Note from the editor To say 2016 has been eventful is a mild understatement. In the power sector, we’ve seen new regulations and technologies spur change throughout the nation. What will 2017 look like? We want to hear from you. In early January, we plan to bring back our popular predictions series and would like you to participate. If you’ve got a read on what the next year holds for the power sector, please send 400 words or less to [email protected] by Dec. 30. Please put "Utility Dive predictions” in the subject line. Before you submit, please make sure you have permission from your manager or communications team. We’ll select the best submissions to run next month. Thanks, as always, for reading! Krysti Shallenberger Associate Editor, Utility Dive Twitter | E-mail |
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Top news The new rules would require utilities to source 80% of their power from non-emitting resources by midcentury and limit GHGs from transport and fossil fuel extraction. |
Feature Story New technologies and looser regulations could help coal, attendees at PowerGen said last week, but many utilities have already made other generation plans. |
FLS Energy turned to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission after Montana suspended guaranteed rates for small solar projects at the request of NorthWestern Energy. |
State leaders across the region want to see Trump's energy priorities before forging on toward a full ISO. |
It was a campaign promise of President-elect Donald Trump. Now 24 states want him to act on his first day in office. |
The group of the House's most conservative lawmakers laid out a list of 200 regulations they want President-elect Donald Trump to overturn once he takes office. |
FERC's notice focuses on large plants but also asks whether it could be expanded to distributed energy. |
A new law that strips some powers from an incoming Democratic governor could have its origins in coal ash power tussles, according to a local report. |
After a scramble to reach a compromise, lawmakers came together to overhaul Michigan's energy marketplace on the last day of the legislative session. |
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