Fortnightly Magazine - May 2026

From Steady Growth to Exponential Demand

Optimism and Pragmatism

While meeting today’s load growth is an incredibly big ask, we have the right technology and talent to get it done. By working together with a proactive, unified strategy, we can build the modernized grid this country actually needs.

Points of Connection: Eight Perspectives on a Unified System

Maximizing the Grid for Growth

The electric utility industry has moved past the era of predictable one percent growth. As we reach the middle of 2026, however, the question is no longer whether new load is coming, but rather how providers can build fast enough to meet the demand. This month, we spoke with eight leaders currently navigating unprecedented growth challenges to discuss the strategies and infrastructure we all need to modernize the grid.

Points of Connection: Rajesh Kumar

New York Power Authority

“Our stance remains focused on reducing unnecessary work to streamline the process. Shorter schedules generally lead to lower costs, which ultimately benefits ratepayers through the broader market.”

Points of Connection: Peter Muhoro

Rappahannock Electric Co-op

“By requiring large loads like data centers to pay their share up front, we are preventing those investments from being shifted onto our broader membership.”

Points of Connection: Jeff Ressler

Clean Power Research

“While spreadsheets can represent data, email becomes the primary way that data moves, which creates problems like lost records, data entry errors, or missed deadlines.”

Points of Connection: Theodore Paradise

CTC Global

“Much of the existing transmission system was designed for gradual, predictable growth, yet today’s load is concentrated, time-sensitive, and increasingly tied to firm delivery commitments.”

Points of Connection: Bill Brackmann

Burns & McDonnell

“There is now a dynamic where vastly different and sometimes competing goals are in the same room. Our role is to align those disparate objectives into an executable strategy.”
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