US Energy Regulator Issues Rules to Plan and Pay For Power Grid
- Regulators seek to streamline transmission project planning
- Without action, ‘we won’t be able to keep the lights on’
This article is for subscribers only.
US regulators finalized rules designed to speed up building the power grid of the future, approving the biggest reforms in at least a decade to enable the energy transition, meet soaring demand and offer protection from extreme weather.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission will require grid planners to perform 20-year assessments and approved rules to permit high-voltage power lines in national corridors established by the US Energy Department. They also set guidelines for divvying up billions of dollars of costs to overhaul grids. And, developers will be required for the first time to engage tribal and environmental justice communities early in the process.