Search
December 23, 2025

A Plea to Let Markets Work at IPPNY Clean Energy Conference

As attendees fussed over their last morsels of breakfast, Emilie Nelson, COO of NYISO, opened the Independent Power Producers of New York Spring Clean Energy Conference with a keynote addressing the strange situation New York’s grid is in, and the need to continue to deliver reliability despite political uncertainty.  

“Since the ISO’s inception in 1999, system reliability has been our top priority in the face of great change,” Nelson said. “We maintain that focus [through] societal changes, policy-based or technical issues, or being prepared to manage more frequent, extreme weather.”  

Speaking of changes, Nelson was a last-minute substitution for NYISO CEO Rich Dewey, who was called away on short notice to testify before Congress. (See All 7 ISO/RTOs Send Senior Executives to Update Congress on Reliability.) Nelson touched on themes that probably were familiar to the audience: the tension between policy pushes for zero-emission generation, the aging grid, increasing customer costs and concerns about winter peaking.  

“It is imperative that during this time of rapid change, … we maintain adequate supply necessary to meet growing consumer demand for electricity,” she said. “Competitive markets continue to provide the most powerful vehicle to speed investment in the grid.” 

The message to independent power generators was not lost: The ISO needs them to continue to build more generators to replace retiring infrastructure. 

Nelson said building effective wholesale markets has helped facilitate the grid’s transition, reduce power costs and protect ratepayers from development cost risks. Building the market to support future reliability was her “North Star,” she said.  

How Things Have Changed

The address kicked off a day of discussion about navigating these treacherous waters. Concern about Donald Trump and Elon Musk’s disruptions came up repeatedly in panel discussions.  

“The new administration feels like they’ve been in place for years even though it’s only been 65 days,” Todd Snitchler, CEO of Electric Supply Power Association, said during a morning panel discussion. “Across virtually all of the administrative agencies that impact our work, from FERC to DOE, to SEC to CFTC, all the places that touch the work we do are seeing some sort of disruption.” 

Snitchler said some disruption was good and some was bad but all of it was confusing. He was unsure “what the goal” of the administration is.  

At the same time, Snitchler said he observed a “tremendous” amount of state-level activity. Some states, like Ohio, are leaning into markets. Other states, like New Jersey, express doubts about the role of markets on the grid.  

“New York is potentially in a spot where it needs a reminder about the value markets have provided and how customers have benefited,” he said.  

From left: Marie French, POLITICO; Laura Chappelle of Potomac Law Group; IPPNY CEO Gavin Donohue; EPSA CEO Todd Snitchler; and NEPGA CEO Dan Dolan discuss regional challenges across control areas. | Timothy H. Raab and Northern Photo

Marie French, an energy reporter for POLITICO who moderated the panel, said she observed New York had slowed some of its climate initiatives. Some of that was due to the withering of federal support for offshore wind and other climate projects. Not all of the delays were because of Trump, in her estimation. 

“They’re realizing that all of these things are more complicated to implement and a little more expensive than they had hoped,” French said.  

IPPNY CEO Gavin Donohue remarked that until roughly six months ago, there had been a lot of conversation statewide about climate change, climate justice and carbon pricing. After the election, that conversation shifted abruptly.  

IPPNY CEO Gavin Donohue | Timothy H. Raab and Northern Photo

“Everything has switched to be about reliability and affordability,” Donohue said. “With the economic development backdrop, we have data centers, chip fabs, just a new interest in economic development where we have to build a grid out to three to four times the size.” 

Donohue said discussions about nuclear power also suddenly became prominent and that the state needs to build the market to attract all kinds of new generation technologies. He mentioned hydrogen and geothermal, which seem to have fallen out of the discussion, to his disappointment.  

“Everything is going to collide, and we just need to be ready,” he said. “We need to make sure that we promote policies that are in the best interest of ratepayers and competitive markets.”  

How Do You Build New Nuclear?

There’s renewed interest in building new nuclear power plants in New York. (See NY Takes a Closer Look at Advanced Nuclear.) Panelists said one key element is finding a community that wants a nuclear power plant. 

Philip Church, Oswego County administrator, said that since 1969, the county has been home to the Nine Mile Point nuclear plant. The operator, Constellation, has been a good safety and economic partner, he added. “We’re the home of three nuclear power plants; 75% of New York’s nuclear plants are in our hometown.” If Church had his way, there would be a fourth nuclear unit in Oswego County.  

Despite the optimism, the history of new nuclear in the U.S. is plagued with huge cost overruns and lengthy delays. The first new reactors built in the U.S. since 2016, Vogtle’s two units in Georgia went online seven years late and $17 billion over budget. (See NIA: Cost, Risk Sharing Needed to Grow Advanced Nuclear Pipeline.) 

