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Today, California took another important step in planning for the transition to cleanenergy, a step that’s been a long time coming. Setting goals and planning for the cleanenergy transition is important, but what really matters is following through on those plans.
The simple fact is that ditching fossil fuels for low-cost cleanenergy resources is good for the planet, good for the US economy, and good for public health. The studies the DOE reviewed also found that transmission investments would provide a host of benefits beyond access to cleanenergy. The good news?
Additionally, long-term energy plans consider how utilities will operate their existing power generating facilities and what type of new facilities they might build and when. DTE was already far along in preparing its long-term energy plan when the law passed. DTE also would install nearly 2,000 MW of battery resources by 2042.
The fabulous growth of wind and solar builds on states’ cleanenergy policy and corporate decarbonization targets. However, great opportunities for more new cleanenergy supplies to replace fossil fuel energy need supporting grid investments. Where do we go for that modern infrastructure?
Our new report outlines a framework for building a more responsible battery supply chain, drawing insights from the European Unions Sustainable Batteries Regulation (2023). Refining processes , particularly in countries with lax environmental regulations, emit greenhouse gases and toxic waste.
Codifying a floor for renewables in state law is helpful, but cleanenergy advocates must keep pushing utilities to move more quickly to incorporate higher levels of renewables not only to cut emissions faster, but also because renewables are the most cost-effective resources for ratepayers. What Still Needs to be Done?
One notable example is in Michigan, where utilities are phasing out coal plants and momentum is building for legislation that would support an equitable cleanenergy transition. In 2022, the MPSC similarly approved a revised version of utility Consumers Energy’s long-range energy plan following settlement negotiations.
Although the country’s federal energyregulator has had a disconcertingly nonchalant attitude towards these events.) The most promising and comprehensive solution is to meet grid reliability needs with clean resources rather than gas plants. However, that’s not what I’m going to focus on here.
Statement by Alienor Rougeot, Senior Program Manager, Climate and Energy, on Ontario’s claims regarding the federal Clean Electricity Regulations. The federal government’s proposed regulations to reduce emissions in electricity generation are achievable without breaking the bank.
Because batteries can be hazardous if improperly handled, transporting them involves additional regulations and can constitute 40 to 60% of battery recycling costs.
Bidirectional EVs Could Be the New Standard Electric vehicles (EVs) should be a clean transportation and a cleanenergy solution. As these regulations drive down emissions, we will also see an increase in battery retirements. that need to be mined for new batteries.
planned capacity additions in 2025, with the bulk of these new plants planned for states without a current cleanenergy standard (the proposed Wisconsin plants wont show up in the EIA data unless they are approved by the state).
Consumers Energy proposed $10 million. Other state regulators are setting an example. Utilities, meanwhile, are calling for a higher budget cap. Indiana Michigan Power, for example, recommended a $5-million cap.
Assembly Bills: A major focus of environmental regulation in California has been on ways to alleviate the health disparities faced by environmentally burdened frontline communities. Let’s see which of the environmental bills I’ve been tracking for Legal Planet were touchdowns and which ones were sidelined.
You don’t have to look beyond the front pages of newspapers , or beyond rooftops in your neighborhood to know that we are in the midst of a cleanenergy revolution, with renewable energy technologies dramatically decreasing in price and increasing in availability.
The multiple perspectives in the fuller picture have to be on the minds of electricity sector decision makers, from the prospective project proponents to the public utility commissioners and environmental regulators in charge of assessing a project on behalf of the public.
With some notable exceptions, they’ve tended to drag their feet on the energy transition. The proposed CleanEnergy Standard is one effort to deal with this problem. In those states where rates are regulated, regulators can do some things to shift these incentives. The Problem.
As electric vehicle charging stations sprout like mushrooms along our roads and clusters of new wind turbines come online, these two cleanenergy solutions to the climate crisis are becoming more commonplace. The United States needs to speed its transition to cleanenergy in order to stave off even worse impacts of climate change.
The governing bodies that regulate California’s energy system are almost as complicated and arcane as the sprawling network of wires, poles, and power plants they oversee. For anyone who isn’t an energy expert this can make substantive participation in the process difficult, if not impossible. California needs a new approach.
5060 ), titled An Act Driving CleanEnergy and Offshore Wind, into law on Thursday August 11, 2022. DPU is directed to promulgate updated regulations in accordance with the legislation. The post Massachusetts Passes Climate Bill Focused on CleanEnergy and Offshore Wind first appeared on Law and the Environment.
Permitting them to violate these critical regulations means taxpayers have to shoulder the cost of monitoring, remediation, and cleanup, if they happen at all. VY: Cleanenergy sources will be absolutely pivotal for an equitable and reliable grid. EN: What needs to be done to make the electric grid more equitable—and reliable?
The Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) and Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) announced that proposed amendments to the state’s CleanEnergy Standard (CES) were finalized earlier this month without substantive changes from draft language initially proposed by the agencies in April 2022.
DEP has told a series of agency advisory committees they do not plan to adopt new regulations incorporating the EPA rule because state regulations automatically adopt federal requirements. In addition to the model rule requirements, the GP requirements will also contain standard conditions regarding state specific regulations.
