A roundup of news from the MISO Market Subcommittee meeting on March 1, 2016.
MISO could have a limited set of market rules for energy storage as early as 2017.
Large hydropower projects shunned by New England’s renewable energy portfolio standards are elbowing their way into the clean energy conversation.
Low load growth and the shift from coal to natural gas mean a need for fewer baseline transmission projects, PJM said in its 2015 RTEP.
FERC approved PJM’s creation of a funding mechanism to support CAPS through a charge to residential electric customers.
FERC approved the plan to keep the Ginna nuclear power plant operating but objected to elements that it said encroached on its jurisdiction.
The ruling by the Albany County Supreme Court stayed regulations that would have required guaranteed savings from retail suppliers for new customers and those with renewing contracts.
This week's FERC and federal briefs include news on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Chief Justice John Roberts and Aubrey McClendon.
FERC attended to some housekeeping by putting to rest a rehearing request rendered moot by MISO and SPP’s settlement of their transmission dispute.
FERC approved a request by CAISO to eliminate from its Tariff a provision establishing convergence bidding at scheduling points on the interties into Ca.










