Regulation & Policy: Page 68
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State PUCs should re-examine planning, procurement costs in wake of Inflation Reduction Act: report
“PUCs should insist that utilities redo integrated resource plans and resource solicitations, despite the procedural headache,” Energy Innovation Policy & Technology said in a report released Thursday.
By Ethan Howland • Oct. 14, 2022 -
What upcoming US elections could mean for the Inflation Reduction Act, FERC and US energy policy
A Republican Senate "might be the end, potentially the end, of Richard Glick at FERC,” said Ari Peskoe, director of Harvard Law School's Electricity Law Initiative.
By Robert Walton • Oct. 13, 2022 -
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 -
Connecticut energy and environment chief outlines updated clean energy plan on path to zero emissions
Filling unmet portions of previous solicitations with solar, developing transmission for offshore wind and adding energy storage and anaerobic digesters are the focus of the updated plan.
By Ethan Howland • Oct. 13, 2022 -
Major utilities oppose Sunnova’s ‘micro-utility’ microgrid proposal at California PUC
Pacific Gas & Electric Co., San Diego Gas & Electric Co. and Southern California Edison say the California Public Utilities Commission should finish a pending rulemaking regarding microgrids before it reviews Sunnova’s proposal.
By Ethan Howland • Oct. 12, 2022 -
Opinion
FERC isn’t acting fast enough to strengthen the grid. Here’s one thing Congress can do.
Congress can and should shore up energy resilience by establishing a clear standard for inter-regional transmission support, the authors write.
By Liza Reed and Andrew Xu • Oct. 11, 2022 -
Opinion
How an unlikely trio helped secure billions for rural electric cooperatives
As rural communities watch wind and solar farms begin to dot their landscape, many want to ensure rural America can own, not just host, the clean energy transition, the authors write.
By Duane Highley, Ramón Cruz and Erik Hatlestad • Oct. 10, 2022 -
EPA launches initiative to speed review of new chemicals for electric vehicle, clean energy sectors
The effort covers mixed metal oxides, which are a key component in lithium-ion batteries and can also be used in solar cells, wind turbines and other clean energy applications.
By Larry Pearl • Oct. 7, 2022 -
Washington to launch carbon cap-and-trade program in January, with tie to California program possible
“This new program will help us decarbonize our economy, improve air quality, and put Washington at the forefront of the fast-growing global era of clean energy,” Gov. Jay Inslee said.
By Elizabeth McCarthy • Oct. 6, 2022 -
MISO energy users cannot leave system without paying their capacity fees: FERC
Industrial companies failed to show that it was unfair they would have to make the capacity payments they owe if they leave the Midcontinent grid operator, federal regulators said Monday.
By Ethan Howland • Oct. 6, 2022 -
Deep Dive
97% of smart meters fail to provide promised customer benefits. Can $3B in new funding change that?
Interoperability standards can deliver “non-discriminatory access” to real-time data from new smart meters to fulfill promises of customer savings and other system benefits, energy managers say.
By Herman K. Trabish • Oct. 5, 2022 -
Opinion
Broken markets: Slick Rick, Doug E. Fresh, and the global strain on the single clearing price
A single clearing price auction is no longer a viable or desirable way to sell power because the power market is now segmented into differentiated products, the authors write.
By Ray Gifford and Matt Larson • Oct. 4, 2022 -
Virginia governor calls for easing clean energy goals, injecting competition into utility sector
Gov. Glenn Youngkin, R, also aims to create a nuclear innovation hub and develop an advanced reactor within a decade.
By Ethan Howland • Oct. 4, 2022 -
FERC OKs $500K fine for ISO-NE over alleged violations of capacity rules with Salem Harbor power plant
ISO New England improperly prevented its market monitor from having access to information about the Footprint Power project, among other violations, according to Federal Energy Regulatory Commission staff.
By Ethan Howland • Oct. 4, 2022 -
Opinion
FERC, state utility regulators, and the arsonist’s dilemma
State and federal officials have saturated power markets with unworkable policies and are now openly lamenting the inability of those markets to deliver the results they expect, the author writes.
By Todd Snitchler • Oct. 3, 2022 -
Sponsored by ScottMadden
A real page-turner: How the Inflation Reduction Act changes everything
The IRA will radically reshape the energy industry through tax credits, direct investments and loan guarantee programs.
Oct. 3, 2022 -
EV charging network plans approved for all 50 states
The FHWA’s approval unlocks $1.5 billion in NEVI program funds through fiscal years 2022 and 2023 for all jurisdictions across the U.S., allowing the build-out of chargers covering about 75,000 miles of highway.
By Danielle McLean • Sept. 28, 2022 -
Republicans oppose ‘sweeping’ transmission reforms, force Manchin to withdraw energy permitting bill
Progressives feared the bill would enable further development of fossil fuel infrastructure with less environmental review while Republicans worried it gave the federal government too much power over transmission development.
By Robert Walton • Sept. 28, 2022 -
New environmental justice office at EPA aims to raise the issue’s national profile
The Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights, which will employ about 200 people, is seen as another step by the Biden administration to prioritize environmental justice in its policies.
By Megan Quinn • Sept. 27, 2022 -
Virginia governor acting like the CEO he used to be in trying to leave regional GHG compact: state senator
“If the governor wants to withdraw from RGGI, he has to learn how to govern,” Sen. Adam Ebbin said.
By Rod Kuckro • Sept. 27, 2022 -
Sponsored by GridX
Avoiding the ‘tax on God’ dilemma when transitioning to dynamic rates
Dynamic rate design is one of the most important tools for decarbonizing the grid. But it is imperative to figure out how to make these types of choices more accessible and better for customers to achieve targets.
By Brad Langley, VP of Marketing, GridX • Sept. 26, 2022 -
FERC rejects complaint from generators seeking strict MOPR in New York
The agency’s decision “should be the final nail in the MOPR’s coffin,” Sarah Ladin, senior attorney at the Institute for Policy Integrity at NYU School of Law, said Friday.
By Ethan Howland • Sept. 23, 2022 -
NYPA burns up to 44% green hydrogen in GE turbine in first such retrofit of a US natural gas plant
Fuel blends from 5% to 44% hydrogen were tried in the demonstration project.
By Robert Walton • Sept. 23, 2022 -
Retrieved from BLM California.
OpinionIs the Inflation Reduction Act the end of the wholesale clean attribute market?
The IRA may reduce any real or perceived tension between wholesale markets and state policies and the need for other mechanisms to harmonize wholesale markets and state policies, the authors write.
By Sarah Ladin & Burçin Ünel • Sept. 23, 2022 -
Opinion
The maxim of the SEC’s climate rule: What you don’t know can hurt you
The standardized disclosures of climate risks will effectively lay bare companies’ readiness to transition to low-carbon operating models and the mounting physical hazards they face, the authors write.
By Bob Hinkle and Lisa Jacobson • Sept. 22, 2022 -
High electricity rates could jeopardize California’s electrification efforts: report
The analysis estimates that California’s rate structures raise the cost of operating an electric vehicle by roughly $600 a year, which could reduce EV adoption by between 13% and 33%.
By Kavya Balaraman • Sept. 22, 2022