From left: Rich Barlette, Constellation Energy; Oswego County Administrator Phil Church; New York State Pipe Trades Association President Greg Lancette; Patrick White, Nuclear Innovation Alliance; and Marcus Nichol, Nuclear Energy Institute, discuss the challenges and opportunities posed by new nuclear power technologies. | Timothy H. Raab and Northern Photo

Patrick White of the Nuclear Innovation Alliance said new technologies are making nuclear power safer, more flexible and more appropriate for more locations. He cited small modular nuclear reactors, high-temperature gas reactors and sodium liquid metal reactors. Some of these are just smaller form factors of existing reactors, but others, like the liquid metal reactor, can generate enough heat to support a thermal energy battery.  

“You start to see other options of how we can think differently about nuclear technology and how can it fit into a system to complement renewables,” White said. 

IPPNY

ACE NY Executive Director Marguerite Wells | Timothy H. Raab and Northern Photo

At the same time, smaller reactors theoretically can help bring down construction costs and reduce safety concerns. If most of the components of a small reactor are built offsite and shipped to the building site, that can reduce costs. Smaller reactors run on less fuel and could be more easily contained. 

While new technologies are often expensive, the panelists said this could be offset with federal, state or inter-company agreements to buy in, derisk and reduce construction costs for new technology.  

“When you buy a piece of any other technology, you’re paying the average cost of what they’re able to produce it at,” White said. “Imagine how much more it would cost to buy an iPhone if you had to pay for the first iPhone’s development costs, the factory, the shipping, the supply chain, upfront.” 

The panelists said co-purchasing between four to six units could hit “the sweet spot” to reduce the cost of an individual reactor. 

IPPNY Study: Competitive Generation Reduces Costs

At the final event of the conference, IPPNY unveiled a study commissioned by the New York Affordable Clean Power Alliance about the impact of competitive markets on the cost of electricity. The Alliance is a new group formed out of IPPNY, the Alliance for Clean Energy New York, the New York Battery and Energy Storage Technology Consortium, and other renewable energy organizations.  

Multiple Intervenors, a consortium of large industrial interests and large electrical consumers, issued a press release shortly after the conference, supporting the study.  

“This report affirms Multiple Intervenors’ position that private investment in power generation results in lower electricity costs, greater reliability and improved environmental performance,” said Michael Mager of Multiple Intervenors. “Returning to utility-owned generation would only increase financial burdens on businesses already navigating challenging economic conditions.”

The study used the same data as an earlier Brattle Group study, funded by Con Ed, that made an argument for allowing utilities to build and own generation. (See Brattle Paper Weighs Pros and Cons of Utility-owned Generation in NY.)  

“Nearly 30 years ago, the New York PSC adopted a set of principals … starting with the premise that competition in the electric power industry will further [the] economic and environmental well-being of New York state,” said Shannon Maher Banaga, senior managing director of FTI Consulting, the study authors. “That premise holds true today.” 

Members of FTI Consulting walked through their findings. After the introduction of a competitive generation market, the state’s electricity prices dropped steadily over the past 30 years. Meanwhile, the price of delivery increased steadily.  

“If you compare the past five years of data to the five years prior to restructuring, total generation costs since are roughly 35% lower,” said Robert Kaineg, managing director of FTI. “But those of us that have been watching the news and are sensitive to these issues know that has not translated into lower bills for customers.” 

IPPNY

Robert Kaineg, FTI Consulting Communications | Timothy H. Raab and Northern Photo

Kaineg said he found the costs of transmission and distribution had risen over time and that state policies supporting energy efficiency and clean energy further escalated costs.  

“We’ve seen this come to a head recently with an announcement by Con Ed that it was going to increase its rates by 11.4%, but that buried the lead because they were raising delivery rates by more than 19%,” Kaineg said.  

Kaineg added that private developers were less expensive in almost every case than utilities. Utilities faced all the same challenges that private developers did, and since restructuring, they didn’t necessarily have any in-house generation-building expertise. 

“There really isn’t a reason to expect, from a cost or development perspective, that utilities are going to enjoy any advantages in asset development,” he said.  

IPPNY’s Donohue said some of the increases in transmission and distribution costs fell on an overall lack of investment in the basic necessities of energy infrastructure.  

“We have avoided making tough decisions on transmission and generation,” Donohue said. “When you wait 10 years to put a new line in, it’s obviously going to be a lot more expensive than it was 10 years earlier.” 

ACE NY Executive Director Marguerite Wells said everyone expects more of the power system now than 50 years ago. More things are electronic; more things require electricity to work.  

“We have to pay the piper to do stuff that’s been deferred for a long time,” Wells said. “But the truth of the matter is that it has nothing to do with the source of the electricity and … everything to do with serving the needs that people want from their power system.” 

ISO-NE Consumer Liaison Group Discusses Benefits of Energy Efficiency

PROVIDENCE — Speakers at the ISO-NE Consumer Liaison Group on March 27 discussed the system-wide costs and emissions benefits of energy efficiency and demand flexibility and called on policymakers to double down on efficiency programs as energy demand grows.  

State energy efficiency programs have faced some political scrutiny in recent months amid high winter energy costs. To help reduce near-term electricity costs, the Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities in late February directed utilities to shave $500 million off the upcoming three-year plan for the Mass Save energy efficiency program. 

