SOLAR: Texas’ grid operator announces solar supplied more power to the grid in March than coal for the first time, marking an important milestone in the clean energy transition. (Houston Chronicle)
ALSO:
OIL & GAS:
PIPELINES: A Louisiana State University professor develops a method of fiber-optic leak detection that could supplement or replace pressure gauges as a way of rapidly detecting leaks in oil and gas pipelines. (Reveille)
ELECTRIC VEHICLES:
- Republican Kentucky lawmakers drop a budget proposal to prohibit state agencies from purchasing electric vehicles. (E&E News, subscription)
- A few dozen electric vehicles waited in line to recharge at a station with only six charging ports after traveling to Arkansas to view the solar eclipse. (KFSM)
TRANSITION:
GRID:
EMISSIONS: Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin makes line-item changes to the state budget passed by Democrats that would mandate state participation in a regional carbon market. (Virginia Business)
UTILITIES:
- Florida Power & Light asks the Florida Supreme Court to step in to expedite a challenge to state regulators’ approval of a 2021 settlement to increase its base rates, which could affect its plans next year. (CBS News)
- Duke Energy claims its listing of riders on bills aids transparency, but one resident claims they obfuscate the cost of its shift to natural gas. (Asheville Watchdog)
COMMENTARY:
- South Carolina lawmakers have ignored consumer advocates in their rush to pass a utility-friendly bill to speed construction of a natural gas-fired power plant, writes the president of the South Carolina Small Business Chamber of Commerce. (South Carolina Daily Gazette)
- Struggling small farmers can find a new stream of income by leasing parts of their land for solar energy, but Virginia utilities are blocking them from doing more, writes a retired U.S. Foreign Service officer. (Culpeper Star-Exponent)
- Energy generated from coal is declining every month on the Texas grid, while solar is skyrocketing and natural gas seems likely to increase as well, writes an energy columnist. (Houston Chronicle)