Florida Regulator Approves Cost Recovery for Second Phase of Tampa Electric's 600-Megawatt Solar Plan

Florida Regulator Approves Cost Recovery for Second Phase of Tampa Electric’s 600-Megawatt Solar Plan

The Florida Public Service Commission on Oct. 29 authorized Tampa Electric Company to recover costs for five solar projects totaling 260 megawatts under the second phase of the company’s solar plan. The projects raise the revenue requirement by $46 million resulting in a $2.46 increase in monthly residential bills, effective January 2019. The agency said…

New England Grid Operator Proposes Market Design to Integrate Battery Storage

New England Grid Operator Proposes Market Design to Integrate Battery Storage

ISO New England Inc. filed revisions with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission for a new market design that would help emerging storage technologies to “more fully participate” in the wholesale power markets, according to an Oct. 29 news release. The rule would recognize the ability of batteries to transition continuously and rapidly from charging to…

New Jersey Regulator Announces Energy Storage Analysis to Help Achieve 2 Gigawatt Goal

New Jersey Regulator Announces Energy Storage Analysis to Help Achieve 2 Gigawatt Goal

The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities approved a six-month contract beginning Nov. 1 with Rutgers University to conduct an analysis of energy storage, according to the agency’s Oct. 29 press release. The state enacted legislation in May that sets a target to reach 600 megawatts of storage by 2021 and 2,000 megawatts by 2030.…

Court Endorses Connecticut’s Diversion of Clean Energy Program Funds to Fill Budget Gap

Court Endorses Connecticut’s Diversion of Clean Energy Program Funds to Fill Budget Gap

The U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut ruled on Oct. 25 that Connecticut’s transfer of ratepayer funds collected for energy conservation programs to the general fund is not illegal. The court said that state law has not promised ratepayers that their money would not be transferred to the general fund for other purposes,…

Oregon Governor Issues Executive Order to Ban Offshore Oil Development Citing Threat to Coastal Economy

Oregon Governor Issues Executive Order to Ban Offshore Oil Development Citing Threat to Coastal Economy

Governor Kate Brown, a Democrat, issued an executive order on Oct. 24 directing state agencies to safeguard Oregon’s coastal economy by preventing the construction of infrastructure associated with oil and gas drilling. The measure comes in response to the Trump administration’s proposal to encourage offshore drilling in federal waters off the Oregon coast. Brown sought…

Missouri Regulators Clears Ameren to Build 400-Megawatt Wind Farm, Largest in State

Missouri Regulators Clears Ameren to Build 400-Megawatt Wind Farm, Largest in State

The Missouri Public Service Commission on Oct. 24 approved a settlement authorizing Ameren Missouri, a subsidiary of Ameren Corporation, to construct and operate its proposed High Prairie Wind Farm in Schuyler and Adair counties. Under the settlement, TG High Prairie LLC, a special purpose entity tasked with building the facility, would merge into Ameren Missouri…

Ohio Regulator Creates Grid Modernization Workgroups to Foster Innovation Towards Enhanced Customer Experience

Ohio Regulator Creates Grid Modernization Workgroups to Foster Innovation Towards Enhanced Customer Experience

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio on Oct. 24 established the PowerForward Collaborative, a utility workgroup charged with monitoring marketplace developments to fulfil the objectives of its grid modernization roadmap. The PowerForward roadmap charts a path forward for the state’s grid modernization endeavor, creating a regulatory paradigm to foster innovation that allows for an enhanced…

Mid Atlantic Power Market Gears Up for Reforms as Debate Over Subsidized Resources Intensifies

EnerKnol’s Visual Primer – Mid Atlantic Power Market Gears Up for Reforms as Debate Over Subsidized Resources Intensifies

PJM Interconnection LLC is at the crossroads for capacity market reforms as participation of sources receiving out-of-market state revenues continues to grow. Significant debate around the issue of price suppression from subsidized resources culminated in the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's invalidation of PJM’s capacity market rules. Several states have opposed the premise arguing that the threat from subsidies is overstated and sweeping changes would unlawfully intrude on state energy policies. Following the FERC directive which rejected PJM’s changes proposed in April, the grid operator on Oct. 2 unveiled a plan which would address price distortion while advancing state policy interests.

U.S. Energy Department Partners With Industry to Tap Lead Battery Potential for Vehicles, Power Grid

U.S. Energy Department Partners With Industry to Tap Lead Battery Potential for Vehicles, Power Grid

The U.S. Energy Department’s Argonne National Laboratory signed an agreement with 14 members of the Advanced Lead Acid Battery Consortium to explore the next generation of lead batteries making it more attractive to the automotive industry and the power grid, according to an Oct. 19 press release. Lead battery makers have largely focused on the…

California Regulator Clears 175 Megawatts of Energy Storage Contracts for Resource Adequacy, Distribution Deferral

California Regulator Clears 175 Megawatts of Energy Storage Contracts for Resource Adequacy, Distribution Deferral

The California Public Utilities Commission approved Pacific Gas and Electric Company’s energy storage contracts totaling 165 megawatts with six storage resources including a 20-megawatt project that would provide distribution deferral services, according to an Oct. 19 decision. The commission also authorized a 10-megawatt contract proposed by Southern California Edison Company. The contracts stem from a…