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July 23, 2024

Neil Chatterjee

Occidental Chemical
FERC Sets PURPA Review; Powelson Targets 1-Mile Rule
FERC will review how it enforces the 1978 Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA), with the commission’s treatment of the 1-mile rule a likely focus.
© RTO Insider
Overheard at IPPNY 2018 Spring Conference
Industry stakeholders gathered in Albany for the Independent Power Producers of New York (IPPNY) Spring Conference for an update on the rapid changes in the state's grid.
© RTO Insider
FERC Whipsawed on Pipeline Policy in House Hearing
Congress will be watching FERC’s review of its policy on licensing natural gas pipelines very closely. Any changes FERC makes are unlikely to please all members, however.
Overheard at NARUC Winter Policy Meetings
Resilience, pipelines and PURPA topped the discussions at the National Association of Regulatory Commissioners’ (NARUC) winter meetings.
FERC Rules to Boost Storage Role in Markets
FERC ordered RTOs and ISOs to revise their tariffs to allow energy storage resources full access to their markets.
© RTO Insider
McIntyre: Won’t Commit to Probe Leak to ‘Good Friend’
FERC Chairman Kevin McIntyre declined to say whether the commission will investigate how attorney William S. Scherman allegedly learned the contents of a pending order.
© RTO Insider
LaFleur, Chatterjee Discuss NOPR Ruling, Resilience Proceeding
FERC Commissioner Neil Chatterjee acknowledged he has suffered some growing pains in his transition from Capitol Hill partisan to FERC commissioner.
Lights Still on After Nearly 12 Months of Typhoon Trump
While the energy industry has experienced upheaval under Donald Trump in his first year as president, there’s evidence that it has ballast that can withstand it.
FERC to Review Gas Pipeline Approval Process
FERC Chairman Kevin McIntyre announced that the commission would re-examine its 1999 policy statement on certifying natural gas pipelines.
FERC Won’t Fall to Partisanship, Chatterjee Promises ISO-NE
FERC Commissioner Neil Chatterjee promised ISO-NE that the commission will not become “hyper-politicized.”

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