Generation: Page 64


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    Dominion jacks up renewables and storage in Virginia IRP, following landmark clean energy rule

    In its newest plan for the state, Dominion would add between 11 and 40 GW of solar in the next 25 years and up to 5 GW of offshore wind in the next 15 years, while still keeping some natural gas in the system.

    By Iulia Gheorghiu • May 5, 2020
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    Photo illustration by Brian Tucker/Utility Dive; photograph by thinkreaction via Getty Images
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    Opinion

    States should leave markets that don't work for families and businesses after bad FERC decisions

    Reentering PJM and other markets can be reconsidered when a new FERC majority is ready to care at all about consumers instead of political donors, the author writes.

    By Mark Kresowik • May 5, 2020
  • Major Cluster Of Data Centers Inhabit Northern Virginia Explore the Trendline
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    Nathan Howard/Getty Images via Getty Images
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    Trendline

    Electricity Supply and Demand

    After nearly two decades of flat demand, U.S. electricity consumption reached an all-time high in 2024 and is expected to continue rising. This trendline brings together the best of Utility Dive’s coverage of emerging trends in supply and demand and the decisions being made today that will impact the power system for years to come. 

    By Utility Dive staff
  • Pueblo, Colorado, voters reject Black Hills Energy exit

    The city's mayor told Utility Dive that forming a municipal utility will help the city lower rates and reach its 100% renewable energy goal by 2035.

    By Catherine Morehouse • Updated May 6, 2020
  • Global GHG emissions could fall 8% in 2020 amid pandemic: IEA

    Coronavirus has reduced emissions and energy demand, but a recovery without clean investments could jeopardize those gains, the group said.

    By May 1, 2020
  • New Mexico delays 350 MW, 240 MWh solar+storage projects intended to replace San Juan coal plant

    Meanwhile, a company determined to save the San Juan plant announced it has secured $22 million in federal funding to explore potential carbon storage options in grounds near the facility.

    By Catherine Morehouse • May 1, 2020
  • FERC confirms Goldman Sachs ties to renewables company, opening door for push on corporate transparency

    The intervenor on the Goldman Sachs application plans to use this ruling to press federal regulators into more regularly defining affiliate relationships, such as in his JPMorgan/El Paso Electric appeal.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 30, 2020
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    Elizabeth Regan/Utility Dive
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    FERC's Chatterjee highlights COVID-19 demand disruptions, resource threats

    The FERC chair also rejected the notion that the commission's PJM MOPR order will hurt renewables, and urged states to wait before pulling out of the RTO's capacity market.

    By Larry Pearl • April 29, 2020
  • Maryland taking a 'serious look' at exiting PJM capacity market through FRR, says PSC Chair

    The state filed a petition for review with the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals this week, echoing concerns raised by Illinois, New Jersey and others that federal regulators are unfairly infringing on state clean energy policy.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 29, 2020
  • Duke to double renewable capacity in 5 years, but critics say utility lags on storage deployment

    The utility plans to add 8,000 MW of wind, solar and biomass by 2025, but critics say the utility isn't taking sufficient advantage of energy storage and efficiency.

    By April 29, 2020
  • Deep Dive

    As extreme weather spurs billions in utility resilience spending, regulators struggle to value investments

    A new study by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory shows the value of resilience depends on too many factors to easily quantify and moves regulators back to human judgment.

    By April 25, 2020
  • Bipartisan senators ask Mnuchin to extend safe harbor deadlines for renewables projects

    Extending these deadlines is essential to ensure projects already in the pipeline are able to cross the finish line, say sector leaders.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 24, 2020
  • Duke, IPL face Indiana scrutiny as NGOs detail coal plant practices costing ratepayers millions

    Duke is estimated to have lost $6.9 million in operational costs over three months last year through self-scheduling, while Indianapolis Power and Light is estimated to have lost $1.55 million from November to December.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 24, 2020
  • Electric grid challenges will grow if COVID-19 impacts extend into summer demand season: NERC

    Deferred maintenance and refueling issues could lead to unplanned outages while increased penetration from distributed resources complicate system operations, according to a new assessment.

    By April 24, 2020
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    GE Renewables
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    Deep Dive

    84 GW US renewables+storage pipeline has developers anxious for market integration rules

    Utilities and developers are adding renewables plus storage hybrids so fast and cost-effectively that regulators had to schedule a conference on paired technologies. 

    By April 23, 2020
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    Brian Tucker/Utility Dive
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    Broad array of groups sue FERC over PJM MOPR decision as Chatterjee rejects cost, renewable concerns

    New Jersey, Maryland and Illinois, along with other stakeholders, have filed against federal regulators, following outrage at the commission's April 16 decision to uphold its December order.

    By Catherine Morehouse • Updated April 27, 2020
  • Citi pledges to stop thermal coal-mining financing by 2030 to aid shift from fossil fuels

    The nation's third-largest bank has long been a green stalwart, reaching a goal to finance $100 billion of activities to address climate change four years ahead of schedule.

    By Dan Ennis • April 22, 2020
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    Pexels
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    California cities top air pollution list — again

    The American Lung Association’s annual "State of the Air" found warmer temperatures are contributing to widespread smog and soot levels in U.S. cities.

    By David Oliver • April 22, 2020
  • Rooftop solar Utah Virtual power plant with sunset in background over mountain ridge
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    Iulia Gheorghiu/Utility Dive
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    Secretive group's petition to FERC could 'end net metering as we know it,' lawyers say

    The filing makes the case that any behind-the-meter, or customer-sited, energy generation is a wholesale sale, subject to FERC jurisdiction.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 21, 2020
  • New England grid operator, market participants divided over how to improve region's energy security

    A growing reliance on gas and renewable generation has left the New England power grid vulnerable to supply losses during cold snaps.

    By April 20, 2020
  • Report: Natural gas is a loser for long-term utility shareholder value

    A new report makes the case that investors need to see new natural gas infrastructure as stranded assets.

    By Matthew Bandyk • April 20, 2020
  • Opinion

    The effects of coronavirus measures on electricity markets

    Economic outcomes and investment decisions in the next 18 to 24 months could reshape electricity markets for decades, the authors write.

    By Alex Gilbert and Morgan Bazilian • April 20, 2020
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    EPA rejects legal basis for MATS, drawing widespread objections, concerns over future air rule impacts

    The electric power industry has already spent over $18 billion to comply with the agency's rules, and would prefer to have regulatory certainty, says a utility trade group.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 17, 2020
  • 'Just plain garbage,' FERC's Glick says as commission largely upholds its PJM MOPR decision

    FERC denied requests for rehearing on its December order, while clarifying two exceptions. It also rejected requests to review its 2019 order approving PJM’s capacity demand curve, which critics say is too high.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 16, 2020
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    Elizabeth Regan, Industry Dive/Utility Dive
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    NextEra, Vistra join array of stakeholders in asking FERC to look at carbon pricing

    Industry leaders say carbon pricing could provide a more consistent federal policy across territories than the varying carbon reduction goals set by states.

    By Catherine Morehouse • April 16, 2020
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    Pixino
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    Legal experts, NGOs blast EPA move on air quality standards after higher pollution linked to COVID-19 deaths

    The agency finalized rules Monday keeping particulate matter standards the same. "To whom does Wheeler answer when he makes life or death determinations?" one legal expert asked when the rule was proposed.

    By Catherine Morehouse • Updated Dec. 8, 2020