New Mexico, DOE Spar Over Los Alamos Nuke Waste Disposal

New Mexico and the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Safety Administration (the agency’s mammoth weapons program) are in a dispute over cleanup of nuclear weapons waste at DOE’s Los Alamos National Laboratory. NNSA wants to cap and backfill unlined pits and shafts filled with liquid radioactive and chemical legacy wastes from the weapons program,… More New Mexico, DOE Spar Over Los Alamos Nuke Waste Disposal

HVDC Trends in Terrestrial Transmission

Two major high-voltage direct current (HVDC) underground electric transmission projects are moving forward in New York City and Iowa. Is this the future of long-distance transmission? New York City last week (Sept.2) saw the beginning of a key element in an innovative power transmission line connecting clean Canadian hydro to the city’s distribution system. Workers began… More HVDC Trends in Terrestrial Transmission

FERC Dissects Gas Unreliability

The U.S. natural gas system – from production, to pipelines, to customers, including electric generating plants – is unable to provide reliable electric service during winter storms. That’s the unavoidable conclusion of a joint Federal Energy Regulatory Commission-North American Electric Reliability Corp. analysis of 2022 “Winter Storm Elliott” unveiled at the commission’s meeting yesterday (Sept.… More FERC Dissects Gas Unreliability

The Blue Hydrogen Blues

A significant element in the Biden administration’s plan to substantially reduce emissions of greenhouse gases from fossil fuels, replacing those fuels with hydrogen produced from fossil fuels, is fundamentally flawed, according to a new analysis from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA). IEEFA says it is “extremely concerned that the current blue… More The Blue Hydrogen Blues

Guest Commentary: Washington Should Just Say No to Saudi Nukes

By Henry Sokolski At the G-20 meeting in India last week, President Biden publicly shook Saudi Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman’s (MBS’s) hand and met with him privately. It’s unclear what the two talked about. The good news is that there was no further mention of any U.S. civilian nuclear cooperation with the Kingdom. As… More Guest Commentary: Washington Should Just Say No to Saudi Nukes

CO2 Storage: None if by Land, Some if by Sea?

The Environmental Protection Agency is getting deluged with applications from companies, predominantly located in oil and gas states such as Louisiana and Texas, seeking to capture and store carbon dioxide underground. The Biden administration is betting that carbon capture and sequestration will make a major contribution to reducing atmospheric CO2, a primary greenhouse gas. By… More CO2 Storage: None if by Land, Some if by Sea?

Maine Ballot Initiative: Hostile Takeover of IOUs

Maine voters in November could approve a ballot initiative that is a hostile takeover of the Pine Tree State’s two investor-owned transmission and distribution utilities – Central Maine Power and Versant Power. Question 3 on the off-year initiative ballot, written by the Pine Tree Power coalition, is simple: “An Act to Create the Pine Tree… More Maine Ballot Initiative: Hostile Takeover of IOUs

Appeals Court Upholds FERC’s 2020 PURPA Rules

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco has largely upheld the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s 2020 policy changes, known as Order 872, to the commission’s original implementation 1978 Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA), which FERC adopted in 1980. The three-judge panel in SEIA v. FERC rejected claims by the Solar Energy Industries… More Appeals Court Upholds FERC’s 2020 PURPA Rules