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Duke Energy unit will remove storm recovery charges from customers' bills one month early

Duke Energy Florida, a U.S. utility, announced on Wednesday that the storm cost recovery charge will be removed from customers' bills a month sooner than originally planned.

Costs are related to the company's response of nearly $1.1 billion dollars to hurricanes Debby Helene and Milton. For this, the Florida?Public Service Commission had received a plan from the company in late 2024.

The utility announced that residential customers would see a?reduction of about $33 in their monthly bill starting in February, and another $11 in March, bringing the total?reductions up to $44 from levels in January.

Commensurate with the reduction in January, commercial and industrial customers can expect to see their monthly bills drop between 9.6% and 15.8%. However, this will vary depending on usage and various other factors.

Duke's electric utilities serve approximately 8.4 million customers across North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Indiana and Kentucky. They collectively have 54,800 Megawatts of energy capacity.

The natural gas utilities in North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee serve over 1.7 million customers. (Reporting and editing by Anil D’Silva in Bengaluru, Pooja Menon from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)