D.C. Circuit slams FERC’s wink-nod pipeline greenhouse gas policy

“The ink has gone dry on FERC’s rubber stamp for gas projects,” commented Moneen Nasmith, Earthjustice senior attorney. The greenhouse gas impacts of FRC’s decisions granting authority for new natural gas pipelines has again come into public view. Yesterday (July 30) the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals bluntly rejected a January 2023 FERC order approving… More D.C. Circuit slams FERC’s wink-nod pipeline greenhouse gas policy

Holtec: Palisades restart progress, Pilgrim decommissioning setback, UK factory examined

Holtec International’s plan to resurrect the shuttered Pilgrim nuclear plant in Michigan is generating optimism. If successful, could nuclear grave robbing could come to life, decommissioning morphing into recommissioning? Speaking at a House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing last week (July 23), Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Christopher Hanson told U.S. Rep. Tim Walberg (R-Mich) that… More Holtec: Palisades restart progress, Pilgrim decommissioning setback, UK factory examined

Manchin-Barrasso energy permitting bill born

The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee leadership this week (July 23) unveiled legislation designed to streamline permitting of energy infrastructure projects, including new interstate electric transmission projects. The prospects are unclear in a presidential election year. The legislation, the “Energy Permitting Reform Act of 2024,” is the product of committee Democratic (now an independent… More Manchin-Barrasso energy permitting bill born

Look out Li, Na and Fe want to beat your butt

Will sodium displace lithium as the key to high-density, long-lasting batteries to power smart phones, electric vehicles, and turn intermittent solar and wind power into dispatchable electricity? Are iron-air batteries heavyweights aimed at becoming serious contenders for the battery energy storage crown? Lithium’s strength is known. It is a muscular lightweight, the lightest metal on… More Look out Li, Na and Fe want to beat your butt

Interior shuts down large Mass. offshore wind farm after blade failure

The U.S. Interior Department has shut down the planned 804-MW Vineyard 1 wind project operating and under construction in federal waters some 15 miles off Nantucket Island. The order came after a blade on one of the 13-MW wind turbines shattered on July 17 spreading debris, some of which washed up on beaches on the… More Interior shuts down large Mass. offshore wind farm after blade failure

Coal ash: Water, water everywhere, not all alike?

The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has stomped down two separate, nearly identical coal-fired utility challenges to the Environmental Protection Agency’s long-running rules on cleaning up coal ash ponds. In a ruling June 28, the three-judge panel rejected a claim from the utilities that somehow groundwater and rainfall are different and the EPA’s 2015 coal… More Coal ash: Water, water everywhere, not all alike?

An SMR miscellany: Dominion, EDF, Britian, Biden

Virginia-based investor-owned utility Dominion Energy wants to become the first in the nation to switch on a trendy small modular nuclear reactor, despite the absence of significant details about what this nuclear unicorn might look like. The company’s electric customers are going to pay in advance for the blank-slate SMR. Last week (July 10), Virginia’s… More An SMR miscellany: Dominion, EDF, Britian, Biden

Disgraced Enron’s criminal electrical tentacles continue to entwine California

The long fallout from the fall of Enron’s illegal electricity market manipulations early this century continues. The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Tuesday (July 9) overturned a Federal Energy Regulatory Commission refund order to sellers of electricity during an August-September 2020 California heat wave. FERC ordered the refunds to distribution utilities based on California Independent… More Disgraced Enron’s criminal electrical tentacles continue to entwine California

“Fusion propaganda” meets on-the-ground reality

Harsh reality is again clashing with the fanciful hype of the past several years about fusion energy. The only credible attempt to harness the physics of the sun — ITER (Latin for “the path” and originally the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) — has again pushed back the date when it will attempt a sustained fusion reaction… More “Fusion propaganda” meets on-the-ground reality