Unassociated Document
UNITED
STATES
SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington,
D. C. 20549
FORM
8-K
CURRENT
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF
THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Date of
report (Date of earliest event reported): September 25, 2008
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Exact
name of registrant as specified
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I.R.S.
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in
its charter, state of incorporation,
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Employer
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Commission
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address
of principal executive offices,
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Identification
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File
Number
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Telephone
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Number
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1-16305
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PUGET
ENERGY, INC.
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91-1969407
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A
Washington Corporation
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10885
- N.E. 4th Street, Suite 1200
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Bellevue,
Washington 98004-5591
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(425)
454-6363
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1-4393
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PUGET
SOUND ENERGY, INC.
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91-0374630
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A
Washington Corporation
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10885
- N.E. 4th Street, Suite 1200
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Bellevue,
Washington 98004-5591
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(425)
454-6363
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___________
Check the
appropriate box below if the Form 8−K filing is intended to simultaneously
satisfy the filing obligation of the registrant under any of the following
provisions:
o
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Written
communications pursuant to Rule 425 under the Securities Act (17 CFR
230.425)
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o
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Soliciting
material pursuant to Rule 14a−12 under the Exchange Act (17 CFR
240.14a−12)
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o
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Pre−commencement
communications pursuant to Rule 14d−2(b) under the Exchange Act
(17 CFR 240.14d−2(b))
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o
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Pre−commencement
communications pursuant to Rule 13e−4(c) under the Exchange Act
(17 CFR 240.13e−4(c))
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Item 7.01
Regulation FD Disclosure
On
September 25, 2008 the Company issued the following press release:
Puget
Sound Energy announces plan to buy
‘Mint
Farm’ natural gas-fired power plant in Longview
310-megawatt
facility to help meet customers’ growing energy needs
BELLEVUE, Wash. – Puget Sound
Energy [utility subsidiary of
Puget Energy (NYSE: PSD)] today announced plans to purchase a
310-megawatt (MW) natural-gas-fired power plant in southwest Washington as part
of the utility’s long-range initiative for meeting customers’ growing
electricity needs.
PSE has
signed an agreement to buy the 9-month-old “Mint Farm” facility in Longview,
Wash., from Minnesota-based Wayzata Opportunities Fund, LLC, an investment fund
managed by Wayzata Investment Partners. The planned $240 million
transaction is expected to close by the end of the year.
“This
plant gives us another cost-effective, environmentally friendly source of power
for ensuring that our growing region has reliable energy service,” said Kimberly
Harris, PSE executive vice president and chief resource officer. “Clean-burning,
natural gas-fired power generation is a good complement to the renewable-energy
resources we’re steadily adding to our portfolio.”
The
Longview facility employs “combined-cycle” technology that allows it to generate
electricity using both a natural gas cycle and, from the power-generating
turbines’ exhaust heat, a steam cycle. The process boosts operating efficiency,
lowers fuel costs, and cuts air emissions.
The Mint
Farm acquisition is part of PSE’s ongoing efforts to procure a large amount of
additional power supply for its customers. With Mint Farm, PSE will have
obtained more than 1,300 MW of long-term resources over the past three years.
These include PSE development of two large wind-power facilities – Hopkins Ridge
(157 MW) and Wild Horse (229 MW) – in Eastern Washington and the purchase of two
other natural-gas-fired power plants in the state. The first was a
$120 million purchase in February 2007 of a 277-MW gas-fired combined-cycle
power plant in Goldendale, Wash. The latest, in July 2008, was the $30 million
acquisition of a 125-MW plant in Sumas, Wash.
Also
included are power-purchase contracts for 50 MW of wind power from a wind
facility in north-central Oregon and for 487 MW of power capacity from the
Chelan County Public Utility District’s Rocky Reach and Rock Island dams on the
Columbia River. PSE also has constructed the Northwest’s largest solar-power
generating facility, a 500-kilowatt demonstration project located at PSE’s Wild
Horse Wind and Solar Facility near Ellensburg.
The
population within PSE’s Puget Sound service territory is predicted to increase
by more than 1 million over the next 20 years, Harris noted. That growth,
together with the expiration of some large purchased-power contracts in coming
years, is prompting the utility to acquire approximately 4,400 MW of additional
power capacity by 2027 – roughly double the peak power load of two cities the
size of Seattle.
Under PSE’s resource-acquisition
strategy, the company issued a request for proposals in January seeking up to
1,340 MW of new power-supply resources by 2015. Out of 30-plus submitted bids,
the Mint Farm purchase was among PSE’s four short-listed targets for new power
resources. The short list also includes two planned 20-year power purchases from
wind facilities in Washington and Oregon, together totaling 250 MW of power
capacity, and one short-term, winter-only power purchase to help PSE erase a
projected near-term power-supply shortfall during customers’
wintertime peaks in power usage.
The Mint
Farm transaction is subject to approval by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission. A commission decision is expected sometime this fall.
About
Puget Sound Energy
Washington
state’s oldest and largest energy utility, with a 6,000-square-mile service
territory stretching across 11 counties, Puget Sound Energy (PSE) serves more
than 1 million electric customers and 737,000 natural gas customers. PSE meets
the energy needs of its growing customer base through incremental,
cost-effective energy conservation, low-cost procurement of sustainable energy
resources, and far-sighted investment in the energy-delivery infrastructure. For
more information, visit www.PSE.com.
SIGNATURE
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the
registrants have duly caused this report to be signed on their behalf by the
undersigned hereunto duly authorized.
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PUGET
ENERGY, INC.
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PUGET
SOUND ENERGY, INC.
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By:
/s/ James W. Eldredge
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Dated: September
25, 2008
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James
W. Eldredge
Vice
President and
Chief
Accounting Officer
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