December 4, 2024

Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PA PUC)

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Pa. PUC Seeks Suggestions on Cyber Regulation Revisions
Pennsylvania regulators are reviewing the state’s cyber regulations for utilities, seeking to identify if they need to be revised to account for future threats.
Pa. Department of Transportation
Pa. PUC Opens Proceeding on EV Rate Design
Pennsylvania regulators opened a rate design proceeding to encourage electric vehicle charging during off-peak hours.
Dough4872, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
New Commissioners Bring Pennsylvania PUC to Full Strength
The Pennsylvania PUC swore in three new members, bringing the five-member board to full strength for the first time in 30 months.
© RTO Insider LLC
Pennsylvania Leaders Celebrate 25th Anniversary of Deregulation Law
It’s been 25 years since Pennsylvania took the step to fundamentally change its energy market, giving customers the ability to choose their electric supplier.
Transource
PJM TEAC Briefs: Nov. 30, 2021
PJM stakeholders received an update on the suspended Transource IEC transmission project at the Transmission Expansion Advisory Committee meeting.
Transource
PJM PC/TEAC Briefs: Oct. 5, 2021
PJM received 79 proposals addressing both the onshore and offshore demands of N.J.’s ambitious OSW program as part of the RTO’s “state agreement approach."
PJM
Transmission Upgrades for PJM OSW, Renewables Could Cost $3.2 Billion
A PJM study said transmission upgrades could cost as much as $3.2 billion by 2035 to accommodate state renewable goals.
© RTO Insider LLC
Transource Challenges Pa. PUC Decision in Court
The future of the Independence Energy Connection transmission project is still undecided as Transource Energy appealed the Pennsylvania PUC's decision.
Montgomery County Planning Department
PJM PC/TEAC Briefs: June 8, 2021
PJM stakeholders will vote next month on the next steps of the RTO’s mitigation proposal to avoid designating projects as critical infrastructure.
Pa. Lawmakers Introduce 2nd Nuke Subsidy Bill
Pennsylvania lawmakers proposed another $500 million plan to subsidize the state’s nuclear industry and fought back against critics of providing support.

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