New England Power Pool (NEPOOL)
ISO-NE plans to discontinue feedback on three stakeholder proposals as part of discussions on eliminating the minimum offer price rule, the RTO told NEPOOL.
Stakeholders told the ISO-NE Consumer Liaison Group that the RTO and NEPOOL still need greater transparency and changes to governance.
Crispins C. Crispian, CC BY-SA-4.0, via Wikimedia
NEPOOL stakeholders and ISO-NE continue to work on eliminating the MOPR from the capacity market, discussing multiple proposals on transitional mechanisms.
ISO-NE presented its proposed 2022 operating and capital budgets to the NEPOOL Participants Committee.
ISO-NE proposed an installed capacity requirement of 32,568 MW for FCA 16, a 1,585-MW decrease from FCA 15, at the NEPOOL Reliability Committee meeting.
Stakeholders discussed ISO-NE’s revised proposal for FERC Order 2222 compliance and removal of the MOPR at NEPOOL's three-day summer meeting.
The New England States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE) presented its “Advancing the Vision” report to the NEPOOL Participants Committee.
ISO-NE presented its revised Order 2222 compliance proposal to the NEPOOL Markets Committee, including changes to EAS market participation and more.
ISO-NE and NEPOOL kicked off a two-day meeting with a session strictly devoted to discussing removing the MOPR from the capacity market.
According to a report from the External Market Monitor, energy prices and uplift costs in ISO-NE are higher compared to other RTO markets.
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