Search
`
July 26, 2024

New York Independent System Operator (NYISO)

© RTO Insider LLC
Decarbonizing New York: Chicken and Egg Proposition
New York’s conundrum is how to ensure grid reliability and resilience as it calls for fossil fuel resources to be replaced by intermittent resources.
© RTO Insider LLC
Overheard at the 2023 New York Energy Summit
Last week’s New York Energy Summit yielded a bumper crop of opinions, updates and words of wisdom from the more than 60 panelists.
© RTO Insider LLC
IPF Panel: MSSC Limits Could Cut OSW Power Coming Onshore
Offshore wind will produce thousands of megawatts of electric power, way more than the onshore transmission system is currently able to absorb, an expert says.
New York 2023: Growing Pains for the Energy Transition
The 2023 New York Energy Summit focused on the financial, regulatory and technology landscape in the state as it presses forward with its energy transition.
NYISO
NYISO Previews Plan to Expedite Interconnection Queue
NYISO updated subcommittee members on a phased window approach to its generator interconnection queue to potentially replace the current process.
New York Utilities
NY Utilities’ Proposed Grid Planning Process Gets Tepid Reception
Stakeholders told the New York PSC that utilities’ proposed transmission planning framework could favor local upgrades over more efficient regional projects.
© RTO Insider LLC
OSW Developers Look to Europe on Meshed HVDC Tx
U.S. OSW developers must follow Europe’s example and build out meshed HVDC systems, experts told the International Partnering Forum.
Siena College
NYISO Receives ‘Exceptional’ Customer Survey Scores
NYSO won "exceptional" grades from its customers in 2022, Siena College Research Institute told the Management Committee.
Claus Ableiter, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
New York Considering Standards for IBRs
The New York State Reliability Council has approved a uniform set of requirements for inverter-based resources over 20 MW to connect to the NYISO grid.
NYISO
NYISO Battered but not Bruised this Winter
December’s winter storm and early February’s cold snap challenged the New York grid, but they did not cause any emergencies, NYISO told the Operating Committee.

Want more? Advanced Search