Regulation & Policy: Page 68


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    California utilities object to fossil fuel requirements in proposed 11.5 GW procurement package

    The proposed procurement is intended to maintain grid reliability after the Diablo Canyon nuclear plant is retired by 2025.

    By Kavya Balaraman • June 15, 2021
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    Manchin defends coal-fired plants, expresses concern over 'aggressive' Biden climate goals

    Sen. Joe Manchin, whose home state of West Virginia is in the heart of mining country, came out swinging in defense of coal-fired power plants in the U.S. at the annual EEI conference, arguing they are being singled out unfairly.

    By Scott Van Voorhis • June 14, 2021
  • High voltage power lines seen from below Explore the Trendline
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    Trendline

    Top 5 Stories from Utility Dive

    Power demand is rising amid dramatic shifts in federal energy policy, but technology and markets continue to push the grid toward cleaner, more distributed resources. 

    By Utility Dive staff
  • Glick: FERC to outline plan to tackle transmission 'certainly' by the end of summer

    Planning and cost allocation are two of the larger-scale keys to building out the amount of transmission necessary to bring the power grid to 100% carbon-free power under President Biden's 2035 timeline, according to Glick.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 11, 2021
  • National Grid encourages FERC to provide better incentives for grid-enhancing technology

    Xcel Energy, on a panel, agreed with many of the hurdles a National Grid representative laid out, including operational, technological and financial barriers.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 10, 2021
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    North Carolina unveils ambitious offshore wind power plan, targeting 8 GW by 2040

    Gov. Roy Cooper issued an executive order on Wednesday making North Carolina the latest state with an offshore wind target, as the budding sector draws increasing interest from investors and the federal government.

    By Scott Van Voorhis • June 10, 2021
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    Colonial CEO defends oversight response, urges transparency on ransomware

    Private industry needs more immediate and detailed threat intelligence to prevent these attacks from happening in the future, CEO Joseph Blount told the House Committee on Homeland Security.

    By David Jones • June 10, 2021
  • California PUC considers sending utilities back to drawing board on hydrogen blending proposal

    “This isn’t the commission slamming the door on hydrogen research — they’re just saying that the utilities don’t have a blank check," said Sara Gersen, clean energy senior attorney with Earthjustice.

    By Kavya Balaraman • June 9, 2021
  • FERC has more questions for Duke, Dominion on Southeast energy market proposal

    According to a SEEM spokesperson, the questions "are readily answerable" and the utilities will respond "thoroughly, efficiently, and promptly" in the 10 days the commission provided.

    By Catherine Morehouse • Updated Aug. 9, 2021
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    Colorado legislators direct all transmission utilities to join an organized wholesale market by 2030

    The passage of Senate Bill 72 is not only an indicator of the growing interest of Western states in regional power markets, but it could also put pressure on other states to create similar policies, one analyst said.

    By Emma Penrod • June 8, 2021
  • Fate of Illinois nuclear plants in balance after 3 fail to clear PJM auction and subsidy plan stalls

    Three Illinois nuclear plants failed to land power contracts at the PJM capacity auction, generating additional uncertainty about their future.

    By Scott Van Voorhis • June 7, 2021
  • New England states push for governance changes in ISO-NE, ahead of anticipated MOPR reform

    To quell state frustrations, regulators say conversations will have to move beyond reforming the controversial minimum price rule.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 7, 2021
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    Avangrid faces tough questions from New Mexico regulators in final hurdle to $8.3B PNM merger

    The company is facing scrutiny over $60 million in penalties and cost disallowances levied against its utility subsidiaries across several states for service issues.

    By Scott Van Voorhis • June 7, 2021
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    Opinion

    'An unlikely alliance': US investor-owned utilities and NGOs partner to advance new carbon-free tech

    The Edison Electric Institute and the Clean Air Task Force announce an initiative to support a slate of emerging carbon-free technologies.

    By Ben Fowke and Armond Cohen • June 4, 2021
  • Texas lawmakers approve bill mandating power plant weatherization, market reforms

    Senate Bill 3, signed by Gov. Greg Abbott on Tuesday, mandates weatherization standards and makes some market reforms, but it will not require renewable energy providers to pay for reliability guarantees.

    By Emma Penrod • Updated June 9, 2021
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    Opinion

    The Texas Big Freeze: Holistic policy design for a clean and resilient grid

    Energy Innovation evaluates a set of lessons from Texas' February power outages that regulators and grid operators can apply around the country, while it cautions against inadequate responses to the crisis.

    By Dan Esposito and Eric Gimon • June 4, 2021
  • FERC should expand organized markets across the US, former chairs and commissioners say

    Although momentum for RTO expansion is growing, resistance to the shift is strong in some markets where the more competitive structure doesn't exist.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 3, 2021
  • California PUC proposes rules to accelerate near-term EV charger deployment

    Facing a potential deficit in the number of chargers needed to meet the state's electric vehicle goals, the state gives utilities more flexibility to install new infrastructure. 

    By Jason Plautz • June 3, 2021
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    Nuclear capacity increases by 4.5 GW in long-delayed 'MOPRed' PJM auction, coal loses 8 GW

    Total costs dropped $4.4 billion and prices dropped to $50/MW-day during PJM’s years-delayed capacity auction, due to lower load forecasts, which translate to lower reliability requirements, according to the grid operator.

    By Catherine Morehouse • June 3, 2021
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    California utilities highlight reliability, cost concerns as state charts path to 100% clean power

    "California has been a leader in decarbonization... how do we also ensure we’re a leader in making sure we’re planning for reliability as the grid changes?" asked one utility representative.

    By Kavya Balaraman • June 3, 2021
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    Opinion

    The Texas Big Freeze: How much were markets to blame for widespread outages?

    Rather than abandoning markets, regulators and lawmakers should correct them through smart policy that bolsters readiness for future climate-driven disasters while facilitating grid decarbonization, the authors write.

    By Dan Esposito and Eric Gimon • June 3, 2021
  • Transition away from natural gas necessary to meet climate goals but creates equity concerns, experts say

    The U.S. may have a handle on how to decarbonize electricity, a panel of regulators and lawmakers concluded, but eliminating dependence on natural gas without burdening low-income populations is another matter.

    By Emma Penrod • June 2, 2021
  • Nevada passes clean energy bill requiring state to join RTO, accelerating $2B transmission project

    The bill also requires utilities to forecast a path to achieve an 80% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions from 2005 levels by the end of the decade.

    By Jason Plautz • June 2, 2021
  • Pike Electric service trucks line up after a snow storm on February 16, 2021 in Fort Worth, Texas.
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    Opinion

    The Texas Big Freeze: How a changing climate pushed the state's power grid to the brink

    Energy Innovation explains what drove the extended Texas outages in February in a series on resiliency against extreme events.

    By Dan Esposito and Eric Gimon • June 2, 2021
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    Biden proposes more than $2B for clean energy infrastructure, $14B+ increase in climate spending

    Biden's first proposed budget includes sizable increases in spending for climate change mitigation, research, EVs and clean energy infrastructure.

    By Emma Penrod • June 1, 2021
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    Deep Dive

    Xcel's record-low-price procurement highlights benefits of all-source competitive solicitations

    The utility's Colorado division showed how competitive bidding benefits customers if regulators protect the quality of the process.

    By June 1, 2021