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☑
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Filed by the Registrant
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☐
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Filed by a party other than the Registrant
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CHECK THE APPROPRIATE BOX:
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☐
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Preliminary Proxy Statement
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☐
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2))
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☑
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Definitive Proxy Statement
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Definitive Additional Materials
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Soliciting Material under §240.14a-12
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PAYMENT OF FILING FEE (CHECK ALL BOXES THAT APPLY):
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No fee required
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Fee computed on table in exhibit required by Item 25(b) per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11
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| Capabilities in | More than | |||||||||||||
| 45,000 MW |
50 States
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9 million |
28,000
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7 | ||||||||||
| of generating capacity | Customers | Employees |
Electric & natural
gas utilities |
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1.6 million
electric utility customers
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2.8 million
electric utility customers
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193,000
electric utility customers
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12,600 MW
of wholesale solar, wind, natural gas and clean alternative technology provider in 15 states
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4.4 million
natural gas distribution customers across four state-regulated, wholesale and retail energy businesses and gas storage facilities in the U.S.
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4
Atlanta Gas Light (GA)
4
Chattanooga Gas (TN)
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4
Nicor Gas (IL)
4
Virginia Natural Gas (VA)
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| Wireless communications service | A national leader in distributed infrastructure technologies doing business nationwide | An innovative leader among the nation’s nuclear energy industry | ||||||
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Our Values
At Southern Company, Our Values establish the foundational behaviors that guide how we work and outline how we make decisions and take actions. Our Values reflect how we lead, engage, collaborate and perform as One Team. Living Our Values is how we make each other better and deliver clean, safe reliable and affordable energy solutions for our customers and communities. This is what we mean when we say we are bigger than our bottom line.
At Southern Company, Our Values will guide us to make every decision, every day, in the right way.
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Safety First
We actively care about the safety and well-being of our employees, customers and communities. Safely approaching every job, every day, always comes first. |
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Intentional Inclusion
We are One Team, working to foster a culture of belonging and ensuring our diverse team feels valued. Investing in an equitable culture benefits our employees, customers, communities and stockholders. |
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Act with Integrity
We act with honesty, respect and fairness, demonstrating trustworthiness in all we do. We are true to our word and follow through on our commitments. |
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Superior Performance
We keep customers at the center of everything that we do, with a focus on continuous improvement. We will continue our strong focus on innovative solutions, improving how we run our business and our commitment to environmental stewardship. |
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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1
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Date and time
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
10:00 a.m., ET
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Record date
Stockholders of record at the close of business on March 31, 2025 are entitled to attend and vote at the annual meeting. On that date, there were 1,100,193,640 shares of common stock of Southern Company outstanding and entitled to vote.
On April 11, 2025, these proxy materials and our annual report are being mailed or made available to stockholders.
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Access the Annual Meeting
Stockholders may participate in the virtual annual meeting by logging in at
www.virtualshareholdermeeting.com/SO2025
.
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| 1 | Elect 13 Directors named in this proxy statement | ||||
| 2 | Conduct an advisory vote to approve executive compensation, often referred to as a Say on Pay | ||||
| 3 | Ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2025 | ||||
| 4 | Approve an amendment to the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to reduce the supermajority vote requirement to a majority vote | ||||
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5-8
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Vote on four stockholder proposals, if each is properly presented at the meeting | ||||
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Vote by mail
If you received a paper copy of the proxy form by mail, you can mark, sign, date and return the proxy form in the enclosed, postage-paid envelope.
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Vote by internet or telephone
Voting by internet or by telephone is fast and convenient, and your vote is immediately confirmed and tabulated.
Internet
www.proxyvote.com
(24/7)
Telephone
1-800-690-6903 (24/7)
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2
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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Christopher C. Womack
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer
April 11, 2025
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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3
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Dr. Janaki Akella
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Henry A. Clark III
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Shantella E. Cooper
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Anthony F. Earley, Jr.
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James O. Etheredge
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David J. Grain
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Donald M. James
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John D. Johns
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Dr. Dale E. Klein
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David E. Meador
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William G. Smith, Jr.
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Kristine L. Svinicki
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Lizanne Thomas
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4
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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¢
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Reported EPS
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¢
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Adjusted EPS
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Increased
8 cents
in 2024
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Paid
$3.13B
to stockholders
in 2024
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
5
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Our TSR outperformed the Philadelphia Utility Index (UTY) for all periods presented. During 2024, we continued to deliver positive stockholder returns, and we have reliably demonstrated strong TSR performance over the long term.
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| TOTAL SHAREHOLDER RETURN (ANNUALIZED) | ||||||||||||||||||||
| 1-Year | 3-Year | 5-Year | 25-Year | |||||||||||||||||
| Southern Company | 21.7 | % | 10.4 | % | 9.5 | % | 12.3 | % | ||||||||||||
| Philadelphia Utility Index | 20.9 | % | 3.4 | % | 6.1 | % | 9.1 | % | ||||||||||||
| S&P 500 Index | 25.0 | % | 8.9 | % | 14.5 | % | 7.7 | % | ||||||||||||
| Dow Jones Industrial Average | 15.0 | % | 7.6 | % | 10.5 | % | 7.8 | % | ||||||||||||
| Source: Bloomberg using quarterly compounding as of December 31, 2024. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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6
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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Our Annual Energy Mix
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4
Energy mix percentages include non-affiliate power purchase agreements.
4
Renewables/Other category includes wind, solar, hydropower, biomass and landfill gas.
4
Energy mix represents all of the energy the Southern Company system uses to serve its retail and wholesale customers. It is not meant to represent delivered energy mix to any particular retail customer or class of customers.
4
With respect to certain renewable generation and associated renewable energy credits (RECs), to the extent an affiliate of Southern has the right to the RECs associated with renewable energy it generates or purchases, it retains the right to sell the energy and RECs, either bundled or separately, to retail customers and third parties.
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Renewables/Other | ||||||||||||||||
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Nuclear | ||||||||||||||||
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Natural Gas | ||||||||||||||||
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Coal | ||||||||||||||||
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
7
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4
In 2024, our companies and foundations invested over $85 million in grants, sponsorships and impact investments across our territories.
4
Our operating companies also play leadership roles in economic development efforts across the states and regions where we operate. In 2024, our economic development groups supported initiatives that resulted in the announcement of more than 20,000 jobs and $14 billion of investment in our electric service territories.
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4
The National Carbon Capture Center (NCCC), funded by the Department of Energy (DOE) and other sponsors and managed by Southern Company, continues to advance CO
2
capture, conversion, and removal technologies. In 2024, the NCCC announced it surpassed 150,000 hours of technology testing, aiding the development of cost-effective and commercially viable carbon management technologies to reduce GHG emissions. Additionally, nine technology projects with a direct testing connection to the NCCC received DOE funding awards, demonstrating the facility’s role in progressing technologies from laboratory development to commercial deployment. The center also completed its first tests of direct air capture and cryogenic carbon capture technologies.
4
In 2024, Georgia Power and Urbint were awarded EEI's Thomas F. Farrell, II Safety Leadership and Innovation Award for their partnership to create a revolutionary artificial intelligence-powered hazard recognition and reporting tool to enhance workforce safety.
4
We continue to leverage innovative collaborations, including our partnership with Energy Impact Partners, the world’s largest utility-backed, clean tech investor coalition with over $4 billion in assets under management. In 2024, we piloted multiple innovative solutions across the Southern Company system to enhance customer value, modernize our business, and sustainably serve our growing communities.
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8
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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||||
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4
We are committed to building a robust, skilled workforce across our footprint that not only meets our internal needs, but also those of our communities. We actively collaborate with educational institutions, labor partners and government, business and industry leaders to advocate for policies that remove barriers to employment, develop training programs that upskill our community members for in-demand careers, and align workforce initiatives across our footprint. In doing so, we seek to uplift our communities and create pathways of socio-economic mobility for our residents. For example, as representatives on the Alabama Workforce Board established in 2024 and its Executive Committee, our leaders are working to advise Alabama’s first Secretary of Workforce on developing a unified Department of Workforce that prioritizes career outcomes for Alabamians.
4
We expanded our reimagined, modern "corporate university" with the implementation of our Leadership Academy Impact Program. Designed for mid-level high potential leaders, the program is a testament to our commitment to foster the growth and development of our future executive leaders. The Impact Program focuses on comprehensive development opportunities such as translating business strategy into action, growing competence and character, holding others accountable and balancing the focus on self, team and Company.
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The Sustainability section of our website highlights our ongoing efforts across our core sustainability priorities:
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Serve Our Customers |
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Invest in Our People | ||||||||||||||
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Advance Clean Energy |
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Elevate Our Communities | ||||||||||||||
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Lead Through Innovation |
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Maintain Effective Governance | ||||||||||||||
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
9
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| The Board, acting upon the recommendation of the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee, has nominated 13 of the Directors currently serving for re-election to the Southern Company Board of Directors. Each nominee holds or has held senior executive positions, maintains the highest degree of integrity and ethical standards and complements the needs of the Company and the Board. Through their positions, responsibilities, skills and perspectives, which span many industries and organizations, these nominees represent a Board of Directors with a broad range and depth of expertise and experience to effectively oversee the Company's operations, risks and long-term strategy. | |||||||||||
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The Board recommends a vote
FOR
each nominee for Director
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Janaki Akella, 64
Independent
Former Digital
Transformation Leader,
Google LLC
Director Since: January 2019
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Shantella E. Cooper, 57
Independent
Founder and Chief Executive
Officer, Journey Forward
Strategies, LLC
Director Since: October 2023
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Anthony F. Earley, Jr., 75
Lead Independent Director
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer,
PG&E Corporation (retired)
Director Since: January 2019
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James O. Etheredge, 61
Independent
Managing Director, Monarch Private Capital and former Chief Executive Officer -
North America, Accenture plc
Director Since: April 2025
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David J. Grain,
62
Independent
Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Grain Management, LLC
Director Since: December 2012
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Donald M. James,
76
Independent
Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, Vulcan
Materials Company (retired)
Director Since: December 1999
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John D. Johns,
73
Independent
Senior Advisor, Blackstone
Inc. and former Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer,
Protective Life Corporation
Director Since: February 2015
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Dale E. Klein,
77
Independent
Professor, University of
Texas at Austin
Director Since: July 2010
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David E. Meador,
68
Independent
Vice Chairman and Chief
Administrative Officer,
DTE Energy (retired)
Director Since: April 2023
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William G. Smith, Jr.,
71
Independent
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer,
Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
Director Since: February 2006
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Kristine L. Svinicki,
58
Independent
Adjunct Professor,
University of Michigan
Director Since: October 2021
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Lizanne Thomas,
67
Independent
Partner, Jones Day (retired)
Director Since: April 2023
|
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Christopher C. Womack,
67
Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer,
Southern Company
Director Since: March 2023
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| Collective qualifications, attributes, skills and experience | |||||
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Accounting, Finance and Capital Markets
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CEO Experience
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Cybersecurity
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Environment and Clean Energy
|
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Government and Public Policy
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Industry Experience
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Regional Knowledge
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Technology and Innovation
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10
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
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We believe our compensation program provides the appropriate mix of fixed and at-risk compensation.
The short- and long-term performance-based compensation program ties executive pay to Company performance, rewards achievement of financial and operational goals, encourages individual performance that is in line with our long-term strategy, is aligned with stockholder interests and remains competitive with our industry peers.
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The Board recommends a vote
FOR
this proposal
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The Audit Committee appointed Deloitte & Touche as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2025.
This appointment is being submitted to stockholders for ratification.
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The Board recommends a vote
FOR
this proposal
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A supermajority vote requirement like the one contained in Article Eleventh of the Restated Certificate of Incorporation (Certificate of Incorporation or Certificate) historically has been intended to facilitate corporate governance stability and provide protection against self-interested action by large stockholders by requiring broad stockholder consensus to make certain fundamental changes.
As corporate governance standards have evolved, many stockholders and commentators now view a supermajority requirement as limiting the Board’s accountability to stockholders and the ability of stockholders to effectively participate in corporate governance.
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The Board recommends a vote
FOR
this proposal
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The following four proposals were submitted by stockholders. If the proponent of each proposal, or the proponent’s representative, is present at the annual meeting and presents the proposal for a vote, then the proposal will be voted on at the annual meeting.
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4
Simple Majority Vote
4
Disclose Assumptions Underlying Continued Reliance on Fossil Fuel-Based Energy
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4
Conduct a Net Zero Audit
4
Report on Respecting Workforce Civil Liberties
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The Board recommends a vote
AGAINST
each proposal
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
11
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| The Board, acting upon the recommendation of the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee, has nominated 13 of the Directors currently serving for re-election to the Southern Company Board of Directors. | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Janaki Akella
Shantella E. Cooper
Anthony F. Earley, Jr.
James O. Etheredge
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David J. Grain
Donald M. James
John D. Johns
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Dale E. Klein
David E. Meador
William G. Smith, Jr.
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Kristine L. Svinicki
Lizanne Thomas
Christopher C. Womack
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Each nominee, if elected, will serve until the 2026 annual meeting of stockholders and until their successors are elected and qualified.
The proxies named on the proxy form will vote each properly executed proxy form for the election of the 13 Director nominees, unless otherwise instructed. If any named nominee becomes unavailable for election, the Board may substitute another nominee. In that event, the proxy would be voted for the substitute nominee unless instructed otherwise on the proxy form.
