By Jason Fordney
Speakers at the California Energy Summit said the state’s grid reliability will be increasingly at risk if it doesn’t soon address resource adequacy planning. | © RTO Insider
By Jason Fordney
Speakers at the California Energy Summit said the state’s grid reliability will be increasingly at risk if it doesn’t soon address resource adequacy planning. | © RTO Insider
California’s utilities are about 2,000 MW short of the capacity needed to comply with 2018 local resource adequacy requirements, according to a CAISO report.
California officials are taking another look at offering consumers the ability to choose their electric supplier.
The California Supreme Court declined to review a challenge of the state’s greenhouse gas cap-and-trade program.