BPA’s Proposed Tx Access Changes Prompt Questions of Industry Readiness

The Bonneville Power Administration’s proposed changes to its grid access process have prompted questions about how new readiness criteria will affect established industry practices and financing of new projects. 

In February, BPA paused certain transmission planning processes to consider changes in light of significant growth of transmission service requests. The federal power agency’s 2025 transmission cluster study includes more than 65 GW of requests, compared with 5.9 GW in 2021. The requests exceed the total regional load predicted for the Pacific Northwest in 2034, according to the agency. (See BPA Halts Some Tx Planning Processes Amid Service Requests and Industry Sees Challenges as BPA Considers ‘Radical’ Updates to Tx Planning.) 

On July 9, BPA outlined its proposed plan to tackle the queue during a workshop. The agency has developed a two-part approach: a transitional phase to get off the pause and a longer-term “future state” that will include more substantial reforms to BPA’s existing transmission processes. (See BPA Outlines Proposed Transmission Planning Reforms.) 

“In general, our current model will not work to effectively evaluate and respond to the massive amount of requests and megawatts in the BPA transmission service queue,” BPA spokesperson Doug Johnson told  RTO Insider. “The framework of our proposal revolves around instituting more rigorous requirements for transmission service requests. The goal is to process the queue as quickly as we can to advance our efforts to identify, plan and build the projects our customers need to do business as well as to provide interim service to those parties who have clarity about the service they need now.” 

As part of this effort, BPA has proposed implementing readiness criteria to weed out speculative requests from commercially ready projects. 

“The current practice in the Northwest is for load-serving entities to require developers who are bidding into their request for proposals to provide their own transmission,” Henry Tilghman, a consultant whose clients include Renewable Northwest and the Northwest & Intermountain Power Producers Coalition, told RTO Insider. (Tilghman spoke on his own behalf, not that of his clients.) 

The load looking to purchase the output of a project doesn’t provide the transmission — the project provides it, Tilghman explained. 

“So that puts the burden on the developer to get into the queue and obtain transmission service,” he noted. 

Financing at Risk?

However, under BPA’s new proposal, the agency would require evidence of security or a power purchase agreement or bilateral transaction between a load and resource to establish commercial readiness, Tilghman said. 

“You would not be allowed to even request transmission service until you have an agreement in place or provide security,” Tilghman said. “So that completely disrupts the existing model where the bidder into the [request for proposal] has to have transmission service placed in order to be eligible to bid.” 

This could affect financing of new projects, Tilghman contended. He said lenders have conducted risk assessments based on criteria that have been in place for decades. 

“One of those criteria is having transmission service in place with enough certainty that the project will be able to deliver … its output to its customer,” he added. “Now you’re going to have to do development without that … transmission as you bring your project through the development process.” 

The Pacific Northwest Renewable Interconnection & Transmission Customer Advocates (PRITCA), a coalition whose members constitute more than 25% of the current BPA interconnection queue, has expressed similar concerns over BPA’s plans to apply commercial readiness criteria. 

“Developers in the queue have generally sunk millions of dollars into developing their projects,” Eric Christensen, an attorney with Beveridge & Diamond PC, which represents PRITCA, told RTO Insider. “The fact that developers are willing to put their own money on the line demonstrates that projects are commercially viable,” Christensen said. 

A more appropriate way to deal with the queue would be to study transmission requests in batches based on existing queue order, Christensen argued. He said this approach would allow viable projects to have a path forward to firm transmission while allowing unserious requests to exit on their own accord. 

Because the proposals are new, it’s unclear whether lenders have had time to analyze how they could impact investments, Christensen said. 

“We talk with financiers regularly, and one of the big variables in financing decisions is a certain path to [long-term firm] transmission,” Christensen added. “If BPA goes forward with the current proposal, we expect to see large financing cost increases or an unwillingness to provide financing, due to the uncertainty these changes create.” 

PUD Support

However, in public comments submitted to BPA, public utility districts have supported readiness criteria. 

For example, Mason PUD said it “generally supports the addition of readiness criteria, so encumbrances are not provided for requests that will likely not convert to service. This will create an actionable queue [that] only includes mature long-term transmission service requests.” 

Grant County PUD said it “supports the development of additional and clarified readiness criteria in order for TSRs to remain in the queue.” 

“Unknown and New-Point [Points of Receipt/Points of Delivery] should be deemed speculative and removed from the queue until and unless new procedures are developed to accommodate such PORs/PODs in a realistic and timely manner,” Grant argued. 