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The Board recommends a vote
FOR
each nominee for Director
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| Stockholder Empowerment | Independent Board of Directors | |||||||
|
4
All Directors stand for stockholder election annually
4
Majority voting standard in uncontested Director elections
4
Directors not receiving majority support must tender their resignation for consideration by the Board
4
Proxy access for stockholders
4
10% threshold for stockholders to request a special meeting
4
No poison pill
|
4
12 of our 13 nominees for Director are independent
4
Strong Lead Independent Director with robust authority and responsibility that is disclosed to stockholders
4
All Board committees are comprised of independent Directors and are chaired by independent Directors
4
Actively endeavors to include candidates in the pool that reflect a broad range and depth of expertise and experience relevant to our businesses and strategies
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| Stockholder Engagement | Governance Best Practices | |||||||
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4
Year-round stockholder outreach that includes participation of independent Directors, with feedback provided to the Board
4
Key members of senior management regularly attend investor conferences to better understand emerging issues and stockholder perspectives and to facilitate engagement opportunities
4
Process in place for stockholders and interested parties to communicate with Lead Independent Director or other independent Directors
|
4
Regular Board refreshment with nationally-recognized search firm on retainer
4
Elected five new Directors in last three years
4
Annual Board review of leadership structure and disclosure of the Board’s reasoning underlying its leadership structure
4
Annual Board self-assessment facilitated by an independent third party and annual committee self-assessments
4
Regular executive sessions of independent Directors
4
Limits on the number of public company boards a Director may serve
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| Director Nominee Attributes | |||||||||||||||||
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12
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
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Accounting, Finance and
Capital Markets |
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CEO Experience |
|
Cybersecurity | ||||||||||||||||||
| Experience in accounting and financial reporting, corporate finance, mergers and acquisitions, developing financial plans and programs or capital allocation | Experience as a public company CEO or leading a similarly complex organization | Experience with cyber threats, risk mitigation and policy | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Environment and Clean Energy |
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Government and
Public Policy
|
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Industry Experience | ||||||||||||||||||
| Experience with environmental or climate policy, regulation, risk and business operations, as well as an understanding of clean energy or the risks and opportunities for an organization transitioning to a low-carbon future | Experience working with governmental agencies, regulatory affairs or public policy, especially in regulated industries | Experience with the energy or utility industry, including electric and gas utility operations, nuclear operations or industrial health and safety, or overseeing large-scale industrial projects | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Regional Knowledge |
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Technology and
Innovation |
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| Experience working in the communities served by Southern Company or with its regional business and political environment | Experience with digital technology including data analytics, artificial intelligence, information technology or digital transformation, as well as technology innovation affecting the industry | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Other Current Public Company Boards | 1 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 1 |
1
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| Tenure (Completed Whole Years) | 6 | 1 | 6 | 0 | 12 | 25 | 10 | 14 | 2 | 19 | 3 | 2 |
2
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| Age | 64 | 57 | 75 | 61 | 62 | 76 | 73 | 77 | 68 | 71 | 58 | 67 |
67
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| Gender (Male/Female) | F | F | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | M | F | F |
M
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Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
13
|
||||
| Board Additions Over Last Three Years | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Shantella E. Cooper
Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Journey Forward Strategies, LLC
|
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|
James O. Etheredge
Managing Director, Monarch Private Capital and former Chief Executive Officer - North America, Accenture plc
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
David E. Meador
Vice Chairman and Chief Administrative Officer, DTE Energy (retired)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Lizanne Thomas
Partner, Jones Day (retired)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Christopher C. Womack
Chairman, President and CEO,
Southern Company
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Skills Brought By New Directors | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Accounting, Finance and Capital Markets |
|
Government and Public Policy | |||||||||||||||||
|
CEO Experience |
|
Industry Experience | |||||||||||||||||
|
Cybersecurity |
|
Regional Knowledge | |||||||||||||||||
|
Environment and Clean Energy |
|
Technology and Innovation | |||||||||||||||||
|
The Board aims to strike a balance between the knowledge that comes from longer-term service on the Board and the new experience and ideas that can come from adding Directors to the Board. The Board believes the average tenure of the 13 Director nominees of approximately
eight
years reflects the balance the Board seeks between the different perspectives brought by longer-serving Directors and new Directors. The Board aims to continue to refresh its membership over time.
|
||||
|
14
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| 1 |
Board Succession Planning
4
Evaluate qualifications and skills of Board
4
Identify skills and experience to enhance effectiveness
|
||||||||||||||||
| 2 | Identification of Candidates by Nomination, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee | ||||||||||||||||
|
4
Evergreen process
|
4
Identify qualified candidates based on talent framework
|
4
Assistance from independent search firm
|
|||||||||||||||
|
4
Consider personal characteristics and qualifications, including:
|
|||||||||||||||||
History of achievement that reflects superior standards
Willingness to commit sufficient time
Genuine interest in the Company and a recognition that, as a member of the Board, one is accountable to the stockholders of the Company, not to any particular interest group
Candidates with diverse backgrounds, skills and experience
|
Highest degree of integrity and ethical standards
Independence from management
Ability to provide sound and informed judgment
Financial literacy
Number of other board memberships
|
||||||||||||||||
| 3 |
Meeting with Candidates
Interviews with:
4
Chairman and CEO
4
Lead Independent Director
|
4
Members of Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee
4
All of the members of the Board
|
|||||||||||||||
| All Board members are provided an opportunity to interview selected candidates and provide feedback | |||||||||||||||||
| 4 |
Decision and Nomination
Nomination by Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee and approval by full Board
|
||||||||||||||||
| 5 |
Election
Stockholders consider the nominees and elect Directors at the annual meeting to serve one-year terms. The Board may also elect Directors on the recommendation of the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee throughout the year, following the same process, when determined to be in the best interests of the Company and its stockholders.
|
||||||||||||||||
|
Result
We have nominated five new highly qualified Directors in the past three years.
|
||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
15
|
||||
|
Any stockholder or group of up to 20 stockholders maintaining continuous qualifying ownership of at least 3% of our outstanding shares for at least three years can nominate, and include in our proxy materials, Director nominees constituting the greater of two nominees or 20% (rounded down) of the number of Directors in our proxy materials for the next annual meeting.
|
||||||||
|
4
No employed Director may serve on more than two public company boards (not including the Company’s Board or the director’s employing company board) unless otherwise approved by the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee.
4
No Director may serve on more than four public company boards (including the Company’s Board), unless otherwise approved by the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee.
4
No Director who is a member of the Company’s Audit Committee may serve on the audit committees of more than three public companies (including the Company’s Audit Committee).
|
||||||||
|
16
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
17
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Janaki Akella
Former Digital Transformation Leader, Google LLC
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 64
Director since:
January 2019
|
Board committees: Audit; Business Security and Resiliency (Chair)
Other public company directorships: SLM Corporation
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Dr. Akella’s qualifications include electrical engineering experience and knowledge, global business technology, data and analytics expertise and cybersecurity and artificial intelligence matters knowledge. Her understanding and involvement with technology market disruptions is particularly valuable to the Board as the Southern Company system continues to develop innovative business strategies.
|
4
Dr. Akella served as the Digital Transformation Leader of Google LLC, a multinational technology company specializing in internet-related products, from 2017 until March 2023. At Google, Dr. Akella addressed challenges and complex technical issues arising from new technologies and new business models.
4
Prior to joining Google, Dr. Akella held a number of leadership positions during a 17-year career at McKinsey & Company, where she most recently served as principal. She led and contributed to over 100 consulting engagements in North America, Europe, Asia and Latin America with multiple project teams and client executives. She began her career with Hewlett-Packard as a member of the system technology technical staff, engineer scientist and technical contributor.
4
She currently serves on the Board of SLM Corporation, commonly known as Sallie Mae, where she is a member of the Audit Committee and Operational and Compliance Risk Committee. She also serves on the Board of Fractal Analytics Limited, a private artificial intelligence company that helps businesses use data to improve decision-making, marketing and customer relationships, and averQ, Inc., a private company that provides risk management platforms to regulated financial services companies.
4
She previously served on the Boards of the Guindy College of Engineering North American Alumni and the Churchill Club.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Shantella E. Cooper
Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Journey Forward Strategies, LLC
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 57
Director since:
October 2023
|
Board committees: Business Security and Resiliency; Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility
Other public company directorships: Intercontinental Exchange and SouthState Corporation
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Ms. Cooper’s qualifications include more than 30 years of talent development and executive leadership experience working with Fortune 500 corporations, private companies and the non-profit sector. Ms. Cooper’s expertise in developing sustainable people-focused business strategies is valuable to the Board.
|
4
Ms. Cooper is Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Journey Forward Strategies, a solutions-focused consulting firm specializing in leadership development and organizational effectiveness. With over 30 years of experience and expertise, Ms. Cooper delivers sustainable results for her clients, while excelling in the areas of executive coaching, leadership and culture development and business transformation. Ms. Cooper also serves as a senior advisor, and was previously an external executive coach, to McKinsey & Company.
4
Ms. Cooper served as Executive Director for the Atlanta Committee for Progress (ACP) from 2019 to 2022. ACP is a partnership between the city’s top business, civic and academic leaders and the Mayor of Atlanta to support economic growth and inclusion.
4
She served as Chief Transformation Officer of WestRock from 2016 to 2019 where she developed infrastructure and processes essential for business growth via mergers and acquisitions. She also led divisions such as Recycling and Waste Services, Enterprise Logistics, Global Procurement and Information Technology. From 2002 to 2016, she served in several roles at Lockheed Martin, including Vice President and General Manager, Vice President of Human Resources and Vice President of Business Ethics.
4
Ms. Cooper currently serves on the Board of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc., where she is the chair of the Risk Committee and a member of the Compensation Committee, and SouthState Corporation, where she is a member of the Risk Committee and the Governance and Nominating Committee. She served on the Board of Directors for Veritiv Corporation until 2023.
4
She serves on the Board of Directors for Grady Memorial Hospital Corporation and the Board of Trustees for Emory University as well as several other Atlanta-area boards supporting technology, research and education. Ms. Cooper has been recognized for her expertise in workforce and leadership development by numerous publications and organizations.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
18
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Anthony F. “Tony” Earley, Jr.
Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer, PG&E Corporation (retired)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 75
Director since:
January 2019
|
Board committees: Operations, Environmental and Safety
Other public company directorships: None
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Earley’s qualifications include public company CEO experience and energy industry expertise including nuclear regulation, generation and technology, as well as cybersecurity matters, environmental matters and major capital projects. His experience as the president and chief executive officer of energy companies and his involvement in electric industry-wide research and development programs are valuable to the Board.
|
4
Mr. Earley served as Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer of PG&E Corporation, a public utility holding company providing natural gas and electric services, from 2011 until February 2017, when he became Executive Chairman. He served as Executive Chairman until his retirement from PG&E in December 2017. On January 29, 2019, PG&E Corporation and its subsidiary Pacific Gas and Electric Company filed voluntary petitions for relief under Chapter 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code as a result of wildfire claims in California.
4
Before joining PG&E, Mr. Earley served in several executive leadership roles during his 17 years at DTE Energy, including Executive Chairman, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Prior to joining DTE Energy in March 1994, he served in various capacities at Long Island Lighting Company, including President and Chief Operating Officer. He was a partner at the Hunton & Williams LLP law firm as a member of the energy and environmental team. He also served as an officer in the U.S. Navy nuclear submarine program where he was qualified as a chief engineer.
4
He served on the Board of Ford Motor Company until 2022. He also previously served on the Boards of, DTE Energy, PG&E Corporation, Comerica Incorporated, Masco Corporation and Long Island Lighting Company.
4
He previously served on the executive committees of the Edison Electric Institute and the Nuclear Energy Institute and served on the Board of the Electric Power Research Institute.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
James O. "Jimmy" Etheredge
Managing Director at Monarch Private Capital and former Chief Executive Officer - North America, Accenture plc
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 61
Director since: April 2025 |
Board committees: None
Other public company directorships: None |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Etheredge’s qualifications include CEO experience, technology and innovation expertise, accounting and cybersecurity experience and a deep understanding of the customer experience in the utility industry. Mr. Etheredge’s leadership experience, his broad knowledge of industries within our regional service territories and his experience with innovative solutions are of significant value to the Board.
|
4
Mr. Etheredge has served as Managing Director of Corporate Solutions at Monarch Private Capital, an impact investment firm, since April 2025.
4
Mr. Etheredge served as Chief Executive Officer – North America of Accenture plc, a global multinational professional services company, leading the company’s largest market (U.S. and Canada) from September 2019 to August 2023, and as a special advisor to the CEO and Board until July 2024. His responsibilities as CEO - North America included driving results through an 80,000-member team and executing Accenture’s strategy and consulting, interactive, technology (including artificial intelligence, cloud and others) and operations practices.
4
From 2016 until September 2019, Mr. Etheredge was Senior Managing Director of U.S. Southeast, responsible for leading Accenture's business in ten states. In this role, he oversaw the firm's business across all consulting specialties and client industry segments within the region and during this time he extended Accenture's innovation hub network by creating an innovation incubator at the Georgia Institute of Technology.
4
Mr. Etheredge joined Accenture in 1985, became a partner in 1997 and an executive partner in 2011. During his career at Accenture, Mr. Etheredge advised clients in the utilities industry both in the U.S. and worldwide with a focus on customer service and customer care.
4
Mr. Etheredge serves as Deputy Chair of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, where he is a member of the Audit and Risk Committee. He is a member of the Board of Encora Digital LLC, a private global digital engineering company. He is part of the governance body for Grant Thornton Advisors and its tax and advisory affiliates, serving as an attendee of the General Partner of Grant Thornton Advisor’s parent.
4
He also serves as a trustee of the Georgia Tech Foundation and Woodruff Arts Center and on the boards of the Atlanta Police Foundation, Techbridge and the Atlanta Area Council of Scouting America.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
19
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
David J. Grain
Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Grain Management, LLC (Grain Management)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 62
Director since:
December 2012
|
Board committees: Compensation and Talent Development; Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility (Chair)
Other public company directorships: Dell Technologies and New Fortress Energy Inc.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Grain’s qualifications include CEO experience, capital allocation expertise, financial expertise, major capital projects knowledge and experience, technology innovations knowledge and experience and risk management experience. Mr. Grain’s knowledge and involvement managing large and small businesses and raising and managing investor capital, particularly in a regulated industry, is also valuable to the Board.
|
4
Mr. Grain is the Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director of Grain Management, a private equity firm focused on global investments in the media and communications sectors, which he founded in 2006. With headquarters in Washington, D.C. and offices in New York City, New York, Sarasota, Florida and London, England, the firm manages capital for a number of the world’s leading academic endowments, public pension funds and foundations.
4
Mr. Grain also founded and was Chief Executive Officer of Grain Communications Group, Inc.
4
Prior to founding Grain Management, he served as President of Global Signal, Inc., Senior Vice President of AT&T Broadband’s New England Region and Executive Director in the High Yield Finance Department at Morgan Stanley.
4
Mr. Grain was appointed by President Obama in 2011 and again in 2024 by President Biden to the National Infrastructure Advisory Council.
4
He previously served as Chairman of the Florida State Board of Administration Investment Advisory Council as an appointee of former Governor Charlie Crist, where he provided independent oversight of the state board’s funds and major investment responsibilities, including investments for the Florida Retirement System programs.
4
Mr. Grain is a Director of Dell Technologies, where he is a member of the Audit Committee, and New Fortress Energy, Inc. Previously, he was a director of Catalyst Partners Acquisition Corporation (a special purpose acquisition corporation) until 2023..
4
He is currently a member of the Dartmouth College Board of Trustees and is a Trustee of the Brookings Institution.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Donald M. James
Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Vulcan Materials Company (retired)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 76
Director since:
December 1999
|
Board committees: Audit; Compensation and Talent Development; Finance
Other public company directorships: None
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. James’ qualifications include public company CEO experience, a legal background as a former public company general counsel and an understanding of corporate governance, risk management, major capital projects and environmental matters. Mr. James brings important perspectives on management, operations and strategy from his experience as the former chief executive officer of a public company.
|
4
Mr. James joined Vulcan Materials Company, a producer of aggregate and aggregate-based construction materials, in 1992 as Senior Vice President and General Counsel. He became President of the Southern Division, followed by Senior Vice President of the Construction Materials Group, and then President and Chief Operating Officer. In 1997, he was elected Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Mr. James retired from his position as Chief Executive Officer in 2014 and as Non-Executive Chairman and from the Board in 2015.
4
Prior to joining Vulcan Materials Company, Mr. James was a partner at the law firm of Bradley, Arant, Rose & White for 10 years.
4
Mr. James serves as Chairman of New Frontier Materials, a private company in the construction materials industry.
4
Mr. James served as a director of Wells Fargo & Company until 2020. He is also a former director of Vulcan Materials Company, Protective Life Corporation, SouthTrust Corporation and Wachovia Corporation.
