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Central Maine Power crews work to restore power along School Street in Alfred following a Nor easter that blew through the region in this file photo from October 2019. Jill Brady/Staff Photographer
A jump in federally mandated, regional transmission rates that’s due to affect nearly every electric utility in New England will contribute to a projected double-digit increase in what Central Maine Power customers will pay on their bills starting Aug. 1.
The annual adjustment to finance new high-voltage transmission lines and maintain existing ones will result in a 9 percent overall increase in the region, according to CMP. But the pending tariff will hit Maine’s largest utility especially hard, increasing rates by $70 million, or roughly 25 percent.
Installing solar panels on a residential roof in San Diego. REUTERS/Mike Blake
(Reuters) - California nonprofit Vote Solar and several owners of solar arrays in Farmington, New Mexico, can challenge the city utilityâs âstandby feesâ on alternative energy systems in federal court, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held Monday.
The 10th Circuit said a federal judge in Albuquerque erred in ruling that he lacked jurisdiction because the challengers and their lawyers at Earthjustice had alleged only that the fees were âinconsistentâ with an antidiscrimination rule adopted by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission â not that the utility âoutright failedâ or âmade no reasonable attemptâ to implement the rule.