Generation: Page 97


  • AEP to shutter 1,590 MW Ohio coal plant two years ahead of schedule

    American Electric Power analyzed the results of recent power auctions before coming to the conclusion that it will shutter its Conesville coal plant by the end of May 2020.

    By Oct. 10, 2018
  • Gulf coast utilities brace for Michael, strongest storm in Florida panhandle history

    The storm will be a test for Duke Energy, whose outage management system failed last year during Hurricane Irma.

    By Catherine Morehouse • Updated Oct. 10, 2018
  • 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
  • Westmoreland Chapter 11 marks 4th major US coal company to declare bankruptcy

    Westmoreland Coal will join producers Peabody Energy, Arch Coal and Alpha Natural Resources, who found the sector's headwinds too much to overcome.

    By Oct. 10, 2018
  • Montana case could set FERC precedent for paired storage treatment under PURPA

    A utility and developer are battling at FERC over whether wind-plus-storage facilities qualify under the federal law, which compels utilities to purchase power from small renewable generators. 

    By Oct. 9, 2018
  • GE sells $1B portfolio of energy assets

    The sale of approximately 20 investments to Apollo Global Management continues GE's efforts to streamline the business.

    By Oct. 9, 2018
  • Federal regulators OK $6B CenterPoint-Vectren merger

    Shares of CenterPoint initially fell when the deal was announced in April on concerns it was paying too much, but since then, have risen about 8.5%.

    By Oct. 9, 2018
  • Mountain Valley stalled, Atlantic Sunrise cleared for service in busy pipeline week

    The diverging fortunes of the two Appalachian projects illustrate the struggle between environmental advocates and natural gas companies over the siting and construction of new pipelines.

    By Oct. 5, 2018
  • First US freshwater offshore wind project gets DOE approval, funding proposal

    Federal regulators determined the Ohio Icebreaker Wind project, opposed by the coal company Murray Energy, will not have a "significant" environmental impact. 

    By Iulia Gheorghiu • Oct. 5, 2018
  • Trump administration tackles pipeline cybersecurity

    The U.S. Department of Energy and the Department of Homeland Security this week co-chaired a meeting with the oil and gas industry to address how pipelines can be protected from cyberattacks.

    By Oct. 5, 2018
  • Illinois regulators seek to appease greens, Vistra with coal plant emission rules

    The Illinois Pollution Control Board modified its plan to change emissions accounting methods, attempting to satisfy both environmentalists and coal plant owner Vistra Energy.

    By Oct. 5, 2018
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    Dollar Photo Club
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    Russian hackers indicted for targeting nuclear firm Westinghouse Electric

    The hackers allegedly tried to steal the login credentials for Westinghouse employees involved in advanced nuclear reactor development — a common tactic in cyberattacks. 

    By Oct. 5, 2018
  • Con Ed plans renewable gas, LNG storage facilities amid pipeline constraints

    The utility wants to turn waste into natural gas and build two to five compressed natural gas and liquefied natural gas storage sites to address rapidly growing demand in New York City and Westchester County.

    By Oct. 5, 2018
  • Brattle: Nevada could cost-effectively deploy 1 GW of energy storage by 2030

    The state is revamping the planning process for its utilities, and the Public Utilities Commission is considering establishing an energy storage target.

    By Peter Maloney • Oct. 4, 2018
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    Senate ENR
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    Coal lobby pleased as Trump nominates ally McNamee to FERC

    The Department of Energy official is expected to align closer with White House priorities than former Commissioner Robert Powelson, who stepped down in August. 

    By Updated Oct. 4, 2018
  • FERC authorizes expansion of US-Mexico pipeline

    Kinder Morgan expects the new expansion capacity to come online in 2020. The rise in natural gas exports to Mexico comes as President Trump pushes for the United States to achieve "energy dominance."

    By Oct. 3, 2018
  • Connecticut agencies say Millstone 'at risk' as Dominion seeks boost in clean energy RFP

    If the state's Public Utilities Regulatory Authority agrees Dominion's Millstone nuclear plant is 'at risk,' it could receive above-market rates in Connecticut's solicitation for zero emission resources.

    By Peter Maloney • Oct. 3, 2018
  • PJM recasts capacity repricing in market reform filing at FERC

    The generator is trying for a second time to boost revenues for coal and gas generators in its capacity market after federal regulators threw out its market rules in June.

    By Oct. 3, 2018
  • PJM control room.
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    Permission granted by PJM Interconnection
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    Deep Dive

    Ahead of FERC storage order deadline, new rules begin to take shape in PJM

    PJM Interconnection's straw proposal gives a glimpse into how energy storage might participate more in wholesale markets.

    By Peter Maloney • Oct. 2, 2018
  • S&P downgrades Georgia Power's partners in Vogtle nuclear project

    After hammering out a last-minute agreement to keep the nuclear project alive, the munis and cooperative utilities in the Vogtle nuclear project are hit with downgrades.

    By Peter Maloney • Oct. 2, 2018
  • EPA MATS rollback threatens DOE carbon capture priorities, critics warn

    Allowing utilities to stop using pollution scrubbers mandated under the EPA's Mercury and Air Toxics Standards could raise the price for coal plants to adopt carbon capture, proponents of the technology said. 

    By Iulia Gheorghiu • Oct. 2, 2018
  • PJM: FirstEnergy can shut 4 GW of fossil plants without harming reliability

    FirstEnergy warned of blackouts if its plants retire, but the grid operator said it has plenty of time to address the lost capacity.

    By Oct. 2, 2018
  • McDermott gets go-ahead for $937M Texas power plant

    McDermott International said its contract for the natural gas plant project, which is expected to generate 750 jobs at peak construction, is between $500 million and $750 million.

    By Kim Slowey • Oct. 2, 2018
  • Opinion

    When PJM's capacity market stops working for consumers is it time to leave?

    Illinois Commerce Commission Chairman Brien Sheahan urges states with renewable energy mandates or nuclear subsidies to reevaluate their participation in the largest U.S. electricity market.

    By Brien J. Sheahan​ • Oct. 2, 2018
  • ISO-NE to focus on market solutions for winter energy security in 2019

    ISO New England is considering an "interim compensation treatment for periods associated with reliability reviews for fuel security," the grid operator says in its 2019 Annual Work Plan.

    By Oct. 2, 2018
  • Report: As EPA rewrites mercury rules, new cost-benefit approach could curtail future regulations

    The proposed rewrite of Obama-era pollution standards does not consider "co-benefits," The New York Times reports, which could set a precedent for less stringent emissions rules in the future. 

    By Oct. 1, 2018