4
Mr. James is a Trustee of Children’s of Alabama, where he serves on the Executive Committee and the Compensation Committee.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
20
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
John D. Johns
Senior Advisor at Blackstone Inc. (Blackstone) and former Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Protective Life Corporation (Protective Life)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 73
Director since:
February 2015
|
Board committees: Finance (Chair); Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility
Other public company directorships: Genuine Parts Company
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Johns’ qualifications include public company CEO experience, financial expertise, capital allocation experience and risk management experience in a highly-regulated industry. His legal background as the former general counsel of a large energy public holding company that included natural gas operations and his prior service for over a decade on the Board of Directors of Alabama Power are also of significant value to the Board.
|
4
Mr. Johns has served as a Senior Advisor at Blackstone, an investment firm, since April 2022.
4
He retired in 2020 as Chairman, DLI North America Inc., the oversight company for Protective Life, a provider of financial services through insurance and investment products.
4
He served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Protective Life from 2002 to 2017 and President from 2002 to January 2016. He joined Protective Life in 1993 as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
4
Before his tenure at Protective Life, Mr. Johns served as general counsel of Sonat, Inc., a diversified energy company.
4
Prior to joining Sonat, Inc., Mr. Johns was a founding partner of the law firm Maynard, Cooper & Gale, P.C.
4
He previously served on the Board of Alabama Power from 2004 to 2015. During his tenure on the Alabama Power Board, he was a member of the Nominating and Executive Committees.
4
Mr. Johns serves on the Board of Genuine Parts Company, where he is Lead Independent Director and is a member of the Compensation and Human Capital Committee and the Executive Committee. He served as a director of Regions Financial Corporation until 2024.
4
Mr. Johns has served on the Executive Committee of the Financial Services Roundtable in Washington, D.C. and is a past chairman of the American Council of Life Insurers.
4
Mr. Johns has served as the Chairman of the Business Council of Alabama, the Birmingham Business Alliance, the Greater Alabama Council of Scouting America and Innovation Depot, Alabama’s leading business and technology incubator.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Dale E. Klein
Reese Endowed Professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin and former Commissioner and Chairman, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 77
Director since:
July 2010
|
Board committees: Business Security and Resiliency; Compensation and Talent Development; Operations, Environmental and Safety (Chair)
Other public company directorships: None
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Dr. Klein’s qualifications include expertise in nuclear energy research, regulation, safety and technology, as well as experience in environmental matters and governmental affairs. His senior leadership skills demonstrated as the Chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission are also important to the Board.
|
4
Dr. Klein was Commissioner from 2006 to 2010 and Chairman from 2006 through 2009 of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the federal agency responsible for regulation of nuclear reactor materials and safety. He also served as Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Defense Programs from 2001 through 2006.
4
Dr. Klein has more than 45 years of experience in the nuclear energy industry. Dr. Klein is a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
4
Dr. Klein began his career at the University of Texas in 1977 as a professor of mechanical engineering, which included a focus on the university’s nuclear program. He spent over 35 years in various teaching and leadership positions, including Director of the nuclear engineering teaching laboratory, Associate Dean for research and administration in the College of Engineering and Vice Chancellor for special engineering programs. He currently serves as a Professor in the Cockrell School of Engineering and holds the Reese Endowed Professorship at the University of Texas at Austin.
4
He served on the Audit and Nuclear and Operating Committees of Pinnacle West Capital Corporation, an Arizona energy company, and was a member of the Board of Pinnacle West Capital Corporation’s principal subsidiary, Arizona Public Service Company, until 2023. Dr. Klein serves on the private company boards of AVANTech and Los Alamos Technical Associates.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
21
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
David E. Meador
Vice Chairman and Chief Administrative Officer of DTE Energy (retired)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 68
Director since:
April 2023
|
Board committees: Audit; Operations, Environmental and Safety
Other public company directorships: None
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Meador’s qualifications include public energy company experience and expertise in the energy sector, including financial, information technology, manufacturing, procurement, and corporate and public affairs. Mr. Meador’s extensive involvement in economic and workforce development, corporate culture and government and community relations are all of value to the Board.
|
4
Mr. Meador served as Vice Chairman and Chief Administrative Officer of DTE Energy, a diversified energy company involved in the development and management of energy-related businesses and services, from 2014 until 2022. In his 25 years at DTE Energy, he served in several executive leadership positions, including Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
4
With over 40 years of experience in the manufacturing and energy sectors, Mr. Meador is a recognized expert in finance and accounting, business strategy, governance, sustainability, mergers and acquisitions, government and community relations, procurement and information technology.
4
Prior to joining DTE Energy, he served in a variety of financial and accounting positions at Chrysler Corporation for 14 years and was an auditor with Coopers & Lybrand.
4
Mr. Meador previously served on the Boards of Amerisure Mutual Insurance, Landauer, Inc. and Energy Insurance Mutual. Mr. Meador led the creation, and is the current Executive Director, of the Detroit Regional CEO Group. He currently serves on several non-profit boards supporting workforce and economic development, human services and education.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
William G. Smith, Jr.
Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 71
Director since:
February 2006
|
Board committees: Audit (Chair)
Other public company directorships: Capital City Bank Group, Inc.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Smith’s qualifications include public company CEO experience, finance and capital allocation expertise, risk management expertise and audit and financial reporting experience. Mr. Smith contributes valuable perspectives on management, operations and regulatory compliance from his experience as the chief executive officer of a public company in a highly-regulated industry.
|
4
Mr. Smith began his career at Capital City Bank, a publicly-traded financial holding company providing a full range of banking services, in 1978, where he worked in a number of positions of increasing responsibility before being elected President and Chief Executive Officer of Capital City Bank Group, Inc. in January 1989. He was elected Chairman of the Board of the Capital City Bank Group, Inc. in 2003. He is also the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Capital City Bank.
4
Mr. Smith previously served on the Board of Directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta and First National Bankers Bank.
4
Mr. Smith is the former Federal Advisory Council Representative for the Sixth District of the Federal Reserve System and past Chair of Tallahassee Memorial and the Tallahassee Area Chamber of Commerce.
4
Mr. Smith served as the Company’s Lead Independent Director from 2012 to 2014.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
22
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Kristine L. Svinicki
Adjunct Professor, University of Michigan and former Commissioner and Chairman, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 58
Director since:
October 2021
|
Board committees: Business Security and Resiliency; Operations, Environmental and Safety
Other public company directorships: Pinnacle West Capital Corporation and its wholly-owned subsidiary Arizona Public Service Company
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Ms. Svinicki’s qualifications include nuclear energy and technology expertise and federal and state energy policy expertise. As a former Chairman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, she has vast experience and insight into nuclear regulation and generation, as well as environmental and cybersecurity matters. Ms. Svinicki’s leadership skills, contributions to U.S. nuclear energy policies and extensive nuclear energy knowledge are of significant value to the Board.
|
4
Ms. Svinicki was appointed a member of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the federal agency responsible for regulation of nuclear reactor materials and safety, by three U.S. Presidents, becoming that organization’s longest-serving member. She served as a Commissioner from 2008 until 2017 and then served as Chairman from 2017 to 2021.
4
Prior to her tenure on the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Ms. Svinicki spent over a decade as a staff member in the U.S. Senate working on issues related to national security, science and technology, and energy and the environment. She also served as a professional staff member on the Senate Armed Services Committee where she was responsible for the committee’s portfolio of defense science and technology programs and policies, and for the atomic energy defense activities of the U.S. Department of Energy, including nuclear weapons, nuclear security and environmental programs.
4
Previously, Ms. Svinicki served as a nuclear engineer in the U.S. Department of Energy’s Washington, D.C. offices of Nuclear Energy, Science and Technology, and of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management, as well as its Idaho Operations Office, in Idaho Falls, Idaho.
4
Ms. Svinicki serves on the Audit, Finance and Nuclear and Operating Committees of Pinnacle West Capital Corporation, an Arizona energy company, and is a member of the Board of Pinnacle West Capital Corporation’s principal subsidiary, Arizona Public Service Company.
4
Ms. Svinicki is a longstanding member of the American Nuclear Society and serves on the Board of TerraPower LLC, a nuclear innovation company.
4
Ms. Svinicki currently serves as an adjunct professor of nuclear engineering and radiological sciences at the University of Michigan. She also serves on the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine’s committee to address specific issues related to nuclear terrorism threats.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Lizanne Thomas
Partner, Jones Day (retired)
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 67
Director since:
April 2023
|
Board committees: Compensation and Talent Development (Chair); Finance; Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility
Other public company directorships: Logility Supply Chain Solutions, Inc.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Ms. Thomas’ qualifications include mergers and public and private acquisitions expertise as well as corporate governance and stockholder activism experience. Her legal background and extensive governance work with publicly traded companies across a wide spectrum of industries are all of value to the Board.
|
4
Ms. Thomas retired at the end of 2023 as Partner and the Chair of the Governance and Activism practice of the global law firm Jones Day after 41 years of service. In addition to leading the firm’s corporate governance and activism practice, she has substantial experience in public company mergers and acquisitions, having led many of the firm’s multi-billion dollar transactions. Ms. Thomas served in various senior management roles at Jones Day, including most recently as Partner-in-Charge of the firm’s Southeast U.S. Region from 2014 through 2022.
4
She currently serves on the Board of Logility Supply Chain Solutions, Inc. (formerly American Software, Inc.), where she chairs the Governance Committee and also serves on the Audit and the Compensation Committees. She previously served on the Boards of Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen, Inc., Atlantic Capital Bancshares and Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Inc. In 2016, Ms. Thomas was named one of the top 100 directors by the National Association of Corporate Directors.
4
Ms. Thomas is a Fellow of the American College of Governance Lawyers and is Chair of the Georgia Research Alliance. She also serves on the Board of Trustees of Furman University and the Lettie Pate Evans Foundation.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
23
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Christopher C. Womack
Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer of Southern Company
|
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Age: 67
Director since:
March 2023
|
Board committees: None
Other public company directorships: Invesco Ltd.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Director Highlights
Mr. Womack’s qualifications include operating company CEO experience, power delivery experience and human resources experience. His extensive knowledge of the Company, its customers and communities based on more than 35 years of service, as well as his external affairs and government policy expertise, are valuable to the Board.
|
4
Mr. Womack was named President, effective March 2023; Chief Executive Officer, effective May 2023; and Chairman of the Board, effective December 2023. He has held numerous leadership positions across the Southern Company system, most recently serving as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Georgia Power since June 2021 and President of Georgia Power since November 2020. Prior to that, Mr. Womack served as Executive Vice President and President of External Affairs of the Company from January 2009 to October 2020. Mr. Womack joined Southern Company in 1988 and has served as executive vice president of external affairs at Georgia Power and senior vice president and senior production officer of Southern Company Generation, where he was responsible for coal, gas, and hydro generation for Georgia Power and Savannah Electric, a subsidiary of Southern Company that merged into Georgia Power in 2006. Mr. Womack also served as senior vice president of human resources and chief people officer at Southern Company, as well as senior vice president of public relations and corporate services at Alabama Power.
4
Prior to joining Southern Company, Mr. Womack worked on Capitol Hill for the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington D.C. He served as a legislative aide for former Congressman Leon E. Panetta and as staff director for the Subcommittee on Personnel and Police for the Committee on House Administration.
4
Mr. Womack is a Director of Invesco Ltd., where he serves on the Audit Committee, the Nomination and Corporate Governance Committee and the Compensation Committee. Mr. Womack served on the Board of Essential Utilities, Inc. until 2023.
4
Mr. Womack also serves on the Board of Georgia Ports Authority. He is past chair of the Board of the East Lake Foundation and is on the national Board of The First Tee. Mr. Womack previously chaired the Atlanta Convention and Visitors Bureau Board and the Atlanta Sports Cou
ncil.
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Henry A. "Hal" Clark III
|
Henry A. "Hal" Clark III will retire from our Board at the end of his term on the date of the annual meeting. We sincerely thank him for his many years of service to the Board, the Company and its stockholders.
|
||||
|
24
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Members |
|
William G. Smith, Jr.
|
|
Janaki Akella |
|
Henry A. Clark III |
Attendance
98%
Meetings in 2024
9
|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
Donald M. James |
|
David E. Meador | |||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The Audit Committee’s duties and responsibilities include the following:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Oversee the Company’s financial reporting, audit process, internal controls and legal, regulatory and ethical compliance.
4
Appoint the Company’s independent registered public accounting firm, approve its services and fees and establish and review the scope and timing of its audits.
4
Recommend the filing of the Company’s and its registrant subsidiaries’ annual financial statements with the SEC.
|
4
Review and discuss the Company’s financial statements with management, the internal auditors and the independent registered public accounting firm, including critical audit matters, critical accounting policies and practices, material alternative financial treatments within GAAP, proposed adjustments, control recommendations, review of internal controls for nonfinancial sustainability-related data and disclosures, significant management judgments and accounting estimates, new accounting policies, changes in accounting principles, any disagreements with management and other material written communications between the internal auditors and/or the independent registered public accounting firm and management.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The Board has determined that each member of the Audit Committee is independent as defined by the NYSE corporate governance rules within its listing standards and rules of the SEC promulgated pursuant to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The Board has also determined that each member of the Audit Committee is financially literate under NYSE corporate governance rules and that William G. Smith, Jr. qualifies as an audit committee financial expert as defined by the SEC.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Members |
|
Janaki Akella
|
|
Shantella E. Cooper |
Attendance
100%
Meetings in 2024
5
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
Dale E. Klein |
|
Kristine L. Svinicki | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Business Security and Resiliency Committee’s duties and responsibilities include the following: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Oversee management’s efforts to establish and continuously improve enterprise-wide security policies, programs, standards and controls, including those related to cyber and physical security.
|
4
Oversee management’s efforts to monitor significant security events and operational and compliance activities.
4
Oversee management’s use of artificial intelligence and associated benefits and risk management.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Board has determined that each member of the Business Security and Resiliency Committee is independent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
25
|
||||
| Members |
|
Lizanne Thomas
|
|
David J. Grain |
Attendance
100%
Meetings in 2024
7
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
Donald M. James |
|
Dale E. Klein | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Compensation and Talent Development Committee’s duties and responsibilities include the following: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Evaluate the performance of the CEO at least annually, review the evaluation with the independent Directors of the Board and approve the compensation level of the CEO for ratification by the independent Directors of the Board based on this evaluation.
4
Oversee the evaluation of, and review and approve the compensation level of, the other executive officers.
4
Review and approve compensation plans and programs, including performance-based compensation, equity-based compensation programs and perquisites.
4
Review CEO and other management succession plans with the CEO and the full Board, including succession of the CEO in the event of an emergency.
|
4
Review risks and associated risk management activities related to human capital, including talent management, development and retention; employee engagement and well-being; Intentional Inclusion initiatives; performance management; and annual pay reviews.
4
Review the assessment of risk associated with employee compensation policies and practices, particularly performance-based compensation, as they relate to risk management practices and/or risk-
taking incentives.
4
Oversee and review annually the Company’s plans for leadership development.
4
Review and discuss with management the CD&A.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The Board has determined that each member of the Compensation and Talent Development Committee is independent as defined by the NYSE corporate governance rules within its listing standards.
