Regulation & Policy
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FERC approves PJM fast-track review for ‘shovel-ready’ power projects
PJM will consider up to 10 interconnection requests annually over two years for resources of at least 250 MW that can come online in three years.
By Ethan Howland • Updated 4 hours ago -
DOE reinstates $57M American Battery grant
American Battery Technology Co. won its appeal after the agency canceled the grant last year. It will continue plans to build a $115 million commercial-scale lithium refinery alongside its lithium-ion battery recycling efforts.
By Megan Quinn • June 9, 2026 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Justin Sullivan via Getty Images
TrendlineCybersecurity of the Grid
In addition to presenting opportunities for growth, AI is exacerbating cyber threats with more sophisticated malware that is easier than ever to build and deploy. The rise of distributed energy resources also creates more opportunities for attack.
By Utility Dive staff -
Supreme Court sends furnace case back to appeals court
The top court agreed with the Trump administration that Biden-era rules effectively eliminating non-condensing gas furnaces and water heaters from the market are based on an incomplete legal review.
By Robert Freedman • June 9, 2026 -
FirstEnergy asks FERC to require data centers to pay for transmission interconnection costs
FirstEnergy’s proposal adopts a cost allocation practice from the gas pipeline sector. It comes ahead of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s expected large load interconnection decision on June 18.
By Ethan Howland • June 9, 2026 -
Microsoft seeks Nevada tariff to shield ratepayers from data center costs
The proposal would require large-load customers to pay for infrastructure built specifically to serve their projects while preserving standard utility charges for broader grid services.
By Marlene Wilden • June 8, 2026 -
FERC approves SPP non-firm, large-load transmission service
The Southwest Power Pool service aims to help data centers and other large loads get online quickly, but they can have their service cut when grid conditions are tight.
By Ethan Howland • June 8, 2026 -
The image by OUC Reliable One is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
DOE orders OUC’s 465-MW coal unit in Florida to continue running
Although Florida is at “normal risk” for long-term energy adequacy, the unit near Orlando needs to remain online partly to help serve potential data centers in the state, the department said.
By Ethan Howland • June 5, 2026 -
Retrieved from White House.
Trump administration announces $850M to modernize US coal capacity, build 2 new plants
New coal-fired plants in Anchorage, Alaska, and Mt. Storm, West Virginia, would total 2.85 GW. They would be the first new U.S. coal plants to come online since 2013.
By Robert Walton • June 5, 2026 -
Q&A
DOE’s Alex Fitzsimmons on energy markets, AI, renewables and more
Utility Dive caught up with the associate deputy secretary of energy at the Edison Electric Institute conference in Las Vegas, where the dominant theme was balancing demand growth with affordability.
By Meris Lutz • June 5, 2026 -
Protesters target NV Energy at electric utility conference as anger over affordability rises
“In Las Vegas, one of the fastest warming cities in the country, you cannot live without electricity,” said protest organizer Leslie Vega, who said she’s lost loved ones to heatstroke.
By Herman K. Trabish • June 4, 2026 -
Opinion
Speed to power requires more transmission, not less competition
A complaint at FERC seeking to limit competition among transmission developers would inject uncertainty into the process and spur regulatory delays, writes Will Hazelip from National Grid Ventures US.
By Will Hazelip • June 4, 2026 -
Constellation’s Three Mile Island nuclear restart gets boost with FERC waiver
Constellation Energy will be able to transfer capacity interconnection rights, enabling the nuclear unit to potentially deliver all its power when it restarts, possibly before the end of 2027.
By Ethan Howland • June 3, 2026 -
SEC proposes rule rescinding Biden-era climate risk disclosures
The agency’s proposal calls the 2024 climate disclosure rules “a dramatic overreach of the Commission’s statutory authority and, independently, unsound as a matter of policy.”
By Lamar Johnson • June 2, 2026 -
The image by AsNuke is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
OpinionWhat does it take to restore a nuclear power plant?
Restarting previously closed nuclear plants could be one of the most cost-effective ways to supply large amounts of firm, clean electricity, writes Patrick White at Clean Air Task Force.
By Patrick White • June 2, 2026 -
Eversource project ‘epitomizes’ flawed transmission reviews: New England states
New England “severely lacks” oversight of asset condition projects like Eversource Energy’s X-178 transmission project, the New England States Committee on Electricity told FERC.
By Ethan Howland • June 2, 2026 -
Sponsored by Black & Veatch
How the U.S. solar industry can solve its 53K-worker challenge
The solar workforce challenge is significant but solvable. Here’s how to close the gap.
June 2, 2026 -
Opinion
Access to real-time electricity data should be a basic consumer right
The technology exists and the infrastructure is there. What is missing is a requirement that customers have access to data on their electricity use, writes Joel Hicks at the University of Oregon.
By Joel Hicks • June 1, 2026 -
Opinion
Once you secure SPARK funds for transmission development, what comes next?
The success of DOE’s SPARK initiative will depend on how prepared organizations are to execute once the funding arrives, writes Al Eliasen, Spatial Business Systems CEO.
By Al Eliasen • May 29, 2026 -
New Mexico has the nation’s best DER interconnection policy: report
The state received high marks for its robust energy storage interconnection framework, frequent public reports on its interconnection queue and incorporating IEEE’s technical standard for DER interconnections.
By Brian Martucci • May 28, 2026 -
Opinion
Hyperscalers didn’t set out to be power companies. The grid left them no choice.
The power gap left hyperscalers with no alternative but to take on utility-scale obligations and lock up gigawatts of generation, writes Peak Nano CMO Shaun Walsh.
By Shaun Walsh • May 28, 2026 -
Oregon PUC approves PGE’s large-load tariff framework for data centers
The order shifts more infrastructure costs and interconnection obligations to hyperscale customers while positioning Oregon’s 2025 POWER Act as an early test of how states manage AI-driven load growth.
By Marlene Wilden • May 28, 2026 -
MISO pushes back on utility complaint over competitive transmission bidding
The grid operator stopped short of taking a position on the complaint itself. States and consumer advocates oppose it, while at least one major data center company supports it.
By Ethan Howland • May 28, 2026 -
Opinion
How Illinois’ energy policy blueprint can address affordability, reliability
By betting on efficiency, storage, long-term energy planning and grid flexibility, the Illinois’ Clean and Reliable Grid Affordability Act offers a blueprint for the state’s energy future, Vote Solar’s John Delurey writes.
By John Delurey • May 26, 2026 -
Competitive transmission projects come online faster than incumbent projects in 4 regions: R Street
Completed competitive transmission projects are also about 30% less expensive than comparable incumbent utility projects, according to a report from the think tank.
By Ethan Howland • May 26, 2026 -
Sponsored by West Monroe
Building an affordable energy future
Customer affordability is becoming a defining priority for utilities as investment costs and energy demands continue to rise.
May 26, 2026