Latest
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Hydro
FERC, Coast Guard to Cooperate on Hydro as New Hydro Bill Is Introduced in Senate
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the U.S. Coast Guard within the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to cooperate with each other on the development of projects that generate power from waves, tides, ocean currents, and the flow of rivers. A group of bipartisan senators, meanwhile, introduced a companion bill to a recently passed House bill that seeks to expand hydropower in the U.S.
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Solar
DOI Approves Three More Major Renewable Projects in Calif., Nev.
The Department of the Interior (DOI) on Wednesday approved three major renewable energy projects in California and Nevada that have a total nameplate capacity of 1,100 MW.
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Business
Value: One of the Most Confounding Propositions We Face
It’s easy to say utilities need to show their customers the value they receive for their money. It’s much harder to define exactly what that means or how to do it.
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Finance
Mexico’s Power Sector Attracts New Investors
Opportunities abound in the Mexican energy sector as investors rediscover one of Latin American’s breakout markets. -
Legal & Regulatory
NRC Grants Citizen Petition to Examine Solar Storms
Attention to the potential risks of solar storms to the power sector continues, as the NRC issues a highly unusual grant to a citizen’s rulemaking petition on how solar storms could affect spent fuel powers at nuclear plants.
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Business
Utility Communicators: An Ounce of Prevention or a Pound of Cure?
Selling the value of good customer communications to upper management is not always easy. Positioning it as CEO pain avoidance can go a long way toward that goal.
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Commentary
Yes, Virginia, There is A Nuclear Renaissance
The news for nuclear the past few years has not been good. But forces lurking in the background are moving to rekindle the nuclear renaissance, as the long-term cost advantages seem certain to beat out much of the competition from renewables.
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Commentary
Minerals Make the World Go Around
The increasingly advanced American economy is increasingly in need of a wide variety of minerals—many of which must currently be imported. But regulatory reform and a better understanding of their importance could lead to a renaissance in domestic mineral production.
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Commentary
“All of the Above” Is Not a National Energy Policy
It’s all well and good to suggest the U.S. needs to be open to all solutions in the pursuit of its energy future, but at some point "try everything" needs to give way to a well-thought plan implementing the best, most cost-effective options.
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Commentary
An Iconoclast’s Manifesto
It’s time to banish a few common terms that are hindering good thinking and obstructing progress in the power sector.