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Duke Energy's electricity rates beat quarterly estimates

Duke Energy, a utility company, beat Wall Street expectations for revenue and profit in the third quarter on Friday. This was due to higher electricity rates and high power demand.

Electricity costs will rise as data centers consume more power in the wake of an industrial electrification wave and a manufacturing boom.

According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, a surge in AI- and cryptocurrency-based data centers combined with the accelerating electricification of homes, businesses and other buildings is expected to drive U.S. electricity demand to record levels by 2025 and 2026.

Duke Energy is looking at adding large nuclear reactors and extending some coal plants' lives as part of its long-term plan to meet the rapidly increasing electricity demand in the Carolinas.

In a press release, CEO Harry Sideris stated that "as load growth materializes in our jurisdictions we expect our new five-year plan to be between $95.9 billion and $105.9 billion when we refresh our plan in February."

Duke Electric serves 8,6 million customers in six states across the U.S. and has about 55,100 Megawatts of power capacity.

The adjusted earnings for its electric utilities division were $1.69 billion. This is up from $1.46 in the previous quarter.

The company's adjusted full-year profit forecast has been reduced from $6.17 to $ 6.42 per share to $6.25 to $6.35.

According to data compiled by LSEG, the company's quarterly revenue was $8.54 billion - higher than analysts' estimates of $8.50billion.

Charlotte, North Carolina based company reported an adjusted profit per share of $1.81 for the three-month period ended September 30 compared to estimates of $1.75. (Reporting from Bengaluru by Sumit S. Saha; editing by Shailesh K. Kuber)

(source: Reuters)