Clearwater’s Plan to Establish Its Own Municipal Electric Utility Puts Taxpayers at Risk

Clearwater’s Plan to Establish Its Own Municipal Electric Utility Puts Taxpayers at Risk - Report Cover

Executive Summary

The City of Clearwater is considering acquiring Duke Energy Florida’s electric distribution assets to establish a municipal electric utility (MEU), citing potential rate reductions and increased local control. Florida TaxWatch’s independent analysis finds that the feasibility study supporting this proposal relies on optimistic assumptions that significantly understate legal, financial, and operational risks.

Most critically, the study assumes a rapid acquisition of Duke’s system despite the strong likelihood that Clearwater would need to pursue eminent domain—an expensive, uncertain, and potentially decade-long legal process. National case studies show that municipalization efforts frequently exceed projected costs, fail to deliver promised savings, and expose taxpayers to long-term financial risk.

Key Takeaways

  • Eminent Domain Is Likely: Acquiring Duke Energy Florida’s assets would almost certainly require prolonged litigation, dramatically increasing costs and delaying implementation.
  • Costs Are Underestimated: Acquisition, severance, startup, and financing costs are understated, increasing the likelihood of higher long-term rates or taxpayer subsidies.
  • Loss of Scale and Expertise: Leaving a large investor-owned utility would reduce purchasing power and operational efficiencies that help stabilize electric rates.
  • National Outcomes Raise Red Flags: Across the country, municipal electric utility conversions have a high failure rate or produce results far worse than initially projected.
  • A Lower-Risk Alternative Exists: Florida TaxWatch recommends pursuing a renegotiated franchise agreement rather than undertaking a high-risk municipalization effort.

Bottom line: Clearwater’s proposed municipal electric utility presents substantial financial and legal risks with limited upside for taxpayers.

Meet the Author:

Bob Nave
Bob Nave
Senior Vice President of Research
Lead Author
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Clearwater’s Plan to Establish Its Own Municipal Electric Utility Puts Taxpayers at Risk

Clearwater’s Plan to Establish Its Own Municipal Electric Utility Puts Taxpayers at Risk

Florida TaxWatch examines the City of Clearwater’s plan to acquire Duke Energy Florida’s electric distribution assets and establish a municipal electric utility (MEU) in response to concerns over electric rates and service quality. While the City’s feasibility study projects modest short-term rate savings, Florida TaxWatch finds those projections rely on unrealistic assumptions—most notably an “overnight” conversion that ignores the likely decade-long, costly eminent domain process required to acquire Duke’s assets. Drawing on national municipalization case studies, the report highlights high failure rates, underestimated acquisition and severance costs, loss of economies of scale, and substantial financial exposure for taxpayers. Florida TaxWatch concludes that the proposed MEU represents a high-risk endeavor with limited upside and recommends the City pursue a renegotiated franchise agreement with Duke Energy Florida as a more prudent path forward.

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