Regulation & Policy
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Tariffs drove construction input prices up to start 2026
January’s cost increases amounted to a “blistering” annualized rate of 7.1% for nonresidential input prices, according to Associated Builders and Contractors. Copper was up 80% year over year, iron and steel 58% and switchgear 67%.
By Sebastian Obando • March 3, 2026 -
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Addressing utility payment delinquencies amid rising energy burden
Rising payment delinquencies are putting pressure on utility revenue cycles. Utilities are adopting preventive strategies to stabilize cash flow and support customers.
March 2, 2026 -
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TrendlineTop 5 Stories from Utility Dive
Power demand is rising amid dramatic shifts in federal energy policy, but technology and markets continue to push the grid toward cleaner, more distributed resources.
By Utility Dive staff -
Virginia, Indiana lawmakers pass surplus interconnection bills
Using existing surplus interconnection, such as at rarely-used peaker plants, can get generation and storage resources online faster and more cheaply than seeking new interconnection rights. PJM lags behind other grid operators in pursuing this.
By Ethan Howland • Updated 8 hours ago -
CARB approves California’s climate disclosure regulations
The California Air Resources Board, tasked with enforcing the state’s climate disclosure laws, will require companies to report Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions by August this year.
By Lamar Johnson • March 2, 2026 -
PJM proposes fast-track interconnection plan, capacity auction price collar
The PJM Interconnection says it is taking steps to bring new generation online as fast as possible while protecting ratepayers from high capacity prices.
By Ethan Howland • March 2, 2026 -
Opinion
From labor to components, America must bring grid modernization home
If the U.S. does not reshore every layer of the grid, it will never be able to power the AI economy it intends to lead, writes Peak Nano CEO Jim Welsh.
By Jim Welsh • March 2, 2026 -
Public takeover of Tucson Electric Power would cost $4B, Brattle finds
A city-run utility would increase electric bills by $5.8 billion over 20 years, according to a study commissioned by the utility. “No one believes TEP’s accounting,” public power proponents countered.
By Robert Walton • March 2, 2026 -
California orders utilities to add 6 GW of non-fossil capacity by 2032
“Eligible new resources must be either zero-emitting or otherwise eligible under the [renewables portfolio standard] program,” according to the California Public Utility Commission order.
By Diana DiGangi • Feb. 27, 2026 -
Opinion
Efficiency first: A fast track to capacity in the era of hyperscalers
Prioritizing demand-side management before committing billions to new infrastructure mitigates risks for utilities and their customers, according to a pair of efficiency experts.
By Paige Knutsen and Erin Kempster • Feb. 27, 2026 -
The image by Peretzp is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0
PSEG sees investment opportunity as NJ eyes adding in-state generation
A bill was introduced this week in the New Jersey Legislature that would require a solicitation for gas-fired generation.
By Ethan Howland • Feb. 27, 2026 -
House passes bills to weaken DOE’s appliance efficiency program, repeal home rebates
Consumer advocates lamented the votes. “Efficiency rules are incredibly popular because they save families money on their utility bills,” said Dylan Jaff at Consumer Reports.
By Robert Walton • Feb. 26, 2026 -
More interregional transmission could save consumers billions: study
However, East Coast generators would see reduced revenue, giving them an incentive to oppose new transmission lines, researchers said.
By Ethan Howland • Feb. 26, 2026 -
PJM proposes behind-the-meter reforms in data center colocation effort
The planned reform threatens the economic viability of new combined heat and power generation at industrial facilities in the PJM Interconnection, according to trade groups.
By Ethan Howland • Feb. 24, 2026 -
Opinion
The false promise of cheap and reliable coal
Colorado’s youngest coal-fired generating unit will not produce power, or savings, anytime soon. The problems with Comanche Unit 3 highlight the hazards of relying on coal, write clean energy advocates Anna Adamsson and Leslie Glustrom.
By Anna Adamsson and Leslie Glustrom • Feb. 24, 2026 -
Opinion
The electricity paradox: Driving affordability means infrastructure investment
Energy abundance, AI competitiveness and consumer affordability are not in conflict, but the power sector needs to show that growth can lower bills, not raise them, write Ray Gifford and Matt Larson from Wilkinson Barker Knauer.
By Ray Gifford and Matt Larson • Feb. 23, 2026 -
Retrieved from New Jersey Board of Public Utilities.
New Jersey regulators take first step to reform electric utility business model
Performance-based ratemaking, multiyear rate plans and lower utility returns are all options the Board of Public Utilities plans to consider. It recently approved hiring a consultant to assist a potential overhaul.
By Robert Walton • Feb. 23, 2026 -
States sue Energy Department for terminating $8B in clean energy funding
The Trump administration unlawfully bypassed Congress and made politically motivated cuts to programs created through the IRA and IIJA, the lawsuit claims.
By Robyn Griggs Lawrence • Feb. 20, 2026 -
Opinion
The ghosts of nuclear past, present, and future: Can you tell them apart?
There’s a lot of chatter about nuclear energy these days, but we need to sort the category to make sense of what is feasible, writes University of Oregon Professor of Practice Joshua Skov.
By Joshua Skov • Feb. 20, 2026 -
Retrieved from Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
DOE ‘emergency’ power plant orders help grid reliability: NERC official
However, the Midcontinent Independent System Operator's reliability remains at “high risk,” NERC’s John Moura said, and it's unclear whether its fast-track interconnection process will help.
By Ethan Howland • Feb. 20, 2026 -
Health, environmental groups sue EPA over repeal of endangerment finding
California will challenge EPA’s “endangerment finding” repeal in court. The U.S. Conference of Mayors pledges to "fight for policy that addresses climate change with the seriousness that it requires."
By Robyn Griggs Lawrence • Feb. 19, 2026 -
Opinion
Improve transmission affordability by mending the regulatory gap
A two-pronged approach to planning could target inefficient spending while also spurring investments that promote beneficial transmission, writes Advanced Energy United’s Alex Lawton.
By Alex Lawton • Feb. 19, 2026 -
Deep Dive
VPP vs. VPP: Customer-owned DER aggregators challenge Xcel-owned batteries in Minnesota docket
The Minnesota decision could affect how regulators see virtual power plants nationwide.
By Herman K. Trabish • Feb. 19, 2026 -
Southeast utilities lag national efficiency averages despite ‘low-hanging fruit’: SACE
In its latest regional efficiency report, the environmental group recommends targeted weatherization, stronger oversight and an end to broad industrial efficiency exemptions.
By Brian Martucci • Feb. 18, 2026 -
City’s adoption of efficiency metric signals less reliance on third-party building certifications
Developers could still use LEED or other certifications to meet green building goals in Alexandria, Virginia, but the energy use intensity metric gives them an option just focused on efficiency.
By Robert Freedman • Feb. 18, 2026 -
Efficiency, demand flexibility can meet growing data center loads — and do so cheaply: ACEEE
Large utility programs provide energy efficiency for about $21/MWh, while new combined-cycle gas plants cost at least twice that, the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy said.
By Robert Walton • Feb. 18, 2026