NextEra Energy agrees to acquire Dominion Energy for $67B in largest utility merger ever
NextEra Energy is buying Dominion Energy in an all-stock transaction valued at roughly $67 billion, creating the largest power and utility merger in history. The deal isn’t just big. It’s a direct bet that artificial intelligence’s hunger for electricity will reshape the American energy landscape for decades.
The acquisition price reflects a 21% premium over Dominion’s closing share price on May 15. When you factor in assumed debt, the combined enterprise value lands somewhere near $400 billion, a number that makes every prior utility deal look quaint by comparison.
What the deal looks like
Under the terms, NextEra shareholders will own approximately 74.5% to 75% of the combined company, with Dominion shareholders holding the remaining stake.
NextEra, already the largest utility company in the US by market capitalization, is essentially absorbing Dominion’s massive footprint across the eastern seaboard. The Florida-based company operates the world’s largest portfolio of wind and solar energy assets, while Dominion’s regulated utility operations serve millions of customers in Virginia, the Carolinas, and other states.
The deal still needs to clear regulatory hurdles, and those hurdles are not trivial. An acquisition of this scale will draw antitrust scrutiny from federal regulators and require approval from multiple state utility commissions.
The AI power play behind the numbers
Strip away the financial engineering and this deal has a simple thesis: Virginia is the data center capital of the world, and someone needs to power all of it.
Dominion Energy’s service territory sits squarely in the PJM Interconnection region, which hosts the largest concentration of data centers in the United States. Northern Virginia alone accounts for a staggering share of global data center capacity, and that share is growing as hyperscalers like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google race to build out AI infrastructure.
After roughly two decades of essentially flat power consumption nationwide, AI training clusters and inference workloads are driving the first sustained increase in electricity demand that utilities have seen in a generation.
What this means for investors
For crypto-native investors, the relevance is more direct than it might appear. Bitcoin mining operations and AI data centers compete for many of the same resources: cheap electricity, grid interconnection capacity, and favorable regulatory environments.
The regulatory path is the key variable to watch. State utility commissions will want assurances that residential and commercial ratepayers won’t subsidize data center expansion. Federal antitrust review adds another layer of uncertainty.
If approved, the combined NextEra-Dominion entity would be a utility behemoth with unmatched scale in both renewable generation and regulated distribution, precisely positioned at the intersection of clean energy and AI demand growth.