Jamie Dickerson, senior director of climate and clean energy programs at the Acadia Center, said energy efficiency is responsible for a roughly 15% reduction in the region’s overall power demand and has brought more than $55 billion in benefits to the region since 2012.  

He said it’s unfortunate energy efficiency “has emerged as a scapegoat for some,” given the cost reductions it can provide. Moving ahead, he emphasized the importance of energy efficiency as peak loads increase and estimated that achieving 20% demand flexibility in winter could save the region about $8 billion in transmission spending by 2050. 

“Let’s face it: In every possible way, negawatts — with an ‘N’ — are better than megawatts with an ‘M,’” said New Hampshire Consumer Advocate Don Kreis. 

However, Kreis said it can be difficult to convince ratepayers they’re benefiting from energy efficiency programs when they may not receive the actual upgrades incentivized by the programs.  

David Westman of the Vermont Energy Investment Corp. (VEIC), the administrator of Vermont’s energy efficiency programs, said demand reductions — especially at peak times — provide cost and emissions benefits to the entire system.  

He highlighted how Vermont has helped ski resorts improve the efficiency of their snowmaking operations and said state incentives reducing the payback period for high-efficiency snow guns are a key component to convincing resorts to adopt more efficient equipment.  

At Stratton Mountain in Southern Vermont, replacing 403 snow guns has enabled a 17% reduction in seasonal kWh demand and a 40% reduction in demand during the most essential peak winter hours. 

He noted that VEIC operates an energy efficiency resource participating in ISO-NE’s forward capacity market (FCM), with about 116 MW of summer capacity and 156 MW of winter capacity. The resource’s participation in the FMC has generated over $80 million in revenue since 2010, all of which is invested back into energy efficiency efforts. 

Westman praised ISO-NE’s commitment to keeping energy efficiency in its capacity market as it undergoes a major market reform effort. He said PJM’s move in 2024 to make energy efficiency resources ineligible for its capacity market “puts a lot of PJM ratepayers at a significant risk of higher costs.” (See PJM Asks FERC to Eliminate Energy Efficiency from Capacity Market.) 

Brett Feldman, energy efficiency manager for Rhode Island Energy, acknowledged that many of the easiest energy efficiency reductions already have been achieved, with LED lighting “basically baseline now.” 

However, he said there still is a lot of home retrofit work to be done as homes electrify and said it’s important to focus on electrification whenever possible with new homes. He noted that artificial intelligence tools could help provide more gains. 

The flip side of artificial intelligence is significantly increased energy demand from data centers, and several speakers expressed concern that data center demand growth may wipe out some of the gains made by energy efficiency. 

“AI specialized data centers are likely to represent the single largest driver of load growth in the U.S. over the next five to 10 years,” said Tyler Norris, a Ph.D. student at Duke University who is focused on power systems.  

He recently authored a study that found that, because the U.S. power system is built to meet infrequent peak loads, existing headroom on the grid “is sufficient to accommodate significant constant new loads, provided such loads can be safely scaled back during some hours of the year.” 

The study found ISO-NE has the capacity to add 4.3 GW of new demand with just 1% curtailment, or 3.5 GW with just 0.5% curtailment.  

PG&E Launches Virtual Power Plant, Microgrid Programs

Pacific Gas and Electric will meet some of this year’s summer electricity demand in California through a virtual power plant demonstration project that will include as many as 1,900 residential customers. 

And in another recent announcement, PG&E said it will award up to $43 million for nine microgrid projects in Northern and Central California. The money, distributed through the company’s Microgrid Incentive Program, will fund the development of community microgrids in disadvantaged areas. 

PG&E described its virtual power plant program, known as Seasonal Aggregation of Versatile Energy (SAVE), as a peak load shifting and shaping program. 

It will recruit up to 1,500 residential electric customers with battery energy storage systems and about 400 customers with smart electric panels. The VPP will be dispatched from June through October for up to 100 hours. 

Program participants will be concentrated in California’s Central Valley and the south San Francisco Bay Area. 

PG&E is partnering on its VPP demonstration with Sunrun, a company that sells residential solar-plus-storage systems. 

Using Tesla’s grid services platform, Sunrun will optimize Powerwall batteries to provide a precise amount of power at specific times to certain locations. For non-Tesla batteries, Sunrun will use Lunar Energy’s Gridshare platform. 

Sunrun will manage participating customers’ battery dispatches while making sure participants have at least 20% of their battery capacity in reserve in case of power outages. 

“Customers with home batteries are a solution to alleviating strain on our electric grid,” Sunrun CEO Mary Powell said in a release. 

Smart Panel Participants

Residents with smart electric panels will participate in the VPP program through a partnership between PG&E and grid service provider SPAN, which will shape home energy demand during peak events. 

Customers will be able to set preferences on an app so they can use certain appliances during peak hours while still reducing grid congestion. 

