax credits under the new safe harbor deadlines, the utility’s leadership said in a Friday earnings call.
- However, the company expects a slightly higher price tag for the project due to President Trump’s new tariff policies. Dominion estimates that the new tariffs will make the project more expensive by $506 million, increasing the total cost of the project to $10.9 billion. The added expenses will increase customer bills by an average of three cents a month over the entire life of the project, said Bob Blue, Dominion’s president, CEO and chairman.
- The utility has slightly lowered its expectations for tariff-related price increases since last quarter “despite a doubling of the steel tariff,” Blue said, “due to both working with vendors to identify cost mitigation strategies as well as completing our analysis of the final trade regulations and appendices.”
Dive Insight:
Blue said that the proposed tariff increases for Mexico and the European Union would add an additional $134 million to the project’s costs.
“The project fabrication and installation are going very well, and CVOW continues to be one of the most affordable sources of energy for our customers,” he said. “We will install our first turbine in September, which is in line with our original schedule … In fact, we’re well ahead of plan, installing monopiles at a pace that exceeds any other U.S. offshore wind project to date.”
Blue said the project has installed 134 of its 176 monopiles, or 76%, and all of its pin piles.
The utility’s anticipated completion of Charybdis, the first Jones Act-compliant offshore wind turbine installation vessel in the U.S., was delayed by work on the vessel’s internal communication technology.
“We had expected the vessel to complete sea trials last month, which would have enabled us to begin turbine installation ahead of schedule,” Blue said. Charybdis “eliminates the need for barges, which will be instrumental in helping us stay on track with turbine installation,” and will cost $715 million as originally estimated, he said.
Blue also said the utility is “quite pleased” with the ultimate shape of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which significantly reduced and curtailed many of the IRA’s renewable energy tax credits.
“We’re confident we can preserve all of the credits that we’ve provided in our forecast to investors, either through safe harboring or under long-standing rules,” he said. Dominion doesn’t expect CVOW or many of its other projects to be impacted.
Only about 20% to 25% of the utility’s clean energy projects will “require some active mitigation,” Blue said. “And as I mentioned, we expect to be able to achieve that and have plans to do that.”