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Jim Rogers, Good's predecessor as head of Duke Energy, urged North Carolina legislators for years to allow utilities to add nuclear plant financing costs to electricity rates, subject to a streamlined review by the state regulators. North Carolina now allows consumers to be charged for major power plants while construction work is still in progress, but as part of a regulatory review of the company's costs that can take months when the utility requests a rate increase. Duke Energy would rather avoid the examination of its costs and simply seek clearance to recover construction costs, said Robert Gruber, who recently retired as executive director of the North Carolina Utilities Commission's public staff. The office represents consumer interests before the regulatory panel. Gruber said the utility would like it even better if state law allowed that unfinished power plant to be considered an asset on which the company could tack on approved profit margin. "I kind of was hoping that issue had sort of died on the vine," Gruber said. Charlotte-based Duke Energy serves 7.2 million customers in the Carolinas, Florida, Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio. It is the largest U.S. utility as measured by number of customers and market value. Like many U.S. utilities, Duke sees a future of restricted growth in electricity demand as homes, buildings, devices and appliances become more efficient. Good said last month she wants to find ways to keep company profits rising by looking for opportunities to cut costs and grow the company even without rising electricity sales. Regulators in May approved a 7.5 percent average increase over two years for about 1.3 million customers of the former Progress Energy. The new rates will cost consumers an extra $326 million over the next two years, but allow the company to recoup some of the $11 billion invested since Progress Energy's last rate increase in 1987. The state utilities commission opens hearings Monday that will determine whether regulators allow the company's operating subsidiary for the state's western half, Duke Energy Carolinas, a rate hike of more than $200 million a year and a 10.2 percent return on equity, a measure of profit.
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