PG&E said it chose places to deploy the VPP program based on: 

    • the potential for overloading during peak summer hours; 
    • participating aggregators’ concentration of customers; and 
    • ability to test performance across varying load shapes.

About 60% of SAVE participants will be in low-income or disadvantaged communities. 

PG&E is conducting the VPP demonstration project as part of California’s Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) initiative. Funded by utility customers, EPIC invests in research that may help the electricity sector meet the state’s energy and climate goals. 

Microgrid Grants

In a separate program, PG&E announced $43 million in funding for nine microgrids in communities deemed vulnerable to power outages. 

The microgrids, which can be disconnected from the grid and provide energy during an outage, typically serve homes and essential facilities such as hospitals, police and fire stations, food markets, and water treatment plants. 

PG&E selected the nine projects from a pool of about 50 inquiries. The projects are in California’s North Coast and North Bay areas. Four will serve tribal communities. 

Generation resources in microgrid projects may include solar, battery storage, pumped hydroelectric storage, small hydroelectric and biomass. 

PG&E is planning a second round of Microgrid Incentive Program grants and will accept applications from April 3 through May 30. 

Industry Anxiety over Grid Reliability Overblown, Panel Says

The current debate in the U.S. electricity sector pitting efforts to increase renewables against the need for grid reliability in the face of growing demand could be unnecessary and counterproductive, according to Ric O’Connell, executive director of the nonprofit GridLab. 

Faced with ever-escalating forecasts of demand growth from data centers, “a lot of utilities and grid operators and their regulators are getting a little nervous … that we’re not going to be able to have adequate resources to meet this growing load,” O’Connell said.  

“I actually don’t think that concern is valid. I think we can do both. … We can both grow the clean energy percentage of our electricity and grow the amount of load that we need to meet certain demand,” he said. 

Speaking at a March 26 webinar hosted by the nonprofit Energy Innovation Policy and Technology, O’Connell cited real-world, real-time examples to support his argument.  

Texas now leads the U.S. in terms of total generating capacity, growing 36% over the past decade, while also doubling its share of renewables from 23 to 42%, he said. During times of peak production, carbon-free resources may provide more than 80% of the state’s power.  

ERCOT’s online dashboard, tracking energy supply and demand across the Texas grid, showed solar, wind and nuclear making up about half of its generation mix March 27. 

SPP ran about 47% on carbon-free generation in 2024, with wind power across the region at times providing 90% of the RTO’s power, O’Connell added. 

Such comments, from O’Connell and other speakers, were aimed at fleshing out Energy Innovation’s recent report, “Grid Reliability in the Clean Energy Transition,” which argues for a more expansive, system-level approach to reliability. (See Energy Innovation: US Needs New Approach to Grid Reliability.) 

“Reliability is thrown out a lot, and not always accurately or correctly,” said Sara Baldwin, Energy Innovation’s senior director of electrification policy and co-author of the report. “Reliability is actually a characteristic of the entire electricity system, and individual resources contribute to reliability as part of a balanced portfolio. … 

“So, whenever you hear someone talking about the reliability of a single resource, that should raise a flag.” 

The Energy Innovation report defines reliability as a combination of three core components: resource adequacy (long-range planning for future demand), operational reliability (day-to-day, real-time balancing of supply and demand) and resilience (the ability to ride out and recover from extreme events). 

The traditional arguments raised against renewables are that they are intermittent and therefore cannot provide the 24/7 reliability and grid support services of coal, natural gas or nuclear power. But according to Julia Matevosyan, associate director and chief engineer at the Energy Systems Integration Group, technology is available to allow solar, wind and storage to provide a full range of grid support services, through the inverters that convert the DC power from solar panels and wind turbines into the AC power the grid uses. 

The capabilities of these inverter-based resources have evolved as the percentage of renewables on the grid has increased, said Matevosyan, who previously worked as the lead planning engineer at ERCOT. For example, as renewables hit 10 to 20% of generation, inverters had to be set to ensure a solar or wind project could stay online and in operation in the event of a brief disturbance on the grid.  

As renewables start to replace coal or natural gas, their inverters have to be able to provide voltage and frequency support, she said. At even higher levels, up to 75%, inverter-based resources can provide “essential reliability services,” with “grid-forming” technologies, which are “advanced controls … [that] can provide the suite of reliability services that synchronous generators are providing today,” Matevosyan said. “With that technology, you can potentially go to 100%” renewables.” 

Grid-forming technologies have been demonstrated on small islands and in “large-scale system studies,” she said. “So, from the technology perspective, what I want to say is, just as the grid evolves and we define what the grid needs ― we define it in technology-neutral terms ― technology will step up and provide.” 

Clean, Firm Emerging

But the Energy Innovation report also acknowledges that a significant gap exists between IBRs’ technical capabilities and industry confidence in their ability to deliver when needed in real life.  

“Developers must be disciplined to program their resources to ride through a voltage event [even] if such a setting should compromise their asset or their operating revenues,” the report says. Similarly, utilities and grid operators need to “quantify and understand how IBRs respond during a grid emergency” and ensure appropriate compensation in cases where they “provide a superior response.” 

