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MISO will not open its doors to stakeholders or visitors for the rest of the year as the coronavirus pandemic runs its course, the RTO said.
The expanded MOPR will cost PJM ratepayers almost $9.7 billion over nine years if FERC adopts revised floor prices allowing most nuclear plants to clear.
NYISO will face a myriad of challenges as New York decarbonizes its economy and the power sector transitions to zero-emissions generation.
PJM’s first-quarter energy prices fell to their lowest level since the RTO was created in 1999, according to the Monitor’s State of the Market report.
ISO-NE’s winter wholesale market costs totaled $1.8 billion, a 32% decrease from the previous winter because of lower energy and capacity costs.
PJM incumbent TOs won a victory as the Planning Committee endorsed a new regional targeted market efficiency project process that would be excluded from competition.
The MIC will choose between a PJM proposal and one from the Monitor to resolve pricing and dispatch misalignment issues in the fast-start pricing plan.
More than two dozen companies and coalitions filed responses to PJM’s compliance filing to FERC's order expanding its MOPR.
FERC partly accepted NYISO’s compliance filing on buyer-side market power mitigation rules, denying a waiver and rejecting the ISO’s arguments on Tariff language.
PJM officials have revised some of their proposed rules for applying the MOPR to state default service procurements in response to stakeholder feedback.
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