Regulation & Policy
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Tariffs lifted nonresidential construction costs 3.2% in 2025
Trade policy will “continue to put upward pressure on certain materials” in 2026, said the chief economist for Associated Builders and Contractors. In December, copper wire and cable jumped 22% year over year. Iron and steel were up 12%.
By Sebastian Obando • Feb. 3, 2026 -
Opinion
Quick fixes won’t solve high energy bills
As grid spending increases, policymakers should look beyond residential customers to cover costs, writes Arjun Krishnaswami, a senior fellow at the Federation of American Scientists.
By Arjun Krishnaswami • Feb. 3, 2026 -
Transmission planning, development improved since 2023 in most US regions: report
However, the grade for Texas slipped to a "D-” and the Southeast continues to get failing marks, according to a report released Tuesday by Americans for a Clean Energy Grid.
By Ethan Howland • Feb. 3, 2026 -
Opinion
The AI boom needs power. Tariffs can make it fair.
Large load tariffs can be used to deliver community benefits, lock in clean, reliable power and strengthen energy resilience, writes Ava Community Energy’s Olivia Vasquez.
By Olivia Vasquez • Feb. 2, 2026 -
Coal plant owners say DOE ‘emergency’ order to run it violates Constitution
By mandating the generator’s availability to operate, the order “constitutes both a physical taking and a regulatory taking” of property by the government without just compensation or due process, they said in a request for rehearing.
By Ethan Howland • Updated 20 hours ago -
Sponsored by Yes Energy
Artificial intelligence in energy markets: The case for AI-ready data and human expertise
Power markets are moving quickly. Combining AI with human expertise can help you keep up.
By Sonal Sakhardande, Vice President of Software Engineering, Yes Energy & Maria Torres, Solutions Engineer, Yes Energy • Feb. 2, 2026 -
2026 US power sector outlook
Read Utility Dive's road map to the year ahead for FERC, affordability, renewable energy, distributed energy resources and more.
By Meris Lutz • Jan. 30, 2026 -
Deep Dive
Customers, don’t expect electric bill relief in 2026: ‘The cake is baked.’
Energy affordability has long been a problem for the poorest Americans, but now middle-income families are starting to feel the squeeze.
By Robert Walton • Jan. 30, 2026 -
PJM prepares to call on data center, large load backup generation to avoid blackouts
However, it is unclear how much generation could be available, and the grid operator doubts it will be needed during the ongoing bitter cold.
By Ethan Howland • Updated Jan. 30, 2026 -
NERC forecasts peak demand to rise 24% on new data center loads
“The system is changing faster than the infrastructure needed to support it,” said John Moura, NERC's director of reliability assessments and performance analysis.
By Robert Walton • Jan. 30, 2026 -
Opinion
Lessons from launching New Jersey’s largest utility-led EV program
Growing PSE&G’s electric vehicle initiative from a pilot to a full-scale program required flexibility and persistence, writes Dawn Neville, the utility’s senior manager of electric transportation.
By Dawn Neville • Jan. 29, 2026 -
Retrieved from Senate EPW on January 29, 2026
Republican, Democratic senators call for project certainty at permitting reform hearing
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., said permitting talks could resume if the Trump administration stops its moves to thwart wind and solar projects.
By Ethan Howland • Jan. 29, 2026 -
Retrieved from Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
Deep DiveFERC in 2026: Rising costs cloud regulators’ options on data centers, transmission and more
DOE’s colocation proposal and transmission planning reforms will set FERC’s agenda this year against a backdrop of rising concern over affordability, former commission chairmen and experts say in our 2026 outlook.
By Ethan Howland • Jan. 29, 2026 -
Ratemaking innovation key to meeting data center demand, experts say
The unprecedented scale and speed of AI data center demand requires institutional rather than technical innovation, University of Texas at Austin's Michael Webber said.
By Emma Penrod • Jan. 27, 2026 -
Opinion
GHG Protocol proposal risks slowing clean energy expansion
Proposed changes to the Greenhouse Gas Protocol would make it more difficult for companies to report renewables use and could discourage procurement, according Lesley Hunter and Jeffrey Gorham of the American Council on Renewable Energy.
By Lesley Hunter and Jeffrey Gorham • Jan. 27, 2026 -
Deep Dive
In 2026, virtual power plants must scale or risk being left behind
The AI data center frenzy is shifting utilities’ focus to large-scale generation. But advocates say flexible, distributed energy resources still provide the biggest bang for the buck, according to our 2026 DER outlook.
By Herman K. Trabish • Jan. 27, 2026 -
MISO regulators seek stakeholder review for DOE ‘emergency’ orders cost allocation
The U.S. Department of Energy has failed to show there are reliability benefits from keeping power plants from retiring in the Midcontinent region, state utility regulators told FERC.
By Ethan Howland • Jan. 26, 2026 -
Winter peak demand could hit new highs, prompting DOE emergency orders
Grid operators that sought permission to run generators at maximum capacity said they have adequate power supplies, but they made their requests in light of potentially record-high winter peak demand this week.
By Robert Walton • Jan. 26, 2026 -
Sponsored by OpenText
Get AI ready: A practical path for electric and water utilities
Why AI readiness is critical for utilities—and how to build data trust to get there
By Phil Schwarz, Industry Strategist for Energy and Resources, OpenText • Jan. 26, 2026 -
Retrieved from Tennessee Valley Authority/Wikimedia Commons.
Lawsuits target EPA rollback of coal plant water pollution standards
The plants need flexibility to meet rising electricity demand, the EPA says. Environmental groups argue that undermines Clean Water Act protections for rivers and drinking water sources.
By Robyn Griggs Lawrence • Jan. 23, 2026 -
The week in 5 numbers: DOE axes or alters $83B in loans, NJ governor comes out swinging
U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright and Democratic Gov. Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey used their respective bully pulpits to push their energy priorities. Plus, transmission and, of course, PJM news.
By Meris Lutz • Jan. 23, 2026 -
FERC upholds MISO, SPP fast-track generator reviews
The agency also approved a 1.2-GW pumped storage project planned by Rye Development in Washington.
By Ethan Howland • Jan. 23, 2026 -
Retrieved from Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
FERC commissioners see progress in PJM data center, power supply plans
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Laura Swett said she is “encouraged that PJM and its stakeholders are working cooperatively now, much more so than they have in the recent past.”
By Ethan Howland • Jan. 23, 2026 -
Opinion
Massachusetts can make ‘bottom-up’ distribution reforms for a better grid
Adopting a distribution system operator, or DSO, structure would make the grid cleaner, more flexible and more affordable, writes Corrin Moss.
By Corrin Moss • Jan. 22, 2026 -
Gas sector takes furnace efficiency fight to Supreme Court
Advocates say proven energy-saving technologies can meet the stricter efficiency rules. The gas industry says the rules ban non-condensing furnaces and other products.
By Robert Walton • Jan. 22, 2026