At present, utilities, grid operators and the Trump administration are looking to natural gas and nuclear to respond to what they see as a looming reliability crisis, while characterizing renewables as intermittent and unreliable. 

In his opening remarks at a March 25 congressional hearing on grid reliability, Rep. Bob Latta (R-Ohio) said EPA regulations limiting emissions from power plants were driving early retirements of dispatchable baseload power. 

“Significant subsidies for intermittent generation undermine the economics of baseload, or on-demand, dispatchable generation resources that are essential to keeping the lights on,” Latta said.  

Speakers at the Energy Innovation webinar offered two potential low- or no-carbon solutions.  

First, demand-side management can provide varied options for improving grid reliability, O’Connell said.  

“We don’t want to just focus on the supply side. … It used to be hard to sort of have load that was responsive to price or other kinds of signals, but now we’ve got smart thermostats; we’ve got customer-sited batteries; we’ve got EV charging,” he said. “Really, this is a load that can be controlled and respond to market signals. This is a really important way that we’re going to be able to meet our reliability [needs].” 

Wilson Ricks, a doctoral researcher at Princeton University, pointed to the second solution: emerging clean, firm technologies, including long-duration energy storage, next-generation nuclear and geothermal, and fossil fuel generation with carbon capture and storage.  

Rising amounts of renewables on the system are flipping seasonal demand peaks from hot summer afternoons, when renewables tend to be plentiful, to cold winter mornings, when they are not. “Current batteries are not necessarily a cost-effective solution to very long periods of low wind and solar output,” Ricks said. 

“There’s a whole suite of emerging technologies that are designed to help fill these very rare but important gaps and ensure a 100% reliable, clean system,” he said.  

The catch, Ricks said, is that all the promising technologies are still in early stages of development and commercialization and are very expensive. Demonstration projects are in the works, he said, but “ensuring the success of at least some of these projects is going to be crucial to ensuring the availability of a portfolio of clean firm resources that we’re going to need for 100% reliability.” 

Getting clean, firm generation to commercial scale could also change the role of always-on baseload power as a foundation of reliability. While it will always be needed and valuable in some circumstances, “baseload has not been a panacea in the past,” Ricks said. “It’s only one portion of our grid. We still have fluctuating demand, and baseload generators don’t meet that. It’s certainly not the end-all, be-all of reliability going forward.” 

Meteorologist Warns Climate Bringing Multiple Grid Impacts

NEW ORLEANS — Sunny Wescott, chief meteorologist for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, opened her presentation at SERC Reliability’s March 26 Members meeting by promising, “It’s only going to get worse.” 

And while she was referring to the font size of the many text boxes crowding her slides, she could just as easily have meant the content of her talk about the growing risks that climate change poses to the electric grid and other critical infrastructure around the globe. 

Wescott has made several appearances at ERO events in recent years, delivering speeches filled with so many warnings about developing dangers that NERC CEO Jim Robb joked at 2024’s GridSecCon security conference that he wanted to find her parents and “ask what they were thinking when they named her ‘Sunny.’” (See Weather-security Connections Highlighted at GridSecCon.) 

The presentation to SERC members followed this pattern, with Wescott — who emphasized that she was there as “Sunny the scientist” rather than in her official capacity — emphasizing that the world faces unprecedented changes to weather patterns. Operators will need to prepare for an era of uncertainty that will challenge the assumptions under which all human infrastructure has been constructed. 

Wescott started by laying out the basics of the changing climate, using a chart based on data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration that showed 2024 and the 10 warmest years on record — all from the last decade — in terms of monthly differences from the average temperatures in the 20th century. She warned that this trend is pushing conditions beyond what existing atmospheric models were meant to deal with. 

“When we see abnormal temperatures like this, the models could not have been trained on it. It’s impossible, because this is superseding all prior years,” Wescott said. “The 10 hottest years on record all having occurred in the last decade means that this is a continuous growing trend.” 

Scientific models aren’t the only things being pushed past their limits, Wescott continued. All of the materials used to build infrastructure facilities — concrete mixtures, adhesives, metals and others — were formulated to work in climate conditions similar to those that prevailed in earlier decades. 

Those assumptions all need to be re-examined now, she said. Certain formulas for concrete may not set as quickly, or at all, in hotter temperatures. Epoxies may need longer to cure and not be as flexible when they do, leading to cracks. Some chemicals may begin to produce harmful vapors in higher temperatures. Extreme heat can cause metals to expand and weaken the structures of which they are a part, in addition to affecting their electrical resistance and magnetism.  

More dangers will come from the winds and precipitation fueled by the increased evaporation of water. Wescott said that “super cell [storms] are now … covering more area [and] staying on the ground longer,” and went on to mention “a fivefold increase in straight line winds” and hail stones more than 8 inches in diameter recently seen in South Dakota. Hailstones also contain less air than they did 20 years ago, meaning they are heavier and more damaging. 