Tri-State Plan Includes Renewables, Batteries and Gas

Colorado regulators have approved Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association’s plan to add 1,657 MW of new resources from 2026 to 2031, despite objections about the inclusion of a new natural gas plant.

The Colorado Public Utilities Commission voted 3-0 on Aug. 1 to approve the plan.

New resources in the plan include 400 MW of wind, 300 MW of solar and 650 MW of battery storage, along with 307 MW from a new natural gas plant in Moffat County in northwestern Colorado. The battery resources will be Tri-State’s first experience with battery storage systems.

In addition, Tri-State plans to replace turbines at the J.M. Shafer gas-fired plant to boost capacity.

The 1,657 MW of resources were included in Tri-State’s preferred portfolio, one of six analyzed in the implementation report for its 2023 electric resource plan (ERP). The report follows commission approval for Phase 1 of the ERP and a competitive bid process.

Another plan, referred to as Portfolio 6, excludes the new gas plant but increases battery storage to 1,175 MW, for a portfolio total of 1,900 MW. That plan also includes new turbines at Shafer.

Tri-State chose its preferred portfolio “as a result of the portfolio’s overall performance across the reliability, environmental and financial categories,” the Colorado-based power cooperative said in its implementation report.

The preferred portfolio was the least-cost option based on the present value of revenue requirements (PVRR), not including the social cost of emissions. The PVRR of the preferred portfolio would be about $88 million less than that of Portfolio 6.

Like all the portfolios analyzed in the implementation report, the preferred portfolio meets reliability targets. It achieves an 80% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions in Colorado in 2030 relative to 2005 levels.

“However, the other portfolios analyzed result in significant, unnecessary financial burdens by aggressively pursuing resources with high transmission interconnection upgrade costs” not needed to achieve the same benefits, Tri-State said.

The new resources are needed in part due to the retirements of the Craig and Springerville coal-fired power plants, slated for 2028 and 2031, respectively.

“Retirement of dispatchable coal resources cannot be affordably or reliably replaced solely with semi-dispatchable resources,” Tri-State said.

Commission Chair Eric Blank said he understood the resource diversity benefit of natural gas.

“For me, given our lack of rate regulation over Tri-State, I don’t think we should be substituting our judgment for that of the utility when there’s a tough choice to be made between competing portfolios where either could be deemed reasonable,” Blank said.

Commissioners also agreed with Tri-State that “time is of the essence” for procuring new resources due to a “volatile” market for renewable energy equipment and recent federal tax and trade actions.

Non-gas Portfolio

Other parties had urged Tri-State to choose Portfolio 6, which excludes the new gas-fueled power plant.

The Natural Resources Defense Council and the Sierra Club, filing together as “the conservation coalition,” said the present value of revenue requirements for Portfolio 6 was similar to that of the preferred portfolio when considered over the 19-year analysis period. Portfolio 6 had the lowest PVRR when the social cost of emissions was included, they said.

Portfolio 6 would result in lower GHG emissions for Tri-State “for little to no incremental cost,” the coalition said in a filing. The groups noted that Tri-State must eliminate its Colorado GHG emissions by 2050.

The groups also questioned the excess capacity resulting from the new gas plant and the “explicit assumption that Tri-State will overbuild capacity in order to sell into the market.”

“The commission’s rules, and prudent utility planning, simply do not countenance a regulated utility operating like a merchant generator in the way Tri-State proposes,” the coalition said.

Dept. of Interior Launches Overhaul of OSW Regs

Another day, another swipe at wind power: The Department of the Interior has launched an overhaul of all regulations pertaining to wind generation in U.S. waters. 

Whether this affects just the increasingly remote prospect of future wind power development or also the few projects under construction and in operation is not immediately clear from Interior’s Aug. 7 announcement. 

The agency’s public affairs office did not provide clarity when asked later in the day. The industry’s trade organization, Oceantic Network, said it still was trying to digest the announcement. 

“We’re taking a results-driven approach that prioritizes reliability, strengthens national security and upholds both scientific integrity and responsible environmental stewardship,” Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said in a news release. 

Interior’s Bureau of Ocean Energy Management and Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement will lead the review for potential update of Parts 285, 585 and 586 of Title 30 of the Code of Federal Regulations. 

President Donald Trump switched from campaign trail rhetoric against offshore wind to tangible action a few hours after his inauguration Jan. 20, ordering a halt to all new offshore wind leasing, permitting and loans, as well as directing an ominous-sounding review of existing leases for potential modification or termination.  

In the wake of that memorandum, federal regulatory work essential to advancing an offshore wind proposal slowed or halted. Some companies in the already-struggling sector paused or ended their efforts as well. 

