ISO New England (ISO-NE)
Exelon provoked ire among ISO-NE stakeholders after signaling it plans to keep its Mystic plant open after expiration of its cost-of-service agreement with the RTO.
PSEG CEO Ralph Izzo said it would be “logical” for New Jersey to abandon the PJM capacity market by adopting the fixed resource requirement option.
NERC’s Operating Reliability Subcommittee decided to cut back its weekly schedule of conference calls focused on the COVID-19 outbreak.
NEPOOL participants seem to be in “overall agreement” with ISO-NE’s approach to finalizing compliance with FERC Order 845.
PJM’s Monitor defended a conclusion that ratepayers are likely to see cost increases in jurisdictions that exit the capacity market and adopt the FRR option.
New England’s grid will see diminishing returns from the incremental addition of offshore wind as more megawatts are added, analysis from ISO-NE shows.
ISO-NE energy demand has fallen 3 to 5% since stay-at-home orders began being implemented across New England, the NEPOOL Reliability Committee heard.
The Market Implementation Committee held discussions on credit requirements and stability-limited generators, and received updates on the ARR/FTR Market Task Force and the nGEM project.
FERC rejected ISO-NE’s request to rehear its decision requiring the RTO to revise its energy storage rules to account for a resource’s state of charge in the day-ahead market.
The American Wind Energy Association reported a “banner year” for the wind industry in 2019 but also acknowledged the storm clouds gathering on the horizon.
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