On Wednesday, PJM Interconnection, the largest U.S. power grid operator, asked (more like begged) Talen Energy to delay retiring several fossil fuel-powered plants in Maryland by three years. Why? PJM is afraid of blackouts due to unreliable "renewables" like wind and solar. Talen notified PJM last October that it intends to retire three oil-burning units
Just two weeks ago, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission (SRBC) told all water users in the basin that have withdrawal permits, including shale drillers, they should review those permits, and if there are restrictions for withdrawals during low streamflow conditions, they need to make alternative plans (see SRBC Advises Water Permit Holders to Consider Alternative
At the end of May, MDN told you about water withdrawal restrictions from the Susquehanna River Basin Commission (SRBC) affecting 42 Pennsylvania oil and gas operators due to ongoing drought conditions (see SRBC Water Withdrawal Restrictions Hit 42 PA Oil & Gas Operators). Earlier this week, the SRBC notified all water users in the basin
That was fast. Yesterday we told you that newly-elected Maryland Gov. Wes Moore had nominated someone who actually knows something about the energy industry, from the American Gas Association, to be a member of the Maryland Public Service Commission (see Big Green Torqued with Maryland Gov Over Appointing Gas Official). As we reported, Big Green
This past November, the uber-leftist state of Maryland elected a true-blue Democrat as its governor, instead of the previous governor, Larry Hogan, who was a Democrat-lite (Republican in Name Only). The new governor, Wes Moore, made all sorts of campaign promises about forcing Maryland to dump reliable fossil fuel energy and switch to unreliable renewables