The problems extend beyond the infrastructure equipment itself. Sustained high heat will create hazards for repair crews: They may dehydrate; their equipment may become hot enough to burn them; and their cell phones may overheat and malfunction. Extreme heat is even known to make animals and humans more aggressive and violent, meaning security could become more of a problem. 

Effects may even be seen below the surface, Wescott said. She explained that aquifers around the world have run low in recent years, with heat causing both accelerated evaporation and increased use for drinking and cooling. Depleting this water leaves large voids underground, which makes these regions more vulnerable to seismic stress. 

Areas of increasing seismic risk in the U.S. with locations of nuclear power plants | USGS

Wescott shared a map of the country based on data from the U.S. Geological Survey, showing areas of increased seismic risk. She overlaid this map with dots representing nuclear reactors, noting that multiple reactors were located in areas the USGS marked red, indicating highest risk. 

“I’d heard it was a killer presentation. I just hadn’t realized it was actually a killer presentation,” SERC board Chair Lee Xanthakos joked after Wescott’s presentation. He asked Wescott for her opinion of the best ways to build infrastructure that could withstand the climate changes of the future. She replied that “it’s both the materials and the shape.” 

“Look at the structures that we have chosen. This room is a great example,” she said, gesturing around the rectangular conference room where the meeting was held. “We know that flat edges do not sustain [wind and water] well [and] domes do. I’ve always [said] that … the future is domed, not doomed. 

“If we were able to go back and choose different shapes, different material types — what does it look like to take a structure like this, not scrap it and say that the structure is weak and needs to be completely redone, but create an exoskeleton that can go over it to increase the tensile strength of the building in full? There are mitigation strategies like that. … There is no reason for most of our sites to be as under the thumb of these weather events as they are. They don’t need to take as much damage.” 

WEIM Q4 Prices Down on Lower Gas Costs, CAISO DMM Finds

CAISO’s Department of Market Monitoring (DMM) said March 27 that lower natural gas prices helped drive down energy prices in the Western Energy Imbalance Market (WEIM) in the fourth quarter of 2024.

Energy prices across the WEIM averaged about $39/MWh in the 15-minute market — down approximately 31% compared to the fourth quarter of 2023 — despite load being about 2% higher on average, according to Ryan Kurlinski, the DMM’s senior manager of monitoring and reporting.

Similarly, the DMM’s quarterly report found prices in the five-minute market “were also down 31% and day-ahead market prices were down 22% compared to Q4 2023.”

The lower energy prices were largely due to lower gas prices, according to the DMM.

“Average fourth quarter prices at the two main delivery points in California (PG&E Citygate and SoCal Citygate) decreased by 31% and 50% compared to the same quarter of the previous year, respectively,” the DMM report stated.

Prices at the Henry Hub trading point, a reference point for natural gas markets, decreased by 14% in the fourth quarter of 2024 compared to the same quarter of 2023.

Prices at Northwest Sumas and El Paso Permian also dropped by 47% and 26%, respectively, during the same period, according to the DMM.

Compared to the rest of the WEIM region, California recorded the highest average energy price at about $45/MWh in the quarter, while other regions’ 15-minute market prices ranged between $32/MWh and $38/MWh, according to DMM.

“The greenhouse gas costs in California continue to be a significant contributor to the higher prices in California compared to other regions,” Kurlinski said.

The fourth quarter of 2024 also saw an upswing in generation from renewable resources in the WEIM footprint. Renewable output “increased by about 4,320 MW (14%) compared to the fourth quarter of 2023. Over 65% of this growth was from wind and solar generation, both of which increased in every region,” according to the report.

Average hourly battery discharge in the CAISO and Desert Southwest regions also increased by 490 MW (64%) and 300 MW (125%), respectively.

Meanwhile, the report pointed to a continued pattern of congestion revenue rights auction revenues underfunding CRR payments, with the fourth quarter marking a $1.7 million shortfall. (See Congestion Revenue Rents Still Underfunded, CAISO DMM Says.)

“These losses are borne by transmission ratepayers who pay for the full cost of the transmission system through the transmission access charge,” according to the report. “Changes to the auction implemented in 2019 have reduced, but not eliminated, losses to transmission ratepayers from the auction. The [DMM] continues to recommend further changes to eliminate or further reduce these losses.”

MISO Feb. Real-time Prices Nearly Double from 2024

MISO’s real-time energy prices in February 2025 nearly doubled from a year earlier as the footprint saw higher load and gas prices.

The grid operator recorded an average $41/MWh real-time locational marginal price over the month compared to an average $22/MWh in February 2024, according to an operations report. The RTO’s real-time price closely tracked January 2025’s average, at almost $42/MWh.

While coal prices stayed flat year-over-year in February at an average $2/MMBtu, gas doubled from $2/MMBtu to $4/MMBtu. The RTO’s real-time price was nearly as high in February 2022, when it hovered at $40/MWh as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began sending gas prices upward.

