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Xcel Energy Inc. wants its Colorado customers to start paying for the nearly $1 billion worth of work, equipment and construction the utility says is needed to comply with the state’s Clean Air-Clean Jobs Act.
That 2010 law calls for the utility to curb pollution from its coal-fired power plants.
“This will be the first rate case dealing with paying for Clean Air-Clean Jobs,” said David Eves, the president of Public Service Co. of Colorado, Xcel’s subsidiary in the state. ("Rate case" is…