The Compensation and Talent Development Committee engaged Pay Governance LLC, a third-party consultant, to provide an independent assessment of the current executive compensation program and any management-recommended changes to that program and to work with management to ensure that the executive compensation program is designed and administered consistent with the Compensation and Talent Development Committee’s requirements.
Pay Governance also advises the Compensation and Talent Development Committee on executive compensation and related corporate governance trends.
Pay Governance is engaged directly by the Compensation and Talent Development Committee and does not provide any services to management unless authorized to do so by the Compensation and Talent Development Committee. The Compensation and Talent Development Committee reviewed Pay Governance’s independence and determined that Pay Governance is independent and the engagement did not present any conflicts of interest. Pay Governance also determined that it was independent from management, which was confirmed in a written statement delivered to the Compensation and Talent Development Committee.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Members |
|
John D. Johns
|
|
Henry A. Clark |
Attendance
100%
Meetings in 2024
6
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
Donald M. James
|
|
Lizanne Thomas | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Finance Committee’s duties and responsibilities include the following: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Review the Company’s financial matters and recommend actions to the Board such as dividend philosophy and financial plan approval.
4
Provide input regarding the Company's financial plan and associated financial goals.
|
4
Review the financial strategy of and the strategic deployment of capital by the Company.
4
Provide input to the Compensation and Talent Development Committee on financial goals and metrics for the Company’s annual and long-term incentive compensation programs.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Board has determined that each member of the Finance Committee is independent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
26
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Members |
|
David J. Grain
|
|
Shantella E. Cooper |
Attendance
95%
Meetings in 2024
5
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
John D. Johns |
|
Lizanne Thomas | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee’s duties and responsibilities include the following: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Recommend Board size and membership criteria and identify, evaluate and recommend Director candidates.
4
Oversee and make recommendations regarding the composition of the Board and its committees.
4
Oversee succession planning for the Board and key leadership roles on the Board and its committees.
4
Review and make recommendations regarding total compensation for non-employee Directors.
4
Oversee the Company’s stockholder engagement program.
|
4
Periodically review and recommend updates to the Corporate Governance Guidelines and Board committee charters.
4
Coordinate the performance evaluations of the Board and its committees.
4
Oversee the Company’s practices and positions to advance its corporate citizenship, including environmental, sustainability and corporate responsibility initiatives.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Board has determined that each member of the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee is independent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Members |
|
Dale E. Klein
|
|
Anthony F. Earley, Jr. |
Attendance
100%
Meetings in 2024
5
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
David E. Meador |
|
Kristine L. Svinicki | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Operations, Environmental and Safety Committee’s duties and responsibilities include the following: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Oversee information, activities and events relative to significant operations of the Southern Company system including nuclear and other power generation facilities, electric transmission and distribution, natural gas distribution and storage, fuel and information technology initiatives.
4
Oversee business strategies designed to address the long-
term reduction of GHG emissions, fleet transition and related risks and opportunities across the Company.
|
4
Oversee significant environmental and safety regulation, policy and operational matters, including net zero carbon strategies.
4
Oversee the Southern Company system’s management of significant construction projects.
4
Provide input to the Compensation and Talent Development Committee on the key operational goals and metrics for the incentive compensation programs.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| The Board has determined that each member of the Operations, Environmental and Safety Committee is independent. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
27
|
||||
|
4
The combined role of Chairman and CEO is held by Chris Womack, who is the Director most familiar with our business and industry (including the regulatory structure and other industry-specific matters) and is most capable of effectively identifying strategic priorities and leading discussion and execution of strategy. During his tenure as Chairman and CEO, Mr. Womack has proven instrumental in driving forward Southern Company’s strategic priorities.
4
The Board believes that the combined role of Chairman and CEO promotes the development and execution of our strategy. Independent Directors and management have different perspectives and roles in strategy development. The CEO brings Company-specific experience and expertise, while our independent Directors bring experience, oversight and expertise from outside the Company and its industry. At the same time, several of our independent Directors have deep experience within our industry, and all of our independent Directors receive comprehensive industry information from diverse sources, both internal and external, to best position them to oversee the Company’s strategy and key risks.
4
The Board believes that the combined role of Chairman and CEO facilitates the flow of information between management and the Board, which is essential to effective corporate governance. For example, the Board recognizes the importance of presenting the Board with robust and comprehensive meeting agendas and information. As a result, a key element of the Lead Independent Director’s role is working with the Chairman to set the agenda for Board meetings and reviewing and approving the meeting materials.
|
||||||||
|
28
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Anthony F. Earley, Jr.
Lead Independent Director
Provides strong independent leadership and independent oversight of executive management
|
|||||||
|
4
Chair executive sessions of the non-management Directors, which are included on the agenda of every regular board meeting, with the ability to call an executive session
4
Chair Board meetings in the absence of the Chairman
4
Work with the Chairman to set the agenda for Board meetings
4
Approve the agenda (with the ability to add agenda items) and schedule for Board meetings to provide that there is sufficient time for discussion of all agenda items
4
Approve information sent to the Board
4
Meet regularly with the Chairman
|
4
Act as the principal liaison between the Chairman and the non-management Directors (although every Director has direct and complete access to the Chairman at any time)
4
Serve as the primary contact Director for stockholders and other interested parties
4
Communicate any sensitive issues to the Directors
4
Oversee the independent Directors’ performance evaluation of the Chairman, in conjunction with the chair of the Compensation and Talent Development Committee
4
Partner with the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee and the Chairman in the recruitment and retention of Directors and management
|
|||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
29
|
||||
|
30
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| 1 | Board Evaluation | The Lead Independent Director, in conjunction with the Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee, oversees the annual self-assessment process on behalf of the Board. | ||||||||||||
| 2 | Committee Evaluations | The charter of each committee of the Board also requires an annual performance evaluation, which traditionally is overseen by the chair of each committee. | ||||||||||||
| 3 | Interviews and Discussion |
The Board self-evaluation process involves completion of a written questionnaire by each Board member, followed by an interview of each Director conducted by an independent third party. The independent third party reviews the results of the evaluation process with the Lead Independent Director. The Lead Independent Director leads a discussion with the full Board to review the results of the self-evaluation and identify follow up items.
The committee self-evaluation process involves a review and discussion for each committee. The process is led by the chair of each committee and is conducted in executive session.
|
||||||||||||
| 4 | Outcome | The objective is to allow the Directors to share their perspectives and consider adjustments or enhancements in response to the feedback. | ||||||||||||
|
In 2024, the Board participated in a multi-day, expanded off-site strategy session that included presentations by external experts and internal leaders and robust dialogue among the members of the Board. Key topics addressed by external experts included the evolving nature of the utility industry, the growth of data centers and infrastructure and related risks and opportunities for the industry, the dynamic political and regulatory landscape and potential long-term impacts on our business and how intentional inclusion facilitates a corporate growth strategy. Key topics led by senior management across the Company included our long-term financial plan, affordability for our customers, the future of nuclear development, projected customer growth and fleet transition.
|
||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
31
|
||||
|
Audit
Committee |
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to financial reporting and ethics and compliance-related matters.
4
Reviews the adequacy of the risk oversight process and documentation that appropriate enterprise risk management and oversight are occurring. The documentation includes a report that tracks which significant risk reviews have occurred and the committee(s) reviewing such risks. In addition, an overview is provided at least annually of the risk assessment and profile process conducted by Company management.
4
Receives regular updates from Internal Auditing and quarterly updates as part of the disclosure controls process.
|
||||||||||
|
Business
Security and Resiliency Committee |
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to cybersecurity, physical security, operational resiliency and technological developments and the response to incidents with respect thereto.
4
Reviews the adequacy of processes and procedures to protect critical cyber and physical assets and resiliency of ongoing operations.
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to use of artificial intelligence (AI).
|
||||||||||
|
Compensation
and Talent Development Committee |
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to human capital.
4
Reviews the assessment of risks associated with the Company’s employee compensation policies and practices, particularly performance-based compensation, as they relate to risk management practices and/or risk-taking incentives. The review is conducted at least annually and whenever significant changes to any business unit’s compensation practices are under consideration.
|
||||||||||
|
Finance
Committee |
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to financial matters of the Company such as financial integrity, major capital investments, dividend policy, financing programs and financial and capital allocation strategies.
|
||||||||||
|
Nominating,
Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee |
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to the state and federal regulatory and legislative environment, stockholder activism and environmental, sustainability and corporate social responsibility.
|
||||||||||
|
Operations,
Environmental and Safety Committee |
4
Reviews risks and associated risk management activities related to significant operations of the Southern Company system such as safety, system reliability, nuclear, gas and other operations, environmental regulation and policy, net zero carbon strategies, fuel cost and availability.
|
||||||||||
|
32
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Spotlight on Cybersecurity and Artificial Intelligence Risks | ||||||||||
|
Cybersecurity is a critical component of our risk management program. The Board devotes significant time and attention to overseeing cybersecurity risk, and our approach to cybersecurity governance establishes oversight throughout the enterprise.
4
The Business Security and Resiliency Committee, comprised solely of independent Directors, is charged with oversight of risks related to cybersecurity, physical security and operational resiliency. The Business Security and Resiliency Committee includes directors with an understanding of cyber issues. The Business Security and Resiliency Committee meets at every regular Board meeting and when needed in the event of a specific threat or emerging issue. The Chief Information Security Officer reports to the Business Security and Resiliency Committee at each regular committee meeting.
4
We use a cross-functional, risk-based, and “defense in depth” approach to prevent, detect, identify, mitigate, respond to and recover from cybersecurity threats and incidents. Recognizing that no single technology, process or business control can effectively prevent or mitigate all risks related to cyber threats, we employ multiple technologies, processes and controls, all working independently but as part of a cohesive strategy to reduce risk. This strategy is regularly tested through auditing, penetration testing, vulnerability testing and other exercises designed to assess effectiveness.
4
Overall network security efforts are led by the Chief Information Security Officer and the Technology Security Organization, the organization responsible for implementing, monitoring and maintaining cybersecurity practices across the Company, and aided by the COO and the Energy Management System and Generation Organization. We utilize a 24/7 Security Operations Center, which facilitates real-time situational awareness across the cyber-threat environment, and a robust Insider Threat Protection Program and Fusion Center that leverages cross-function information sharing to assess insider threat activity.
The Business Security and Resiliency Committee is also charged with oversight of the Company's use of AI and the associated benefits and risk management thereof. During 2024, the Company adopted an AI Acceptable Use Policy to guide employees in leveraging this technology for the benefit of our customers, while protecting data, helping to ensure accuracy, respecting intellectual property rights, preventing bias and keeping people involved in decisions.
|
|||||||||||
|
Spotlight on Environmental Risks
|
||||||||||
|
The Board oversees the strategy and risks of climate and environmental matters. These matters are important to the long-term success of the Company and, accordingly, are integrated into topics reviewed and discussed at each Board meeting as well as the Board’s annual in-depth strategy session. Our committee structure facilitates oversight of these matters.
4
The Audit Committee oversees the adequacy and effectiveness of internal controls, including the development of internal controls for non-financial sustainability-related data and disclosures
4
The Business Security and Resiliency Committee oversees physical security and operational resiliency, including issues and policies relating to climate change and adaptation and its impact on business resiliency
4
The Compensation and Talent Development Committee oversees total rewards strategies, including aligning incentive compensation with our fleet transition goals
4
The Finance Committee oversees capital deployment, including alignment of long-term capital allocation strategies with net zero objectives
4
The Nominating, Governance and Corporate Responsibility Committee oversees significant corporate responsibility strategies, programs and practices, including environmental and climate matters through community engagement, public policy advocacy, political contributions and lobbying and assessing feedback from stockholders and other stakeholders
4
The Operations, Environmental and Safety Committee oversees progress toward our GHG emission reduction goals and fleet transition, including net zero carbon strategies, resource planning, emerging technologies and R&D and the impact on employees and communities of implementing the business strategies and operations
|
|||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
33
|
||||
|
4
We published a Trade Association and Climate Engagement Report to provide additional transparency by bringing together existing disclosures and providing analysis and insight into our net zero advocacy positions and memberships in trade associations, along with an assessment of whether the climate change statements or positions of key trade associations are aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement.
4
We describe the principles and public policy advocacy positions that are representative of the views we express in our engagements on climate-related matters.
4
Our Report on Political Engagement Disclosures includes political contributions made by our subsidiaries and the lobbying dollars spent by trade associations that lobby at the state and federal level and to which our subsidiaries pay annual dues of $50,000 or more.
4
Our Overview of Southern Company Policies and Practices for Political Engagement summarizes our approach to governance and oversight of these matters.
|
||||||||
|
34
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
4
Board of Directors
4
Composition of Board Committees
4
Board Committee Charters
4
Corporate Governance Guidelines
4
Company Leadership
|
4
Director and Executive Stock Ownership Guidelines
4
Code of Ethics
4
Restated Certificate of Incorporation
4
Amended and Restated By-Laws
|
4
SEC Filings
4
Overview of Southern Company Policies and Practices for Political Engagement
4
Restrictions on Hedging or Pledging
|
||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
35
|
||||
|
Post Annual Meeting |
|
Off-season Engagement and Evaluation of Best Practices |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Discuss vote outcomes in light of existing practices, as well as feedback received from stockholders during proxy season
4
Review corporate governance trends, recent regulatory developments and the Company’s own corporate governance documents, policies and procedures
4
Determine topics for discussion during off-season stockholder engagement
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Engage with stockholders to better understand their viewpoints and inform discussions in the boardroom
4
Independent Directors actively participate in engagement efforts
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annual Meeting
4
Provide a forum for stockholders to ask questions of senior management about the Company
4
Determine voting results for management and stockholder proposals
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Engagement Prior to Annual Meeting | Evaluate Potential Enhancements |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Seek feedback on potential matters for stockholder consideration at the annual meeting
4
Discuss stockholder proposals with proponents
4
Publish annual report and proxy statement
4
Discuss Board’s rationale for its voting recommendations with key stockholders
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Review governance and executive compensation practices
4
Consider sustainability disclosures and governance and transparency enhancements
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
36
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Significant topics for stockholder engagement included:
4
Climate-related risks and opportunities, our decarbonization efforts and progress toward meeting our interim and long-term GHG goals, and just transition, including the impact of our fleet transition on our workforce and the communities we serve
4
Human capital management, including employee engagement, workforce training, development, hiring and retention and Intentional Inclusion efforts
4
Management succession planning and leadership development
4
Board governance, including Board leadership structure, Board succession planning and Board skills
4
Political engagement and trade association memberships and how our activities align with our business strategies
4
Board oversight of key risks and opportunities, including perspectives on increased projected load growth
|
4
Executive compensation and how our core metrics are aligned with our business strategies and stockholder interests
4
Cybersecurity and artificial intelligence
4
Human rights practices, including supply chain considerations
We also discussed how the Board oversees these topics and how they tie to our long-term strategy.
|
|||||||||||||
|
Independent Directors actively participate in engagement efforts with our largest stockholders.
