ALABAMA
Senate Advances Bill to Expand PSC
The Senate passed a bill that would expand the Public Service Commission from three members to seven, who would represent areas of the state rather than serving in an at-large capacity.
According to the bill, the governor would appoint four commissioners by July 15. Two commissioners would serve two‑year terms while two would serve four‑year terms. The governor would be required to select appointees from a list of three names submitted by the lieutenant governor, house speaker and senate pro tempore for each position. Commissioners elected after June 1 would serve six-year terms.
The bill does not change the way utilities are regulated or address profit but would freeze base rates through June 2029.
More: WBRC
KENTUCKY
Senate Passes Bill Exempting EPIC from Open Records Law
The Senate voted 29-6 to approve a bill that would exempt the taxpayer-funded Energy Planning and Inventory Commission (EPIC) from the state’s Open Records Act.
The bill would exempt “information, records, data, files, documents or correspondence” created by EPIC. The legislature created EPIC in 2024 to review utilities’ plans to retire fossil fuel-fired power plants, along with analyzing supply, demand and infrastructure.
The bill would also remove appointments made by Gov. Andy Beshear to an executive committee within EPIC and give appointment power to Attorney General Russell Coleman.
More: Kentucky Lantern
MAINE
Harrington Adopts Utility‑scale Solar Moratorium
The town of Harrington voted to enact a moratorium on utility‑scale solar farms.
The Solar Energy Ordinance authorizes personal ground‑mounted systems and personal and commercial roof‑mounted installations but does not authorize power to be distributed to the grid for profit. The commercial provision applies only to businesses that install systems to power their own operations.
More: The Maine Monitor
House Passes Bill Requiring PUC to Consider Affordability
The House passed a bill that would require the Public Utilities Commission to consider the impact of affordability and publicize data from utilities.
The amended bill directs the PUC to develop an affordability metric to assess the impact of bills on customers’ overall energy burden, which would be submitted to a legislative committee by Jan. 15, 2027. The commission also would be required to publicize data from utilities related to credit and collection activities, and to conduct a review of rates, during which it would consider options to contain costs in delivery rates, reduce transmission and distribution bill volatility, and increase bill transparency.
The bill now heads to Gov. Janet Mills.
More: Maine Morning Star
MICHIGAN
Apex Clean Energy Ditches Plans for Wind Farm
Apex Clean Energy announced it is abandoning plans to build a wind farm on 50,000 acres in the western part of the state.
According to reports, Apex was able to sign leases with about 500 property owners, which fell short of its goal by about 20,000 acres.
More: Michigan Public Radio
MISSISSIPPI
DEQ Approves xAI Permit
The Department of Environmental Quality unanimously approved a plan by xAI to build a 41-turbine natural gas power plant.
The generator would power xAI’s data centers in Memphis, Tenn.
The DEQ’s decision comes three weeks after it held a town hall to invite feedback on xAI’s application. Dozens of residents and advocates — both from Mississippi and Tennessee — spoke out against the permit. No one spoke in favor of the facility.
More: Mississippi Today; CNBC
NEVADA
NV Energy Asks PUC to Delay Peak Demand Charge Start Date
NV Energy asked the Public Utilities Commission to push back implementation of its peak demand charge until Oct. 1.
The legality of the demand charge is being challenged by the Attorney General’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. It was scheduled to go into effect April 1. Under state law, utilities can ask to change the implementation of new charges up to 10 days before they are scheduled to go into effect.
More: Nevada Current
NORTH DAKOTA
Judge Voids Summit’s CO2 Storage Permit
South Central Judicial District Judge Jackson Lofgren revoked Summit Carbon Solutions’ permits for underground carbon dioxide storage, saying parts of the state law under which they were issued are unconstitutional.
The decision is the second time a judge has reached the conclusion that the 2009 state law violates the state’s constitution. The law authorizes regulators to permit the storage of carbon dioxide beneath the property of nonconsenting landowners.
A Summit spokesperson said the company is reviewing the decision and evaluating next steps.
More: North Dakota Monitor
SOUTH DAKOTA
Gov. Rhoden Signs Bill Limiting Utilities’ Wildfire Liability
Gov. Larry Rhoden signed a bill that will limit utilities’ liability in wildfire lawsuits.
Once the law takes effect July 1, people who sue will be able to recover damages only from utilities that either fail to file fire mitigation plans and follow them, or act with criminal intent or exhibit “willful and wanton” misconduct. No claims will be valid after four years and plaintiffs will be limited in the types of damages they can recover.
More: South Dakota Searchlight
PUC Approves Otter Trail Rate Hike
The Public Utilities Commission approved a $3.3 million rate hike for Otter Trail Power.
The company originally asked for $5.7 million, which would have raised average residential rates by more than $14/month. The settlement will raise rates by $8.97/month.
Black Hills Energy also has asked for a rate increase that would raise rates by about $25/month.
More: South Dakota Searchlight
WISCONSIN
PSC OKs We Energies Solar-plus-storage Purchase
The Public Service Commission unanimously approved We Energies’ purchase of the 200-MW Dawn Harvest Solar and Battery Energy Storage Facility.
The $443 million project will provide 150 MW of solar capacity and 50 MW of battery storage. We Energies will own the storage facility and 80% of the solar generation. The remaining power will be split between the Wisconsin Public Service Corporation and Madison Gas & Electric.
The project is expected to be operational in 2028.
More: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel