Daily edition | Oct. 12, 2018 Note from the editor A correction from our Thursday coverage: We changed the headline on our story about the gas constraints in the Northwest caused by a ruptured pipeline from Enbridge.
A previous version mischaracterized the pipeline. It is a high pressure natural gas line.
Thank you for reading, Iulia Gheorghiu Associate Editor, Utility Dive Twitter | E-mail Hurricane Michael has reached the Carolinas, but Duke said the damages wrought on its coal ash pits by Florence are repaired and the sites are not a concern. |
GE is facing performance problems with its most advanced gas turbine, which faces a $71 billion order backlog, but there is still hope for the turbine business, one analyst says. |
Regulators approved a 2.2 GW wind farm but last month turned back an application for a transmission line that is supposed to deliver the clean energy to California markets. |
We have surveyed power companies to discover the challenges and benefits they are getting from IIoT. |
A market-based rule for grid resilience would be preferable to a federal bailout, the head of the nation's largest wholesale power market told senators Thursday. |
Community choice advocates say a Thursday decision by state regulators will shift hundreds of millions in costs and undercut the business case for leaving an investor-owned utility's supply. |
The company is already the largest corporate buyer of renewable energy in the world, but a new white paper shows how difficult it will be to eliminate all emissions from its footprint. |
UPDATED The incident in British Columbia reduced natural gas supply to generators operated by Puget Sound Energy and Avista, as well as residential and commercial customers. |
The Trump administration has not always shown enthusiasm when it comes to energy efficiency, but its "Better Plants" partnership with the manufacturing sector is showing results. |
Deep Dive Vehicle purchase incentives have the most impact, according to the National Association of State Energy Officials rubric, while some popular policies may not be particularly effective. |
Predictive modeling for storms empowers utility companies with the information needed to make better resource allocation decisions prior to impact. Discover how top utility companies are using this technology to restore power faster. |
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