In 2024 and 2025, the Lead Independent Director directly engaged with stockholders representing approximately 20% of our outstanding shares.
|
||||||||||||||
|
In early May 2024, we hosted an in-person environmental stakeholder forum in Washington D.C. Chris Womack, our CEO, led discussions with stakeholders. Other senior leaders who participated included the Chief Legal Officer, COO, President of External Affairs, SVP of Research, Environment and Sustainability and VP of System Planning. Key topics discussed included our net zero by 2050 goal, decarbonization efforts, R&D, enhancing affordability and resilience. Twenty stakeholders participated in the forum. Stakeholder participants include regional environmental and socially focused non-
governmental organizations, stockholder advocacy groups and state pension funds. We also invited the co-lead investors of our Climate Action 100+ investor engagement team to participate.
|
||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
37
|
||||
| Annual cash retainers | ||||||||
| Cash retainer | 120,000 | |||||||
| Additional cash retainer if serving as the Lead Independent Director of the Board | 35,000 | |||||||
|
Additional cash retainer if serving as a chair of a standing committee of the Board other than the Audit Committee
|
20,000 | |||||||
|
Additional cash retainer if serving as chair of the Audit Committee
|
25,000 | |||||||
| Annual equity grant | ||||||||
| In deferred common stock units until Board membership ends | 170,000 | |||||||
| Meeting fees | ||||||||
| Meeting fees are not paid for participation in a meeting of the Board | — | |||||||
| Meeting fees are not paid for participation in a meeting of a committee or subcommittee of the Board | — | |||||||
| Name |
Fees Earned or
Paid in Cash ($) (1) |
Stock
Awards ($) (2) |
All Other
Compensation ($) (3) |
Total
($) |
||||||||||
| Janaki Akella | 131,667 | 170,000 | — | 301,667 | ||||||||||
| Henry A. Clark III | 120,000 | 170,000 | — | 290,000 | ||||||||||
|
Shantella E. Cooper
(4)
|
143,016 | 203,478 | — | 346,494 | ||||||||||
| Anthony F. Earley, Jr. | 150,417 | 170,000 | — | 320,417 | ||||||||||
| David J. Grain | 149,167 | 170,000 | — | 319,167 | ||||||||||
| Donald M. James | 120,000 | 170,000 | — | 290,000 | ||||||||||
| John D. Johns | 140,000 | 170,000 | — | 310,000 | ||||||||||
| Dale E. Klein | 140,000 | 170,000 | — | 310,000 | ||||||||||
|
David E. Meador
|
120,000 | 170,000 | — | 290,000 | ||||||||||
|
Ernest J. Moniz
(5)
|
70,000 | 85,000 | 25,000 | 180,000 | ||||||||||
| William G. Smith, Jr. | 145,000 | 170,000 | — | 315,000 | ||||||||||
| Kristine L. Svinicki | 120,000 | 170,000 | — | 290,000 | ||||||||||
|
Lizanne Thomas
|
131,667 | 170,000 | — | 301,667 | ||||||||||
|
E. Jenner Wood III
(5)
|
70,000 | 85,000 | 25,000 | 180,000 | ||||||||||
|
38
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
39
|
||||
|
|||||||||||
|
4
As described in the CD&A beginning on
page
41
, we believe our compensation program provides the appropriate mix of fixed and at-risk compensation.
4
Our short- and long-term performance-based compensation program for our CEO:
•
Ties pay to overall Company performance;
•
Rewards achievement of financial and operational goals, relative TSR performance and progress toward meeting our GHG reduction goals; and
•
Is aligned with stockholder interests while remaining competitive with our industry peers.
|
|||||||||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
FOR
this proposal
|
||||||||||
|
40
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
The Compensation and Talent Development Committee (Compensation Committee or Committee) describes its key focus areas and its pay decisions for the year
|
|||||
|
We demonstrate how CEO pay is aligned with our performance and stockholder interests
|
|||||
|
We describe what we heard from investors on executive compensation topics from our outreach efforts and how the Committee responded to the input
|
|||||
|
We describe the details of our executive compensation program, including base salary, short- and long-term incentive awards and benefits
|
|||||
|
We describe our key compensation beliefs, the active compensation governance oversight by the Committee and the Board, peer groups, clawback policies and other compensation policies and practices
|
|||||
|
Annualized TSR in top quartile of peers
over the last 3 years
|
Adjusted EPS at the Top End
of 2024 Guidance Range
|
||||
|
77 consecutive years
of dividends paid
|
Plant Vogtle Unit 4 placed in service
marking the successful completion of a significant construction project
|
||||
| This CD&A focuses on the compensation for our CEO, CFO and our three other most highly compensated executive officers serving at the end of 2024. Collectively, these officers are referred to as the NEOs | |||||
|
Chris Womack | ||||
|
Chairman, President and CEO of
Southern Company |
|||||
|
Dan Tucker | ||||
| Executive Vice President and CFO of Southern Company | |||||
|
Stan Connally
|
||||
|
Executive Vice President and COO of Southern Company
|
|||||
|
Kim Greene | ||||
|
Chairman, President and CEO of
Georgia Power |
|||||
|
Jim Kerr | ||||
|
Chairman, President and CEO of
Southern Company Gas |
|||||
|
2024 Performance Against Key Metrics
4
Achieved
the top of our adjusted EPS guidance range with payout at 176% of target
4
Exceeded
our annual operational goals for customer experience and satisfaction, culture and generation reliability and sustainability goals with a calculated payout of 177% of target for our CEO
4
Delivered
on our objective to provide long-term value to stockholders with top quartile TSR and ROE results and exceeding target on our GHG Reduction Metric with relative TSR payout at 168% of target, ROE payout at 180% of target and GHG Reduction Metric payout at 136% of target
|
||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
41
|
||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||
|
Lizanne Thomas
|
David J. Grain | Donald M. James | Dale E. Klein | ||||||||
|
42
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
CEO 2024 Target Pay
|
|||||
|
In making 2024 pay decisions for our CEO, the Committee continued to demonstrate alignment between CEO pay and Company performance based on three factors:
4
Placing the overwhelming majority of the CEO’s total compensation at risk based on the achievement of Committee-approved goals
4
Selecting metrics and targets to align pay with long-term value creation for stockholders
4
Actively reviewing performance to appropriately align payouts in a manner consistent with stockholder interests and stockholder feedback
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
43
|
||||
|
What We Do
|
What We Don’t Do | ||||||||||||||||
Align actual payouts with performance and stockholder interests
100% of short- and long-term incentive awards are performance based
Independent compensation consultant retained by the Committee
Policy against hedging and pledging of stock by Directors and executive officers
Executive officers receive limited perquisites that make up a small portion of total compensation
Change-in-control severance payouts require double-trigger of change in control and termination of employment
Strong stock ownership requirements for executive officers
|
Annual compensation risk assessment undertaken with input from an independent consultant
Clawback provisions apply to all incentive compensation awards with enhanced Clawback Policy provisions for key executives, including in the event of misconduct
90% of CEO target pay is at risk based on achievement of performance goals
Evaluate stockholder feedback through year-round engagement and results of prior years' Say on Pay votes
Dividends on stock awards received only if underlying award is earned
Annual compensation review conducted to help ensure fair and equitable pay
|
No tax gross ups on executive perquisites for executive officers (except on certain relocation-related expenses)
No employment agreements with our executive officers
No excise tax gross-ups on change-in control severance arrangement
No additional service granted under supplemental retirement plans since 2014
|
|||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||
|
44
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
At our 2024 annual meeting, we received 95% support of the votes cast on the Say on Pay vote, consistent with the high level of stockholder support we have received for many years.
|
||||||||||
|
What we heard
|
What we did | |||||||||||||
|
Alignment between CEO pay and financial performance
|
The Committee evaluated plan design to help ensure our programs produce results that are aligned with stockholders’ interests and overall Company performance; we continued the overall plan design given stockholders’ year-over-year support for the program
The Committee continued to review all adjustments to earnings, whether positive or negative, to determine their appropriateness based on management control, materiality and overall impact to investors
|
||||||||||||
|
Consistent with the 95% support for the 2024 Say on Pay vote, stockholders expressed the following:
4
Support for the 2023 payout decisions
4
Confidence in the overall pay program designs
4
Trust that the Committee will act to promote pay for performance alignment and consider the stockholder experience
|
||||||||||||||
| What we heard | What we did | |||||||||||||
|
Focus on human capital
management
|
The Committee continued to focus on employee engagement, talent development and succession planning efforts
Company continued providing aggregated EEO-1 workforce data in 2024
Company expanded our reimagined, modern “corporate university” to develop mid-level high potential leaders with comprehensive development opportunities
|
||||||||||||
|
4
Interest from stockholders on succession planning for executive positions
4
Interest from stockholders in our Intentional Inclusion efforts, talent development and transparency on workforce data
|
||||||||||||||
| What we heard | What we did | |||||||||||||
|
Alignment of pay with fleet transition strategy
|
The Committee continued to include the GHG reduction metric in 2024 LTI awards for key executives using a quantitative metric of cumulative MW change as a reliable measure of progress in our fleet transition, along with a qualitative modifier
The Committee incorporated energy efficiency and load flexibility/demand response MWs into the quantitative GHG metric starting in 2024
|
||||||||||||
|
4
Support for linking CEO pay with the Company's fleet transition strategy and GHG reduction goals
4
Interest from stockholders in understanding the increased projected load growth in our service territory and how our fleet may evolve over time
|
||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
45
|
||||
| Element | Vehicle | Link to Stockholder Value | |||||||||||||||
|
Base Salary
|
Cash |
4
Fixed cash compensation rewards scope of responsibility, experience and individual performance to attract and retain top talent
|
||||||||||||||
|
Annual Performance
Pay Program (PPP)
|
Cash |
4
Promotes strong short-term business results by rewarding value drivers, without creating an incentive to take excessive risk
4
Serves as key compensation vehicle for rewarding annual results and differentiating performance each year
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
Long-Term Incentive Program (LTI)
|
Performance share units (PSUs) (paid in shares of common stock)
Performance-based restricted stock units (PRSUs) (paid in shares of common stock)
|
4
PSUs reward achievement of financial goals and stock price performance compared to utility peers over a three-year period
4
PRSUs reward achievement of financial goals related to our ability to pay regular dividends while promoting employee retention
4
Equity awards provide a significant stake in the long-term financial success of the Company that is aligned with stockholder interests and promotes employee retention
4
For the CEO, CFO and COO, PSUs link a meaningful portion of LTI compensation with the Company’s GHG reduction goals
|
||||||||||||||
|
Employee
Savings Plan |
401(k) plan |
4
Creates shared responsibility for retirement through matching contributions
|
||||||||||||||
|
|
Pension Benefits | Defined benefit and supplemental pension plans |
4
Financially efficient vehicle to provide market-competitive retirement benefits while promoting employee retention
|
||||||||||||||
|
46
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Name |
2023
($) |
2024
($) |
|||||||||
|
Chris Womack
(1)
|
1,450,000 | 1,500,000 | |||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 790,763 | 838,208 | |||||||||
| Stan Connally | 781,279 | 820,343 | |||||||||
| Kim Greene | 900,004 | 945,005 | |||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 850,000 | 884,000 | |||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
47
|
||||
| Base Salary |
|
Target Award
Percentage |
|
Performance Goal Achievement
(1)
|
|
PPP Award Earned | ||||||||||||||
|
(% of Base Salary;
varies by pay grade)
|
(% of target level; payout
ranges from 0% to 200%) |
|||||||||||||||||||
| g | 65% | EPS | ||||||
| g | 35% | Operational | ||||||
| g | 45% | EPS | ||||||
| g | 35% | Operational | ||||||
| g | 20% |
Business Unit
Net Income
|
||||||
|
48
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Belief:
The Committee believes that paying on adjusted EPS and business unit net income in conjunction with active Committee engagement aligns pay outcomes with stockholder interests
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
In setting the financial goals, the Committee reviews the financial plan approved by the Finance Committee to reflect the current economic and regulatory environment and expectations for investment opportunities with the aim to deliver regular, predictable and sustainable EPS and dividend growth to stockholders over the long term.
The Committee believes that setting goals in support of the achievement of our long-term EPS growth objectives is in the best interest of stockholders, rather than absolute comparisons of year-over-year GAAP results. This approach focuses on the long-term EPS growth trajectory and, when setting the EPS goal, considers unique factors that may have impacted the prior year’s results, such as weather-related revenue and expenses; regulatory, legislative or policy changes from federal or state authorities; and the impact of acquisitions and dispositions.
The Committee calibrates the EPS goal to align with our publicly announced guidance range and considers industry comparisons and growth expectations to establish the threshold, target and maximum performance levels. This process resulted in the Committee setting the following EPS goal for 2024.
|
|||||||||||||||||
| Year | EPS Guidance Range | EPS Target (Middle of Guidance) | Year over Year EPS Target Increase | ||||||||||||||
| 2024 | $3.95 - $4.05 | $4.00 | $0.40 (11%) | ||||||||||||||
|
For 2025, the Committee set a target EPS goal of $4.25 reflecting the middle of the 2025 EPS guidance range.
When determining payouts on the financial goals, the Committee remains actively engaged at every regular Committee meeting in reviewing potential EPS or net income adjustments. In approving these adjustments, the Committee considers:
4
Whether the item was contemplated in the financial plan
4
Whether the item was outside of normal operations (one-time versus recurring item or something outside of management’s control)
4
Whether the pay outcome would align with stockholder interests
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
Belief:
The Committee believes that operational goal targets should be set at challenging levels to achieve and drive top quartile performance and continuous improvement
|
||||||||
|
The Committee establishes operational goals that are primarily based on industry benchmarks, with the objective of delivering top quartile results, and top decile where appropriate, compared to industry peers. For goals that do not have a comparable industry benchmark, the Committee sets stretch targets to motivate continuous improvement.
