Coal Fired Generation New York New England

Coal’s Share of New England Power Mix Drops to One Percent, Driven by Plant Closures, Low Operating Rates: EIA

Coal-fired electricity generation and coal consumption in New England and New York have fallen to near minimal levels as many of the coal plants in the region have either retired or switched fuels, according to a Feb. 4 report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Coal’s share of generation will be less than one percent…

U.S. Energy Department Announces $170 Million to Support Solar, Geothermal Technologies

U.S. Energy Department Announces $170 Million to Support Solar, Geothermal Technologies

The U.S. Energy Department will invest $125.5 million to advance research and development of solar technologies that lower costs, increase the competitiveness of manufacturing and businesses, and support grid reliability, according to a Feb. 5 news release. The agency will also spend $43.8 million to support geothermal technologies. The funding opportunities will be made available…

Hawaii Examines Rate Design to Encourage Microgrid Adoption, Advance Clean Energy Policies

Florida Regulator Authorizes Duke Energy to Recover $170 Million in Storm Restoration Costs

The Florida Public Service Commission approved an interim storm restoration recovery surcharge allowing Duke Energy Florida LLC to recover costs related to Hurricane Dorian and Tropical Storm Nestor, which occurred in 2019. The utility reported costs of $171.3 million, including interest. Monthly bills for residential 1,000 kilowatt-hour customers will increase by $5.34 from March 2020…

Minnesota Regulators Clear Environmental Review for Enbridge's $2.9 Billion Oil Pipeline

Minnesota Regulators Clear Environmental Review for Enbridge’s $2.9 Billion Oil Pipeline

The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission on Feb. 3 determined that a court-ordered revised environmental review of Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3 pipeline project is adequate. The agency also approved and re-issued the certificate of need and route permit for the project, which has been delayed for a year due to opposition from environmental groups and permitting…

New England Forward Capacity Auction Clears at Record-Low Prices

The ISO New England Inc.’s annual forward capacity auction closed at a clearing price of $2.00 per kilowatt-month, the lowest in the auction’s history, according to a Feb. 5 news release. The closing price was about 47 percent lower than the last year’s auction, which valued capacity at $3.80 per kilowatt-month. The primary auction received…

Hydropower Garners Attention as States Race for Carbon-Free Grid

Hydropower Garners Attention as States Race for Carbon-Free Grid

Hydropower is moving to the forefront of clean energy and climate policy debates as a growing number of U.S. states are setting targets to achieve zero-carbon power. About half a dozen state-level laws were enacted last year to establish 100 percent clean energy transition, showing how the nation’s decade-long renewable push is ramping up. Hydroelectricity…

U.S. Electricity Generation From Renewables to Surpass Natural Gas in 2045

U.S. Electricity Generation From Renewables to Surpass Natural Gas in 2045: EIA Annual Energy Outlook

U.S. electricity generation from renewable sources such as wind and solar are projected to surpass nuclear and coal by 2021 and to surpass natural gas in 2045, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s Annual Energy Outlook 2020. The share of U.S. electricity generation from renewable sources is projected to double, accounting for 38 percent…

U.S. Natural Gas Use for Power Generation Rose by 12 Percent This Winter

U.S. Natural Gas Use for Power Generation Rose by 12 Percent This Winter: EIA

Estimated U.S. natural gas use for power generation averaged about 28.4 billion cubic per day from November 2019 to January 2020, about 12 percent higher compared to the same period in 2018-2019, according to a Jan. 30 report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Power burn reached 34 Bcf/d on Jan. 20, the second-highest natural…

U.S. Court Orders EPA to Review Biofuel Waivers Granted to Refineries Under Renewable Fuel Standard

U.S. Court Orders EPA to Review Biofuel Waivers Granted to Refineries Under Renewable Fuel Standard

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit on Jan. 24 vacated three orders issued by the Environmental Protection Agency in 2017 granting extensions of small refinery exemptions under the Renewable Fuel Standard, or RFS, program. The court ruled that the agency cannot allow extensions of exemptions that had lapsed, noting that none of…

New Mexico Regulator Clear PNM’s Plan to End Coal-Powered Generation by 2031

New Mexico Court Directs Utility Regulator to Apply Energy Transition Act to PNM’s Coal Plant Retirement Plan

The New Mexico Supreme Court on Jan. 29 ruled that the Public Regulation Commission must apply the Energy Transition Act, or ETA, to the closure and replacement of the San Juan coal-fired plant, granting a petition by New Mexico Governor Lujan Grisham, Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez, and the legislators who sponsored the act. The…

Utility Power Shutoffs

California Commission Proposes Additional Measures to Minimize Impact of Utility Power Shutoffs

The California Public Utilities Commission proposed additional guidelines that investor-owned utilities would be required to follow prior to the 2020 wildfire season prepare for and minimize the impacts of public safety power shutoff events to avoid the risk of power lines starting wildfires, according to a Jan. 30 news release. The agency also issued a…