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July 31, 2024

carbon emissions

QA: NEPOOL Chair on Redesigning Market Rules for Low-Carbon Future
RTO Insider spoke to the chair of NEPOOL, which is reviewing its market rules to align them with New England’s efforts towards a low-carbon future.
PJM: Regional Plan Cuts Costs, but Gas Prices are Wild Card for CPP Compliance
The Clean Power Plan poses no threat to reliability in PJM, but compliance costs are highly sensitive to gas prices and whether states go it alone or combine efforts with a regional approach, according to a study released by the RTO.
PJM’s Grid 20/20 Ponders Mixing Public Policy, Competitive Markets
Panelists at the PJM Grid 20/20 summit discussed the challenges of conflicting state public policy, competing interests and the impact on the RTO's competitive markets.
Southern California Edison Preparing for Distributed Energy Future
Edison International, and its SoCalEd subsidiary, are maneuvering to capitalize on California’s effort to meet its greenhouse gas emissions goals.
New York Adopts Clean Energy Standard, Nuclear Subsidy
The New York PSC unanimously approved its Clean Energy Standard, including a controversial plan to provide a nuclear subsidy for up to 12 years.
Integrated Resource Planning on the Horizon for Calif.
The California PUC's highest priority is reforming its long-term planning process to ensure the state will meet its emission  reduction goals.
Overheard at GCPA Annual Spring Conference
Almost 500 electric and gas industry participants attended the Gulf Coast Power Association’s (GCPA) 30th annual spring conference,
MISO Proposes 3 New MTEP 17 Futures
MISO proposed the adoption of three new future scenarios intended to inform the development of MTEP 17.
Market Policies, Emissions Goals on Collision Course in New England
ISO-NE market rules favoring natural gas clash with renewable energy goals, speakers at the EUCI US/Canada Cross-Border Power Summit said.
Modeling Shows Need for Higher Wind Assumptions
The increase in wind generation under the Clean Power Plan would likely exceed MISO’s previous assumptions, according to a new study.

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