US Federal Energy Regulator to hold meeting on May 13 over long-awaited electricity transmission reforms

US Federal Energy Regulator to hold meeting on May 13 over long-awaited electricity transmission reforms

The US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has announced a special meeting on May 13 to consider its long-awaited electricity transmission reform proposals that will affect energy markets across America.

The reforms have been considered since severe storms in states from North Dakota to Georgia struck in the Christmas of 2022.?This followed an earlier major winter storm in Texas that caused power outages in the Southeast.

The Transmission Reform meeting begins at 11am on May 13 in the Commission Meeting Room at the FERC’s Washington, D.C. headquarters.

FERC has proposed a set of regulatory reforms to speed a much-needed expansion of the nation’s network of long-distance electric transmission lines.

FERC’s final rules, which are now set to be debated, are expected to substantially update the framework under which transmission lines are planned and paid for, and pave the way for the growth of clean energy.

Analysts noted that the FERC’s reforms come at a time when the future of the electric grid has become the focus of partisan debate and legal challenges to FERC’s proposed rules are expected.

Power demand surge

Electricity demand in the United States is expected to grow dramatically over coming decades, by some estimates tripling before 2050.

This is because under current US plans, from cars to home heating, there will be a move to the use of more electric power.

Accompanying this demand will be a fundamental shift in how electricity is produced, with renewable energy becoming an ever-larger portion of the generation mix.

Both of these trends to more and cleaner power will require simultaneous expansion of the network of long-distance transmission lines to reliably deliver power to consumers.

Yet despite clear need, relatively few miles of new transmission have been built in recent years.

At the core of the challenge are outdated frameworks for how the grid is planned and paid for.

In addition, the future of the electric grid has become the focus of political debate, turning what was once primarily an engineering challenge into a political one.

“One factor at play here is that the utility industry wants to make sure that the system is developed for its own needs, which don’t necessarily align with broader decarbonization goals or the interests of consumers in having low-cost power,” said one study filed with FERC.

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