Good morning. After years of fighting Dominion’s offshore wind farm near Virginia, a conservative think tank has declined to join a push for Trump to block it because it’s already halfway built. A regional grid operator considers its options, while Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says his state’s independent grid is ready for a crushing cold snap. Read those stories and more in today’s digest.
Editor's note: On Friday, we accidentally sent Thursday's newsletter a second time. We're sorry for the error, and you can find the news you missed here.
TODAY'S TOP NEWS
WIND
“My view is go ahead and finish it” — a conservative think tank that previously opposed Dominion Energy’s 2.6 GW offshore wind farm near Virginia declines to lobby for the project’s cancellation, which would leave ratepayers on the hook for $6 billion already spent. (Canary Media)
West Virginia lawmakers consider a bill to eliminate a state law that grants a lower tax rate for wind farms, but much of the debate boils down to whether the state should rely on coal or work with companies that want cleaner energy. (WV Metro News)
GRID
Critics argue that PJM Interconnection should bypass federal approval to fast-track “dispatchable” gas-fired power plants and instead add new resources to existing projects like battery storage to wind and solar farms. (Canary Media)
West Virginia officials court the data center industry, even as the power-hungry facilities have caused debate over rising power demand and loud noise. (Charleston Gazette-Mail)
SOLAR
A Virginia county planning commission considers an amendment to its zoning ordinance to allow community solar projects in industrial districts. (Gazette-Virginian)
Trump’s block on infrastructure and clean energy spending could affect nearly $90 million in funding for West Virginia to clean up abandoned natural gas wells. (Mountain State Spotlight)
NUCLEAR
The Tennessee Valley Authority works to resolve outages at three of its seven nuclear reactor units. (Chattanooga Times Free Press, subscription)
OVERSIGHT
A union official says Trump’s order to place 170 U.S. EPA employees on leave because of their connection to diversity, equity and inclusion policies could hamper the agency’s ability to permit new highways, pipelines and other construction projects in Texas. (Houston Chronicle)
Oklahoma’s attorney general says he’s closely watching natural gas markets to ensure state residents aren’t hit from spiking costs from a pending winter storm like they were in 2021. (KOKH)
COMMENTARY
Two Democratic Virginia lawmakers display hypocrisy by proposing legislation to require site assessments for data centers ahead of permitting and construction without doing the same for proposed solar farms, writes the head of a consumer advocacy group. (Cardinal News)