News
LCG, July 24, 2025--The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today announced the next steps in the Trump administration’s plan to accelerate the development of AI infrastructure by using Federal lands to lower energy costs and help power the global AI race, as previously outlined in President Trump’s Executive Orders on Accelerating Federal Permitting of Data Center Infrastructure, Deploying Advanced Nuclear Reactor Technologies for National Security, and Unleashing American Energy.
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LCG, July 22, 2025--Enbridge Inc. (Enbridge) today announced that it has reached a final investment decision on the Clear Fork solar project located near San Antonio, Texas. Meta Platforms, Inc. (Meta), has signed a long-term contract for all of the renewable power generated from the 600-MW project.
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Industry News
New England Firm Plans 420 Megawatt Wind Farm
LCG, Oct. 31, 2001--Boston-based green electricity company Energy Management Inc. has announced plans to develop a 420 megawatt (nameplate capacity) wind farm off the coast of Massachusetts in Nantucket Sound.The company said it expects to get an optimistic 34 percent operating factor out of the Cape Wind Associates project, which, if achieved, means the wind farm would be the equivalent of a 140 megawatt power plant.According to Cape Wind President Jim Gordon, the wind farm will consist of about 150 pylon-mounted turbines on a 24-square-mile shoal in Nantucket Sound, a density of 6.25 turbines per square mile, which is fewer that the 9 per square mile many consider best for maximum generation.The company explained that the towers would be kept a half-mile apart so as not to affect navigation by fishing and pleasure boats.Gordon said the wind farm would save New England electricity customers tens of millions of dollars a year because "Once the turbines are built, the wind is free."Mike Worms, a New York energy analyst, disagreed. "I don't think wind power is cheap by any stretch," he said. "If it weren't for federal subsidies, it probably wouldn't even be a viable option."Worms was referring to a federal production tax credit that pays wind farm operators 1.7 cents per kilowatt-hour of power actually produced. That subsidy kicks in when a turbine first starts putting power on the grid and runs for 10 years, but the program is due to expire at the end of this year.Without the tax credit, wind power would cost about 6 cents per kilowatt-hour, compared to 1.83 cents for nuclear power, 2 cents for electricity produced in coal-fired plants and 3 cents for power from gas-fueled power plants.
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UPLAN-NPM
The Locational Marginal Price Model (LMP) Network Power Model
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UPLAN-ACE
Day Ahead and Real Time Market Simulation
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UPLAN-G
The Gas Procurement and Competitive Analysis System
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PLATO
Database of Plants, Loads, Assets, Transmission...
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