STORAGE: Analysts say a significant buildup of battery energy storage capacity over the last two years has helped California’s grid weather this summer’s heat wave-driven power demand spikes. (East Bay Times)
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ALSO: Rural Washington state residents push back on a proposed 16-acre battery energy storage system, saying it would take land out of farming. (Capital Press)
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SOLAR:
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GRID:
- A southern California city that could lose power and natural gas service after landslides compromised utility lines appeals to Tesla to provide solar panels and batteries to residents. (Los Angeles Times)
- Frequent power outages imperil the Port of Los Angeles’ quest to electrify its operations and distribution system. (Los Angeles Times)
- A New Mexico advocacy group urges the U.S. Forest Service to reject a proposed transmission line leading to Los Alamos National Laboratory, saying it would damage cultural and ecological sites. (Santa Fe New Mexican)
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MICROGRIDS: A developer plans to install a wind and solar powered microgrid in downtown Honolulu. (news release)
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OIL & GAS:
- Advocates criticize Chevron for operating a local news website in the Permian Basin, saying it exists solely to prop up the industry. (Floodlight)
- A California petroleum company seeks to block the state from releasing documents related to the firm’s plan to reopen a pipeline that spilled more than 100,000 gallons of oil in 2015, saying it could enable sabotage. (KCBX)
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ELECTRIC VEHICLES:
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UTILITIES:
- Oregon’s largest natural gas utility agrees to reduce its proposed rate hike following pushback from environmental and consumer advocates. (OPB)
- Wyoming rural electric cooperatives push back on Tri-State Generation & Transmission’s plan to phase out coal generation. (Cowboy State Daily)
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MINING: An industry-commissioned report finds Alaska’s mining sector supported 11,800 jobs and $1.1 billion in total wages last year. (Alaska Beacon)
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COMMENTARY: A retired attorney calls on the Northwest’s congressional delegations to help prepare for rising power demand by reforming a 1980s law that handicaps the Bonneville Power Administration. (Oregon Capital Chronicle)
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