News

  • EDF Withdraws Opposition to Exelon-Constellation Merger

    Électricité de France (EDF), Constellation Energy’s partner in five nuclear plants on three sites in Maryland and New York and a 7.2% owner of Constellation shares, on Tuesday withdrew its opposition to a $7.9 billion merger between Baltimore-based Constellation and Chicago-based Exelon Corp. The French company said it had reached an agreement with Exelon to protect the “operational autonomy” of the Constellation Energy Nuclear Group (CENG).

  • DOE Reports: Tides, Waves Could Generate 15% of Nation’s Power by 2030

    Two reports assessing wave and tidal resources in the U.S. released today by the Department of Energy (DOE) suggest that water power—including conventional hydropower and wave, tidal, and other resources—could provide 15% of the nation’s electricity by 2030.

  • Distribution Companies Sue Vermont Yankee for Curtailed Power After Cooling Tower Collapse

    Two of Vermont’s largest power distribution companies on Monday filed suit against Entergy Vermont Yankee, owner of the aging 620-MW Vermont Yankee Nuclear Plant in Vernon, Vt., alleging that Entergy’s faulty maintenance of cooling towers at the plant in 2007 and 2008 had cost them $6.6 million in increased power costs and lost capacity payments.

  • BPA Asks FERC to Rehear Order on Power Curtailment Practices

    The Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) on Friday asked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for a rehearing of a decision it made last December, when it ruled the Pacific Northwest–based federal agency discriminated against wind generators after the BPA curtailed wind power when high river flows hit the region last May and June.

  • Japan to Limit Reactor Operating Age to 40 Years

    New policy on nuclear safety regulation could limit the operational life of Japanese nuclear plants to 40 years and require operators to prepare for severe accidents, Japan’s government announced on Friday. If the new law is passed, at least 13 plants, as well as the six Fukushima Daiichi reactors, will be shut down per the […]

  • Myanmar Halts Construction of 4-GW Coal Plant on Environmental Worries

    Myanmar’s government on Monday cancelled construction of a 4,000-MW coal-fired power plant proposed by Thai company Italian-Thai Development on public concerns about the plant’s environmental impact.

  • DOE Launches New Power Sector Cybersecurity Initiative

    The newest initiative to protect the nation’s power grid from cyber attacks is the “Electric Sector Cybersecurity Risk Management Maturity” project, led by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS). The project is expected to leverage the insight of private and public sector grid experts and build on existing cybersecurity measures and strategies.

  • FERC, NARUC Launch Forum on Reliability, Environment

    The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), an organization representing state public service commissioners, joined forces to launch a forum to explore reliability issues that could crop up as a result of new and pending environmental rules for the power sector.

  • Report: Utilities Major Force Behind Energy Efficiency Savings

    A new report published by the Institute for Electric Efficiency (IEE) finds that electric energy efficiency savings are on the rise in the U.S.—and that electric utilities accounted for a vast majority of ratepayer-funded electric efficiency expenditures in 2010.

  • Federal Court Blocks Implementation of CSAPR

    The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit temporarily blocked the Cross-State Air Pollution Rule (CSAPR) just two days before it was set to go into effect. The federal court ordered the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to continue administering the previously promulgated Clean Air Interstate Rule (CAIR) until a final decision can be made on the merits of the rule, likely this summer or fall.