MDU Resources Group, Inc. (MDU) has big plans for the next five years, and they involve spending a lot of money on the decidedly unsexy business of energy infrastructure. On Thursday, the company unveiled a $3.4 billion capital investment roadmap covering 2026 through 2030, targeting its regulated electric, natural gas, and pipeline operations.
The plan represents a meaningful step up from the company's previous $3.1 billion blueprint for 2025-2029. It also clocks in about 34% higher than what MDU spent during the 2021-2025 stretch. Management is essentially reshaping the business into a pure-play regulated energy delivery company, the kind that generates predictable cash flows and helps investors sleep better at night.
"Our capital investment plan for 2026 through 2030 reflects our commitment to building the energy infrastructure that communities depend on," said President and CEO Nicole Kivisto. She emphasized that the company remains laser-focused on safety, system reliability, and delivering consistent long-term value to shareholders.
Where the Money's Going
The electric segment gets the biggest slice of the pie at roughly $1.37 billion between 2026 and 2030. That money will fund substation upgrades, grid modernization efforts, and generation investments. MDU will wrap up its final payment in 2026 for a 49% stake in the Badger Wind Farm. The company also plans to energize its Jamestown-to-Ellendale transmission project by late 2028 or early 2029.
Natural gas distribution isn't far behind, with approximately $1.35 billion earmarked for the five-year period. Those funds will support system replacements, service extensions, and capacity enhancements designed to keep pace with growing population and economic activity across MDU's eight-state service territory.
The pipeline unit rounds out the investment plan with about $643 million allocated over the same timeframe. Key projects include the Line Section 32 Expansion Project, which supports power generation demand, and the Minot Industrial Expansion Project aimed at serving increasing industrial loads.
Financing the Future
How does MDU plan to pay for all this infrastructure? Management expects to issue $150 million to $175 million in equity during 2026, with another potential round of $100 million to $125 million following in 2027. The remainder will come from internal cash flow and debt financing. Executives said they'll reassess capital needs after 2027, giving themselves room to adjust based on how things develop.
Despite the heavy capital expenditures, MDU expects its regulated rate base to expand at a healthy 7% to 8% clip annually. The company is targeting earnings per share growth between 6% and 8%, though management acknowledged that actual spending could shift depending on demand patterns or regulatory decisions.
Price Action: MDU shares were trading down 1.32% to $20.75 in premarket action Friday.