Mystic Generating Station
New England utilities have sought information on the agreement between ISO-NE and the Mystic power plant in Massachusetts.
ISO-NE gave the Participants Committee a review of the past winter and a preview of the next — with and without the Everett LNG terminal.
ISO-NE will start 2023 like it starts every year: worrying about the winter weather.
A group of New England suppliers is raising worries about the costs of the cost-of-service agreement between ISO-NE and the Mystic Generating Station.
The fate of the LNG import terminal in Everett, Mass., has come into increasingly sharp focus in the last few months.
ISO-NE warns that the region’s near-term grid reliability depends on its access to LNG — and that access in turn relies on a single facility outside Boston.
The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals issued rulings relating to the Mystic Generating Station, including granting review to a group of state regulators.
Energy sector leaders in New England are already warning of a grim possible scenario for next winter.
Fletcher6, CC BY-SA-3.0, via Wikimedia
FERC voted 3-1 to reduce the base return on equity for Exelon’s Mystic Generating Station as part of its reliability-must-run agreement with ISO-NE.
Fletcher6, CC BY-SA-3.0, via Wikimedia
FERC set a base return on equity of 9.33% on the Mystic Generating Station’s reliability-must-run contract, using methodology it introduced last year.
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