Plus: Louisiana regulators consider spiking energy efficiency program

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Southeast

16 April 2025

Good morning. Wind, solar, and battery storage have boomed in Texas in recent years, propping up its wobbly state grid against outages and growing demand. Last week, ERCOT CEO Pablo Vegas cautioned state lawmakers not to interfere with the grid or the state’s energy market — likely a reference to pending legislation to add stringent new rules for renewables and to mandate more gas, coal, and nuclear power. 

 

Elsewhere, Louisiana regulators abruptly added an agenda item to terminate the state’s energy efficiency program, and a company says its electric vehicle battery factory in Virginia is still on track after questions about a federal grant.

 

Also: If you appreciate how this newsletter keeps you up to date on the energy transition, can you make a donation to support our work? We would be very grateful! 

Mason Adams

TODAY'S TOP NEWS

GRID

  • Texas grid operator ERCOT warns lawmakers that interfering with the state’s energy market could disrupt the grid’s ability to meet growing demand from residents and businesses, possibly referring to bills to require more gas, coal, and nuclear power, and to more tightly restrict renewables. (Texas Tribune)
  • Puerto Rico’s utility begins installing “smart” meters as part of an island-wide push to modernize its grid. (Utility Dive)

EFFICIENCY

  • Advocates scramble to respond as the Louisiana Public Service Commission abruptly considers eliminating a statewide energy efficiency program that would require utilities to meet a certain savings target each year. (Louisiana Illuminator, WVLA)

STORAGE

  • Microporous affirms its plans to build a Virginia factory to make lithium-ion battery separators for electric vehicles despite questions about whether it will still receive a $100 million federal grant. (Cardinal News)
  • A newly appointed member of a Virginia county board calls for changes to its zoning ordinance to regulate battery storage facilities after the county made similar changes two years ago to set out requirements for solar farms. (Smithfield Times)

SOLAR

  • North Carolina lawmakers advance legislation that would require solar power companies to pay property taxes on nearly $6 billion in equipment around the state. (NC Newsroom)
  • Residents urge a North Carolina county board to extend a moratorium on solar farms set to expire this summer and to add new regulations to control their development. (Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald)
  • Tampa Bay Solar moves to install an estimated 3,000 solar panels on seven buildings at a Florida art school. (Business Observer)

FOSSIL FUELS

  • The Trump administration grants at least 66 coal-fired power plants operated by Dominion Energy, Southern Co., the Tennessee Valley Authority, and other utilities a two-year exemption from federal requirements to reduce emissions of mercury and other toxic chemicals. (Associated Press)

BIOMASS

  • Mississippi’s Environmental Quality Permit Board denies a request from biomass manufacturer Drax to scale up its production and increase the threshold for toxic emissions after local residents complain about its air pollution violations. (Mississippi Free Press) 

WIND

  • Scientists attribute the growing number of whale deaths off North Carolina and the Mid-Atlantic to ship strikes, but commercial fisherman who want to avoid stricter regulations argue the cause is construction of offshore wind farms. (Coastal Review)

CLIMATE

  • The Federal Emergency Management Agency cancels a grant program to protect against climate change, resulting in the termination of funding for projects in coastal Virginia and elsewhere. (Virginian-Pilot)
  • Virginia officials say FEMA’s new “manual review processes” have delayed federal funding for recovery from Hurricane Helene. (Cardinal News)

POLITICS

  • Records show a Democratic candidate for Georgia’s Public Service Commission changed his residency to a different district just before filing to run for the utility regulatory board, but says the decision was “not solely a political move.” (Atlanta Journal-Constitution)

NEW FROM CANARY MEDIA

  • Massachusetts regulators approve plans from National Grid and Unitil to offer lower seasonal electricity rates to heat pump owners, with a similar plan from Eversource in the works, Sarah Shemkus reports.
  • Making plant-based meals the default at New York City hospitals proves an emission-reducing success, and shows how making climate-friendly options the norm can encourage their adoption, Michael Grunwald writes.

Canary Media is an independent, nonprofit newsroom covering the transition to clean energy and solutions to the climate crisis. Donate to support us.

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