Regulation & Policy
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Retrieved from Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
PJM may be ‘too big to function’: FERC Chairman Swett
Each of the 13 states in PJM, and the District of Columbia, have “fundamentally different regulatory structures, resource portfolios and politics,” FERC Chairman Laura Swett said. FERC will host a conference in July to identify potential reforms to PJM’s governance structure.
By Ethan Howland • May 13, 2026 -
2026 Q1 roundup: Utilities divided on data centers as affordability looms large
Physics, policy and politics are beginning to constrain some of the electric utility industry’s highest aspirations for data center-driven growth, Utility Dive learned in first quarter earnings calls.
By Meris Lutz • May 13, 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 -
Opinion
Making AI work for utilities means treating technology as a partner, not a replacement
In an era when reliability indices directly shape regulatory ratings, AI's predictive capability becomes a measurable operational asset, but only when people know how to use it, writes Sean Burri, a Dominion Energy infrastructure engineer.
By Sean Burri • May 12, 2026 -
Q&A
Hyperscalers driving record clean energy deals: CEBA CEO
U.S. corporate clean energy procurement surpassed 27 gigawatts in 2025, with four companies accounting for about three-quarters of that capacity, Rich Powell, CEO of the newly rebranded Corporate Energy Buyers Association, said in an interview.
By Lamar Johnson • May 12, 2026 -
Constellation Energy enters 5 GW of nuclear, gas, battery capacity in PJM queue
Some potential data center customers are pausing decision-making in the PJM Interconnection to see how the grid operator’s colocation and backstop auction rules shake out, company officials said.
By Ethan Howland • May 12, 2026 -
Opinion
Competitive power markets have delivered. Abandoning them would be a mistake.
Electricity markets are not perfect, but they remain one of the most powerful tools we have for delivering reliable, affordable power at scale, writes former FERC Commissioner Nora Mead Brownell.
By Nora Brownell • May 11, 2026 -
Sponsored by Torus
Owning the full stack: What U.S. storage has to figure out next
Storage is no longer about the breakthrough tech, but who can build and deliver a system at scale.
By Nate Walkingshaw, CEO and Co-Founder, Torus • May 11, 2026 -
Deep Dive
Will DOE’s ‘nuclear lifecycle innovation campuses’ solve the US nuclear waste problem?
The Department of Energy wants to collaborate with states that agree to take in and possibly recycle used nuclear fuel, and some have responded positively. But practical and policy challenges remain.
By Herman K. Trabish • May 7, 2026 -
Exelon lowers utility spending to ease electric affordability issues
Exelon is shifting its spending away from utility operations while boosting planned transmission expenditures, company officials said during an earnings call on Wednesday.
By Ethan Howland • May 7, 2026 -
PJM floats options for capacity market overhaul
“The current situation is not tenable,” PJM President and CEO David Mills said. “The region has years, not decades, to make these choices deliberately.” The grid operator lays out three options, including shifting to an energy market model, in a white paper.
By Ethan Howland • May 7, 2026 -
PSEG CEO: Nuclear outlook for New Jersey improves on lifting of moratorium
Nuclear power plants won’t be built, however, without long-term federal financial support and hyperscaler offtake agreements, said Ralph LaRossa, Public Service Enterprise Group CEO.
By Ethan Howland • May 6, 2026 -
‘Supplemental’ municipal utility begins solar-and-storage installs in Ann Arbor, Michigan
The Ann Arbor Sustainable Energy Utility will use locally sited solar, batteries and other resources to improve reliability and lower costs for subscribers, city officials say.
By Brian Martucci • May 5, 2026 -
Opinion
America’s load growth moment is a chance to scale distributed energy
The fastest approach to expand the grid is via the distribution system, using front-of-meter storage to precisely target substations and feeders that need relief, writes Jigar Shah of Deploy Action.
By Jigar Shah • May 5, 2026 -
Pennsylvania House unanimously passes advanced transmission technology bill
State regulators could require utilities such as PPL Electric, PECO Energy and FirstEnergy to integrate ATTs into proposed projects. Similar laws have been signed in at least nine states with more bills pending.
By Ethan Howland • Updated May 7, 2026 -
Sponsored by InvoiceCloud
The ADA deadline just moved. Utilities still need to act.
The DOJ extended its ADA Title II web accessibility compliance deadline to 2027 but the obligations for utility payment platforms have not changed.
By Nicole Hastings • May 4, 2026 -
The image by Eversource NH is licensed under CC BY-ND 2.0
New England transmission owners ask FERC for increased ROE
Eversource, Avangrid and other New England utilities seek an 11.39% return on equity weeks after FERC set it at 9.57%. Higher ROE is needed to attract capital given “current risk conditions,” such as the Iran war and supply chain constraints, they said.
By Ethan Howland • Updated May 1, 2026 -
The image by Steven Baltakatei Sandoval is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
TransAlta seeks $19.9M for Centralia plant’s first DOE ‘emergency’ order
The plant didn’t produce electricity, but TransAlta spent money keeping it “available” instead of retiring it as planned. It will cost another $23 million to repair it, TransAlta told the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
By Ethan Howland • May 1, 2026 -
Offshore wind lease buyouts create troubling precedent, say former DOI officials
“You wouldn't want to create a situation where you are allowing companies, for instance, to buy up leases for anti-competitive purposes,” said former Bureau of Ocean Energy Management director Liz Klein.
By Diana DiGangi • Updated May 1, 2026 -
Opinion
Congress should fix the nuclear investment tax credit
A bipartisan bill would restructure the credit to pass its full value on to ratepayers from day one, cutting the sticker price of new nuclear projects by 30% to 50%, writes Samuel Thernstrom at the Energy Innovation Reform Project.
By Samuel Thernstrom • April 30, 2026 -
Senators vow to block permitting reform over Trump’s renewables obstruction
“There won’t be the votes unless we can have some assurance,” Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, told the Interior secretary. “And it would really help if you would move those permits that are sitting on your desk.”
By Diana DiGangi • April 30, 2026 -
FirstEnergy opposes key part of PJM data center backstop procurement plan
The PJM Interconnection’s planned backstop auction is flawed, said CEO Brian Tierney. Separately, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said his administration will oppose rate hike requests that fail to meet affordability criteria.
By Ethan Howland • April 30, 2026 -
Meta deal adds to Entergy’s $57B, 4-year capital plan
Entergy’s 2026-2029 capital plan is more than 30% higher than what the company announced three months ago, and it has a pipeline of 7-12 GW of potential data center load.
By Robert Walton • April 30, 2026 -
Opinion
Capacity cost explosion: What PJM’s $80B bill means for the AI buildout
To avoid an era of grid instability, electric-sector stakeholders must fast-track replacement generation, deploy grid-enhancing technologies and pass permitting reform, writes EnerKnol’s Shahid Mahdi.
By Shahid Mahdi • April 29, 2026 -
Opinion
Americans deserve facts, not fearmongering, about their electric bills
Policymakers must remove barriers to new infrastructure and allow competitive power markets to function properly, writes Todd Snitchler, CEO of the Electric Power Supply Association.
By Todd Snitchler • April 28, 2026 -
Cities sue EPA for failing to uphold soot standard
“By ignoring the legal responsibility to uphold its own rule, U.S. EPA is willfully abandoning the agency’s duties under the Clean Air Act,” California Air Resources Board Chair Lauren Sanchez said.
By Robyn Griggs Lawrence • April 27, 2026