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This deal will be Rowe's parting shot. If the deal is completed, Rowe would step aside. Exelon president Chris Crane, who is credited with rehabilitating the company's nuclear operations, would become CEO of the combined company. Constellation CEO Mayo Shattuck would become chairman. In addition to ComEd and PECO, Exelon, based in Chicago, owns a large wholesale power division anchored by the nation's largest fleet of nuclear plants. Nuclear plants don't emit mercury and other pollutants that are subject to tightening environmental regulations. So, Exelon doesn't face the same costs as other utilities that rely on coal-fired generation. But Exelon has warned recently of higher costs because nuclear regulators are expected to issue safety rules in the wake of the nuclear crisis in Japan. Also, Exelon, like other wholesale power companies, has seen revenue and profit fall along with electricity prices. In much of the country, power produced with natural gas sets the price of electricity for all generators. Discoveries of vast reserves of natural gas in shale formations across the U.S. have kept those prices low.
Constellation, based in Baltimore, is the parent of the Maryland utility Baltimore Gas and Electric, which serves 1.2 million electric customers and 630,000 gas customers. It also owns power plants, including three nuclear power stations, in 13 states. It sells power to commercial and retail customers across the country. Earlier this month AES Corp. agreed to buy DPL for $3.5 billion. Duke agreed to buy Progress in January. If approved by regulators, that deal would create the biggest electric utility in the nation.
[Associated
Press;
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