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Energy Dept Offers $26.5Bn Loan To Southern Company

US Energy Sector, A Safe Haven for Investors

Catenaa, Wednesday, February 25, 2026- The US Energy Department has offered a $26.54 billion loan to subsidiaries of Southern ‌Company to increase grid reliability, the largest ever such ‌financing by its loan office.

The loans will ​save power customers in Georgia and Alabama more than $7 billion, the department said, without detailing how. Southern said last year it would freeze increases in power bills for several years.

The ‌two roughly 30-year loans ⁠to Georgia Power and Alabama Power will help build or upgrade more than 16 gigawatts ⁠of power to the electrical grid, including 5 GW of new natural gas generation.

It will also help enlarge current nuclear plants, ​modernize ​hydropower plants, and develop battery ​energy storage systems and over ‌1,300 miles (2,092 km) of transmission and grid enhancement projects, the department said.

“These loans will not only lower energy costs but also create thousands of jobs and increase grid reliability for the people of Georgia and Alabama,” US Energy Secretary ‌Chris Wright said in a release.

Chris ​Womack, the Chairman, President, and CEO ​of Southern Company, ​said the loans “will help lower the cost of ‌investments in our grid that ​will enhance reliability ​and resilience for the benefit of our customers”.

Southern said draws from the loans are subject to the satisfaction ​of conditions, and ‌may be made through September 15, 2033.

Southern Company stock fell by 0.5% on Wednesday and is up by 9.2% so far this year.