As part of its goal-setting process, the Committee reviews previous goals and performance along with input from the Operations, Environmental and Safety Committee on operational goals to appropriately align the threshold, target and maximum goals with Company performance expectations.
|
||||||||
| Financial Goals |
Threshold
($) |
Target
($) |
Maximum
($) |
Result
(1)
($)
|
Calculated
Achievement
(%)
|
||||||||||||
| EPS | 3.80 | 4.00 | 4.20 | 4.05 | 176 | % | |||||||||||
| Alabama Power Net Income (millions) | 1,289 | 1,420 | 1,490 | 1,430 | 125 | % | |||||||||||
| Georgia Power Net Income (millions) | 2,250 | 2,475 | 2,580 | 2,541 | 184 | % | |||||||||||
| Southern Company Gas Net Income (millions) | 646 | 713 | 765 | 740 | 179 | % | |||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
49
|
||||
| Goal | Why it’s important | What it measures and how we set the goal | ||||||
| EPS |
4
Supports commitment to provide stockholders superior risk-adjusted returns and to support and grow the dividend
4
Increased goal weighting for 2024 reflects the Company's emphasis on acting as One Team and improving collaboration and consistency across the business units
|
4
The Company’s net income from ongoing business activities divided by average shares outstanding during the year
4
EPS target is consistent with our business plan and aligned with the midpoint of our publicly-announced guidance range for the year
|
||||||
| Business Unit Net Income |
4
Supports delivery of stockholder value and contributes to the Company’s sound financial policies and stable credit ratings
|
4
Net income
4
Targets are consistent with our 2024 business plan
|
||||||
|
Customer Experience and Satisfaction Goals
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Goal | Target | Weight | Performance | Goal Payout | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Customer Satisfaction –
Continue to deliver strong performance for residential, business and managed account segments
|
Achieve median for J.D. Power and Net Promoter Score benchmarks | 30% |
4
Top quartile for General Business segment
4
2nd quartile for Residential and Managed Account segments
|
166% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Power Delivery –
Continuous focus on transmission and distribution reliability, and the frequency and duration of outages experienced by customers
|
Distribution duration: 115.7 Distribution freq.: 1.078 Transmission duration: 5.9 Transmission freq.: 0.093
|
15% | Exceeded targets for transmission and distribution reliability | 177% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Gas Operations –
Improve pipeline safety and reliability by reducing damages from excavations and leak response time
|
Damage Ratio: < 2.32 Leak Response: 2.0%
|
Exceeded target for leak response time, while results were below target for damage prevention | 167% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
50
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Workforce Goals
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Goal | Target | Weight | Performance | Goal Payout | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Safety –
Improve critical risk controls through the safety and health management system; reduce occurrence of serious injuries
|
Continuous focus on safety culture and prevention | 20% | Significantly exceeded targets with a serious injury rate of 0.05; however, unfortunately, there were two employee fatalities in 2024 | 184% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Culture –
Foster a dynamic and welcoming workplace that drives employee satisfaction and supplier engagement and inclusion
|
Achieve top quartile on work environment benchmarks and drive supplier engagement and inclusion
|
20% | Significantly exceeded targets | 174% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Generation Reliability and Sustainability Goals
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Goal | Target | Weight | Performance | Goal Payout | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Generation Reliability –
Achieve top quartile for Annual Equivalent Forced Outage Rate (EFOR) goal
|
EFOR of 8.23%
|
15% | Achieved industry leading results by maintaining a low annual EFOR of 1.21% | 200% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Carbon-Free Resource Availability –
Measures the Company’s capacity to generate energy from carbon-free resources (nuclear, solar, wind and hydro)
|
Nuclear: 93% Solar & Wind: >95% Hydro: 81%
|
Exceeded target for nuclear capacity factor, solar and wind assets | 200% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Gas Infrastructure –
Our pipeline replacement program and our focus on responding to leaks and preventing damages aims to mitigate the release of methane to the atmosphere and improve community safety
|
Replace 93 pipeline miles | Exceeded target on pipeline replacement program and leak response, while results were below target for damage prevention | 200% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Weight | Calculated Goal Payout | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Total Operational Goal Achievement | 100% | 177% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Kim Greene
|
Jim Kerr
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Customer Satisfaction | 30% | 30% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Safety | 20% | 20% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Culture | 20% | 20% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Electric Operations | 30% | — | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Gas Operations | — | 30% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
51
|
||||
|
||||||||||||||
|
Chris Womack
Chairman, President and CEO
|
||||||||||||||
|
Deliver Financial and Operational Success
4
Adjusted EPS finished at the top of guidance
4
Restored electric and gas service to customers following Hurricane Helene, the most destructive storm in Georgia Power's history, requiring an unprecedented rebuild of the transmission and distribution systems
4
Successful outcome of Georgia Power's 2023 IRP Update to meet unprecedented acceleration of load growth
4
Positive and constructive regulatory outcomes at Atlanta Gas Light and Virginia Natural Gas
4
Operational excellence across generation, power delivery and gas operations
|
||||||||||||||
|
Achieve Success with Plant Vogtle Units 3 and 4
4
Unit 4 entered commercial operation in April 2024
4
Leadership and governance of cost and schedule for both construction and operations, including a focus on quality construction, thorough documentation and procedures, and effective oversight of related regulatory processes
4
With all four units now in operation, Plant Vogtle is the largest generator of clean energy in the nation, expected to produce more than 30 million megawatt hours of electricity each year
|
||||||||||||||
|
Maintain Focus on Culture and Talent Development
4
Continued to promote a cross-company culture focused on collaboration and innovation
4
Continued to reinforce robust and thoughtful training program for key leaders focusing on business acumen and organizational efficiencies
4
Maintained a robust executive pipeline through succession planning and development
4
Focused on cultural bandwidth and leadership’s emotional intelligence for the purpose of enhancing leadership effectiveness and the ability to drive successful outcomes within their organizations
|
||||||||||||||
|
Foster Transparent and Collaborative Board Relationship
4
Led ongoing evolution of business strategy as Company prepared to meet increasing energy demand and excellent service for customers
4
Collaborated with Board to continue focus on thoughtful Board refreshment process
|
||||||||||||||
|
Execute Strategic Engagement with Key Stakeholders
4
Advanced the electric fleet transition, including completion of Plant Vogtle Unit 4, expansion of South Cheyenne Solar Facility and Millers Branch Solar Facility, commercial operation of Georgia's first battery energy storage system at the Mossy Branch Battery Facility, and invested in additional transmission to deliver energy to customers
4
Led robust stakeholder engagement program including an annual stakeholder forum
|
||||||||||||||
|
52
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Dan Tucker
Executive Vice
President and CFO of the Company
|
Stan Connally
Executive Vice
President and COO of
the Company
|
Kim Greene
Chairman, President
and CEO of
Georgia Power
|
Jim Kerr
Chairman, President
and CEO of Southern
Company Gas
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The following areas were considered when assessing the overall performance of the executive team:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
4
Strong financial and operational performance with adjusted EPS at top of guidance range
4
Continued to enhance the customer experience and strengthen customer satisfaction and loyalty
4
Facilitated customer growth and constructive regulatory, legislative and policy outcomes
4
Successful completion of Plant Vogtle Unit 4 and strong operating performance for Unit 3 and 4 and other nuclear facilities
4
Led business initiatives with a focus on collaboration and innovation to help ensure that we are positioned for success
|
4
Emphasis on our employees, including employee well-being, recruitment and development, and advancing Our Values, which focus on Safety First, Intentional Inclusion, Act with Integrity and Superior Performance
4
Strengthened leadership capabilities and bench strength, foster a culture of inclusion, engagement, innovation and execution
4
Commitment to transitioning the fleet while maintaining system reliability and affordability
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Name |
Target
2024 PPP
Opportunity
(% of salary)
|
Target
2024 PPP Opportunity ($) |
EPS
Payout (%) |
Net
Income
Payout
(%)
|
Operational
Payout
(%)
|
Calculated Total Payout
(%)
|
Approved Total
Payout (%) |
2024 PPP
Payout ($)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Chris Womack
(1)
|
130 | % | 1,950,000 | 176 | % | — | 177 | % | 176 | % | 171 | % |
|
3,334,500 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 85 | % | 712,477 | 176 | % | — | 177 | % | 176 | % | 176 | % |
|
1,253,960 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
(1)
|
85 | % | 697,292 | 176 | % | — | 177 | % | 176 | % | 171 | % |
|
1,192,369 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 100 | % | 945,005 | 176 | % | 184% | 180 | % | 179 | % | 179 | % |
|
1,691,558 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Jim Kerr
(1)
|
80 | % | 707,200 | 176 | % | 179 | % | 169 | % | 174 | % | 169 | % |
|
1,195,168 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
53
|
||||
| Weighting | |||||||||||||||||
| Metric(s) |
CEO, CFO & COO
|
Other NEOs | |||||||||||||||
|
PSUs - Relative TSR & Consolidated ROE
Earned solely on achievement of pre-established performance goals over 2024-2026 performance period Potential payout of 0-200% based on actual level of goal achievement
|
•
Relative TSR measured against an industry peer group
•
Consolidated Southern Company ROE
|
65% | 70% | ||||||||||||||
|
PSUs - GHG Reduction Metric
Earned solely on achievement of pre-established three-year performance metrics aligned with Company’s fleet transition to support our GHG reduction goals
|
•
Quantitative metric of cumulative MW change
•
Qualitative modifier
|
10% | N/A | ||||||||||||||
|
PRSUs - Cash from Operations Goal
Earned if 2024 cash from operations exceeds 2023 dividends. If earned, vest over three-year period
|
•
Cash from operations must exceed prior year’s dividends paid
|
25% | 30% | ||||||||||||||
| Goal | Why it’s important | What it measures and how we set the goal | ||||||
| Relative TSR | Aligns award with shareholder returns on a relative basis over the performance period |
TSR relative to a utility peer group of companies that are believed to be most similar to the Company in both business model and investors. It measures investment gains arising from stock price appreciation and dividends received from that investment. The peer group is described on
page
61
and is subject to change based on merger and acquisition activity.
|
||||||
| Consolidated ROE |
Aligns performance with delivering sustainable returns on invested capital
|
Consolidated Southern Company ROE of the traditional electric operating companies, Southern Company Gas and Southern Power | ||||||
|
GHG Reduction Metric (for CEO, CFO and COO)
|
Aligns performance with Southern Company’s 2030 and 2050 GHG emission reduction goals |
GHG reduction metric measures the progress on the Company’s fleet transition through quantitative and qualitative metrics
|
||||||
|
54
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Relative TSR
Performance |
Consolidated
ROE Performance |
Payout
|
|||||||||
| Maximum | 90th percentile or higher | 13.75 | % | 200 | % | ||||||
| Target | 50th percentile | 11.50 | % | 100 | % | ||||||
| Threshold | 10th percentile | 10.00 | % | 0 | % | ||||||
| Type of Generation | MW Crediting | ||||||||||
|
Addition of solar, nuclear and hydro
|
1.0 Times | ||||||||||
|
Addition of wind
(1)
|
1.25 Times | ||||||||||
|
Addition of energy storage
(2)
|
4 to 8 hours of full-load discharge: 0.5 Times
> 8 hours of full-load discharge: 0.75 Times |
||||||||||
| Energy Efficiency |
1.0 Times
|
||||||||||
| Load Flexibility / Demand Response | 1.0 Times | ||||||||||
|
Retirement of coal or gas steam
|
1.0 Times
|
||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
55
|
||||
|
2024-2026 Cumulative MW Change
(1)
|
Payout % of Target
|
|||||||
| < 1,044 MW | 0 | % | ||||||
| Threshold | 1,044 MW | 50 | % | |||||
| Target | 1,843 MW | 100 | % | |||||
| Maximum | 3,044 MW | 150 | % | |||||
| Name |
Target as
Percent of Base Salary |
PSU –
Relative
TSR
(1)
|
PSU –
Consolidated
ROE
(1)
|
PSU –
GHG
(1)
|
PRSU –
Cash From
Operations
(1)
|
Total
Long-Term
Grant
(100%)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Chris Womack
|
735 | % | $ | 4,410,000 | 2,756,250 | 1,102,500 | 2,756,250 |
|
|
11,025,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| # of units | 63,435 | 39,647 | 15,859 | 39,647 |
|
|
158,588 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 275 | % | $ | 922,029 | 576,268 | 230,507 | 576,268 |
|
|
2,305,073 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| # of units | 13,263 | 8,289 | 3,316 | 8,289 |
|
|
33,157 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Stan Connally | 250 | % | $ | 820,343 | 512,715 | 205,086 | 512,715 |
|
|
2,050,858 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| # of units | 11,800 | 7,375 | 2,950 | 7,375 |
|
|
29,500 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 275 | % | $ | 1,039,505 | 779,629 | — | 779,629 |
|
|
2,598,763 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| # of units | 14,953 | 11,214 | — | 11,214 |
|
|
37,381 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 250 | % | $ | 884,000 | 663,000 | — | 663,000 |
|
|
2,210,000 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| # of units | 12,716 | 9,537 | — | 9,537 |
|
|
31,790 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
56
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Performance Results
|
|||||
| PSUs – Relative TSR | 168 | % | |||
|
PSUs – ROE
(1)
|
180 | % | |||
|
PSUs – GHG (for Dan Tucker and Stan Connally only)
(2)
|
136 | % | |||
|
Total Weighted Average for Chris Womack, Kim Greene and Jim Kerr
|
173%
|
||||
| Total Weighted Average for Dan Tucker and Stan Connally |
168%
|
||||
| Financial Goals |
Threshold
(%) |
Target
(%) |
Maximum
(%) |
Result
(%)
|
Calculated
Achievement
(%)
|
||||||||||||
| Relative TSR | 10 | % | 50 | % | 90 | % | 77 | % | 168 | % | |||||||
|
ROE
(1)
|
10.00 | % | 11.50 | % | 13.75 | % | 13.31 | % | 180 | % | |||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
57
|
||||
| Name |
2022-2024 Target PSUs
|
2022-2024
PSUs Earned
|
|||||||||||||||
| Chris Womack | 26,083 | 50,587 | |||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 22,200 | 41,710 | |||||||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
|
19,449 | 36,541 | |||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 20,935 | 40,602 | |||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 19,241 | 37,317 | |||||||||||||||
|
58
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
59
|
||||
|
60
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Peer Group for 2024 Compensation Decisions
|
Peer Group for Relative TSR Metric for
2024-2026 Performance Period |
||||
|
4
Used to determine the total direct compensation for our executives
4
Approximates the competitive market in which we compete for talent in executive and managerial roles
4
Consists of 19 publicly traded utility companies (subject to changes resulting from mergers and acquisitions)
4
In partnership with Pay Governance, the Committee’s annual review focuses on large companies (at least $6 billion in revenues) with more similar businesses, including other large diversified utilities that have combined electric and gas operations
4
We target the total direct compensation for our executives at market median of the peer group
|
4
Used to measure our relative TSR performance for incentive compensation
4
The peer group consists of 23 publicly traded utility companies that the Committee believes are most similar to Southern Company's business model
4
The Compensation Committee considers companies that have at least 70% regulated assets and $7.5 billion in market capitalization
4
Several companies in the relative TSR peer group do not meet the revenue size requirement to be included in the compensation peer group, and some companies might not participate in the survey from which the data for the compensation peer group is derived
|
||||
|
Peer Companies for BOTH:
2024 Compensation Decisions Peer Group and
2024-2026 Relative TSR Peer Group
|
||||||||
|
Ameren Corporation
American Electric Power Company, Inc. CenterPoint Energy, Inc. CMS Energy Corporation Dominion Energy, Inc. DTE Energy Company |
Duke Energy Corporation
Edison International Entergy Corporation Exelon Corporation Eversource Energy FirstEnergy Corp. |
PPL Corporation
Public Service Enterprise Group Incorporated Sempra Energy WEC Energy Group, Inc. Xcel Energy Inc. |
||||||
|
|
||||
|
Additional Peer Companies for
2024 Compensation Decisions Peer Group
|
Additional Peer Companies for
2024-2026 Relative TSR Peer Group
|
||||
|
NextEra Energy, Inc.
PG&E Corporation
|
Alliant Energy Corporation
Consolidated Edison, Inc.
Evergy, Inc.
Fortis Energy Services
NiSource Inc.
