Colorado Public Utilities Commission (CO PUC)
Jimmy, CC BY-SA-2.0, via Wikimedia
Tri-State G&T has reached a settlement with more than two dozen of its members over the first phase of its $21.3 billion plan to reduce GHG emissions.
A Colorado PUC report found that joining an organized wholesale electricity market could save the state’s utilities $50 million to $230 million annually.
Gov. Jared Polis signed Senate Bill 72, an infrastructure and transmission bill that would require utilities with transmission facilities to join an RTO.
At the end of Colorado's legislative session, climate bills surrounding air quality, energy efficiency and underserved communities await Gov. Polis' signature.
A spate of transmission projects is in the works to move renewables from remote regions of the West to urban load centers.
Utilities need to offer electric vehicle rate designs that will encourage customers to use EVs most efficiently, said Rachel Gold, director at ACEEE.
The Colorado PUC launched an investigation into the methane emissions released from natural gas infrastructure and the actions needed to reduce them.
Tri-State G&T filed its first ERP with the Colorado Public Utilities Commission, building on the Responsible Energy Plan it unveiled last year
The Colorado PUC dismissed formal complaints filed against Tri-State G&T, saying it lacked legal jurisdiction to rule on the proceeding.
FERC affirmed that it has exclusive jurisdiction over Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association’s rates and member exit charges.
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