ISO-NE

ISO New England Inc. is a regional transmission organization that oversees the operation of the electricity transmission system, coordinates wholesale electricity markets, and manages power system planning for the states of Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and most of Maine.
Hydro-Québec Dominates Mass. Clean Energy Bids
Hydro-Québec and various partners submitted six separate proposals to meet Massachusetts’ call for 9.45 TWh a year of renewable generation.
Connecticut Governor Orders Financial Analysis of Millstone Plant
Connecticut Governor Dannel P. Malloy ordered state regulators to assess the economic viability of the Millstone nuclear power plant.
Vermont Seeks ISO-NE Help on Tx Constraints
Vermont regulators and utilities are working with ISO-NE to resolve transmission constraints in the northern part of the state.
NEPOOL Reliability, Tx Committee Briefs
ISO-NE presented guidance for distribution-connected generation to the NEPOOL Reliability/Transmission Committee.
Maine Gov. Vetoes Net Metering Bill; Override Likely
Maine Gov. Paul LePage followed through on his promise to veto a solar net metering bill, calling it bad policy that would “result in irrational outcomes.”
Rhode Island Looks to Sustain Clean Jobs Gains
Rhode Island is seeking ways to sustain a recent surge in jobs stemming from the growth of renewable and distributed energy resources.
Second Circuit Upholds Conn. Renewable Procurement Law
The D.C. Circuit upheld a Connecticut law that requires utilities to enter into contracts with renewable energy facilities.
NEPOOL Participants Committee Briefs: June 2017
ISO-NE presented its monthly operations report to the New England Power Pool (NEPOOL) Participants Committee's at their summer meeting.
Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources, Massachusetts Clean Energy Center
Massachusetts Underwhelms with 200-MWh Storage Target
Massachusetts officials the state’s electric distribution utilities must procure a combined 200 MWh of energy storage by Jan. 1, 2020.
We Read 79 FERC Comments so You Don’t Have to
Following FERC’s technical conference on tensions between wholesale electric markets and policy initiatives, the commission invited comments on five paths.

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