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Sunday, June 28, 2026
Charlotte, NC|
business

Duke Energy

Investor-owned utility

NYSE-listed utility (ticker DUK) headquartered in Charlotte. Operates the Catawba-Wateree reservoir system through its network of dams. Co-coordinates the Catawba-Wateree Drought Management Advisory Group (CW-DMAG) with regional water utilities. Issues monthly drought-stage evaluations under the Low Inflow Protocol.

Coverage (2 articles)

Other coverage in the Mercury Local network

On Data Centers, Mecklenburg County Wants a Voice It Mostly Doesn't Have

The Charlotte Mercury·

Mecklenburg commissioners got a deliberately neutral briefing on data centers at their May 19 meeting and signaled they want a position on the fast-growing industry. The catch: under North Carolina law, nearly all the zoning power belongs to the cities, not the county.

Charlotte's Stage 1 Drought Hit Monday. Here's What It Means in Ballantyne.

Strolling Ballantyne·

Charlotte Water moved to its first voluntary water restrictions since 2023 on Monday, April 20. Here's what the schedule looks like in Ballantyne, and what the basin-wide trigger means for HOA common areas, the burn ban that came with it, and the watershed picture.

Charlotte Water Moves to Voluntary Restrictions as the Catawba-Wateree Basin Hits Stage 1

The Charlotte Mercury·

Charlotte Water shifted to voluntary water restrictions on Monday, April 20 — the first time since 2023 — after the Catawba-Wateree River Basin moved to Stage 1 of its regional Low Inflow Protocol. A separate citywide burn ban with a $100 fine and $183 in court costs was imposed alongside it. Here is what the city is asking and what would push the basin further.

Stage 1 Drought Hits the Catawba-Wateree Basin. What Firethorne Needs to Know.

Strolling Firethorne·

The Catawba-Wateree Basin entered Stage 1 of its regional drought protocol Monday, triggering Charlotte Water's first voluntary restrictions since 2023. Out here in Firethorne, the response runs through whichever utility serves your home — but the drought is shared, and the basin-wide thinking is worth knowing either way.