Pinnacle West Capital Corporation
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
61
|
||||
|
Setting Pay and Evaluating Performance
|
Monitoring and Oversight | |||||||
|
4
Review CEO performance
4
Set target compensation for CEO and executive officers
4
Approve pay for performance payouts and long-term incentive grants
4
Variable pay plan design for following year
|
4
Review utility industry trends, say-on-pay vote
4
Annual compensation risk assessment
4
Approve base pay merit budget for following year
4
Monitor variable pay payout projections
4
Review reports on human capital management matters, including employee engagement and leadership development
4
Review reports on risks to workforce, including job market trends, external pressures and economic conditions
|
|||||||
|
62
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Position |
Stock ownership requirement,
as a multiple of base salary rate |
Compliance
Period |
Compliance status
|
||||||||
| CEO |
|
5 years |
As of March 1, 2025, all NEOs met their requirements
|
||||||||
|
Other NEOs and
Executive Officers |
|
||||||||||
| Other Senior Executives |
|
||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
63
|
||||
|
Name
(a) |
Year
(b) |
Salary
($) (c) |
Stock
Awards ($) (d) |
Non-Equity
Incentive Plan Compensation ($) (e) |
Change in
Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation ($) (f) |
All Other
Compensation ($) (g) |
Total
($) (h) |
Total without
Change in
Pension Value
($)
(i)
|
||||||||||||||||||
|
Christopher C. Womack
Chairman, President and
CEO, Southern Company
|
2024 | 1,490,577 | 11,725,994 | 3,334,500 | 7,142,735 | 191,367 | 23,885,173 | 16,742,438 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 1,245,324 | 10,009,683 | 2,802,760 | 9,352,563 | 110,057 | 23,520,387 | 14,167,824 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 895,212 | 2,677,724 | 1,291,593 | 768,093 | 63,271 | 5,695,893 | 4,927,800 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Daniel S. Tucker
Executive Vice President
and CFO, Southern Company
|
2024 | 829,267 | 2,451,630 | 1,253,960 | 622,033 | 51,404 | 5,208,294 | 4,586,261 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 777,767 | 2,256,706 | 1,058,633 | 1,735,519 | 41,257 | 5,869,882 | 4,134,363 | |||||||||||||||||||
| 2022 | 711,113 | 2,127,069 | 944,602 | — | 36,596 | 3,819,380 | 3,819,380 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Stanley W. Connally, Jr.
Executive Vice President and COO, Southern Company
|
2024 | 812,981 | 2,181,230 | 1,192,369 | 332,668 | 58,242 | 4,577,490 | 4,244,822 | ||||||||||||||||||
|
Kimberly S. Greene
Chairman, President and CEO, Georgia Power
|
2024 | 936,524 | 2,763,957 | 1,691,558 | 716,640 | 63,885 | 6,172,564 | 5,455,924 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 890,969 | 2,568,457 | 1,459,677 | 1,076,497 | 57,710 | 6,053,310 | 4,976,813 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
James Y. Kerr
Chairman, President and CEO, Southern Company Gas
|
2024 | 877,592 | 2,350,552 | 1,195,168 | 390,010 | 56,402 | 4,869,724 | 4,479,714 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 837,570 | 2,205,244 | 1,120,721 | 595,163 | 57,574 | 4,816,272 | 4,221,109 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
64
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
High prevalence of traditional pension plans in utility industry
|
4
Traditional pension plans remain highly prevalent in the utility industry
4
Most economically efficient way to provide financial well-being at retirement to our employees
4
Help us retain and protect the significant investment we make in our highly skilled workforce and attract the right talent for the future
4
Align with our business model
|
|||||||||||||
|
No additional pension benefits were provided
|
4
2024 annual change in pension value is not due to any modifications to the existing pension program or formulas
4
Pension formula considers years of service, which has an impact on the year over year change in pension value
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Annual changes primarily driven by macroeconomic and non-performance factor changes
|
4
Traditional pension plans are extremely sensitive to interest rate changes, which are macroeconomic factors out of the Company’s control
4
Unlike the short-term and long-term incentive programs which are purely performance based, pension values are driven mostly by non-performance factors
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Compensation Committee committed to the ongoing sustainability of the pension plan
|
4
Over the years, the Committee has taken actions to promote the sustainability of pension benefits for the future, shift to a more shared responsibility between employer and employee and meet evolving workforce needs to attract and retain employees
4
Eligibility was closed to additional participants in the SERP nonqualified pension plan program beginning in 2016
4
The pension plan formula changed in 2018 for new participants from a final average earnings formula to a cash balance formula
4
The Committee will continue to assess the pension program so that it attracts, engages, includes and retains the workforce necessary for today and tomorrow
|
|
||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
65
|
||||
| Name |
Perquisites
($) |
Tax
Reimbursements ($) |
Company
Contribution to 401(k) Plan ($) |
Company Contribution
to Supplemental Retirement Plan ($) |
Total
($)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chris Womack | 115,770 | — | 17,173 | 58,424 | 191,367 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 9,944 | — | 16,762 | 24,698 | 51,404 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
|
18,291 | — | 16,084 | 23,867 | 58,242 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 16,122 | — | 17,595 | 30,168 | 63,885 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 11,770 | — | 17,470 | 27,162 | 56,402 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
66
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Estimated Possible Payouts
Under Non-Equity Incentive Plan Awards |
Estimated Future Payouts
Under Equity Incentive Plan Awards |
Grant Date Fair
Value of Stock
Awards
($)
(i)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Grant Date
(b) |
Threshold
($) (c) |
Target
($) (d) |
Maximum
($) (e) |
Threshold
(#) (f) |
Target
(#) (g) |
Maximum
(#) (h) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chris Womack | 195,000 | 1,950,000 | 3,900,000 |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 10,308 | 103,082 | 206,164 | 7,867,217 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 1,586 | 15,859 | 35,683 | 1,102,518 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 39,647 | 2,756,259 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 71,248 | 712,477 | 1,424,954 |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 2,155 | 21,552 | 43,104 | 1,644,851 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 332 | 3,316 | 7,461 | 230,528 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 8,289 | 576,251 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Stan Connally | 69,729 | 697,292 | 1,394,584 |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 1,918 | 19,175 | 38,350 | 1,463,436 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 295 | 2,950 | 6,638 | 205,084 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 7,375 | 512,710 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 94,500 | 945,005 | 1,890,009 |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 2,617 | 26,167 | 52,334 | 1,984,360 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 11,214 | 779,597 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 70,720 | 707,200 | 1,414,400 |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 2,225 | 22,253 | 44,506 | 1,687,540 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1/31/2024 | 9,537 | 663,012 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
67
|
||||
| Stock Awards | |||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Equity Incentive Plan Awards: Number of Unearned Units That Have Not Vested
(#)
(b)
|
Equity Incentive Plan Awards:
Market or Payout Value of Unearned Units
That Have Not Vested
($)
(c)
|
|||||||||
| Chris Womack | 4,174 | 343,604 | |||||||||
| 23,901 | 1,967,530 | ||||||||||
| 41,093 | 3,382,776 | ||||||||||
| 98,247 | 8,087,693 | ||||||||||
| 123,280 | 10,148,410 | ||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 2,763 | 227,450 | |||||||||
| 5,681 | 467,660 | ||||||||||
| 8,591 | 707,211 | ||||||||||
| 25,566 | 2,104,593 | ||||||||||
| 25,775 | 2,121,798 | ||||||||||
| Stan Connally | 2,422 | 199,379 | |||||||||
| 5,103 | 420,079 | ||||||||||
| 7,644 | 629,254 | ||||||||||
| 22,962 | 1,890,232 | ||||||||||
| 22,932 | 1,887,762 | ||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 3,350 | 275,772 | |||||||||
| 7,759 | 638,721 | ||||||||||
| 11,623 | 956,805 | ||||||||||
| 27,157 | 2,235,564 | ||||||||||
| 27,122 | 2,232,683 | ||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 3,080 | 253,546 | |||||||||
| 6,663 | 548,498 | ||||||||||
| 9,885 | 813,733 | ||||||||||
| 23,317 | 1,919,455 | ||||||||||
| 23,065 | 1,898,711 | ||||||||||
|
68
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Stock Awards | |||||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Number of Shares
Acquired on Vesting
(#)
(b)
|
Value Realized
on Vesting
($)
(c)
|
|||||||||
| Chris Womack | 70,644 | 5,558,109 | |||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 47,671 | 3,844,823 | |||||||||
| Stan Connally | 44,476 | 3,554,687 | |||||||||
| Kim Greene | 51,197 | 4,072,945 | |||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 46,829 | 3,727,494 | |||||||||
|
Name
(a) |
Plan Name
(b) |
Number of Years
Credited Service (#) (c) |
Present Value of
Accumulated Benefit ($) (d) |
Payments During
Last Fiscal Year
($)
(e)
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Chris Womack | Pension Plan | 36.00 | 2,093,633 | – | |||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Benefit Plan (Pension-Related) | 36.00 | 15,739,258 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 36.00 | 10,357,692 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Retirement Agreement | 8.00 | 6,383,691 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | Pension Plan | 25.67 | 843,202 | – | |||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Benefit Plan (Pension-Related) | 25.67 | 3,194,181 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 25.67 | 1,653,486 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
|
Pension Plan | 33.17 | 1,141,536 | – | |||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Benefit Plan (Pension-Related) | 33.17 | 4,623,582 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 33.17 | 1,809,617 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | Pension Plan | 17.17 | 711,932 | – | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
69
|
||||
| Supplemental Benefit Plan (Pension-Related) | 17.17 | 3,493,506 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 17.17 | 1,624,630 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | Pension Plan | 9.92 | 445,657 | – | |||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Benefit Plan (Pension-Related) | 9.92 | 2,099,532 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan | 9.92 | 723,123 | – | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
70
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Executive
Contributions in Last FY ($) (b) |
Registrant
Contributions in Last FY ($) (c) |
Aggregate
Earnings in Last FY ($) (d) |
Aggregate
Withdrawals/ Distributions ($) (e) |
Aggregate
Balance
at Last FYE
($)
(f)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chris Womack | — | 58,424 | 1,135,910 | — | 6,996,186 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 94,475 | 24,698 | 147,911 | — | 978,832 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
|
— | 23,867 | 215,389 | — | 1,639,085 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | — | 30,168 | 88,489 | — | 530,166 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 280,180 | 27,162 | 155,469 | — | 1,587,127 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
71
|
||||
| Program | Retirement | Lay Off | Resignation | Death or Disability |
Involuntary
Termination (For Cause) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PPP | Prorated if before 12/31 | Prorated if before 12/31 | Forfeit | Prorated if before 12/31 |
Forfeit
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PSUs | No proration and paid on regular schedule; amount of payment depends on amount actually earned | Forfeit unvested award | Forfeit unvested award | Prorated based on number of months employed during performance period; amount of payment depends on amount actually earned |
Forfeit unpaid award, even if vested
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| PRSUs | No proration and paid on regular schedule, pending achievement of performance goal | Forfeit unvested award | Forfeit unvested award | Vest; full payout of unvested amount; payable within 30 days |
Forfeit unpaid award, even if vested
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Financial Planning
Perquisite |
Continues for one year | Terminates | Terminates | Continues for one year |
Terminates
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
72
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Program | Company CIC | Subsidiary CIC |
CIC Termination
|
||||||||||||||
| PPP |
If program is not terminated, payout for year in which CIC occurs is at the greater of actual or target performance
If program is terminated within two years after CIC, prorated for year of termination at greater of target or three-year historical average payout at the applicable business unit
|
For impacted subsidiary employees, prorated for year of CIC at greater of target or three-year historical average payouts at the applicable business unit |
If not otherwise eligible for payment, if the program is still in effect, prorated at the greater of target or average payout over three most recent fiscal years
|
||||||||||||||
| PSUs* |
Generally not affected
If Company does not survive, vest at target and convert to surviving company’s securities; if cannot convert, pay value in cash
|
For impacted subsidiary employees, vest at target and convert to surviving company’s securities; if cannot convert, pay value in cash |
Vest at target
|
||||||||||||||
| PRSUs* |
Generally not affected
If Company does not survive, vest and convert to surviving company’s securities; if cannot convert, pay value in cash
|
For impacted subsidiary employees, vest |
Vest
|
||||||||||||||
| Financial Planning Perquisite | Not affected | Not affected |
Terminates
|
||||||||||||||
| Severance Benefits | Not applicable | Not applicable |
Two or (for the CEO) three times the sum of base salary and PPP (at the greater of target or average payout over three most recent fiscal years)
|
||||||||||||||
| Benefits | Not applicable | Not applicable |
Up to five years participation in group plan plus payment of three years’ premium amounts
|
||||||||||||||
| Outplacement Services | Not applicable | Not applicable |
Up to six months
|
||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
73
|
||||
|
Amounts below are Lump Sum Acceleration
(No additional benefits) |
|||||||||||
|
|
Plan |
Change in Control
($) |
|||||||||
| Chris Womack | SBP-P | 14,890,447 | |||||||||
| SERP | 10,046,622 | ||||||||||
| SRA | 6,094,425 | ||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | SBP-P | 4,157,106 | |||||||||
| SERP | 2,151,950 | ||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
|
SBP-P | 5,957,360 | |||||||||
| SERP | 2,400,222 | ||||||||||
| Kim Greene | SBP-P | 4,224,937 | |||||||||
| SERP | 1,975,395 | ||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | SBP-P | 2,088,644 | |||||||||
| SERP | 723,715 | ||||||||||
|
Number of Equity Awards with
Accelerated Vesting (#) |
Total Number of Equity Awards
Following Accelerated Vesting (#) |
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
PSUs | PRSUs | PSUs |
PRSUs
|
|||||||||||||||||||
| Chris Womack | 357,333 | 69,168 | 357,333 | 69,168 | |||||||||||||||||||
| Dan Tucker | 82,585 | 17,036 | 82,585 | 17,036 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
Stan Connally
|
73,847 | 15,169 | 73,847 | 15,169 | |||||||||||||||||||
| Kim Greene | 92,240 | 22,732 | 92,240 | 22,732 | |||||||||||||||||||
| Jim Kerr | 78,848 | 19,628 | 78,848 | 19,628 | |||||||||||||||||||
|
74
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Severance Amount
($) |
|||||
| Chris Womack | 14,620,500 | ||||
| Dan Tucker | 4,041,840 | ||||
|
Stan Connally
|
4,025,425 | ||||
| Kim Greene | 5,065,225 | ||||
| Jim Kerr | 4,229,056 | ||||
| Plan category |
Number of securities to
be issued upon exercise of outstanding options, warrants, and rights (a) |
Number of securities
remaining available for future issuance under equity compensation plans (excluding securities reflected in column (a)) (c) |
||||||
| Equity compensation plans approved by security holders |
3,235,560
(1)
|
27,952,603
(2)
|
||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
75
|
||||
|
76
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| PEO Pay | Non-PEO Pay |
Value of Initial Fixed
$100 Investment Based On |
Percentile | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Fiscal
Year
(a)
|
Summary
Compensation
Table Total for CEO
($)
(b)
|
Compensation
Actually Paid to CEO ($) (c) |
Average
Summary
Compensation
Table Total for
non-CEO NEOs
($)
(d)
|
Average
Compensation
Actually Paid to
non-CEO NEOs
($)
(e)
|
Southern
Total
Shareholder
Return
($)
(f)
|
Peer Group
Total
Shareholder
Return
($)
(g)
|
Net Income
($ millions)
(h)
|
Company
Selected
Measure
One-Year
Relative TSR
(percentile)
(i)
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Womack | Fanning | Womack | Fanning | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2024 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2023 |
|
|
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2022 |
|
|
|
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2021 |
|
|
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||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2020 |
|
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|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
2024 Fiscal Year
|
Summary
Compensation Total ($) |
Minus: SCT
“Stock Awards” ($) |
Minus: SCT “Change in
Pension Value and Nonqualified Deferred Compensation” ($) |
Add: Stock
Award Fair Value ($) |
Add: Pension
Service Costs ($) |
Compensation
Actually Paid
($)
|
||||||||||||||
|
PEO
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
|
Average
Non-PEO NEOs |
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||||||
| PEO |
Average
Non-PEO NEOs
|
|||||||||||||
| Fair Value of Awards Granted during Year that remain unvested as of Year-End | $ |
|
$ |
|
||||||||||
| Fair Value of Awards Granted during Year that vested during such Year |
|
|
||||||||||||
| Change in Fair Value from prior December 31 to December 31 of Year of Awards Granted in Prior Years that remain outstanding and unvested | $ |
|
$ |
|
||||||||||
| Change in Fair Value from Prior December 31 to Vesting Date for Awards that vested during Year | $ |
|
$ |
|
||||||||||
| Deduction of Fair Value of Awards Granted in Prior Years that were forfeited during Year |
|
|
||||||||||||
| Increase based upon Incremental Fair Value of Awards modified during Year |
|
|
||||||||||||
| Increase based on Dividends or Other Earnings Paid during Year prior to Vesting Date of Award |
|
|
||||||||||||
| Total | $ |
|
$ |
|
||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
77
|
||||
|
78
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Compensation Actually Paid vs. Net Income
|
Compensation Actually Paid vs. 1-Yr rTSR*
|
||||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
79
|
||||
|
|
|
|
|
||||||||||
|
William G. Smith, Jr.
