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Celerity

(52,368 posts)
Thu Oct 2, 2025, 08:08 PM Thursday

Private Equity Power Play in Minnesota



https://prospect.org/environment/2025-10-02-private-equity-power-play-minnesota/



On Friday, the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC)—a five-member board of commissioners appointed by Democratic Gov. Tim Walz to regulate the utility industry—will decide the fate of a $6.2 billion proposal to acquire ALLETE, the parent company of Minnesota Power, an electric utility in northeastern Minnesota that serves approximately 150,000 customers throughout the region.

Global Infrastructure Partners, which the asset management giant BlackRock acquired for $12.5 billion last year, and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPP) plan to take ALLETE private, in a deal announced in May 2024 that concluded over a year of closed-door negotiations, complete with confidentiality agreements, secretive dinners, and “fireside chats” led by the company’s C-suite executives. The new ownership group says it will provide Minnesota Power with fresh capital to comply with a state law requiring utilities to deliver “100% carbon-free electricity by 2040.”

Ratepayers, consumer advocates, watchdog groups, environmental organizations, and industrial customers have opposed the acquisition, arguing it would cause rates to skyrocket and compromise reliability. Nineteen Minnesota state lawmakers have also requested that the PUC deny approval for the purchase. Meanwhile, ALLETE and BlackRock-owned Global Infrastructure Partners appear to be exerting immense institutional power to shape public opinion, discredit opponents, and persuade the PUC to sanction the deal. And officials associated with Gov. Walz’s administration are apparently participating in that effort.

On July 15, Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) Megan J. McKenzie issued a damning report that enumerated every foreseeable way the bid to buy the company could jeopardize the public interest. Based on her review of both public and nonpublic evidence, as well as months of evidentiary hearings, the ALJ recommended that the PUC deny the acquisition. Not only did the report lend credibility to the opposition’s claims, it revealed how “numerous commenters” expressing support for the deal were either Minnesota Power employees or members of organizations that received financial support from the company.

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Private Equity Power Play in Minnesota (Original Post) Celerity Thursday OP
this just got approved WhiskeyGrinder Friday #1
arfffff Celerity Friday #2
State regulators approve sale of northern MN public utility to private investors, MPR, 10/3/25 progree Saturday #3

progree

(12,403 posts)
3. State regulators approve sale of northern MN public utility to private investors, MPR, 10/3/25
Sat Oct 4, 2025, 06:34 AM
Saturday

Might as well add this for completeness and "closure"
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2025/10/03/state-regulators-approve-sale-of-northern-mn-public-utility-to-private-investors
Various excerpts:

Minnesota regulators have unanimously approved the controversial $6.2 billion sale of Allete — parent company of the Duluth-based public utility Minnesota Power — to a pair of private investment firms.

Several commissioners admitted they were initially highly skeptical of the proposal, and only came around to supporting it after Minnesota Power and its purchasers agreed to several new conditions that the PUC says are “unprecedented.”

For example, the approved deal requires the utility to give customers $50 million in rate credits and create a $10 million fund for energy efficiency improvements for low and moderate-income households. It also freezes rates for one year.

It also requires Minnesota Power to create a $50 million fund for new clean energy technologies, and spend up to $3.5 million to forgive customers’ unpaid bills.

All totaled, the PUC said the deal includes more than $200 million in savings, protections and benefits.

. . . Commissioners said they were confident those risks ((that the conglomerate won't carry out it's promises, that will find ways to extract extra billions in profits at the expense of customers, reliability, and the environment --progree)) could be mitigated, because the utility will continue to be regulated by the state.

The deal also imposes caps on the utility’s profitability, but only through the end of 2030.

The agreement received the support of labor unions... The utility has committed to keeping its headquarters and its workforce in Duluth, and to honor union contracts and maintain wage levels.

The Minnesota PUC’s blessing is the final approval needed for the acquisition, which had already been approved by federal regulators. Minnesota Power says the transaction is expected to close in late 2025.
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