24 February 2026
Disclaimer: This is a simplified summary of a public company filing. See full disclaimer here.
DOMINION ENERGY, INC
CIK: 715957•2 Annual Reports•Latest: 2026-02-23
10-K / February 23, 2026
Revenue:$16,506,000,000
Income:$3,065,000,000
10-K / February 27, 2025
Revenue:$14,459,000,000
Income:$2,071,000,000
10-K / February 23, 2026
Dominion Energy, Inc.
Overview
Dominion Energy is a diversified energy company with a focus on regulated electric utility operations and long-term contracted, nonregulated generation. The company operates through three primary segments plus Corporate and Other:
- Dominion Energy Virginia: regulated electric transmission, distribution and generation serving Virginia and parts of North Carolina
- Dominion Energy South Carolina: regulated electric and gas operations in South Carolina
- Contracted Energy: nonregulated generation including Millstone nuclear, long-term contracted renewables, and renewable natural gas investments
- Corporate and Other: corporate functions, unallocated debt and noncontrolling interests
Key metrics and scale (as of December 31, 2025)
- Customers
- Electric utility customers: approximately 4.1 million across Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina
- Workforce
- Approximately 15,200 full-time employees
- About 3,400 employees subject to collective bargaining
- Dominion Energy Virginia: about 6,700 full-time employees, with about 2,700 subject to collective bargaining
- Assets and infrastructure
- Generating capacity: approximately 30.7 GW
- Transmission lines: about 10,800 miles
- Distribution lines: about 80,400 miles
- Capital plan
- Planned capital expenditures for 2026–2030: approximately $65 billion
- Funding priorities: generation (including Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind), grid transformation, reliability, and transmission/distribution resiliency
- Earnings mix
- Approximately 95% of earnings are expected to come from state-regulated utility operations in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina
Notable projects and transactions
- Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind (CVOW)
- CVOW Commercial Project: roughly 2.6 GW capacity
- Oct 2024: sold a 50% noncontrolling stake to Stonepeak (OSWP) with $2.6 billion cash received at closing (representing 50% of project costs incurred through closing)
- Use of fixed-price contracts for major offshore construction and equipment components; contracts include multi-currency pricing and hedges
- Gas-distribution dispositions (2023–2024)
- Completed several transactions with Enbridge (East Ohio, Questar Gas, PSNC), representing multi-billion-dollar cash proceeds and debt assumption (examples: $4.3B, $3.0B, $2.0B)
- Millstone and Contracted Energy
- Millstone (Connecticut): planned ~2,013 MW nuclear capacity under Contracted Energy
- Contracted Energy includes nonregulated solar, renewable natural gas and equity-method investment Align RNG (partnered with Smithfield Foods)
- Offshore vessel and leasing
- Jones Act–compliant offshore wind installation vessel delivered in September 2025; five-year lease with an affiliated entity commenced upon delivery
- Solar, wind and storage investments
- Continued growth in North American solar projects, including Virginia
- Development of utility-scale battery storage
- Nuclear decommissioning
- Decommissioning trusts and estimated costs are maintained for Surry, North Anna and Millstone
Operating segments
Dominion Energy Virginia
- Regulated electric transmission, distribution and generation operations in Virginia and parts of North Carolina
- Customer base: ~2.8 million residential, commercial, industrial and governmental customers
- Major projects: CVOW, dispatchable generation investments, grid upgrades, undergrounding and reliability initiatives
- Rate framework: Virginia Commission regulation with cost-of-service mechanics and riders for major projects
- Load drivers: data center demand in Loudoun County contributes materially to load growth
- Capacity mix (2025): natural gas 39%, nuclear 25%, purchased power 24%, coal 7%, renewable/hydro 5%
- Major planned projects: CVOW Commercial Project (~2.6 GW), storage initiatives, Chesterfield Energy Reliability Center
Dominion Energy South Carolina
- Regulated electric generation, transmission and distribution, plus regulated gas distribution
- Customer base: ~0.8 million electric customers; ~0.5 million gas customers
- Project highlights: a new ~200 MW gas-fired unit at Urquhart targeted by 2028; proposed joint 2.2 GW CCGT with Santee Cooper (as of December 2025)
- Rate framework: regulated by the South Carolina Commission; gas rates subject to fuel and DSM riders and potential state rate stabilization mechanisms
- Generation mix (2025): gas ~42%, coal ~23%, nuclear ~23%, hydro ~12%, other (wind/solar) ~0%
Contracted Energy
- Nonregulated generation assets and energy marketing activities
- Key assets: Millstone nuclear plant, nonregulated solar facilities, Align RNG
- Revenue tied to long-term power purchase agreements and market-based sales
- Growth focus: solar development, renewable natural gas investments and contracted generation and storage
Corporate and Other
- Corporate functions, unallocated debt and noncontrolling interests (including legacy privatization and pipeline interests)
Regulatory and operating context
- State commissions regulate electric distribution and generation in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina
- FERC regulates interstate transmission and wholesale markets; utility transmission often follows formula-rate mechanisms
- Wholesale market participation in PJM, ISO-NE and CAISO
- Environmental and safety oversight from EPA, NRC, PHMSA, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, BOEM and other agencies
Environmental and climate strategy
- Net-zero target for Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2050 with ongoing Scope 3 considerations
- Virginia policy targets 100% zero-carbon generation by 2045 under the Virginia Clean Economy Act, with multi-year transition plans
- Investments in offshore wind, solar, storage and carbon-beneficial renewable natural gas
- Ongoing grid modernization, undergrounding and resilience initiatives
Risks and uncertainties
- Construction and cost-overrun risk on large projects (for example, offshore wind)
- Contract and supplier risk, including foreign-exchange exposure in multi-currency contracts
- Regulatory and rate-case risk affecting cost recovery and earnings
- Cybersecurity and physical security exposures
- Weather and climate-related impacts on load and asset resilience
- Market and counterparty credit risk in wholesale markets
- Pension and decommissioning funding risk and market volatility affecting trust valuations
