Other NYISO Committees
NYISO proposed broadening rules for including projects in transmission studies, citing concerns that projects studied in one process may affect those in others.
NYISO proposed changes to its capacity accreditation rules and expected ramp rates for duct-firing generators.
NYISO is proposing a $191 million budget for 2023, a 13% increase over current spending, with funding for salary increases, 20 new staffers and 54 projects.
NYISO shared a proposal to set a 10-kW minimum capability requirement for individual distributed energy resources participating in aggregations.
NYISO plans to narrow the scope of its interconnection studies and revise related pro forma agreements to address increasing grid connection requests.
NYISO spent $2.5 million on raises for about 300 staffers to encourage retention; the ISO also proposed a $32 million project budget for 2023, a $5 million cut.
NYISO reviewed the preliminary results of phase one of the Grid in Transition study on the reliability effects of integrating more renewables into the grid.
NYISO presented stakeholders with a plan to clarify by year-end what increasing amounts of renewable energy mean for the grid over the next decades.
The ICAP/MIWG discussed rising energy prices, Order 2222 compliance, dynamically scheduling reserves and keeping critical infrastructure out of DR programs.
With a filing due Nov. 19, NYISO presented stakeholders its draft responses to FERC’s data request regarding its Order 2222 compliance.
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