Regulation & Policy
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Opinion
The grid’s fastest-growing resource isn’t generation. It’s flexibility.
The technology is there. The institutions are not. FERC’s July 23 technical conference on the PJM Interconnection’s governance is where that gap gets addressed — or doesn’t, writes Jeanine Johnson, a former member of the grid operator’s board.
By Jeanine Johnson • July 15, 2026 -
PJM capacity prices hit price cap, reserve shortfall grows
“The outcome demonstrates that the current system doesn’t work to bring online new capacity or stimulate demand response, the two things we need the most,” Aurora Energy’s Julia Hoos told Utility Dive, warning of “an intervention doom loop.”
By Ethan Howland • July 15, 2026 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Nathan Howard via Getty Images
TrendlineData Centers and the US Grid
A look at how data centers are affecting the U.S. grid today and how new technologies and rate structures could affect that trajectory in the years to come.
By Utility Dive staff -
Pennsylvania data centers face increased oversight under new law
Data centers willl now have to provide annual energy usage reports to the state, and the PJM Interconnection will need to give state regulators additional insight into its demand forecasting.
By Diana DiGangi • July 14, 2026 -
Utilities requested $9.2B in rate hikes in Q2: PowerLines
Dominion Energy in Virginia is seeking about $1.5 billion in increases across three rate requests, the report said. Oncor in Texas requested the largest single increase in Q2 at $1.2 billion, driven largely by transmission and distribution investments.
By Ethan Howland • July 14, 2026 -
DHS proposes new critical infrastructure security framework
The Trump administration eliminated the previous framework in 2025, sparking backlash from experts and infrastructure operators.
By Eric Geller • July 14, 2026 -
Illinois governor signs laws on utility bill transparency, financial assistance
Alignment between the state’s progressive governor and Republican state lawmakers underscores a bipartisan consensus on the urgency of addressing public anger over electricity bills.
By Meris Lutz • July 14, 2026 -
PG&E faces $22M penalty for Mosquito Fire under proposed agreement
The 2022 fire burned more than 75,000 acres and dozens of structures. A subsequent investigation of PG&E’s infrastructure found violations of state rules for the design, construction and maintenance of overhead electrical lines.
By Meris Lutz • July 13, 2026 -
Former FERC officials concerned about Supreme Court Slaughter decision impacts
“Stripping those agencies of their independence will leave consumers exposed to the worst aspects of competitive markets without the protections of informed regulatory review,” said former FERC Chair Jon Wellinghoff.
By Herman K. Trabish • July 10, 2026 -
What can best ease transmission bottlenecks? More transfer capacity, DOE says.
Transmission congestion added $12 billion in wholesale power costs in 2024, the U.S. Department of Energy said in a draft report on U.S. transmission needs.
By Ethan Howland • July 10, 2026 -
Retrieved from WIRES Group.
PJM status quo ‘untenable’: FERC Commissioner LaCerte
“Looking at things differently is hard, especially in entrenched utilities that have been doing this for a long time,” the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission member said.
By Ethan Howland • July 9, 2026 -
IRA clean energy gains mostly on track despite OBBBA, says MIT study
74% of all new clean electricity capacity that would have been added under the Inflation Reduction Act will be preserved despite Trump administration policy changes, the report estimates, including 82% of utility-scale solar generation.
By Diana DiGangi • July 8, 2026 -
New Jersey increases transmission oversight in ‘affordability’ push
New Jersey’s governor signed bills that aim to cut transmission owners’ return on equity, establish data center tariffs and require state approval for “supplementary” transmission projects.
By Ethan Howland • July 8, 2026 -
Exelon, FirstEnergy utilities’ RTO adder targeted by Maryland in FERC complaint
Maryland state agencies asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to end an extra 0.5% return the transmission owners earn for being PJM Interconnection members.
By Ethan Howland • July 7, 2026 -
States are taking action on energy affordability as issue grows: report
U.S. regulators and lawmakers have taken more than 350 energy affordability actions so far this year, but the problem is persistent, say researchers from the North Carolina Clean Energy Technology Center.
By Robert Walton • July 7, 2026 -
FERC denies waiver for $2B gas-fired plant in PJM’s fast-track review
Giving Advanced Power Services a waiver from the PJM Interconnection’s rules could harm other project developers, the agency said.
By Ethan Howland • July 6, 2026 -
DOE wants to ‘permanently end’ appliance efficiency requirements
A proposed rule would create an “obstacle course of restrictions” bogging down the Department of Energy’s appliance efficiency program, a consumer advocate said.
By Robert Walton • Updated July 2, 2026 -
PJM stakeholders advance data center backstop procurement plan
The PJM Interconnection’s board expects to file a proposal for meeting its near-term power supply needs with federal regulators this month, with a goal of holding the backstop auction in September.
By Ethan Howland • July 2, 2026 -
Opinion
Why the true cost of new gas plants is much higher than the sticker price
When reviewing gas-fired power plant proposals, regulators often fail to consider pipeline, fuel and storage costs, which can add about 30% to a project’s total cost, GridLab’s Cassady Craighill writes.
By Cassady Craighill • July 2, 2026 -
EPA’s tougher soot standard upheld in court
The D.C. Circuit rejected a challenge from states and industry groups, leaving the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for fine particulate matter, including from power plants, in place as litigation over implementation continues.
By Robyn Griggs Lawrence • July 1, 2026 -
New Jersey lawmakers send data center tariff bill to governor
The bill applies to new and existing data centers of at least 50 MW and aims to shield other ratepayers from costs associated with the AI boom.
By Meris Lutz • July 1, 2026 -
California delays emissions reporting deadline by 3 months
The California Air Resources Board said it will delay the compliance deadline for California’s SB 253 — the Climate Corporate Data Accountability Act — and propose “limited changes.”
By Lamar Johnson • June 30, 2026 -
Sen. King urges FERC to reject $67B NextEra-Dominion merger
NextEra Energy’s efforts to kill the New England Clean Energy Connect transmission project is a sign of how the combined utility could stifle competition and harm consumers, the Maine senator said.
By Ethan Howland • June 30, 2026 -
Virginia defines agrivoltaics, expanding opportunities for solar
Agrivoltaic projects must “ensure flexibility for farmers to adapt to market conditions and support operational needs,” according to the law.
By Diana DiGangi • June 29, 2026 -
PJM opposes waiver for $2B gas-fired plant in fast-track interconnection review
Gas turbine backlogs prompted Advanced Power Services to seek changes to its project in PJM’s fast-track Reliability Resource Initiative interconnection review, but the grid operator said granting such a waiver would be unfair to other developers.
By Ethan Howland • Updated June 30, 2026 -
Deep Dive
Data centers are ready to negotiate flexibility for speed
Hyperscalers want their data centers online and utilities want to provide interconnections, but experts say both are still looking for common operating guidelines.
By Herman K. Trabish • June 26, 2026