More recently, Interior has swung into action to thwart placement of offshore wind turbines and their smaller onshore cousins, as well as solar panels. 

    • On July 15, Interior told its staff that all decisions, actions, consultations and anything else pertaining to wind and solar would need separate review and approval by two high-level subordinates and then Burgum himself.
    • On July 29, Burgum ordered a series of steps to halt “preferential treatment” of wind and solar; give greater voice in offshore wind regulatory review to stakeholder groups that have opposed offshore wind; and review the effect of wind turbines on migratory birds. 
    • On July 30, BOEM rescinded all designated wind energy areas on the Outer Continental Shelf — over 3.5 million acres on the East, West and Gulf coasts. 
    • On Aug. 1, Interior said it would consider the energy density of generation when assessing the benefits of a project proposed on federal land or seabed, to make the most efficient use of space — setting up sprawling wind and solar farms for an unwinnable comparison with compact fossil or nuclear plants. 
    • On Aug. 4, BOEM rescinded its offshore renewable energy leasing schedule. 
    • On Aug. 6, Interior moved to cancel the gigawatt-scale Lava Ridge Wind Project on federal land in Idaho, which Trump had paused in his Day One memorandum. 

The series of actions is redundant in some ways, but if one is stalled or rejected in a court proceeding, the others still may accomplish the Trump administration’s goals. 

There is one small offshore wind farm in operation in federal waters, and five larger ones are in some stage of construction. 

Between the financial assault launched by the reconciliation bill Trump signed into law July 4 and the policy changes his administration has been making since January, it is unclear if any other offshore projects will proceed to construction before the 2028 presidential election and how long the industry would take to recover lost momentum after 2028. 

The Trump administration has moved to block the one remaining New Jersey offshore wind project from starting construction and has indicated it will do the same with the only Maryland project. 

ISO-NE: Resources Overperformed During June Capacity Scarcity Event

Pay-for-Performance (PFP) credits accumulated during the capacity scarcity conditions June 24 totaled about $114 million, a major boost in revenue for resources that performed during the event, ISO-NE COO Vamsi Chadalavada told the NEPOOL Participants Committee on Aug. 7.

The event was caused by the highest demand ISO-NE has experienced since 2013 and about 2,560 MW of generator outages and reductions. (See Extreme Heat Triggers Capacity Deficiency in New England.)

ISO-NE’s PFP construct is intended to incentivize resource performance during capacity scarcity events. Resources earn credits by providing more power than their obligations, while resources that provide less power than their obligations face charges. Resources without capacity supply obligations (CSOs) also can earn credits by performing during shortfall events. On June 24, capacity resources earned about $67 million, while non-capacity resources earned about $47 million.

Credits and charges are intended to equal out, which is designed to protect ratepayers from the cost of incentives. However, ISO-NE has imposed a cap on the total monthly PFP charges a resource can accumulate, which caused a $26 million under-collection of PFP penalties on June 25. Under ISO-NE rules, the deficit between PFP credits and penalties is charged to capacity resources that have not hit the stop-loss cap.

In the wake of the scarcity event, the New England Power Generators Association (NEPGA) filed a complaint with FERC contesting ISO-NE’s rules on PFP charges, arguing the allocation method unfairly penalizes capacity resources that are below the stop-loss cap. (See related story, NEPGA Seeks Relief for ‘Improper’ Pay-for-performance Costs in ISO-NE.)

NEPGA also wrote that ISO-NE should cap its balancing ratio at 1.0, noting that the ratio exceeded that during the June 24 event, requiring capacity resources to provide more power than their capacity obligations. The balancing ratio determines the portion of each CSO that capacity resources are required to provide.

PFP charges and credits can have a major impact on each resource’s overall capacity revenue. The overall capacity market value in June was about $88 million, $26 million less than the credits awarded during the three-hour scarcity event.

Interregional imports earned the majority of PFP credits, taking in $70 million. The total imports across ties with New York and Canada surpassed 4,300 MW around the peak period of the event.

In-region generation resources earned about $36 million but racked up $99 million in charges. This calculation includes the reallocation of the deficit of funds caused by the stop-loss cap.

Monthly Operations Report

Energy market revenue totaled about $1 billion in July, compared to $672 million in July 2024, Chadalavada noted in his monthly report on system operations.

Chadalavada said the significant load fluctuations experienced in New England over the spring and summer demonstrate the increasing demand volatility challenges in ISO-NE. The RTO experienced its lowest recorded demand in April, more than 20,000 MW below the 26,000-MW system peak experienced on June 24. (See Growth of BTM Solar Drives Record-low Demand in ISO-NE.)

