Consumers Urge Congress to Support Competition on Electric Transmission Projects and Oppose Monopoly Market Power on Electric Transmission Projects rstreet.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rstreet.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A complaint seeking action that could invalidate PJM Interconnection s approval of Dominion Energy s decision to pull nearly 17 GW of resources and load from the capacity market will not be acted upon ahead of the long-awaited May 19 resumption of PJM s annual capacity auction, potentially throwing into question the finality of the upcoming auction s results.
Not registered? Receive daily email alerts, subscriber notes & personalize your experience. Register Now
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued a notice May 14 setting a May 27 deadline for comments on the emergency complaint (EL21-72) filed by LS Power Development and its affiliate Doswell Limited Partnership. The commission will have to take any comments filed up and to that date into consideration before issuing an order on the matter.
Minnesota defended its law that gives incumbent utilities the first crack at building new projects before other companies are considered to the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday, arguing the practice isn't discriminatory to out-of-state companies and helps keep the power supply reliable.
President and CEO, New York Power Authority
While New York won national acclaim last year for passing landmark climate change legislation, Gil Quiniones has spent nearly a decade pursuing ambitious green energy policies at the helm of the New York Power Authority. Besides running NYPA, a major energy producer and utility largely driven by hydropower, Quiniones has shaped the governor’s Reforming the Energy Vision initiative, which aims to harness private markets and technological innovations to boost renewable energy and increased efficiency.
4.
Chairman, President and CEO; New York President, Con Edison
It will be the end of an era come January when John McAvoy resigns as president and CEO of Con Edison. McAvoy’s retirement reshuffles the top ranks of the influential utility, which is among the nation’s largest. Timothy Cawley, who leads Con Ed’s New York subsidiary, will succeed McAvoy as head of the parent corporation, while Matt Ketschke, a senior vice president,