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Has Duke ‘sold a lie’ to St. Petersburg? 

Mark Parker

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St. Petersburg's Joseph E. Savage Sanitation Complex is one of 13 municipal buildings with a rooftop solar array. Taxpayers helped St. Petersburg purchase 73 million kilowatt hours of electricity from Duke Energy in 2024. Photo by Mark Parker.

St. Petersburg’s clean energy goals face gale-force headwinds, primarily due to its reliance on a publicly traded utility conglomerate.

Pinellas County terminated an agreement with Duke Energy in April amid increasing criticism over soaring electricity costs. At least one city council member wants to follow suit and pull the plug on the company’s Clean Energy Connection (CEC) Program. 

Councilmember Richie Floyd reiterated his disdain for Duke at a committee meeting Thursday. Quantifiable data on the convoluted, subscription-based CEC program remains elusive for both city officials and residents. 

“When we’re not getting what we paid for and we were sold a lie, then I’m not interested in continuing,Floyd said.I’m pretty comfortable saying that I don’t want to be a part of the program anymore.” 

Floyd is not alone in his dismay over the company’s monopoly on electricity sales. Community support for a grassrootsDump Dukecampaign has increased, and a social event at Voodoo Brewing Co. begins at 6:30 p.m. Friday. 

St. Petersburg’s 30-year contract with Duke ends in August 2026. Councilmember Brandi Gabbard broached the idea of creating a municipal utility in February 2024

The city became Florida’s first to make an official100% clean energy commitmentin 2019, with a target date of 2035.I don’t see anything in here that describes how close we are to achieving these goals, or how much progress we’ve made in the last six years,Floyd said of Thursday’s presentation. 

“I think the discrepancy between our goals here and what we have covered shows the need for a pretty drastic change.” 

St. Petersburg annually spends $10 million on municipal electricity. On-site solar panels accounted for 1% of the 73 million kilowatt hours (kWh) consumed through 1,400 accounts with Duke. 

City officials, using taxpayer dollars, bought roughly 22 million kWh of solar power from Duke in 2024. St. Petersburg also participates in the Solar United Neighbors co-op, which integrates its energy into the company’s grid. 

While it remains unclear how much solar power Duke or its CEC program provides, Rogers said the city is atanywhere from 31% to 33%of its 100% goal.  

Gabbard noted that understanding the CEC, which St. Petersburg subscribed to in 2021, requires apretty complex mathematical equation.” 

“Residents are asking … what is our return on investment, and we can’t explain it,Gabbard added.Duke is asking residents to buy into it … we as the city can’t even explain it.” 

In April, a Duke representative told county commissioners that residential participants pay roughly $14 annually without realizing any financial benefits for about 12 years. Pinellas has spent $3.7 million on CEC fees since 2022 and has generated $3.2 million in credits. 

The county will formally exit the program Oct. 1. Gabbard wants municipal databroken down as clearly as possiblewhen the committee discusses the local electrical grid’s future, the franchise agreement with Duke and a potential public utility at a July 31 meeting. 

“I think it’s a very important, larger piece of the Duke conversation,Gabbard said. 

Clearwater officials allocated $500,000 to weigh the pros and cons of establishing a municipal utility in August 2024. That city’s 30-year contract with Duke ends Dec. 31. 

Floyd subsequently said that Clearwater’s unanimous vote showed studying the electric grid’s future isreasonablerather thanradical.He told the Catalyst that itputs us in a good position for future negotiations.”

Melissa Seixas, president of St. Petersburg-based Duke Florida, has said that the company’s equipment is “not for sale.” However, proponents believe a municipal utility would significantly lower bills

As a publicly traded company, Duke is beholden to shareholders. The company has a $92.22 billion market capitalization; its stock price has increased by over 46% in the past five years. 

In July 2024, Duke finalized a $262 million base rate hike over the next three years. State regulators approved an additional $32 monthly surcharge to help the company recoup hurricane costs in January. 