In a previous winter round-up, MISO’s Independent Market Monitor said the historically low gas prices of 2024 evaporated due to sustained cold weather across the country. (See MISO: Better Preparations Clinched Winter Storm Operations.)

Load in February 2025 also trended higher than in 2024. MISO averaged 80 GW with a 105-GW monthly peak this year and a 71-GW average and 88-GW peak last year. The RTO also reported an average of 39 GW in daily generation outages, 4 GW better than in February 2024.

For February, solar contributions became consequential enough to earn a spot in MISO energy fuel mix totals. The RTO observed an 11.5-GW all-time solar peak Feb. 21, 2025. The figure is in line with MISO’s estimate that it would end winter with a 12-GW solar fleet. (See MISO Estimates Solar Fleet will be 12 GW by Winter’s End.) MISO entered winter registering 8-GW solar output records.

Otherwise, MISO’s reliance on coal in February 2025 was unchanged from 2022, at 18 TWh. Natural gas inched upward to 16 TWh, higher than 2022’s 14 TWh.

Louisiana PSC Leaves Statewide Energy Efficiency Program As Is For Now

The Louisiana Public Service Commission has selected a contractor to measure its statewide energy efficiency program, days after rumblings that a commissioner was prepared to dismantle the long-awaited program.  

The commission’s March 26 meeting agenda listed a “discussion and possible vote to pause the statewide energy efficiency program.” However, the PSC deferred that item and instead voted 3-2 to contract with Tetra Tech for $7.2 million to evaluate, measure and verify energy savings for Louisiana’s fledging statewide energy efficiency program.  

The step continued a years-in-the-making effort to establish a statewide energy efficiency program in Louisiana. The PSC in 2010 hired Georgia-based consulting firm J. Kennedy & Associates to draft the commission’s energy efficiency rules. The firm spent more than a decade trying to land on parameters that utilities didn’t oppose. The commission finally authorized a program in April 2024.  

Ahead of the meeting, the Alliance for Affordable Energy, Louisiana’s sole utility consumer advocate, sent notice that a commissioner was trying to undo the program altogether. It refrained from naming the commissioner. Commissioner Eric Skrmetta was the most vocally opposed to hiring an evaluation, measurement and verification (EMV) contractor during the meeting. Skrmetta’s office didn’t respond to RTO Insider’s request for comment on whether the call for discussion originated with him.  

In addition to Tetra Tech’s bid, DNV, Opinion Dynamics and ADM Associates submitted bids at $4.5 million, $8.4 million and $10.9 million, respectively.  

Skrmetta said none of the companies attempted to reach out to him to explain their bids. He said the program costs seem “extraordinarily high without explanation” and could have ratepayer impacts.  

“In a time where we’re looking to avoid waste, fraud and abuse in government contracting, this is the type of thing where you question where we are,” Skrmetta said.  

Skrmetta also said it seems “counterintuitive” to spend money to gauge energy savings.  

Commissioner Davante Lewis, on the other hand, said he met with representatives from the companies and believes the move to a statewide energy efficiency program will be worthwhile. He said Louisiana’s investor-owned utilities already have contracted with Tetra Tech to conduct their individual energy efficiency programs. Lewis said he expected no rate impacts from the state taking charge of energy efficiency oversight.  

“It’s not creating new administrative costs. It’s just now the commission sees those costs because the utility typically hires their EMV contractor,” Lewis explained. 

But Skrmetta said he was concerned a contractor could pull off a “double dip,” where it charges the commission in addition to a utility for energy efficiency measurements.  

Skrmetta was joined by Commissioner Mike Francis in his “no” vote; all other commissioners voted in favor.  

“This is not something we can’t unwind if we need to,” Francis said. The Louisiana PSC can cancel the contract with an EMV contractor with 30 days’ written notice.  

“We are relieved to see the commission defer an item that would have stopped efficiency planning in its tracks. Louisianans deserve real action, not delays and political games. Rolling back these programs would mean higher energy bills for Louisiana residents and more money in the pockets of utilities,” Alliance for Affordable Energy’s Alaina DiLaura said in a press release following the meeting.  

The Alliance said Louisiana’s shift to using a third-party administrator to manage an energy efficiency program “ensures that the programs are run efficiently and effectively — not by utilities whose profits depend on selling more energy.”  

DiLaura added that the commission hasn’t found any new evidence to justify a rollback of the program.  

Alliance for Affordable Energy Executive Director Logan Burke also said commissioners should keep their focus on standing up the program and not “not waste time rehashing a settled decision.”  

GCPA to Honor Kim Casey with Power Star

The Gulf Coast Power Association has awarded its former executive director, Kim Casey, the 2025 Power Star Award in recognition of her contributions to Texas’ competitive energy markets, the organization said in a March 26 press release.

“Kim Casey’s impact on the energy landscape in Texas is profound. Her dedication, knowledge and innovative approach to challenges in the industry have set a standard for excellence,” said Pat Wood III, who chaired both FERC and the Texas Public Utility Commission, in the release. “This award is a well-deserved acknowledgment of her contributions that have shaped competitive energy markets.”

