Note from the editor A correction to a story from last week. We have updated our post on California's pending clean energy bill to reflect that the 100% renewables provision is an administrative target — not a mandate. The bill would mandate 60% renewables by 2030 and set a 100% target by 2045 for state agencies to use for planning procedures. For a full look at the bill's details and its prospects of passage, read Herman's feature today. After passage in the Senate, lawmakers are confident they can push the measure through the Assembly, but opposition from the state's utilities could prove a roadblock. Thanks to the Utility Dive readers who contacted us to point out the error. As always, you can reach us at utility.dive.editors@industrydive.com, or at the link below. Gavin Bade Editor, Utility Dive Twitter | E-mail |
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Top news GenOn, with nearly 15 GW of gas and coal capacity across 18 states, is the latest victim of persistently low wholesale power market prices. |
Feature Story With current clean energy goals in sight, liberal lawmakers are pushing the state to ratchet up its ambitions. But utility companies could prove a powerful roadblock. |
A cap-and-trade program in Virginia would be the third in the U.S., and buck direction from the White House to pull back on carbon regulation. |
Reliability has been a table stake for utilities for decades, but being ‘out of sight’ has led to being ‘out of mind’ among many utility customers. |
Cybersecurity firm Dragos says Russian hackers developed the malware tied to a 2015 attack that caused widespread blackouts in Ukraine, and it could be used to target the U.S. grid. |
But the rate case will likely be finalized in November and is expected to go into effect at the beginning of 2018. |
Feature Story Energy storage deployment grew nearly 1,000% in Q1 2017. But a new GTM Research report says that pace will probably not last the rest of the year. |
Under H. 1725, utilities would have to submit any plans for system upgrades to a newly-created Grid Modernization Board, which would evaluate the viability of NWAs. |
Both grid operators issued weather alerts last week as high temperatures spurred demand. But prices remained stable. |
Wind and solar power, on the other hand, accounted for nearly one-third of the increase in primary energy use last year. |
Feature Story Utility executives have discovered that cleaning up their power mixes and electrifying other sectors is their best chance at strong growth. But it's easier said than done. |
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