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SB 1750

SB 1750 - The act modifies and creates new provisions relating to the regulation of large load electric customers. Under the act, an electrical corporation providing electric service to more than 250,000 customers shall develop and submit to the Public Service Commission schedules to include in the electrical corporation's service tariff applicable to customers who are projected to have above an annual peak demand of 50 megawatts, instead of 100 megawatts as currently provided, or more. (Section 393.130.7) LARGE LOAD FACILITIES (Section 393.325) The act provides that an owner or operator of a large load facility, as defined in the act, that intends to operate the facility in the state after August 28, 2026, shall file with the Public Service Commission a disclosure of intent to operate the facility before signing contracts with any public utility. Requirements of the disclosure are described in the act. During the Commission's review process of the disclosure, the Commission shall take certain specifics into account, as described in the act. The Commission shall make such disclosure publicly accessible on the Commission's website. The Commission's requirements for the disclosure are described in the act. The Commission shall have the authority to approve, provisionally approve, or deny the disclosure, as described in the act. Upon approval of the disclosure, an owner or operator shall conduct a pre-construction study of the large load facility and submit the results of the study to the Commission. Specifics of the study are described in the act. The study shall be conducted for the second time after the construction of the facility is completed to ensure no deficiencies are present and whether mitigation is necessary. If the post-construction study shows any deficiencies or disparities, the owner or operator shall pay for any mitigation costs. Results of the pre- and post-construction studies shall be reported to the Commission and shall be made available to the public before and after construction is completed and annually thereafter in a format determined by the Commission. After the disclosure is approved by the Commission, an owner or operator of a large load facility shall be required to pay for certain costs, as described in the act. Such costs shall not be shifted to any other class of ratepayers in a general rate proceeding. After a large load facility becomes operational, an owner or operator shall be required to make financial contributions to certain programs for low-income ratepayers, as described in the act. Certain facilities under the act shall implement an emergency curtailment system for temporary reduction or suspension of electric service, as described in the act. Facilities that provide services to entities such as hospitals, long term care facilities, or first-responder facilities shall be exempt from this provision. JULIA SHEVELEVA

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Tracy McCreery

SB 1750 grants Missouri utilities regulatory authority to monitor and manage electricity demand from large industrial and commercial customers to stabilize the grid.

Second Read and Referred S Transportation, Infrastructure and Public Safety Committee
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Bill Summary · SB 1750

Legislative bill overview

SB 1750 establishes new regulatory frameworks for managing electricity consumption among large industrial and commercial customers in Missouri. The bill grants utilities and state regulators specific authority to monitor, control, and potentially incentivize demand management for high-volume electricity users. These provisions aim to balance grid stability with the operational needs of major power consumers.

Why is this important

Large load customers consume significant portions of electrical grid capacity, and their usage patterns directly affect grid reliability and electricity prices for all consumers. How these customers are regulated influences both industrial competitiveness in the state and the stability of Missouri's power system during peak demand periods. The framework established here could affect manufacturing facilities, data centers, hospitals, and other major electricity users.

Potential points of contention

  • Cost allocation: Determines whether demand management costs are borne by large users, utilities, or spread across all ratepayers
  • Operational autonomy: How much control regulators/utilities have over customer operations versus allowing businesses to manage their own energy use
  • Competitive fairness: Whether regulations disadvantage Missouri businesses compared to competitors in states with different rules

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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