The Power Star Award was created in honor of Wood and recognizes an individual with a distinguished career who has played a crucial role in the advancement of electric markets. Casey was one of the first wholesale power originators in the U.S. and helped develop ERCOT’s first protocols. While at Dynegy, she originated numerous structured wholesale power contracts and oversaw the Texas power generation portfolio.

Casey co-founded Fulcrum, a nationwide energy management services company that evolved into a competitive retail electricity company since acquired by Just Energy. She has served on ERCOT’s Technical Advisory Committee and SPP’s Board of Directors.

The award will be presented at GCPA’s 38th Annual Spring Conference April 14-16 in Houston.

SERC Members/Board of Directors Meetings Briefs: March 26, 2025

Blake Lauds Winter Grid Performance

NEW ORLEANS — At the March 26 meetings of SERC Reliability’s members and Board of Directors, CEO Jason Blake praised electric utilities in the regional entity’s footprint for their response to the January cold snap.

A “deep trough” of Arctic air brought low temperatures across the entire South on Jan. 19. New Orleans hit a record-low temperature of 26 degrees Fahrenheit on Jan. 22 and even received snowfall.

Despite the extreme conditions, FERC and NERC said the grid operated without any major incidents. The commission and the ERO have pledged to review the grid’s performance along with the REs to determine the impact of winter preparations by the electric and gas industries and any more opportunities to improve winter operations. (See FERC, NERC Praise Grid Performance in Cold Snap.)

“A lot of times when these significant events come through, we’re usually sitting back and talking about how we could do better [and] what went wrong,” Blake said. “But I think it’s so important, when things like this happen, to recognize victory, and the system performed incredibly well under such extreme conditions.”

New Directors and Board Officers

The March meeting was the last as chair for Lee Xanthakos, of Dominion Energy South Carolina, whose two-year term will end on June 1.

Directors voted to elevate the current vice chair, Seminole Electric Cooperative CEO Lisa Johnson, to take over as chair on that date, with Entergy CSO Chris Peters succeeding Johnson as vice chair. Lonni Dieck will remain the lead independent director.

SERC’s members chose several new and returning directors for two-year terms, also beginning June 1. The next class of directors will be:

    • Johnson and Lee Ragsdale of North Carolina’s Electric Cooperatives, representing the cooperative sector;
    • Virgil Hobbs of Southeastern Power Administration, for the federal/state sector;
    • Peters and Chip Whitworth of Tampa Electric, for investor-owned utilities;
    • Tim Lyons of Owensboro Municipal Utilities and Ricky Erixton of JEA, for municipal utilities; and
    • Shirley Bloomfield of the National Telecommunications Cooperative Association and Deborah Wheeler of Delta Airlines, as independent directors.

Former Chair Todd Hillman, of MISO, was elected to replace retiring Director Paul McGlynn, representing the RTO/ISO/reliability coordinator sector. His term will begin immediately.

From left: NERC CEO Jim Robb; SERC Reliability CEO Jason Blake; Lee Xanthakos, Dominion Energy; and Entergy CEO Drew Marsh. | © RTO Insider

Xanthakos will remain with the board through the end of his term on May 31, 2026, as will Denver York of East Kentucky Power Cooperative; Vicky Budreau of Santee Cooper; Beth McFarland of LG&E and KU Energy; Eric Laverty of ACES; Venona Greaff of Occidental Chemical; and Doug Lego of the Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia.

Of the new and returning directors, the board chose Xanthakos to head the Finance and Audit Committee, taking over for departing Director Bob Dalrymple. Wheeler, Bloomfield and Greaff will continue to lead the Risk Committee, Human Resources and Compensation Committee, and Nominating and Governance Committee, respectively.

Board Approves Draft Budget

Directors also approved SERC’s draft 2026 business plan and budget for public posting and submission to NERC.

This is the first step in the budget approval process for SERC, NERC and the other REs, according to a timeline presented at the members meeting by CFO George Krogstie. After the draft budgets are received by NERC, the ERO will present them to FERC staff in June. NERC’s Finance and Audit Committee then will review the budgets and endorse them to NERC’s Board of Trustees for approval. Submission to FERC will follow in August, with the commission’s approval expected in October.

SERC’s budget is expected to grow from $35.3 million in 2025 to $37.5 million in 2026, Krogstie said. The assessment is expected to grow by 8.6%, to $34.3 million; this figure would have been higher if not for the decision to draw $2.85 million from the RE’s reserves. SERC will draw $325,000 from its $2.6 million working capital reserve, which is above its target of 6% of the annual budget, and $2.9 million from its assessment stabilization reserve, which is $9.2 million.

A significant driver of the budget increase is growing costs to the RE’s registration, monitoring, outreach and training programs posed by the entry into the grid of large numbers of inverter-based resources, Krogstie said. Additionally, while Krogstie emphasized that SERC is not planning to add any new full-time-equivalent positions in 2026, he acknowledged personnel costs have continued to increase, including merit-based pay raises and other benefits.