Floyd previously said that he iswilling to negotiate with Duke if we can lower the impact on residentsand reduce fossil fuel consumption. He reiterated Thursday that the city haspaid for a certain amount of clean energy, and they have not delivered.” 

“That program is not … providing benefits the way they said it would,Floyd continued.I can think of significantly better ways we can plot the future of our renewable energy use, our energy grid, with that funding.”

7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. Avatar

    John Donovan

    July 19, 2025at7:33 pm

    Ms. Keika has it right.

  2. Avatar

    Leilani Keaka

    July 19, 2025at2:28 pm

    The city hasn’t operated a public utility in decades! Demanding a publicly run utility as a knee-jerk response is neither cost-effective nor practical. I think thoughtful, strategic negotiations are the most sensible way to eat this elephant.

  3. Avatar

    Julia Burke

    July 19, 2025at2:00 pm

    Yeah, I’ve been fine with Duke… maybe Floyds should tell us what HIS ideas are…?

  4. Avatar

    Hugh Hazeltine

    July 19, 2025at12:09 pm

    Full Disclosure, I own Duke Stock. It’s value has appreciated 10% in the last 12 months and it pays a 3.6% dividend. I did not support the plan for Florida Power to merge with Carolina Power and Light in 2000. In 2012 that merged with Duke Energy.

    The Clean Energy Connection (CEC) program is an investment in the future. By participating you are saying you would rather invest in solar energy with the “possible” pay back in the future rather than relying exclusively on burning fossil fuels at Weedon Island. I have invested in Solar Panels on my home. It makes no economic sense because the electricity it generates costs much more per Kilowatt than what comes from the grid. But I want to participate in this technology that can bring us all to a better place in the future. It is kind of like buying a stock, you think there will be a future pay-off.

    It was in 1911 that the first Electric Powerplant in St. Petersburg began 24hr operations. It was located where the Yacht Club now stands. It was run by a man named Byrd Latham, you can see his name on the obelisk in Pioneer Park. They charged $20 cents per Kilowatt hour. When adjusted for inflation that is $6.57 per Kilowatt hour today. In reviewing my latest Duke Power Bill I payed $17.5cents Per Kilowatt/hr.

    From a book titled “The Grid” by Gretchen Bakke, I learned the United States functions on Three Grids the Eastern Grid, the Western, and the Texas Grid. The dividing line between East and West are the Rocky Mountains. Texas paid the price of their independence two winters ago during a cold snap when they were unable to tap into the grid of adjoining states. When you get your electric bill, about one third covers the cost of the infrastructure to bring it to you, the generators, wires, and transformers. Another third is the cost of fuel to generate the electricity. The last third is to pay all the people to make the system run.

    If you look at the challenges of creating your own local electric utility today that would require billions of dollars to acquire the needed infrastructure the decision would be clear. Electricity is a tremendous value for the good we get from it. The price of electricity has declined 97% from 1911 to today. We have many problems today but the cost of electricity is not one of them and you should only participate in the CEC program if you want to look to the future.

  5. Avatar

    Laura Milo

    July 18, 2025at9:40 pm

    After witnessing the way the city has managed the post hurricane recovery, the inflated water bill scandal (still no answers), the over development of downtown, the poor water treatment plant maintenance and numerous other projects over the years, the thought of them being in charge of our electricity is terrifying.

  6. Avatar

    Velva Heraty

    July 18, 2025at7:24 pm

    i fully support this initiative. What do I, and other residents, need to do to support this initiative? We saved Spa Beach Park, we can do much more if pointed in the right direction. Please advise.

  7. Avatar

    S. Rose Smith-Hayes

    July 18, 2025at3:38 pm

    Please talk to the City of Lakeland Florida and the residents of Lakeland Florida before going any further on this venture. I lived in Lakeland Florida for a year. They billed the Water and Electricity on one bill. Almost every household was on a payment plan because they could not pay the entire bill at one time.

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