American Municipal Power (AMP)
PJM unanimously approved a problem statement to consider granting merchant transmission developers capacity interconnection rights for offshore wind.
PJM riled stakeholders when it rejected manual language approved by more than two-thirds of members on transmission owners’ end-of-life projects.
PJM’s transmission owners have floated a proposal that would comply with FERC’s show cause order on their planning processes.
AMP and ODEC developed a proposal to give PJM stakeholders “meaningful input” in planning of transmission projects for end-of-life facilities.
PJM staff completed an analysis on the reliability impact of the retirements of FirstEnergy’s Davis-Besse, Perry and Beaver Valley nuclear plants.
American Municipal Power contended that PJM’s limited review of transmission owner projects is not rigorous enough to ensure the RTO is avoiding unnecessary costs.
FERC ordered a technical conference to consider whether PJM should move from a year-round to a seasonal capacity market construct.
PJM transmission owners’ processes for developing supplemental projects violate FERC Order 890 transparency and coordination requirements, FERC ruled.
American Municipal Power (AMP) continued its criticism of PJM’s grid spending, grilling utility officials during a marathon TEAC meeting.
The PJM Board of Managers authorized $348 million in transmission projects, irking American Municipal Power.
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