New York Independent System Operator (NYISO)
NYISO experienced six days with peak loads of more than 31,000 MW this summer, compared with last summer’s actual peak of 29,677 MW.
A study suggests that New York’s effort to price carbon into its electricity market could result in reduced CO2 emissions from neighboring generators.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld New York’s zero-emission credits for nuclear generation, rejecting claims they intrude on FERC jurisdiction.
A Brattle Group study found that a carbon charge would only slightly impact NY’s wholesale energy prices, with any increase offset by benefits.
The evolving challenges of grid resilience and the past and future of New York’s REV took center stage at the 33rd Annual IPPNY Fall Conference.
The NY Public Service Commission (NYPSC) expanded the eligibility of distributed energy resources to be compensated under the state’s value stack tariffs.
The Business Issues Committee endorsed changes to NYISO’s unsecured credit scoring model following its first review of the methodology since 2009.
FERC said a dispute between PSE&G and Con Edison over shared transmission lines between New Jersey and New York should be resolved in federal court.
The NYISO Management Committee agreed to relax its minimum 20-MW constraint reliability margin value to price transmission constraints on 115-kV facilities.
The LIPA proposal to exempt “beneficial electrification” from a carbon price received a mixed reaction Monday at a meeting of New York's IPPTF.
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