Good morning! Local governments in Ohio have been a significant barrier for solar energy developers looking to do business in the state. In at least one case, the mere existence of opposition from a local government has caused regulators to reject permits without fully considering the merits of the opposition. That’s at the heart of a case before the Ohio Supreme Court that a developer’s attorney says could have far-reaching implications for the industry.
TODAY'S TOP NEWS
SOLAR
In a case that could have deep consequences for rural solar development, a solar developer argues before the Ohio Supreme Court that state regulators’ rejection of a large, rural solar farm failed to properly consider whether pushback to the project was rooted in fact. (Canary Media)
PIPELINES
Michigan pipeline activists raise conflict of interest concerns over Enbridge’s pick of a major Trump donor to replace Line 5 in the Straits of Mackinac. (The Guardian)
Closing arguments are scheduled to start today in a $300 million defamation lawsuit against Greenpeace over the nonprofit’s alleged role in attempting to derail construction on the Dakota Access pipeline. (South Dakota Searchlight)
Inadequate inspections and quality control may have caused the manufacturing of a faulty Keystone XL pipeline that cracked and caused a major crude oil spill in North Dakota in 2019, according to a newly released report from regulators. (Grand Forks Herald)
UTILITIES
Ann Arbor, Michigan’s city council will begin considering an ordinance today to create a sustainable energy utility that would allow residents to opt in and host solar and battery storage projects. (WEMU)
Ann Arbor advocates also plan a petition drive to ask city voters in 2026 whether to study the potential for creating a full municipal utility after officials rejected a plan to move forward. (WEMU)
GRID
Excluding the Grain Belt Express transmission project led MISO to overstate the benefits of the grid operator’s planned $32.3 billion transmission buildout plan, according to an analyst who claims MISO is biased in favor of over-building transmission. (Utility Dive)
NUCLEAR
North Dakota farmers and environmental advocates push back against a bill that would allow state-backed research on nuclear waste disposal as lawmakers explore the potential to build nuclear plants. (Bismarck Tribune)
ELECTRIC VEHICLES
The failed rollout of a fuel-efficient GM model produced in Ohio in the 1970s offers a lesson in bad planning as U.S. automakers struggle to compete with China and lose money on EVs. (The New Republic)
Iowa House lawmakers pass a bill that would require a new state training program and certification process for people involved with recycling batteries from EVs. (Radio Iowa)
STORAGE
Detroit-based utility DTE Energy issues a request for proposals for roughly 450 MW of new standalone energy storage projects that would start commercial operations by the end of 2028. (PV Magazine)
FOSSIL FUELS
Two electric transmission cooperatives buy a 720 MW gas-fired power plant in northern Indiana as an alternative to building a new facility. (WNDU)
NEW FROM CANARY MEDIA
California introduces the first statewide plan to boost heat pump sales as it aims to deploy 6 million of the electric appliances by 2030, Alison Takemura reports.
ATTENTION CHICAGO: UPCOMING EVENT
On stage: Conversations with clean energy experts, including Rep. Sean Casten of the U.S. Congress, Naomi Davis of Blacks in Green, Kara Demirjian Huss of TCCI Manufacturing, A.J. Patton of 548 Enterprises, David Roberts of Volts, Angela Tovar of the city of Chicago and Lisa Clemmons Stott of the Illinois Department of Commerce.
Off stage: Drink, eat, and socialize with clean energy leaders, investors, inventors, public leaders, and advocates.
🗓️March 27, 2025, 2:00 - 7:00p.m. CDT
📍 mHUB • 1623 West Fulton Street Chicago, IL 60612