NextEra Energy announced a $66.8 billion all-cash and stock acquisition of Dominion Energy on May 18, securing operational control of the utility infrastructure serving Northern Virginia's Loudoun County data center cluster—the single densest concentration of hyperscale compute infrastructure in North America. The transaction values Dominion at a 34% premium to its trailing thirty-day average share price and represents the largest U.S. utility merger since Duke Energy's $32 billion acquisition of Progress Energy in 2012.
Dominion operates 2.7 million customer connections across Virginia and the Carolinas, including the transmission corridors that deliver power to Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud facilities concentrated in a forty-square-mile Loudoun County footprint. That region accounts for an estimated 70% of global internet traffic routing and consumes roughly 2,300 megawatts of electricity annually—a figure projected to exceed 3,800 megawatts by 2027 as Meta, Oracle, and newer entrants including xAI scale training clusters. NextEra, already the largest renewable energy generator in the United States with 30 gigawatts of wind and solar capacity, gains immediate exposure to contracted power demand with no commodity risk and limited regulatory friction.
The deal completes a strategic pivot that began eighteen months ago when NextEra's management flagged data center load growth as a structural tailwind in its Q4 2023 earnings call. At that time, Virginia utility data center interconnection requests totaled 11 gigawatts; the current queue sits at 27 gigawatts, a 145% increase. Dominion had already secured $8.2 billion in committed capital expenditures for grid reinforcement projects through 2028, costs that flow directly into the regulated rate base and generate a guaranteed 9.2% return on equity under Virginia's regulatory framework. NextEra inherits that pipeline while adding its own renewable generation assets to meet Virginia's clean energy mandate—100% carbon-free electricity by 2045—without Dominion's legacy coal retirement costs.
Allocators should monitor three specific catalysts over the next sixteen months. First, Virginia State Corporation Commission approval hearings begin in September, with a final ruling expected by November; any conditions imposed on interconnection timelines or rate recovery mechanisms will materially affect the economic case. Second, AWS and Microsoft are both scheduled to announce expanded Northern Virginia capacity commitments in Q3 2025, which will clarify whether the 27-gigawatt interconnection queue reflects genuine demand or speculative land-banking. Third, NextEra must refinance $14.3 billion of Dominion's near-term debt maturities by March 2026; the spread between current utility bond yields and NextEra's AA- credit rating will determine whether the acquisition is immediately accretive or requires equity dilution.
The transaction closes the valuation gap that separated regulated utilities from renewable pure-plays for the past thirty-six months. NextEra's enterprise value now reflects a 16.2x forward EBITDA multiple, converging with Southern Company and Duke Energy, both trading near 15.8x. The AI power thesis—once a speculative overlay on data center REITs and merchant generators—is now a balance-sheet fact priced into the largest clean energy operator in the Western Hemisphere.