New Tech, Collaboration Key to Targeted PSPS, WECC Panelists Say

As large swaths of the West continue to explore ways to mitigate wildfire risk, utilities say information sharing and new technologies allow them to implement targeted public safety power shutoffs (PSPS).

Representatives from three utilities discussed PSPS during a webinar hosted by WECC on Aug. 6. A PSPS is when an electric utility temporarily shuts off power to reduce the risk of wildfire caused by the company’s equipment.

Southern California Edison, which serves about 15 million customers, has approximately 1,800 weather stations that are deployed across high-risk wildfire areas and provide real-time updates on conditions, said Kevin Alirez, a senior adviser with the utility.

But in an effort to avoid PSPS, SCE has “aggressively pursued grid-hardening efforts” around areas that are most prone to PSPS, including undergrounding of transmission lines and covering conductors, Alirez said.

“We’re installing more isolating devices as well across our distribution circuits so that we can be more surgical and more precise on those specific areas across our grid to do those de-energizations,” he added.

SCE also is looking at microgrids as a strategy for PSPS “where it makes sense,” according to Alirez.

“Battery energy is a big thing coming out too,” Alirez said. “So where can we potentially add battery energy storage units across our grid that would make most sense from a PSPS de-energization perspective?”

Carrie Laird, managing director of emergency management and meteorology at PacifiCorp, said PSPS is a last resort in wildfire mitigation.

In order to reduce the impact of PSPS, PacifiCorp focuses on sectionalizing its system “so that we can impact smaller subsets of customers with the introduction of … smart protective devices, early fault detecting devices,” Laird said.

The utility uses cameras powered by artificial intelligence, among other technologies, to detect wildfires faster, according to Laird.

Laird also noted that because of the challenging geography of PacifiCorp’s service area, the utility’s communications connections to its transmission and distribution system have been “pretty far behind the big California utilities … so that’s a huge area of focus.”

For the Public Service Company of New Mexico, PSPS is a great tool, but the goal is “to never have to do a PSPS,” according to Thad Petzold, associate director of wildfire risk and vegetation management.

“The first thing you do when you decide you’re going to have a PSPS policy is try to minimize the impact to your customers,” Petzold said. “And so you’re using sectionalizers, and you’re figuring out ways to really make those areas more granular … this isn’t something that we necessarily want to do, but it’s something that we will do for safety.”

An important part of ensuring that a PSPS has limited impact is collaborating with other utilities and states, he noted.

“Because … otherwise you’re stuck doing a lot of different trials and projects where you’re trying … that out and the data takes such a long time to really incorporate,” Petzold said. “So you look at what successful people do, you copy them, and you do it in, in our case, the most frugal way that we possibly can.”

Similarly, coordination and communication between utilities is important to avoid customer confusion, especially when the counterpart does not have the same type of PSPS planning, according to Laird.

Still, with the threat of wildfires growing and high fire-risk areas constantly changing and expanding, Laird said a PSPS “can happen anywhere if the combination of … the fuels and weather conditions are right.”

“It’s not just [a] California problem anymore, and it’s not just a … wild-urban land interface or rural problem either,” she added. “The topic of urban conflagration is a hot one right now. So the preparedness piece of this could happen anywhere, and helping our customers get to a space where they’re prepared should they be impacted is kind of an important area of focus.”

MISO Requests Month to Respond to States’ Long-range Tx Complaint

MISO has asked FERC for a month to prepare a defense of its second long-range transmission portfolio, which is being challenged by five state commissions in the footprint.  

The grid operator said it needed an extension to respond to the 200-page complaint alleging that its $22 billion transmission package for the Midwest region isn’t as valuable as purported. As it stands, MISO is to respond to the complaint, filed July 30 by the public service commissions of North Dakota, Montana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana, by Aug. 19. The RTO asked for the deadline to be pushed to Sept. 19. (See Five Republican States File FERC Complaint to Undercut $22B MISO Long-range Tx Plan.)  

MISO said it didn’t receive notice from the commissions that they planned to dispute the transmission portfolio. It also said it needed time to review testimony, conduct analyses and prepare its own expert witness testimony in response to testimony from William Hogan, research director of the Harvard Electricity Policy Group and professor emeritus at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.  

