PacifiCorp sells Washington operations to Portland General Electric

PacifiCorp, a major Western utility, has agreed to sell its Washington state operations to Portland General Electric for $1.9 billion, amid tensions over differing state energy policies. The deal transfers 140,000 customers and related infrastructure, fulfilling demands from Utah Republicans for an energy 'divorce' from blue states. This move highlights growing divides between fossil fuel-dependent red states and clean energy-focused blue states.

Relations between U.S. states are straining over energy approaches, with Utah Republicans pushing for separation from states favoring renewables. Last week, PacifiCorp announced it would cease serving Washington customers, handing over operations—including two wind farms, a natural gas plant, and other assets—to Portland General Electric for $1.9 billion.

Utah House Speaker Mike Schultz, a Republican, welcomed the development, stating, “We want a divorce from the three states that don’t look like Utah.” He called it “the first step forward.” PacifiCorp cited “diverging policies” across its six service states—Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, California, Oregon, and Washington—as creating financial pressure. Utah remains coal-reliant, while Washington targets halving greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 from 1990 levels. In January, Washington barred PacifiCorp from charging local customers for coal generation, saving ratepayers $68 million annually.

Tensions escalated in 2024 when Rocky Mountain Power, PacifiCorp's Utah arm, sought a 30 percent rate hike to cover infrastructure and compliance costs. Utah lawmakers criticized ties to progressive policies in coastal states. Governor Spencer Cox signed a resolution for energy collaboration with Wyoming and Idaho, noting, “Utahns are paying more for power because of decisions being made in coastal states, places like Oregon and Washington.”

Environmental economist Matthew Burgess described the rhetoric as a “culture war thing,” linking it to economic anxieties in coal regions. Nationally, U.S. household electricity bills rose 30 percent from 2021 to 2025. Similar disputes include five Republican-led states opposing a $22 billion Midwest transmission project. Democrats counter that fossil fuel extensions, like a Michigan coal plant costing $80 million in four months, drive up prices.

Meredith Connolly of Climate Solutions argued, “Clean energy is just the way we’re moving,” warning against partisan splits that could raise costs further. PacifiCorp faces additional pressures, including $2.2 billion in wildfire-related settlements.

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