Maine voters reject power utility takeover, by a wide margin
Published: 11-08-2023 11:46 AM
Modified: 11-08-2023 4:35 PM |
Maine voters soundly rejected Tuesday a proposal to create a non-profit that would take over the state’s private electric utilities.
The referendum, Question 3 on the ballot, was defeated by a 2-1 margin. Only the Portland area supported it, but just barely.
The proposal, submitted by a public referendum, would have created a non-profit based in Maine to buy out the state’s two public utilities: Central Maine Power, owned by Spain’s Iberdrola, and Versant, owned by Enmax of Canada. The new entity, Pine Tree Power, would have been run by a 13-person board, seven of them elected and six appointed.
The big stumbling block was the price to buy the utilities, which would have been somewhere between $6 billion and $13 billion, depending on whose estimates you believed.
A second referendum that would make such a switch harder won easily. Question 1 would require separate voter approval for debt over $1 billion. It was initiated by CMP’s owner as a backstop in case Question 3 succeeded.