South Carolina Statutes

§ 6-23-110 — Municipalities may contract to buy power; terms of contract; sources of payment; advances.

South Carolina § 6-23-110
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 6LOCAL GOVERNMENT—PROVISIONS APPLICABLE TO SPECIAL PURPOSE DISTRICTS AND OTHER POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS
Ch. 23JOINT MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC POWER AND ENERGY ACT

This text of South Carolina § 6-23-110 (Municipalities may contract to buy power; terms of contract; sources of payment; advances.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 6-23-110 (2026).

Text

Any municipality which is a member of the joint agency may contract to buy from the joint agency power and energy required for its present or future requirements, including the capacity and output of one or more specified projects. As the creation of a joint agency is an alternative method whereby a municipality may obtain the benefits and assume the responsibilities of ownership in a project, any such contract may provide that the municipality so contracting shall be obligated to make the payments required by the contract whether or not a project is completed, operable or operating notwithstanding the suspension, interruption, interference, reduction or curtailment of the output of a project or the power and energy contracted for, and that such payments under the contract shall not be sub

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Legislative History

HISTORY: 1978 Act No. 473, SECTION 12; 2004 Act No. 210, SECTION 1, eff April 26, 2004; 2015 Act No. 25 (S.304), SECTION 2, eff June 1, 2015. Effect of Amendment The 2004 amendment, in the second paragraph, divided the existing text into the first and third sentences, inserted the second sentence relating to extension of the contract for the same period, in the third sentence substituted "effectiveness of those contracts or extensions of those contracts are not subject" for "effectiveness thereof shall not be subject", and made nonsubstantive changes. 2015 Act No. 25, SECTION 2, rewrote the second paragraph.

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Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 6-23-110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/23/6-23-110.