Hogan testified that MISO’s assumptions and cost-benefit analysis “contain several significant defects,” including environmental benefits extended to states that don’t believe there is a social cost of carbon; reliability benefits premised on unlikely instances of load shedding as the alternative at a rate of $3,500-$10,000/MWh; and a distorted avoided capacity cost benefit that doesn’t imagine materially different and closer-to-load generation resources being built without the transmission projects. The criticisms track those that MISO’s Independent Market Monitor made in 2024. (See MISO Board Endorses $21.8B Long-range Transmission Plan.)  

Hogan also said he took issue with the 29.8 GW of high-accreditation “flex capacity” MISO assumed would be built by 2042 to meet resource adequacy requirements despite no concrete plans from members. Hogan said if members built the nearly 30 GW in highly available capacity, it would obviate the need for scores of wind and solar generation projects MISO also assumed in its modeling.  

MISO has said repeatedly that its second long-range portfolio is founded on the generation plans that its members have communicated to it. The RTO also noted that 75% of the footprint’s load is served by members with ambitious decarbonization or renewable energy goals.  

The five state commissions asked FERC to deny MISO’s request for extension. They argued that MISO’s subject matter experts are in-house and “MISO should have on hand all the materials to support its case, primarily the package of information it presented to receive the board’s approval.”  

They also said the filing should come as no surprise, because every concern they outlined with the transmission portfolio was raised multiple times by stakeholders, some state commission staff and MISO’s own Independent Market Monitor as the portfolio was being drawn up.  

“MISO had ample time to respond to those concerns but failed to substantively address them,” the five state commissions said.  

The states added that should FERC decide to grant an extension, it should be limited to two weeks beyond Aug. 19.  

The North Dakota Public Service Commission — one of only two state commissions that joined the complaint that are expected to fund some of the long-range transmission — circulated a press release explaining that ballooning transmission costs drove their decision to draft the complaint.  

“Transmission costs are rapidly becoming a large portion of utility customer bills, and their costs need to be carefully scrutinized,” Commissioner Jill Kringstad said. “I recognize the importance of transmission infrastructure, but it must be a prudent investment that balances affordability with the long-term needs of the grid.” 

Commission Chair Randy Christmann said MISO gave a “weak justification” for the projects and that they will lead to “massive cost increases for residents.”  

“Overturning MISO’s decision will protect North Dakotan consumers from this egregious maneuver,” he said.  

Commissioner Sheri Haugen-Hoffart said she opposes “any cost allocation framework that compels states to subsidize transmission projects driven by other states’ public policy goals.”  

“If a state chooses to pursue ambitious decarbonization targets, it should also bear the financial responsibility for the infrastructure required to meet those goals. Anything less undermines the principle of just and reasonable rates and imposes unfair financial burdens on ratepayers in states that have not adopted such policies,” Haugen-Hoffart said. 

Stakeholder Forum: Will Christie’s FERC Tenure End in a Bang or a Whimper?

By Paul Cicio

FERC Chair Mark Christie’s five-year term officially expired June 30, yet Senate gridlock over unrelated issues means President Trump’s nominee, Laura Swett, is unlikely to be confirmed any time soon. 

Christie, a vocal critic of high transmission costs and transmission incentives “candy” that impact every consumer in the nation, has only a couple of weeks to act to reduce consumer costs. The question is, will his tenure end in a bang or a whimper? He has the desire and intent, but will Commissioners Rosner, See and Chang follow his lead?  

In his July 24 monthly meeting press conference, Christie said transmission costs are responsible for increasing electric rates being imposed on every consumer in the nation. Electricity prices are escalating nationwide despite the fact that until recently, demand has been flat. Each year for the past 10 years or so, monopoly utilities have spent billions of dollars per year on transmission and less than 10 percent of these transmission projects were competitively bid, which would have reduced consumer costs. 

Paul Cicio

Economists frequently comment on rising inflation but miss the fact that electricity prices, which typically are stripped out of core inflation measurements, have consistently exceeded the consumer price index. The consistency of these price increases goes back longer than the AI-driven data center boom, and other inflationary factors. It is a price response to a policy problem: a lack of competition. 

PJM, the largest RTO in the country, is a cautionary tale. In 2014, transmission charges were 6.8% of the PJM wholesale price. A decade later, they are over 32%, even though demand has barely moved. 

Where projects have been competitively bid, consumers have seen cost reductions of up to 40%. More than $100 billion in new transmission projects are in the planning stage or in implementation, which should give FERC impetus to act to reduce costs.    

Failures by FERC, RTOs and states to embrace and enforce competition are at the heart of high transmission costs. Electric utilities spend tens of millions of dollars per year lobbying to protect their monopoly and have largely succeeded. Homeowners have no idea that their utility is putting profit over the interests of their customers. Utility actions to prevent competitive bidding of transmission lines is anti-consumer, anti-competitive, anti-market and anti-American.  

