New York Clean Energy Standard (CES)
New York started 2019 around renewable energy and quickened the pace of the most ambitious decarbonization goals in the country.
The New York PSC granted the New York Power Authority a certificate of environmental compatibility and public need to rebuild transmission lines.
A New York court rejected a challenge to the state’s zero-emission credit program, dismissing a suit by Hudson River Sloop Clearwater and others.
Two Sierra Club environmental advocates were the only commenters at a public hearing on New York’s proposed restrictions on NOx emissions from power plants.
NYISO proposed using an estimated fuel cost to help determine the carbon component of locational-based marginal prices, while the state’s largest waste energy producer called for carbon offsets to be included in the final carbon pricing plan.
Nearly 40 people braved a snowstorm Tuesday to testify on a bill that aims to put some of New York’s ambitious decarbonization goals into the statute books.
NYISO recommended steps to prevent suppliers from collecting double payments for carbon-emission reductions that have already been captured by renewable energy credit contracts.
NYISO stakeholders again backed joint proposals by North America Transmission (NAT) and NYPA to build two 345-kV transmission projects.
Industry stakeholders gathered in Albany for the Independent Power Producers of New York (IPPNY) Spring Conference for an update on the rapid changes in the state's grid.
Offshore wind projects being developed through individual state procurements should be viewed as regional resources, panelists told a the audience of the New England Electricity Restructuring Roundtable.
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