|
Janaki Akella
|
Henry A. Clark III | Donald M. James | David E. Meador | ||||||||||
|
80
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| (in thousands) |
2024
|
2023 | ||||||
|
Audit Fees
(1)
|
$15,867 | $15,560 | ||||||
|
Audit-Related Fees
(2)
|
3,503 | 4,238 | ||||||
| Tax Fees | — | — | ||||||
|
All Other Fees
(3)
|
133 | 468 | ||||||
| Total | $19,503 | $20,266 | ||||||
|
|||||||||||
|
4
The Audit Committee has appointed Deloitte & Touche as our independent registered public accounting firm for 2025. This appointment is being submitted to stockholders for ratification.
|
|||||||||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
FOR
this proposal
|
||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
81
|
||||
|
|||||||||||
|
4
The Board has determined that it is in the best interest of the Company and its stockholders to reduce the current two-thirds supermajority vote requirement in Article Eleventh of the Certificate to a majority vote.
4
The Board proposed a similar amendment to the Certificate seven times in the last 12 years (including last year) and is putting the amendment up for vote again this year.
|
|||||||||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
FOR
this proposal
|
||||||||||
|
82
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Year Submitted for Vote |
Affirmative Vote of Issued and
Outstanding Shares |
||||
| 2024 | 66.47 | % | |||
| 2023 | 66.33 | % | |||
| 2021 | 63.25 | % | |||
| 2019 | 60.79 | % | |||
| 2017 | 61.86 | % | |||
| 2016 | 57.21 | % | |||
| 2013 | 51.16 | % | |||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
83
|
||||
|
|||||||||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
AGAINST each
proposal
|
||||||||||
|
84
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
AGAINST
the proposal.
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
85
|
||||
|
86
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
AGAINST
the proposal.
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
87
|
||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
AGAINST
the proposal.
|
||||
|
88
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
89
|
||||
|
The Board recommends a vote
AGAINST
the proposal.
|
||||
|
90
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Directors and Executive Officers |
Shares Owned
Directly or
Indirectly
(1)
|
Deferred
Common
Stock Units
(2)
|
Shares
Individuals
Have Rights to
Acquire within
60 Days
(3)
|
Total Shares
Beneficially
Owned
(4)
|
||||||||||
| Janaki Akella | — | 17,421 | — | 17,421 | ||||||||||
| Henry A. Clark III | 2,000 | 69,699 | — | 71,699 | ||||||||||
|
Stanley W. Connally, Jr.
|
176,846 | — | — | 176,846 | ||||||||||
| Shantella E. Cooper | 19,901 | 27,349 | — | 47,250 | ||||||||||
| Anthony F. Earley, Jr. | 24,261 | 26,590 | — | 50,851 | ||||||||||
| James O. Etheredge | — | — | — | — | ||||||||||
| David J. Grain | 500 | 77,746 | — | 78,246 | ||||||||||
| Kimberly S. Greene | 139,009 | — | — | 139,009 | ||||||||||
| Donald M. James | — | 192,887 | — | 192,887 | ||||||||||
| John D. Johns | 730 | 81,571 | — | 82,301 | ||||||||||
| James Y. Kerr II | 205,065 | — | — | 205,065 | ||||||||||
| Dale E. Klein | — | 52,770 | — | 52,770 | ||||||||||
| David E. Meador | — | 5,006 | — | 5,006 | ||||||||||
| William G. Smith, Jr. | 10,480 | 150,157 | — | 160,637 | ||||||||||
| Kristine L. Svinicki | — | 8,297 | — | 8,297 | ||||||||||
| Lizanne Thomas | 700 | 4,642 | — | 5,342 | ||||||||||
| Daniel S. Tucker | 78,021 | — | — | 78,021 | ||||||||||
| Christopher C. Womack | 116,228 | — | — | 116,228 | ||||||||||
|
Directors and Executive Officers as a
Group (25 people)
(5)
|
1,083,938 | 714,135 | 1,361 | 1,799,434 | ||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
91
|
||||
| Name and Address |
Shares
Beneficially
Owned
(1)
|
Percentage of
Class Owned
(2)
|
||||||
| The Vanguard Group, 100 Vanguard Blvd., Malvern, PA 19355 | 99,606,095 | 9.1 | % | |||||
| BlackRock, Inc., 50 Hudson Yards, New York, NY 10001 | 77,730,437 | 7.1 | % | |||||
| State Street Corporation, One Congress Street, Boston, MA 02114 | 63,785,573 | 5.8 | % | |||||
| JPMorgan Chase & Co., 383 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10179 | 55,894,492 | 5.1 | % | |||||
|
92
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Item
|
Board
Recommendation |
Voting
Standard |
Abstentions |
Uninstructed
Shares |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | Election of 13 Directors |
✓
FOR
|
Majority of votes cast for each Director | No effect | No effect | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2 | Advisory vote to approve executive compensation (Say on Pay) |
✓
FOR
|
Majority of votes cast | No effect | No effect | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3 |
Ratify the appointment of Deloitte & Touche as the independent registered public accounting firm for 2025
|
✓
FOR
|
Majority of votes cast | No effect | Discretionary voting by broker permitted | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4 | Approve an amendment to the Restated Certificate of Incorporation to reduce the supermajority vote requirement to a majority vote |
✓
FOR
|
At least two-thirds of issued and outstanding shares | Count as a vote against | Count as a vote against | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
5-8
|
Vote on four stockholder proposals |
AGAINST
|
Majority of votes cast | No effect | No effect | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
93
|
||||
|
94
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
95
|
||||
|
96
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
97
|
||||
| Year Ended December 31, | ||||||||||||||||||||
| (In millions, except earnings per share) | 2024 | 2023 | 2022 | |||||||||||||||||
| Net Income – GAAP | $ | 4,401 | $ | 3,976 | $ | 3,524 | ||||||||||||||
| Average Shares Outstanding | 1,096 | 1,092 | 1,075 | |||||||||||||||||
| Basic Earnings Per Share | $ | 4.02 | $ | 3.64 | $ | 3.28 | ||||||||||||||
| Net Income – GAAP | $ | 4,401 | $ | 3,976 | $ | 3,524 | ||||||||||||||
| Less Non-GAAP Excluding Items: | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
Estimated Loss on Plants Under Construction
(1)
|
7 | 51 | (199) | |||||||||||||||||
| Tax Impact | (15) | (13) | 51 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Acquisition and Disposition Impacts
(2)
|
— | (1) | (115) | |||||||||||||||||
| Tax Impact | — | 33 | 32 | |||||||||||||||||
|
Loss on Extinguishment of Debt
(3)
|
— | (5) | — | |||||||||||||||||
| Tax Impact | — | 1 | — | |||||||||||||||||
|
Estimated Loss on Qualifying Infrastructure Plant and Other Capital Investments
(4)
|
— | (96) | — | |||||||||||||||||
| Tax Impact | — | 24 | — | |||||||||||||||||
|
Impairments
(5)
|
(36) | — | (119) | |||||||||||||||||
| Tax Impact | 9 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||
|
Accelerated Depreciation from Repowering
(6)
|
(9) | — | — | |||||||||||||||||
| Tax Impact | 2 | — | — | |||||||||||||||||
| Net Income – Excluding Items | $ | 4,443 | $ | 3,982 | $ | 3,874 | ||||||||||||||
| Basic Earnings Per Share – Excluding Items | $ | 4.05 | $ | 3.65 | $ | 3.60 | ||||||||||||||
|
98
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
99
|
||||
|
100
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
| Term | Definition | ||||
|
2023 GPC IRP Update
|
An update to GPC's 2022 IRP filed with the Georgia Public Service Commission prompted by updated energy projections in Georgia that was submitted by GPC in October 2023 and approved in April 2024 | ||||
|
Alabama Power
|
Alabama Power Company | ||||
|
Benefits
Protection Plan
|
Amended and Restated Southern Company Change in Control Benefits Protection Plan, effective August 15, 2022
|
||||
|
CD&A
|
Compensation Discussion & Analysis
|
||||
| CEO |
Chief Executive Officer
|
||||
| CFO |
Chief Financial Officer
|
||||
| COO |
Chief Operating Officer
|
||||
| Clawback Policy |
Southern Company Clawback Policy, as adopted May 26, 2021 and amended and restated December 1, 2023
|
||||
|
Director
Deferred
Compensation
Plan
|
Deferred Compensation Plan for Outside Directors of The Southern Company, as amended and restated effective June 1, 2021 and subsequently amended thereafter effective June 1, 2021
|
||||
| DOE | Department of Energy | ||||
| EPRI |
Electric Power Research Institute
|
||||
| EPS |
Earnings per share
|
||||
| GAAP |
Generally accepted accounting principles
|
||||
|
Georgia Power
|
Georgia Power Company
|
||||
| GHG |
Greenhouse gas
|
||||
| Gulf Power |
Gulf Power Company, until January 1, 2019 a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company
|
||||
| IRP |
Integrated resource plan
|
||||
| LTI | Long-term incentive program offered under the 2021 Omnibus Plan | ||||
|
Mississippi
Power or MPC
|
Mississippi Power Company | ||||
|
MW
|
Megawatt | ||||
| NEOs | Named Executive Officers | ||||
| Nicor Gas |
Northern Illinois Gas Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company Gas
|
||||
| Notice | Notice of Internet Availability of proxy materials | ||||
| NYSE | New York Stock Exchange | ||||
|
2011 Omnibus
Plan
|
Southern Company Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan, approved by stockholders in 2011 | ||||
|
2021 Omnibus
Plan
|
The Southern Company 2021 Equity and Incentive Compensation Plan, approved by stockholders in 2021 | ||||
|
PowerSecure
|
PowerSecure, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company
|
||||
| Term | Definition | ||||
|
R&D
|
Research and development
|
||||
|
Recoupment
Policy
|
The Southern Company and Covered Subsidiaries Compensation Recoupment Policy, as adopted effective December 1, 2023
|
||||
| ROE | Return on equity | ||||
|
SCS
|
Southern Company Services, Inc., the Southern Company system service company and a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company
|
||||
| SEC |
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
|
||||
|
Severance
Plan
|
Southern Company Senior Executive Change in Control Severance Plan, as amended and restated effective August 15, 2022
|
||||
|
Southern
Company,
Southern, the
Company, we,
us or our
|
The Southern Company
|
||||
|
Southern
Company Gas
|
Southern Company Gas, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company
|
||||
|
Southern
Company
system
|
Southern Company, the traditional electric operating companies, Southern Power, Southern Company Gas, Southern Nuclear, SCS, Southern Linc, PowerSecure and other subsidiaries
|
||||
|
Southern Linc
|
Southern Communications Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company, doing business as Southern Linc
|
||||
|
Southern Nuclear
|
Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Southern Company
|
||||
|
Southern Power
|
Southern Power Company and its subsidiaries
|
||||
|
Tax code or
Code
|
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
|
||||
|
TSR
|
Total shareholder return
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
101
|
||||
|
102
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
103
|
||||
|
DCP Notional Investment
Account Options |
Summary |
2024 Rate
of Return
|
||||||
| Stock Equivalent Account | Treated as invested at a rate of return equivalent to that of an actual investment in common stock, including crediting dividend equivalents as paid by Southern Company | 21.69 | % | |||||
| Prime Equivalent Account |
Treated as invested in prime interest rate compounding monthly, as published in
The Wall Street Journal
as the base rate on corporate loans posted as of the last business day of each month by at least 75% of the United States’ largest banks
|
8.62 | % | |||||
| Equivalent Index Fund Accounts | Treated as invested in one of the following: |
|
||||||
|
4
Equivalent Vanguard Institutional 500 Index Fund
|
25.00 | % | ||||||
|
4
Equivalent BlackRock Russell 2000 Index Fund
|
11.56 | % | ||||||
|
4
Equivalent BlackRock EAFE Equity Index Fund
|
3.78 | % | ||||||
|
104
|
Southern Company
2025 Proxy Statement
|
||||
|
Our Mission
Building the future of energy
For more than a century, we've been providing clean, safe, reliable and affordable energy to the customers and communities we're privileged to serve. Through industry-leading innovation and a commitment to a net-zero future, we're delivering sustainable and resilient energy solutions that help to drive growth and prosperity.
|
|||||
|
4
2025 World’s Most Admired Companies by
Fortune
magazine (No. 1 in electric and gas utility industry for social responsibility, financial soundness and long-term investment value)
4
2024 Platts Global Energy Award (demonstrated excellence in generation and grid asset management, systems operations, technological innovation, including the use of AI, grid modernization and cybersecurity)
4
CPA-Zicklin Index of Corporate Political Disclosure “Trendsetter” for 2024
4
2025 Military Friendly® Top 10 Employer
4
2024 Best Place to Work for Disability Inclusion by Disability Equality Index
|
||||
No information found
* THE VALUE IS THE MARKET VALUE AS OF THE LAST DAY OF THE QUARTER FOR WHICH THE 13F WAS FILED.
| FUND | NUMBER OF SHARES | VALUE ($) | PUT OR CALL |
|---|
| DIRECTORS | AGE | BIO | OTHER DIRECTOR MEMBERSHIPS |
|---|
No information found
Customers
Suppliers
| Supplier name | Ticker |
|---|---|
| ABB Ltd | ABB |
| Clarivate Plc | CCC |
| CMS Energy Corporation | CMS |
| CenterPoint Energy, Inc. | CNP |
| Dominion Energy, Inc. | D |
| General Electric Company | GE |
Price
Yield
| Owner | Position | Direct Shares | Indirect Shares |
|---|