Company: AILIM
Filing Date: 2025-11-06
Form Type: 10-Q
Source: 0001002910-25-000129
Chunk: 52

Company: Ameren Illinois Co
Filing Date: 2025-11-06
Form: 10-Q
Item: Part I, Item 2
Chunk 52
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, which will be achieved through the 1,600 MWs of natural gas generation projects discussed in Note 2 – Rate and Regulatory Matters under Part I, Item 1, of this report, and an additional 1,200 MWs by 2043;

•adding 2,100 MWs of natural gas-fired combined-cycle generation by 2035 and an additional 1,200 MWs by 2040;

•adding 3,200 MWs of renewable generation by 2030, which includes the 650 MWs of solar generation projects discussed in Note 2 – Rate and Regulatory Matters under Part I, Item 1, of this report, and an additional 1,500 MWs by 2035;

•adding 1,000 MWs of battery storage by 2030, which includes the 400-MW Big Hollow Battery Energy Storage Project discussed in Note 2 – Rate and Regulatory Matters under Part I, Item 1, of this report, and an additional 800 MWs by 2042;

•adding 1,500 MWs of nuclear generation by 2040;

•retiring all of Ameren Missouri’s coal-fired energy centers by 2042;

•retiring 1,800 MWs of Ameren Missouri’s natural gas-fired energy centers by 2040 to comply with Illinois law;

•the continued implementation of customer energy-efficiency and demand response programs; and

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•the expectation that Ameren Missouri will seek and receive NRC approval for an extension of the operating license for the Callaway Energy Center beyond its current 2044 expiration date.

Ameren Missouri’s plan could be affected by, among other factors: Ameren Missouri’s ability to obtain CCNs from the MoPSC, and any other required state or federal approvals for the addition of renewable resources, battery storage, or nuclear or natural gas-fired generation, retirement of energy centers, and new or continued customer energy-efficiency programs; the ability to enter into agreements for renewable, natural gas-fired, or nuclear generation and acquire or construct that generation at a reasonable cost; the ability of suppliers, contractors, and developers to meet contractual commitments and complete projects timely, which is dependent upon the availability of necessary labor, materials, and equipment, geopolitical conflict, or government actions, among other things; changes in the scope and timing of projects; the continued existence and ability to qualify for, and use or transfer, federal production or investment tax credits