Armchair Discussion: Grid Deployment Office During the 2023 National CleanEnergy Week Policymakers Symposium , American Electric Power Senior Vice President of Federal Affairs Emily Duncan sat down with Maria Duaime Robinson , Director of the U.S. continues to transition to cleanenergy.
EPA on Thursday, June 30, 2022, curbing the power of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from power plants across the country. The decision focuses on EPA’s authority under a specific section of the Clean Air Act. What does this mean for cleanenergy projects?
We already have so many of the foundational technological building blocks of the cleanenergy transition at hand: renewables, energy efficiency, energy storage, and pathways to electrifying a vast array of energy end uses. Now we need to rapidly accelerate the cleanenergy momentum already underway.
In late December, the Treasury Department and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) released proposed regulations for the Section 45V Clean Hydrogen Production Tax Credit. The tax credit, passed as part of 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act, provides a generous incentive for the production of clean hydrogen. the “three pillars”).
Last year’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) included a clean hydrogen production tax credit (known as “45V”) that is one of a slew of new incentives intended to help catalyze the next and necessary phase of advancing the nation’s cleanenergy transition as a whole. The costs will be too great otherwise.
Recent analysis from the Haas School of Business finds “that over recent years, utilities have earned sizeable regulated rates of return on their capital assets, particularly when set against the unprecedented low interest rate environment from 2008–2022. Right now, we now need to focus on passing Proposition 4 this November.
The regulations aim to provide a legal framework for China’s carbon allowance trading market by strengthening requirements and designating responsibilities. The Regulations fill in the regulatory vacuum that has existed since 2021. By Hui Xu , Paul A.
Much of our electricity system is 50 to 70 years old, yet current plans for domestic manufacturing, electric vehicle fleets, community solar gardens and more cleanenergy all depend on a modern grid. In some states, when the legislature created new cleanenergy goals they also started transmission planning to help meet those goals.
The second-most expensive campaign in Maine history is a debate over energy infrastructure. New England CleanEnergy Connect, a 145-mile-long transmission line will cut through the commercial timberlands of western Maine. Lobbying campaigns are being funded largely by rival energy groups.
It is significant because if its huge public health benefits and because it has provided the basis for EPA regulation of greenhouse gases. Another California climate law, setting targets for greenhouse gas reductions and providing the basis for California cap and trade system as well as other regulations. Inflation Reduction Act.
For Canada, a major oil and gas producing country, it is imperative to be prepared for the shift in the global energy market. Increasing investments in cleanenergy sources will not only help meet Canada’s climate targets, but also safeguard the Canadian economy. This is an ambitious task, but very much achievable.
The DEP Climate Change Advisory Committee is scheduled to meet on April 22 and on the agenda are presentations on resilient microgrids, abandoned oil and gas well plugging and updates on federal cleanenergy and climate program funding.
Consumers, cleanenergy developers and state governments have all warned about a looming crisis of inadequate energy infrastructure. The benefits of updated transmission are obvious: greater reliability, lower energy costs, and a resilient modern power system with new cleanenergy sources.
The notion that an existing power plant can serve a data center, and not use the grid, is now before regulators for consideration. Tech companies are so hungry for new data centers that they are pursuing deals to reopen shuttered nuclear plants, or build new ones with untried designs.
On October 7, the Ohio River Valley Institute released the results of a new poll which found 90% of Pennsylvania voters support stricter regulations on the fracking industry, according to the poll conducted by Upswing Research for the Ohio River Valley Institute. Click Here for poll results narrative. Click Here for poll results narrative.
An ambitious law that promises to accelerate the state’s cleanenergy transition, CEJA provides a detailed framework for greater utility transparency and accountability to update electricity distribution infrastructure to ensure a cleanenergy future.
On 5 February 2024, the European Parliament and Council of the EU announced that they had reached a provisional political agreement on the text of the ESG Ratings Regulation (the Regulation). The agreed text was subsequently published on 14 February 2024. Refer to this Latham blog post for previous commentary on the proposal.
That’s because the case, which was about the nature and scope of EPA authority in regulating carbon emissions from existing power plants, turned on a rule that does not exist. Because while this decision does still recognize EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, it simultaneously sharply curtails the agency’s ability to do so.
The Supreme Court heard the Sackler case, which will have a huge impact on federal regulation of wetlands. EPA , which reinvigorated the “Major Question Doctrine,” axed Obama’s Clean Power Plan, and increased barriers to future EPA regulation. The oral argument suggested that the Justices were looking for a middle ground.
Grid modeling tools have a significant real-world impact because utilities, grid operators, regulators and policymakers rely on these tools to make investment and policy decisions. Capacity expansion models are the ones that get all the glory these days because utilities, grid operators and regulators use them to make investment decisions.
But in trying to shape a regulation that would mollify opponents—largely industries responsible for the heat-trapping gases that cause climate change—the SEC failed to relieve investors of responsibility for determining how companies will fare in the cleanenergy transition.
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