News
LCG, September 12, 2025--Entergy announced yesterday that the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) approved Entergy Texas’ proposal to build two efficient natural gas-fired power plants to support the region’s rapid growth. The combined electric generating capacity of the two facilities, the Legend Power Station and the Lone Star Power Station, will add over 1,200 MW to the Southeast Texas power grid to support new customer demand, increase reliability and lower costs for all customers. Both facilities are scheduled to commence operations by mid-2028.
Read more
|
LCG, September 4, 2025--Puget Sound Energy (PSE) announced yesterday that phased construction has commenced on its 142-MW Appaloosa Solar Project, a utility-scale solar facility underway in southeastern Washington. The project is being built by Qcells EPC, who will serve as the module manufacturer and the engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) solution provider. Construction is scheduled through 2026, and commercial operation is expected at the end of next year.
Read more
|
|
|
Industry News
California Treasurer Still Pushing $12.5 Billion Deal
LCG, Jan. 7, 2002--California Treasurer Phil Angelides is pushing hard for the state to issue the $12.5 billion in power revenue bonds that would pay back the general fund for more than $7 billion in spot market purchase of electricity and fund the $43 billion in long term contracts.Angelides said it was essential for the bonds to be sold if California wants any chance of making it through the economic challenges it faces, according to a report Saturday by Thomson Financial Media."The only thing standing between us and the marketplace is us," he said yesterday, speaking at a bond buyer conference. "The deal has to get done."At first, the bond issue was delayed by the state legislature. When Republicans refused to go along with the indebtedness -- the largest municipal bond issue ever -- during a special session called by Gov. Gray Davis, there was no chance that the sale could take place last spring.Davis had "guaranteed" that the general fund would be repaid by June 30.A new deadline of October 31 was set for the bond sale, but by then the California Public Utilities Commission, which must sign off on some elements of how the debt is to be repaid and serviced, looked with disfavor upon the issue. The CPUC has taken no action and appears unwilling to do so.Angelides remains optimistic. "My hope is that in the next few weeks the PUC will look at the reality of where we stand fiscally in the state and the reality that the governor plans to veto Senate Bill 18XX."Senate Bill 18XX is an alternative bond structure that Angelides and the state attorney general have said could lead to extensive litigation that would further delay the sale or make it impossible to sell bonds."The state can't get a bond counsel to say that bonds sold under SB 18XX would be free from litigation risk," Angelides said Friday. "We have not yet found a firm willing to give a clean opinion."
|
|
|
UPLAN-NPM
The Locational Marginal Price Model (LMP) Network Power Model
|
|
UPLAN-ACE
Day Ahead and Real Time Market Simulation
|
|
UPLAN-G
The Gas Procurement and Competitive Analysis System
|
|
PLATO
Database of Plants, Loads, Assets, Transmission...
|
|
|
|