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week of Jan. 27, 2022

The EnerKnol Week Ahead is back to give you the key energy policy events happening next week, all powered by the EnerKnol Platform. Coming up, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers draft rules to cut methane emissions from the oil and gas industry; New York discusses a proposal for a statewide community distributed generation program on an opt-out basis; the California Energy Commission examines natural gas research initiatives for the 2022-2023 fiscal year to reach statewide carbon neutrality goals.

Featured Entities


BLM

California EC

District of Columbia PSC

DOE

EPA

Hawaii PUC

Massachusetts DPU

Maryland MEA

New Jersey DEP

New York PSC

Federal Agencies

Monday,
January 31
EPA Methane Emissions Rule

The Environmental Protection Agency is due to receive comments on additional sources of methane to further strengthen emission controls and increase methane reductions from oil and gas operations. In November, the agency proposed a rule that would require states to reduce methane emissions from existing sources nationwide for the first time and expand and strengthen current requirements for new, modified and reconstructed sources in the oil and natural gas industry. Further, the rule would encourage the use of innovative methane detection technologies and other cutting-edge solutions, many of which are being developed and deployed by small businesses. The proposal is in response to President Biden’s executive order on Protecting Public Health and the Environment and Restoring Science to Tackle the Climate Crisis. The proposed rule would reduce 41 million tons of methane emissions from 2023 to 2035, the equivalent of 920 million metric tons of carbon dioxide. READ MORE

Monday,
January 31
BLM Arizona Solar Projects Information

The Bureau of Land Management is due to receive public input on the applications for three solar projects to be located in Maricopa County, Arizona. Pinyon Solar, proposed by 8minute Solar Energy, consists of a 200-megawatt alternating current solar power generating and battery storage facility. Naturgy Candela Devco LLC’s proposed Vulcan 2 Solar would include a 650-megawatt generating facility with equivalent battery storage. Ditat Deus Solar LLC has proposed the Western Tiger Solar project, a 650-megawatt alternating current solar power generating facility with up to 350-megawatts of battery. The projects follow the current administration’s goal of developing 25 gigawatts of solar, wind, and geothermal production on public lands by 2025.

Tuesday,
February 1
DOE Carbon Reduction Technologies RFI

The U.S. Energy Department is due to receive responses to its request for information on deployment-ready carbon reduction and removal technologies. The department seeks feedback from industry, investors, developers, academia, research laboratories, government agencies, non-governmental organizations, and potentially affected communities, including environmental justice communities. The request follows the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, enacted last November, offering over $20 billion to form the Office of Clean Energy Demonstrations, which seeks to enhance clean energy projects such as green hydrogen, carbon capture, grid level energy storage and small modular reactors. The law includes more than $62 billion for the agency to deliver revolutionary technologies. READ MORE

Wednesday,
February 2
BLM Renewable Energy Projects Draft Guidance

The Bureau of Land Management is due to receive comments on a draft guidance to foster wind and solar energy development on public lands. The proposal would lower acreage rental rates and capacity fees for wind and solar project authorizations. The update is expected to improve financial and regulatory predictability for these projects. The agency has paused annual billing for both wind and solar authorizations until the guidance is finalized. The measure supports President Biden’s goal of attaining a carbon-free power sector by 2035, with at least 25 gigawatts of renewable energy production on public lands by 2025.

Eastern Region

Tuesday,
February 1
MD MEA Offshore Wind Grant Programs

The Maryland Energy Administration is due to receive applications for grants available under two programs for FY 2022. Under the Offshore Wind Workforce Training Program, a total of $1.2 million is available, with the agency contributing up to 75 percent of the total project costs and applicants contributing the remainder in matching funds or in-kind services. The Offshore Wind Capital Expenditures Program provides a grant funding of $1.6 million, with the agency contributing at least 50 percent of the project costs. The initiatives are designed to establish an offshore wind supply chain in the state by supporting local businesses involved in the expansion of offshore wind energy. READ MORE

Tuesday,
February 1
NJ DEP Carbon Emission Control and Prohibition

The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection will conduct a virtual public hearing on a proposed rulemaking intended to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from stationary sources. The measure proposes to address emissions from three major sources: fossil fuel-fired electric generating units through the application of output-based emission limits, certain commercial and industrial fossil fuel-fired boilers based upon an additional permit requirement, and fuel oil by banning its sale and use. The new rules would also cut other air pollutants such as oxides of nitrogen, sulfur dioxide, direct particulate matter, and hazardous air pollutants. READ MORE

