Exelon
The early impacts of PJM’s first capacity auction in three years began to emerge Thursday as Exelon reiterated plans to retire two of its nuclear plants.
Exelon’s Byron and Dresden nuclear plants depend on the Illinois legislature passing a comprehensive energy package, CEO Chris Crane said.
FERC received dozens of comments on the final day for stakeholders to answer questions on the future of PJM’s capacity market.
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities awarded annual subsidies totaling $300 million a year to the state’s three nuclear power plants.
FERC dismissed a complaint by New England generators against Exelon's Mystic cost-of-service agreement.
New Jersey’s Division of Rate Counsel appealed to the Supreme Court the dismissal of its suit seeking to block the BPU's ZEC program for nuclear plants.
FERC explained why it would not reconsider revenue calculations in PJM’s capacity market, saying it did want to further delay the RTO's upcoming auction.
Exelon plans to separate its regulated transmission and distribution utilities from its merchant power generation business.
Stakeholders endorsed PJM’s proposals for mitigating and avoiding designating projects as critical infrastructure under NERC reliability standards.
COVID-19 was the defining problem of 2020 as PJM worked to overcome difficulties in coordinating deliberations on a host of issues, including the MOPR.
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