PJM Transmission Owners’ annual transmission formula rate informational filings | PJM Transmission Owners

Consumers support competition, as does President Trump. One of his executive orders calls for each federal agency to root out regulations that are harmful to competition. Trump has pledged to reduce the cost of energy, and this is a good example of regulations that are anti-competitive and drive up the price of electricity for decades to come.    

When a new transmission line is put into the rate base, consumers will pay for it over the next 40 years or more. Added to the cost of the transmission line is a rich ROE and financing costs that can increase the total cost by seven to eight times.   

Building transmission lines is a lucrative business for utilities, which is why they fight against competitive bidding of transmission lines at FERC, at RTOs and in their states. In 2024, utilities pushed legislation in Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Indiana, Missouri, Illinois and Kansas that that instituted rights of first refusal, preventing transmission lines in their territory from being competitively bid. 

The Industrial Energy Consumers of America has filed several legal complaints and motions for rehearing that have been sitting at FERC, some for months and others for years. Those filings would be a good place to start and also eliminate the “candy,” as Christie calls it. The candy is transmission economic incentives that are not needed, inflate costs and are inconsistent with “just and reasonable” rates.         

Chairman Christie, the moment is now: Finish what you began and break the grip of monopoly transmission and escalating electricity prices. Let your tenure end with a bang. 

Paul Cicio is president of Industrial Energy Consumers of America and is a consumer advocate. 

Constellation Optimistic About Nuclear-friendly Federal Policies

Constellation Energy said it is riding high on policy and market support for nuclear energy as it announced its second-quarter results.

“The passage of One Big Beautiful Bill [Act] was an undisputed win for nuclear power,” CEO Joe Dominguez said during an earnings call with analysts Aug. 7.

More than that, the passage of OBBBA was a demonstration of bipartisan support for a power-generation technology that for many years was out of favor with many Americans. Dominguez noted the bill, which passed with only Republican votes, expands tax credits created by the Inflation Reduction Act, which was passed with only Democratic votes.

“It’s one of the only things the two bills have in common, is that it supports existing and new nuclear plants,” he said.

He added that negotiations have reached late stages with one potential power customer and middle stages with others interested in clean, reliable electricity.

“But most importantly, from my perspective, we’re seeing a continued acceleration of interest from a growing number of entities,” Dominguez said.

An analyst asked if Constellation’s nuclear strategy has changed in light of OBBBA.

Evolution seems likely, Dominguez said, rather than abrupt and sharp changes — particularly with small modular reactors, a potential game changer for the industry. Not all of the dozens of SMR designs being advanced will work or be commercially viable, he said.

Constellation’s R.E. Ginna nuclear power plant in Ontario, N.Y., houses the nation’s smallest and second-oldest operating commercial reactor. | Constellation Energy

“But we’ve got a pretty good bead on who we think the winners are going to be,” he said. “I feel better with the passage of each week in terms of better understanding the cost structures and the time to complete the work. And so I would say that our confidence is growing, but it’s growing incrementally, not in terms of major step changes.”

Dominguez said co-location of new SMRs with Constellation’s existing fleet of large reactors just makes sense — the sites have suitable land, an experienced workforce and a supportive community.

He singled out New York for its recent policy moves to support existing and new nuclear generation — announcing plans to develop at least 1 GW of new advanced nuclear capacity, moving toward a decision to extend to 2049 the zero-emissions credits that subsidize Constellation’s four in-state reactors and collaborating with the company to seek federal funding for advanced nuclear development at the Nine Mile Point plant, which has two older-generation reactors. (See N.Y. Makes Case for Extending Nuclear Subsidies to 2049 and N.Y. Pursuing Development of 1-GW Advanced Nuclear Facility.)

“It’s early innings on this work, but I think it is going to be a signpost for other states, and I’m excited for the opportunities to expand nuclear in places like Maryland, Illinois, Texas and Pennsylvania,” Dominguez said.

In other updates:

    • Constellation’s acquisition of natural gas power generator Calpine has cleared most of its key regulatory reviews and is targeted for closure before the end of this year.
    • Big Tech is not the only sector seeking clean energy. Many customers other than data centers are interested in nuclear power.
    • Comcast is among the newest of these customers and has committed to a significant energy transaction that will help support a nuclear reactor uprate.
    • The engineering process is complete on potential uprates of other reactors, and Constellation says it hopes to partner with customers on these projects as well.
    • Constellation and GridBeyond are collaborating on an AI-powered demand-response program in the PJM grid that will allow customers to cut their peak energy costs while helping the market maintain system reliability.

