RTOs: The Creditworthiness Conundrum
IOUs, RTOs duke it out over standardization.
IOUs, RTOs duke it out over standardization.
Critics say FERC's filed rate doctrine is wrong for the times.
Legal challenges continue for the undersea transmission line.
FERC's AEP ruling begs the question: Can the feds bypass states that block transmission reform?
People for January 2004.
ISO New England dares to dream, again.
We ask merchant grid developers if anything can ever be done.
With just a few changes in reliability rules, regulators could call on consumer loads to boost power reserves for outages and contingencies.
In proposing a standard market design (SMD), the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) makes clear that it wants customers to participate in wholesale power markets, such as by bidding an offer to curtail consumption, increase supply, and reduce upward pressure on prices.
"We believe in the direct approach of letting demand bid in the market," says FERC.
The ISO graples with the politics of scarity.
In regions that have embraced electric industry restructuring, such as New York, New England, and the mid-Atlantic states, where independent system operators (ISOs) have taken over and the standard market design (SMD) has grabbed a foothold over bulk power transactions, one fascinating question still dogs theorists and policymakers alike:
Is a power supply shortage really all that bad?