Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (CT DEEP)
State energy leaders from Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Maine outlined their long-term strategies to achieve decarbonization goals.
Connecticut DEEP Commissioner Katie Dykes took aim at both ISO-NE and FERC in a panel discussion on carbon pricing during a Consumer Liaison Group meeting.
Connecticut regulators hosted a public hearing to examine whether ISO-NE’s wholesale electricity markets are geared to serving clean energy objectives.
About 40 environmental activists marched in front of the headquarters of Connecticut’s DEEP to protest the approval of the Killingly Energy Center.
New England Energy Conference and Exposition panelists discussed the many state and city policies spurring changes in the regional electricity markets.
With four months to go in this year’s Connecticut General Assembly session, regulators made their cases short and sharp when briefing legislators.
Connecticut announced the results of state’s solicitation for nearly 12 million MWh of zero-carbon electric power, equivalent to 45% of the electric load.
Fuel security and market design topped the agenda at the quarterly meeting of ISO-NE’s Consumer Liaison Group on Dec. 6.
Connecticut regulators issued a report on the Millstone nuclear plant, saying the state should procure its energy under a program reserved for renewables.
Connecticut regulators are getting mixed signals from power industry participants on the economic viability of the Millstone nuclear power plant.
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