How Can We Ensure Energy Transition is Just?

Deck: 

Procedural Justice at State Commissions

Fortnightly Magazine - January 2024
This full article is only accessible by current license holders. Please login to view the full content.
Don't have a license yet? Click here to sign up for Public Utilities Fortnightly, and gain access to the entire Fortnightly article database online.

For over a century, state utility regulators across the country have worked hard to ensure that the entities they oversee deliver safe and adequate service at just and reasonable rates. That century saw the emergence of the interconnected energy system we rely on today, as well as a series of transformations in society, transportation, and technology, and multiple evolutions of utility governance.

Today, the climate crisis and resulting energy transition are upending settled beliefs about a range of energy-related practices and values — such as the benefits and costs of various energy sources, relationships between supply and demand, interactions among different infrastructure systems and fuels, and time horizons of interest for planning and analysis.

Utility regulators now face the challenge of ensuring that the energy utilities they oversee do their parts to effect the energy transition, while continuing to provide safe and adequate service at just and reasonable rates. Moreover, they need to accomplish all this while assuring fairer outcomes for communities that have in the past been persistently and disproportionately harmed by energy infrastructure decisions.

This full article is only accessible by current license holders. Please login to view the full content.
Don't have a license yet? Click here to sign up for Public Utilities Fortnightly, and gain access to the entire Fortnightly article database online.