Constellation reported second-quarter 2025 income of $833 million ($2.67/share) on revenue of $6.1 billion, which compares with $809 million ($2.58/share) on $5.48 billion a year earlier.

Its stock price closed 0.6% lower Aug. 7.

Clean Energy Groups Seek Rehearing on DOE Resource Adequacy Report

Three clean energy trade groups have asked the Department of Energy to reconsider its recent report on resource adequacy, which they contend uses a deterministic approach to stake out a position for not retiring any more power plants in the face of rising electricity demand.  

The American Clean Power Association (ACP), American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE) and Advanced Energy United (AEU) filed a request for rehearing Aug. 6, saying DOE should rework the report to offer a more clear-eyed view of the risks the industry faces with exploding demand stemming from the growth of data centers and other large energy customers. (See DOE Reliability Report Argues Changes Required to Avoid Outages Past 2030.) 

“As demand for energy surges, grid reliability must rely on sound modeling, reasonable forecasts and unbiased analysis of all technologies,” the groups said in a statement. “Instead, DOE’s protocol relies on inaccurate and inconsistent assumptions that undercut the credibility of certain technologies in favor of others.” 

The report uses forecasts for high demand coupled with projections for limited new supply that include only NERC Tier 1 planned generation — resources already under construction or with firm in-service dates. That means DOE effectively assumes no new generation will go online after 2026 in a report that extends to 2030, John Hensley, ACP senior vice president of markets and policy analysis, said on a call with reporters. 

“We are all kind of cognizant of the challenges facing us over the next 10 years as energy demand is starting to skyrocket, at the same time that there are very active debates going on right now, thinking about taking a lot of resources off the table that could help to meet that demand going forward,” Hensley said. 

A recent RTO Insider story cited industry experts who raised similar concerns about the report, prompting DOE to defend its methodology. (See Industry Experts Find Fault in DOE’s Resource Adequacy Analysis.) 

The agency said its future data center demand estimate represented a midpoint from 2024 studies by the Electric Power Research Institute and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and acknowledged the report’s “conservative yet realistic baseline” for new generation, but pointed also to supply change challenges the electric sector faces, which could lead to major construction delays.  

Former Kentucky Public Service Commission Chair Kent Chandler said the report relies on one scenario with limited supply growth to push the argument for no retirements. While that could offer evidence of how the industry and its regulators are falling short, it is not enough, he said. 

“It is certainly not, in my opinion, sort of my former regulator hat, useful for the singular purpose of saying all power plants need to stay on at all cost, or build all new power plants at all costs,” Chandler, now a senior fellow with R Street, said in an interview. 

Most studies assessing future resource adequacy would use various scenarios and rank the probabilities of occurring, but by its own admission DOE’s report does not do that, Chandler said.  

A ‘Protocol’ for Retirements

Some industry observers have argued DOE could use the report’s findings to issue more orders under the Federal Power Act to keep plants from retiring, as it did with the Campbell plant in Michigan and the Eddystone plant in Pennsylvania. 

“It’s directly tied to that,” AEU Managing Director Caitlin Maquis said on the call with reporters. “DOE’s analysis came out of Executive Order 1462 back in April that directed DOE to put this analysis together, and then, as part of that same executive order, directs DOE to use all mechanisms available, including FPA Section 202 (c) to retain resources it deems necessary in regions it’s identified as having inadequate reserve margins.” 

A rehearing request for a DOE report is rare, but the groups call the document a “protocol” that will be used to keep more power plants open under the FPA. 

The rehearing request argues the report amounts to “an effective amendment to DOE’s existing regulation governing 202 (c).” 

“In the rehearing request, we go through pretty extensively the reasons that this protocol from DOE may be styled as a report but really looks like agency action that is intended to have real world effects,” Gabe Tabak, ACP general counsel, told reporters. “It is not, as folks sometimes call government reports, a piece of shelf art that is just going to sit there. So, even though it is labeled as a report, in our view, it clears the bar as agency action and therefore qualifies as a type of action where hearing is appropriate to seek.” 

Although preventing retirements in the face of rising demand can be prudent, maintaining all plants that were on the path to closure absent that growth doesn’t make sense, Hensley said. 

“Deferring that decision making to the utilities themselves and their PUCs is the right course of action,” he added. “They understand what their fleet looks like. They understand the available options set in front of them and can make the best decision on what retirements to delay or new resources to bring online to meet that in a most economic way for ratepayers and to balance supply and demand.” 

