Regulation & Policy: Page 62
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Billions more needed to address climate infrastructure needs of US cities: report
Cities need at least $10.6 billion to fund more than 300 sustainable infrastructure projects, according to a CDP survey of 97 U.S. cities.
By Jason Plautz • July 20, 2021 -
Cost allocation remains key challenge for FERC ahead of transmission reform, Glick says
"When you're talking about money — when you're talking about who pays and how much — that's always a difficult issue," FERC Chair Richard Glick said in an interview with Utility Dive.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 20, 2021 -
Explore the Trendline➔
Kevork Djansezian via Getty ImagesTrendlineSustainability
Companies are pursuing increasingly ambitous sustainability goals around clean energy, but integrating rising amounts of renewables, minimizing environmental impacts, and achieving carbon reduction targets can be challenging.
By Utility Dive staff -
Cyber leaders officially join the ranks as White House grapples with remediation
The Senate confirmed Jen Easterly to lead CISA while the White House swore in Chris Inglis as the first national cyber director.
By Katie Malone • July 19, 2021 -
Challenge to Berkeley gas regulation dismissed, a win for cities in carbon emissions fight
A federal judge dismissed a lawsuit last week that challenged the city's restrictions on natural gas in new low-rise residential buildings, a major boost for local governments looking to follow suit.
By Chris Teale • July 19, 2021 -
Deep Dive
Gridlock in transmission queues spotlights need for FERC action on planning
FERC is calling for stakeholder input to address the backlog in transmission queues holding 70% of the renewables needed for Biden's policy goals.
By Herman K. Trabish • July 19, 2021 -
California approves expedited pathway for near-term utility EV investments, despite cost concerns
Commissioner Martha Guzman Aceves, however, pushed for "a progressive way" to fund these investments, adding that "whenever we're using utility bills to pay for this, it's inherently regressive."
By Kavya Balaraman • July 16, 2021 -
Heatwave, wildfires heighten urgency for Western RTO: Glick, Clements
Some ex-FERC commissioners and chairs have urged FERC to tackle this unilaterally, but Chair Richard Glick and Commissioner Allison Clements believe such a policy should come from Western stakeholders themselves.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 16, 2021 -
Sen. Lankford voices doubts over Democratic clean energy standard, calling it 'punitive' for fossil fuels
Democrats are advancing clean energy funding and policy through a variety of legislative pathways, but Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., doubts how much will make it into a final bill.
By Robert Walton • July 16, 2021 -
FERC launches proceeding to reform transmission policy
“This is the beginning of a very long process,” said Commissioner Mark Christie.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 16, 2021 -
DER advocates take on Alabama Power distributed solar program, challenge one of 'the worst' fees
"Alabama Power's discriminatory fees are likely the worst of any major utility, but they are not the only ones," Vote Solar said in support of the Southern Environmental Law Center's federal district court challenge.
By Iulia Gheorghiu • July 15, 2021 -
Clean electricity standard lands spot in $3.5 trillion Democratic-backed infrastructure deal
Efforts to pass a national standard that would require utilities across the country to slash emissions took a step forward Wednesday.
By Scott Van Voorhis • July 15, 2021 -
Senators clash over policy to increase FERC transmission siting authority
Proposed legislation could allow federal regulators to override state authority in siting transmission where demand and congestion are high. One Republican proposed eliminating it, sparking a Senate committee debate.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 15, 2021 -
Too few companies advocate for climate-friendly policies despite lofty goals: report
Only around 40% of the country's top 100 firms lobby for green legislation, according to sustainability nonprofit Ceres. We have "run out of time to waste," a spokesperson said.
By Chris Teale • July 14, 2021 -
ERCOT releases plan to boost reliability after blackouts, as report outlines gas, electric failures
Former PUCT officials called the plan "a good start," but said the state still needs to think about how it can improve demand response and energy efficiency programs.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 14, 2021 -
Western officials reckon with reliability challenges as heat and 'wildcard' wildfire threaten grid
Regulators will have to figure out which resources can be brought online "that can really take us off the edge," the head of the California Independent System Operator said.
By Kavya Balaraman • July 13, 2021 -
Deep Dive
'Doesn't make sense': Analysts pan omissions in MISO's first electrification impact analysis
MISO’s first electrification-focused planning study was a "good start" by accentuating uncertainties on the rate and pace of the transition, but missed what storage needs will be and what least-regrets solutions offer, experts said.
By Herman K. Trabish • July 13, 2021 -
Southern California Edison plans for 38,000 EV charging stations, in largest IOU effort of its kind
Southern California Edison wants tens of thousands of new EV charging stations across its service territory, as more and more electric vehicles hit the roads.
By Scott Van Voorhis • July 13, 2021 -
New York to test green hydrogen at Long Island power plant
The experiment is part of a research initiative by the power authority as the Empire State scrambles to reduce carbon emissions by 85% over the next three decades.
By Scott Van Voorhis • July 12, 2021 -
Opinion
Fix Texas electricity — and hurry!
A report from former Texas regulators and staff offers 20 recommendations following the February outages. Nearly all apply to cold weather outages as well as the grid operator's generation shortfall and demand surprises in June.
By Alison Silverstein • July 12, 2021 -
As Chatterjee's tenure ends, FERC could be 'single most impactful agency' on climate: Rep. Casten
The question of who will fill Commissioner Neil Chatterjee's seat took on new urgency last week as the commissioner announced that July would, probably, be his last open meeting.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 12, 2021 -
PJM Board approves new MOPR plan in effort to placate states, FERC
The plan aims to accommodate state policies, mitigate buyer side market power and be a long-lasting, resilient solution, according to PJM officials.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 9, 2021 -
New England and the South shoulder the nation's highest energy costs, WalletHub survey finds
Consumers in New England and the Southeast face some of the highest energy costs in the country, potentially accelerating a shift towards solar and other distributed resource solutions.
By Scott Van Voorhis • July 8, 2021 -
Groups ask Congress for first-of-its-kind cost analysis of RTOs amid market expansion debate
Though markets were restructured in the early 2000s and some studies have pointed to their benefits, a more comprehensive cost analysis has never been done.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 8, 2021 -
Kentucky regulators deny utility request to recover EEI dues. A similar question sits before FERC.
The state's ruling comes as environmental and consumer groups ask federal regulators to require utilities and their trade groups to justify why trade dues should be charged to ratepayers.
By Catherine Morehouse • July 2, 2021 -
Groups protest PG&E plan to move away from diesel, as utility forecasts $7.4B in fire investments
Clean energy groups and ratepayer advocates say the utility's plan to reduce the use of temporary diesel generation during public safety power shut-offs through existing demand response programs doesn't go far enough.
By Kavya Balaraman • July 2, 2021