Note from the editor Dear readers, Last week, Utility Dive's story on Kansas City Power & Light's electric vehicle charging program contained an error. KCP&L did not halt the rollout of its entire EV charging program, as the post indicated, but instead put parts of it on hold after a Kansas regulatory decision. The corrected post is available here. Stay tuned as we continue to explore the role for utilities like KCP&L in deploying electric vehicle charging stations throughout the nation. Have a happy and safe Halloween. Gavin Bade Editor, Utility Dive Twitter | E-mail |
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Top news Feature Story As the dust settles, the details of Elon Musk’s new integrated solar-plus-storage offering and its effect on the sector remain unclear. |
Exelon's plan to save Illinois nuclear plants reportedly incorporates a social cost of carbon in determining subsidies, similar to a program in New York designed to skirt federal jurisdiction. |
Tesla CEO Elon Musk unveiled an integrated solar roof and battery storage product at an event in Los Angeles. |
The utility said the proposed gas plant and pipeline were no longer necessary due to lower energy demand. |
Current storage tariffs were designed for flywheel technologies, not modern lithium batteries, argues Indianapolis Power & Light. |
But the state could consider long-term power purchase agreements or taking an equity stake in the dams. |
The changes include a new definition of the word "utility" to restrict net metering to customer-generators. |
The rooftop installer is backing the Save Our AZ Solar group, which faces allegations it was late in filing campaign finance reports. |
A nine-year agreement between Rocky Mountain Power and Rio Tinto Kennecott aims to provide customer savings and cleaner air by shutting down the units. |
Feature Story Utilities are throwing their weight behind an amendment that would give states a bigger role in regulating coal ash disposal. |
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