Generation: Page 62


  • Could the aspirations of a small Memphis utility signal the beginning of the end for TVA?

    Stymied by years of high prices that seem likely to increase, communities across the six-state TVA region are weighing the possibility of leaving the federally-owned utility.

    By Emma Penrod • June 22, 2020
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    Getty
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    Opinion

    The truth about the future of gas: We don't need to build anymore

    "Let’s clear away the myths about gas, renewables and the grid," writes UC Berkeley professor David Wooley, co-author of a recent report that said a 90% clean electricity system is feasible in the U.S. by 2035. 

    By David Wooley • June 22, 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
  • Corporate carbon reduction targets get boost with new EEI, WRI utility emission rate tool

    The database, now containing information from about half of the Edison Electric Institute's members, helps customers calculate more easily the emissions related to their energy use.

    By Iulia Gheorghiu • June 22, 2020
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    NRC Flickr
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    Pilgrim decommissioning deal surpasses federal requirements, requires cybersecurity plan

    Massachusetts and Holtec have agreed on financial guarantees, cleanup standards, interim spent fuel storage and other requirements for dismantling the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station in Plymouth.

    By Guy Burdick • June 19, 2020
  • Divided FERC approves New England ISO short-term fuel security plan despite cost concerns

    The program would compensate resources that help ensure winter reliability, but Commissioner Richard Glick warned the $300 million price tag would be an unnecessary "windfall" for some generators.

    By June 19, 2020
  • FERC schedules technical conferences on carbon pricing, offshore wind integration challenges

    The meetings will examine whether the regulatory body has the legal authority to implement carbon pricing, as well as how grid operators can better address transmission concerns for offshore wind.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 19, 2020
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    Wikipedia
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    Cleantech incubator Greentown Labs expands to Houston

    The incubator will offer testing space to early stage, climate-focused companies in an effort to make Houston the "energy transition capital of the world." 

    By June 17, 2020
  • Vectren bucks Indiana legislature with plan to reduce coal mix 78% to 12% by 2025

    The utility will add up to 1,000 MW of solar + storage, among other renewable resources, bringing its energy mix to 64% renewable energy plus demand response in the next five years.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 17, 2020
  • FERC accepts Tri-State exit fee methodology as jurisdiction battle looms with Colorado

    Tri-State and its member cooperatives looking to leave its service territory are at odds over whether federal or state regulators should have the final say on exit fees. Observers say the battle will likely reach the courts.

    By June 16, 2020
  • Utilities remain mute on FERC net metering petition, leave filing to face overwhelming opposition

    Pacific Gas and Electric, Xcel Energy, Duke Energy and others filed motions to intervene, but ultimately elected not to comment, while bipartisan federal and state political leaders, regulators and others expressed strong opposition.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 16, 2020
  • A high-voltage transmission line runs through barren woods.
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    Permission granted by Minnesota Power
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    Minnesota Power to reach 50% renewables in 2021 with Canadian hydropower

    The utility energized a $700 million 224-mile transmission line last week that will bring 250 MW of hydropower from Manitoba to Minnesota.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 15, 2020
  • California regulators establish SCE, PG&E as central procurement buyers, to the dismay of CCAs

    Despite the growth of community choice aggregators, regulators feared allowing numerous entities to buy small amounts of local resource adequacy would create market concerns.

    By Iulia Gheorghiu • June 15, 2020
  • Disbanded EPA science panel blasts lack of action on particulate matter in order to inform future litigation

    The EPA found that more review was needed to determine the full health impacts of particulate matter, created by burning coal or other industrial processes.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 12, 2020
  • US weighs end to foreign nuclear power finance ban, potentially boosting advanced reactors

    Opening up international financing could allow the U.S. to become more competitive with countries like Russia and China in providing carbon-free power to developing nations, advocates said.

    By Emma Penrod • June 12, 2020
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    Array Technologies Inc.
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    Utility-scale solar to soar in 2020, despite COVID, while coal decline accelerates, SEIA, EIA project

    Solar growth is projected to be largely driven by utility-scale projects as residential installations take a larger hit due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 12, 2020
  • New York's economy is slowly reopening, but electricity demand remains clipped due to COVID-19

    The grid operator for New York anticipates annual electricity consumption for 2020 will be 6% to 7% lower than previously forecast, due to the coronavirus pandemic — with increasing amounts supplied by carbon-free resources.

    By June 11, 2020
  • Alabama Power James M. Barry Electric Generating Plant in Bucks, Mobile County, Alabama
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    The image by Altairisfar is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
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    Alabama regulators greenlight nearly 2 GW of gas for Southern, punt on solar+storage

    Regulators said 400 MW in solar and storage facilities should be considered in a separate docket, but did approve 200 MW in demand side management programs.

    By Iulia Gheorghiu • June 10, 2020
  • Indiana regulators decline to scrutinize IPL coal practices but continue Duke review

    The Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission's order said Sierra Club's testimony didn't adequately account for non-economic factors that utilities need to consider when self-committing coal.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 9, 2020
  • Deep Dive

    California plans for future of gas system amid 'patchwork' of electrification policies

    The California Public Utilities Commission has opened a rulemaking to "manage" a transition away from natural gas. But questions remain on what that transition will look like.

    By Kavya Balaraman • June 9, 2020
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    Getty Images
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    Trump permitting order benefits fossil fuels and renewables, but NGOs vow to challenge

    A former Environmental Protection Agency attorney says the order is on shaky legal ground and will likely be challenged in court.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 8, 2020
  • Opinion

    Renewables' potential depends on transparent and fair policies, not special interest giveaways

    FirstEnergy spinoff Energy Harbor is receiving a $1 billion taxpayer bailout while also enriching its shareholders with an $800 million stock buyback. This is crony capitalism at its worst, the author writes.

    By Michael K. Dorsey • June 5, 2020
  • PJM: MOPR compliance plan aims to avoid FERC's 'immense' and 'unreasonable' burden

    FERC clarified in April that default capacity auctions are a state subsidy under the Minimum Offer Price Rule. But PJM warns too expansive a definition could "paralyze" the voluntary markets.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 4, 2020
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    Herman K. Trabish
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    Deep Dive

    The 3 key challenges to expanding the West's real-time energy market to day-ahead trading

    Driven by new Western state renewables and zero emissions mandates, the 11 active participants and nine new applicants in the Energy Imbalance Market are pushing to expand it to day-ahead trading.

    By June 3, 2020
  • Ways2H waste-to-hydrogen demonstration unit in Joso, Japan
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    Permission granted by Ways2H
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    Opinion

    New waste-to-hydrogen processes could contribute to a carbon negative future

    With the rise in production and sales of hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles and power generators, the technology is entering a new maturation point that could encompass both mobile and stationary storage options, the author writes.

    By Jean-Louis Kindler • June 3, 2020
  • Opinion

    Outdated NEPA needs modernizing. Just ask Warren Buffett

    As the U.S. economy prepares to recover from the current crisis, important job and revenue-creating proposals like the 1,000 mile Gateway West transmission project don’t need to languish in a regulatory morass, the author writes.

    By Paul Griffin • June 3, 2020