Exelon
Illinois electric customers filed a federal civil racketeering lawsuit against ComEd and House Speaker Michael Madigan, seeking $450M in damages.
Exelon CEO Chris Crane apologized for the Illinois bribery scandal and said he may be forced to shut down the company’s nuclear plants.
ISO-NE selected a $49 million project by incumbent utilities National Grid and Eversource Energy as the winner of its Boston 2028 transmission solicitation.
ComEd admitted it bribed Ill. House Speaker Michael Madigan in return for legislative support, what one involved called an "old time patronage system."
Exelon’s ComEd agreed to pay a $200 million fine to settle allegations it bribed Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan in return for legislation favor.
FERC clarified some aspects of its orders approving ISO-NE’s cost-of-service contract with Exelon’s Mystic Generating Station.
FERC accepted settlements for violations of NERC reliability standards, with AEP, DTE, Eversource, PGE and Exelon among those hit with monetary penalties.
Seeking to extend Mystic Generating Station’s contract, Exelon accused ISO-NE of shortcutting its Boston competitive transmission solicitation.
Exelon and FirstEnergy called on PJM to police stakeholder sector selections after LS Power had an affiliate improperly voting in the senior committees.
Exelon said its Illinois nuclear plants are “up against a clock,” with the legislature unable to meet to consider withdrawing from PJM’s capacity market.
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