Is California Energy Commission cockamamie?

California has too much solar-produced electricity. The California Energy Commission this month said the answer to that is to build more solar. California has a very expensive housing market. The California Energy Commission this month said the answer is to increase the cost of a new home by around $10,000. The five-member energy commission voted … More Is California Energy Commission cockamamie?

Entergy stumbles on astroturf

When the New Orleans city council held a public meeting last fall to get comments on a controversial $210 million power plant Entergy Corp. wants to build, some 50 demonstrators clad in orange T-shirts and carrying professionally-printed signs showed up in support. Local plant opponents also attended, but the plant supporters outnumbered them. The same … More Entergy stumbles on astroturf

Dueling views of electricity regulation and no-fault capitalism

For Scott Hempling, a veteran electric utility regulatory critic, recent activities suggest only a lip-service dedication to capitalism on the part of investor-owned utilities undercut by industry developments. For Branko Terzic, a former state and federal utility regulator and a consultant to investor-owned utilities, current trends suggest that IOUs are need help from regulators as … More Dueling views of electricity regulation and no-fault capitalism

Tesla hangs on in 1Q 2018 with better-than-expected results

Electric car maker Tesla’s river of red ink continued for the first quarter of 2018, but the losses announced today were less than some analysts expected. The troubled automaker is still bedeviled by an inability to roll out its mid-priced ($35,000) Model 3 at profitable levels, the only path to a sustainable business model. But … More Tesla hangs on in 1Q 2018 with better-than-expected results

FirstEnergy federal bailout slammed from right and left

The latest ploy the Trump administration is considering to bail out failing coal and nuclear plants in the PJM Interconnection’s competitive wholesale markets is drawing fire from the right and the left. At the behest of Akron-based FirstEnergy, the Department of Energy is reviewing a petition to employ the emergency provisions (Section 202(c)) of the … More FirstEnergy federal bailout slammed from right and left

No-fault capitalism: Trump, coal, and nukes

Some existing U.S. coal and nuclear plants have failed in competitive wholesale markets for several years, mostly for sound commercial reasons. The driving factor has been the astonishing rise of low-cost natural gas, thanks to new technologies. Horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing have turned the tables on electric generation. State and federal subsidies for wind … More No-fault capitalism: Trump, coal, and nukes

PURPA: Reform or wreck?

Political heat appears to be increasing under an electric policy issue that has been simmering for several years. The issue is changes to the 1978 Public Utilities Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA). Those who want significant changes to the venerable law describe it as “reform.” Opponents more often call it “gutting” the law. PURPA is arguably … More PURPA: Reform or wreck?

FERC embarks on formal review of gas pipeline approval process

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission today formally began a process announced  at the end of December during the first meeting chaired by Kevin McIntyre, issuing a notice of inquiry to review the agency’s 1999 policy statement (“Certification of New Interstate Natural Gas Pipeline Facilities – Statement on Policy”) on how it will certify new natural … More FERC embarks on formal review of gas pipeline approval process