Wednesday,
February 2
MA DPU Distributed Energy Resource Planning

The Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities is due to receive comments on the Office of Attorney General’s notice of retention of experts and consultants to assist in the department’s proceeding regarding distributed energy resource planning and interconnection costs. The department issued an order last November establishing a provisional framework for the funding of upgrades to the electric power system to foster prompt and cost-effective development and interconnection of distributed generation. The department opened the proceeding in October 2020 to assess optimal solutions for the interconnection of distributed generation facilities, taking a long-term perspective, and to examine methods for the assignment and recovery of costs associated with the grid connection of these resources. 20-75

Wednesday,
February 2
NY PSC Community Distributed Generation Webinar

The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority will hold a webinar to discuss a white paper on community choice aggregation, or CCA, released by the Public Service Commission in April 2021. The webinar will focus on issues outlined in a November 2021 order on the whitepaper’s proposal for opt-out community distributed generation, or CDG, program operation. Commission staff and interested stakeholders will also identify potential solutions to establish an opt-out program that will benefit all ratepayers. To provide a path forward that ensures uniformity, transparency, and clarity, the whitepaper recommended standardized program filing requirements and provisions to reassure participants that appropriate protections are in place to participate in opt-out CCA programs. To facilitate investment in local distributed resources, the whitepaper proposed the addition of a statewide CDG program on an opt-out basis. A second webinar meeting will be held on Feb. 16. 14-M-0224, 14-01211

Friday,
February 4
DC PSC Interconnections Standards Investigation

The District of Columbia Public Service Commission will hold a meeting of the advanced inverter working group to discuss topics including the establishment of advanced inverter settings profiles, timeline for adoption, and delays in the widespread availability of certified equipment in the market. The group is part of the commission’s investigation into the implementation of interconnection standards for distributed energy resources to attain the state’s solar and grid modernization goals. The Clean Energy DC plan identifies actions required from 2018-2032 in buildings, energy infrastructure, and the transportation system to meet the district’s ambitious emissions reduction targets. RM40-2020-01-M, FC1050

Western Region

Monday,
January 31
CA EC Natural Gas Research Initiatives Workshop

The California Energy Commission is due to receive comments on proposed natural gas research initiatives for the 2022-2023 fiscal year. The commission held a workshop in January to discuss future research and budget requests for the Public-Interest Natural Gas Research and Development Program’s proposed energy-related initiatives. The workshop also considered long-term gas research strategies to help decarbonize the state by 2045. The commission serves as the administrator of the gas research fund, which includes surcharges from customers receiving gas service from public utility corporations. The fund supports public interest research and development through the program, which is evaluated on an annual basis. Research areas covered by this year’s proposed budget include energy efficiency, targeted gas system decommissioning, decarbonization of gas end uses, and entrepreneur development. 16-PIER-01

Monday,
January 31
HI PUC Renewable Energy PPA

The Hawaii Public Utilities Commission will hold an evidentiary hearing on Hawaiian Electric Light Company Inc.’s application for approval of a power purchase agreement for renewable and dispatchable firm energy capacity with Hu Honua Bioenergy LLC. The commission will consider issues set forth in a 2021 order that reopened the proceeding in response to a court ruling, and subsequent modifications. Topics that will be considered include greenhouse gas emissions that would result from approving the agreement and long-term environmental and public health costs of relying on energy generated from the proposed facility. The hearings will be conducted from Jan.31 through Feb. 3. 2017-0122

Thursday,
February 3
CA EC ZEV Infrastructure Plan

The California Energy Commission is due to receive comments on its zero-emission vehicle infrastructure plan designed to support the ZEV market development strategy developed by the Office of Business and Economic Development in collaboration with multiple state agencies. The commission held a workshop in January seeking early input to inform the state’s pathway to deploying the infrastructure necessary to support the level of ZEV adoption needed to meet state goals. A 2020 executive order issued by Governor Gavin Newsom set a 100 percent ZEV target for new passenger vehicle sales by 2035 and medium-and heavy-duty vehicles by 2045. The California Air Resources Board is developing Advanced Clean Cars II and Advanced Clean Fleets regulations to help the state achieve its climate and air quality goals. 21-TRAN-03