If you are a member of the media, please email ngarcia@azcc.gov or call (602) 542-0728.
Phoenix, Ariz. - Commissioners Kevin Thompson and 
Nick Myers successfully introduced an amendment requiring APS 
demonstrate it has acquired a sufficient mix of dependable and 
dispatchable capacity to ensure resource adequacy before it may exit 
Four Corners Power Plant (“Four Corners”). APS plans to exit Four 
Corners in 2031, which will result in the loss of an estimated 970 MWs 
of dependable generation capacity. 
The amendment adopts a 
technology neutral approach while requiring the replacement capacity to 
be a mix of dependable and dispatchable resources. Dispatchable power 
sources can be deployed by grid operators on demand to match supply with
 electricity demand. Dispatchable resources are critical to meeting the 
peak demand period, when consumer demand for electricity is at its 
highest. They are also capable of being deployed regardless of weather 
conditions.  
“Arizona is experiencing tremendous growth and 
record-breaking demand for electricity, and along with that comes the 
need for new generation sources,” said Commissioner Kevin Thompson. “As 
long-standing and dependable coal plants continue to shut down
 in Arizona and across the country, it’s important to ensure Arizona’s 
grid remains reliable. We must deploy the most dependable generation 
sources in the most cost-effective manner. Our amendment holds APS 
accountable and helps ensure the lights and AC stay on for the 
foreseeable future." 
“One of our highest priorities as 
Commissioners is to ensure Arizona’s electric grid remains safe and 
reliable into the future. Arizona cannot afford rolling brownouts and 
blackouts as other states have experienced, through their failed 
ideologically driven policies,” commented Commissioner Nick Myers, “This
 amendment ensures APS is properly planning for its exit from Four 
Corners in 2031 so that Arizona’s grid remains as reliable as ever.”   
The
 Commission adopted the amendment with a 4-1 vote at the ACC’s regular 
open meeting on October 8, 2024, with Commissioners Thompson, Myers, 
O’Connor, and Marquez Peterson supporting the amendment, and 
Commissioner Tovar opposing. The reliability provision was adopted as 
part the review of Integrated Resource Planning (“IRP”) proposals 
submitted by Arizona Public Service Company (APS), Tucson Electric Power
 Company (TEP), UNS Electric, Inc. (UNSE), and Arizona Electric Power 
Cooperative, Inc. (AEPCO).  
Commission review of these IRPs 
began on November 1, 2023. IRPs are a critical and regular planning 
process used by utilities to identify the most reliable and most 
cost-effective resources to meet Arizona’s growing customer demand for 
electricity. Arizona utilities set record-breaking peak demand for the 
second year in a row this summer. During the IRP presentations this 
year, long term APS load growth and demand projections demonstrated 
unprecedented growth coupled with massive capacity drops in replacement 
generation sources in the near future. 
The amendment requires APS to demonstrate in annual reporting filings its progress towards ensuring resource adequacy and any factors that may impact their planned exit from Four Corners.
For more information, contact Ryan Anderson at randerson@azcc.gov or Amanda Hasty at Myers-Web@azcc.gov