2025 Session Last amended: 2006 session

§ 452.25 — Joint Ventures by Utilities

Plain-Language Summary

This section allows Minnesota municipal utilities to form joint ventures with other municipal utilities, cooperative electric associations, and investor-owned utilities to provide electric or water services more efficiently. The joint venture can form a separate legal entity with its own governance structure. The retail service territory of each utility is preserved — joint ventures cannot expand their service area through this authority alone, only combine resources within existing boundaries.

Practical Notes
Municipal utility customers who notice their electric or water utility has entered a joint venture arrangement should know that their retail rates are protected — if rate changes aren’t approved by each utility’s governing body, customers can petition for Public Utilities Commission rate oversight. Joint ventures must preserve existing customer service territories and cannot use this authority to take customers from other utilities. For cities considering utility joint ventures, this section provides a complete legal framework without needing to look to other city charter provisions.