Taking Politics out of the Picture

Chandler said Kentucky, a coal-friendly state, established a board to review all proposed plant retirements and make recommendations to the PSC regarding approval. He noted the board recently made no filing after a co-op asked to retire a small, broken combustion turbine plant that would have cost more to repair than build new. 

“This body, who basically was put together for the purpose of keeping thermal fossil fuel-fired generation from retiring, was like, ‘We take no position on the retirement either way,’” Chandler said. “They were never going to be for it, but they just couldn’t come up with a reason to say, ‘Yeah, let’s keep it on.’” 

“So, that’s a long way of saying even those folks that are super interested in resource adequacy, or have a bias towards legacy, fossil fuel-fired generation — there are going to be many instances where it just does not make any sense at all for reliability or economic purposes to try to keep some of these plants on way past their economic life,” he said. 

That decision might have been different with a larger 650-MW power plant, which would be a major resource to take offline in one area, he added. 

DOE historically has used Section 202 (c) for limited circumstances when the grid is stressed and a power plant is running up against emissions limits from environmental rules, ensuring it will not be fined for exceeding air permits to maintain reliability — including this summer. 

Chandler said one way to take the politics out of the retirement issue would be broadening how RTOs and ISOs employ reliability must-run (RMR) contracts. While most grid operators use RMRs as a stopgap to prevent grid problems as they address the consequences of removing a retiring plant from the system, ERCOT is one market that relies on the tool for resource adequacy after making a clear case, he said.  

Chandler thinks Congress — or possibly FERC — could change rules to allow RTOs/ISOs to review the impact of retirements on resource adequacy and offer RMRs when needed. 

“That removes a lot of the politics around depending on DOE to do 202 (c) orders, and it frankly makes it probably a more sustainable practice and limits its application to just those instances where it’s most necessary,” he said. 

NERC Plans to Register 720 IBRs by May 2026

NERC has finished identifying owners of inverter-based resources that will need to register with the ERO and is ready to move on to the final stage of the work plan FERC approved in May 2023, the organization said in a quarterly update filed Aug. 4 (RD22-4).

According to the filing, NERC and the regional entities identified 720 IBRs qualifying for registration that either are or plan to be connected by the registration deadline of May 15, 2026, with a total nameplate capacity of over 32,000 MVA. They were distributed among the regional entities as follows:

    • MRO: 110 IBRs with a total nameplate capacity of 4,454 MVA;
    • NPCC: 50 at 1,752 MVA;
    • ReliabilityFirst: 73 at 3,572 MVA;
    • SERC: 171 at 9,881 MVA;
    • Texas RE: 34 at 1,792 MVA; and
    • WECC: 282 at 10,725 MVA.

The ERO Enterprise arrived at these numbers by revising their initial estimate of 863 IBRs with nameplate capacity of 38,785 MVA, derived from surveys of balancing authorities and transmission owners and submitted to FERC in February. (See NERC Updates FERC on IBR Registration Progress.) NERC refined the estimate by reaching out to generator owners and operators identified as candidates in the initial survey to confirm that their facilities qualify for registration.

GOs and GOPs with facilities requiring registration will be classified as Category 2, a label created by NERC in changes to its Rules of Procedure filed with FERC in 2024. (See FERC Accepts NERC ROP Changes, Drops Assessment Proposal.) Category 2 GOs are entities that own or maintain IBRs that “either have or contribute to an aggregate nameplate capacity of [at least] 20 MVA, connected through a system designed primarily for delivering such capacity to a common point of connection at a voltage [of at least] 60 kV.” Category 2 GOPs operate such equipment.

NERC emphasized in the filing that these numbers are subject to change. Facilities under development may be canceled or have their expected operational date delayed past the registration deadline. Registered entities also may determine their facilities were inaccurately reported, in which case they will be removed from the list.

The identification of qualifying facilities completes Phase 2 of NERC’s IBR registration work plan, developed in response to a 2022 FERC order to identify and register IBRs that currently are not required to register but, “in the aggregate, have a material impact” on reliable operation. Phase 1 was the creation of the Category 2 designation.

Phase 3, comprising registration of GOs and GOPs, will begin “in the upcoming months,” NERC said. Entities will register through the Centralized Organization Registration ERO System, the common registration portal for all utilities.

The ERO will continue to file quarterly updates on the percentage of registrations completed within each RE’s footprint, with the final update to be filed within a few days of the deadline. NERC also will update its quick reference guide on the registration initiative with links to frequently asked questions and recordings of webinars for candidates.