Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (CT DEEP)
Connecticut officials are accepting comments on the scope of the state’s Comprehensive Energy Strategy update through March 3.
Environmental advocates in Connecticut want to update state climate laws to follow the lead of neighboring states in the Northeast.
An exchange of letters between ISO-NE and Connecticut's top energy regulator shows tension still remains about how to handle winter reliability worries.
Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont signed an executive order on climate with directives related to transportation, buildings, resilience, jobs and land use.
Resource adequacy concerns and market rules and transmission infrastructure to support state clean energy policies highlight the issues facing ISO-NE in 2022.
jglazer75, CC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Connecticut Environmental advocates vow to maintain pressure on lawmakers to pass enabling legislation for the Transportation and Climate Initiative Program.
Gov. Ned Lamont said he would not pursue the TCI-P next year, arguing that rising gas prices make the enabling legislation “a pretty tough rock to push."
ISO-NE asked FERC to terminate the capacity supply obligation for the 650-MW gas-fired Killingly Energy Center in eastern Connecticut.
The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection released the final version of its biennial integrated resources plan.
Connecticut's Supreme Court upheld a lower court decision to approve a new gas-fired power plant, dismissing a local environmental group’s complaint.
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