TVA reports solid financial results, acknowledges resource plan delays

TVA reports solid financial results, acknowledges resource plan delays

Spread the love

The Tennessee Valley Authority Board of Directors held its quarterly meeting Thursday, with its new interim CEO moving to establish operational stability after a period of leadership turnover.

During the session, the board reported that the federal utility generated $6.6 billion in operating revenues for the first half of fiscal year 2026. The figure beats financial projections by $122 million, despite a historic drought currently affecting 71% of the Tennessee Valley watershed.

The extreme weather caused water levels at the Chickamauga and Watts Bar reservoirs to drop to near 40-year lows, according to Senior Vice President of Generation Allen Clare.

Interim CEO Mike Skaggs said the strong financial performance will continue to support a push to “modernize the grid, increase reliability, improve resilience, and ensure our investments align with valley and national needs” while expanding capacity.

The nine-member TVA board is appointed directly by the president, and it has not had quorum for nine months after a series of directors were removed and the Senate confirmations of replacements were delayed – effectively preventing the routine operational votes for most of 2025.

Skaggs took the CEO position in April after the sudden retirement of Don Moul, whose tenure was the shortest in modern TVA history. Moul announced his retirement directly after President Trump signed a memorandum imposing a $500,000 salary cap on all TVA employees. Moul, who had served as TVA’s executive vice president and chief operating officer since 2021, had a compensation package totaling almost $6 million.

When the Board voted in early April to promote Moul to CEO, the move irked some of the president’s closest congressional allies in Tennessee. In a joint opinion editorial published in POWER Magazine, Republican Sens. Marsha Blackburn and Bill Hagerty demanded that the board stop its internal search and instead appoint an “interim CEO trusted by the president.”

Beyond weather-related strains on the grid, Director Randy Jones reported that supply chain bottlenecks are driving up infrastructure costs for local power distribution companies. Jones, who chairs the External Stakeholder and Regulations Committee, noted that a transformer delivered Wednesday to Guntersville Power cost $900,000 – a near-quadrupling over the last 36 months.

To help speed the delivery of these critical transformers, Jones pointed to a newly announced expansion at a plant in Muscle Shoals by Roanoke-based Virginia Transformer, a project expected to create 1,100 local jobs.

The push to expand the grid’s capacity comes amid intensifying public scrutiny over the board’s transparency and long-term planning. Clean energy advocates point out that while TVA’s nuclear performance showed strong marks during the first half of the fiscal year, those figures are heavily inflated by a low baseline from the previous year.

“TVA’s nuclear generation looked so good this year because the nuclear plants were plagued by issues last year, leading TVA to rely on neighboring utilities,” said Maggie Shober, research director at the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.

A primary point of contention remains delays to the utility’s Integrated Resource Plan. Under its own internal guidelines, TVA is committed to finalizing a new comprehensive plan at least every five years. The last integrated plan was finalized in 2019, and a new one is now years overdue.

Consumer defenders and clean energy advocates like Shober argue the delay represents a systemic dismantling of public oversight.

“It’s imperative that TVA integrate feedback from stakeholders and valley residents into the critical IRP process,” said Shober. “But to do that, they would have to hold venues for us to review their work and discuss our views. That risks an illegitimate IRP if one ever gets publicized.”

Appalachian Voices, an environmental advocacy group, echoed those concerns, warning that closed-door decisions are already impacting local communities.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Industry advocates: More state regulation will drive insurance rates higher

Industry advocates: More state regulation will drive insurance rates higher

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Insurance industry leaders are advising Illinois lawmakers that state regulation of rates will lead to higher costs...
Manhattan School District 114 Logo Graphic

Manhattan School District 114 and Teachers Union Finalize New Contract

Article Summary: After months of negotiations, the Manhattan School District 114 Board of Education has unanimously approved a new collective bargaining agreement with its teachers and support staff. The approval...
MH VB

Manhattan Village Board Donates Surplus Truck to Local Animal Rescue Ranch

Article Summary: The Manhattan Village Board has officially declared a 2007 Ford F-150 pickup truck as surplus property, unanimously voting to donate the vehicle to the Triple H Ranch, a...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for August 14, 2025

The Will County Board Executive Committee received a comprehensive update on the county's expenditure of $134 million in federal ARPA pandemic relief funds, learning that 61% of the total has...
Public education budgets balloon while enrollment, proficiency, standards drop

Public education budgets balloon while enrollment, proficiency, standards drop

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In return for soaring state spending on education, Illinois taxpayers are getting chronic absenteeism, poor academic proficiency...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Manhattan Township for July 8, 2025

Manhattan Township Meeting | July 2025 Discussions about a massive 5,000-acre solar farm proposed by EarthRise Energy dominated the Manhattan Township meeting on Tuesday, July 8, 2025. Supervisor Jim Walsh...
manhattan park district graphic.2

Manhattan Park Board Hires Architect for Round Barn Interior Buildout

Manhattan Park Board Meeting | July 2025 Article Summary: The Manhattan Park Board has approved a resolution to hire Jon Steven Ditter Architect PLLC to design a partial interior buildout of...
Screenshot-2025-08-19-at-7.14.24-PM

Frankfort Approves Over $19 Million in Surplus Fund Transfers for Future Projects

Article Summary: The Frankfort Village Board has approved the transfer of more than $19 million in surplus operating revenues to its capital funds to finance future infrastructure projects, equipment purchases,...
frankfort-village-hall-graphic-logo.7

Frankfort Advances Plans for New Multi-Use Paths to Boost Pedestrian Safety

Article SummaryThe Frankfort Village Board has approved a $77,500 agreement with Robinson Engineering, Ltd. to design two new multi-use paths aimed at improving safety and connectivity in Main Park and...
frankfort-village-hall-graphic-logo.1

Frankfort Police Department to Purchase New Portable Radios for $31,000

Article SummaryThe Frankfort Village Board has approved the purchase of 14 new Kenwood portable radios for the police department at a cost not to exceed $31,000. The new equipment will...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Village of Frankfort Board for August 18, 2025

The Village of Frankfort Board leveraged a significant budget surplus at its August 18 meeting, approving the transfer of over $19 million into capital funds designated for future infrastructure, equipment,...
Plan launched to place redistricting amendment before voters in 2026

Plan launched to place redistricting amendment before voters in 2026

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Two former U.S. Cabinet members have launched a new effort to stop Illinois politicians from drawing their...
30 charged in TdA drug trafficking, murder-for-hire and firearms offenses

30 charged in TdA drug trafficking, murder-for-hire and firearms offenses

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square As part of the Trump administration’s ongoing efforts to pursue violent criminal foreign nationals, two federal indictments were made public charging 30 people, including several...
White House touts D.C. crackdown; no timeline on National Guard deployment

White House touts D.C. crackdown; no timeline on National Guard deployment

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square More than a week after President Donald Trump declared “Liberation Day” in Washington, D.C., his administration is touting the operation as a success as more...
Trump signs bill studying cancer among military pilots

Trump signs bill studying cancer among military pilots

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square President Donald Trump has signed into law the Aviator Cancer Examination Study Act, which seeks to address cancer rates among former and current military aircrew...