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Invenergy Announces New Agreements with Meta for Renewable Energy to Support Data Center Operations

LCG, June 26, 2025--Invenergy today announced that they and Meta Platforms, Inc. have signed four new clean energy agreements that total an additional 791 MW of procured solar and wind capacity to support Meta's near-term operations, data center growth, and clean energy goals.

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New York Power Authority to Develop New Nuclear Facility in Upstate New York

LCG, June 23, 2025--The Governor of New York today directed the New York Power Authority (NYPA) to develop and construct an advanced nuclear power plant in upstate New York to deliver zero-emission power that supports a reliable and affordable electric grid. NYPA will lead the effort to develop at least one new nuclear energy facility with a combined capacity of at least one gigawatt (GW) of electricity, either alone or in partnership with private entities. The directive builds on the Governor’s 2025 State of the State to develop nuclear energy plans in New York.

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Industry News

California Capsule: Bush Will Meet with Davis Next Week

LCG, May 24, 2001President Bush will take time during a trip to California next week to meet with Gov. Gray Davis, who has accused the president and Vice President Dick Cheney of favoring their "Texas pals" by refusing to impose federal price caps on wholesale electric power in the Golden State.

Bush plans to visit the Marine Corps base at Camp Pendleton, the Fresno area and Los Angeles in the first part of next week and will see Davis on Tuesday or Wednesday. Spokesmen for neither the president nor the governor were able to furnish details.

Since Bush released his administration's energy policy a week ago, Davis has stepped up his attacks on the president, saying he and Cheney have turned a blind eye to price gouging by Texas-based power producers because of their close ties to the energy industry.

So far, Bush has ignored the attacks. "The president's focus is going to be on solving problems," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said yesterday. "He's not interested in finger-pointing."

Davis, of course, is dependent on finger-pointing to shift responsibility for the California electricity crisis away from his administration and the Democrat-controlled legislature that created it. He has repeatedly blamed the state's problems on Texas-based power producers.

"There's a massive transfer of wealth going on from ordinary citizens in California to companies in Texas," the governor has said.

Fleischer said "The federal government is going to be a strong partner to the state of California in the cause of energy conservation to help ease the burden in the summer months, when demand is high and blackouts are mosrt at risk."

SDG&E Wants to Pay Businesses to Use Back-up Generators
San Diego Gas & Electric Co. has asked the California Public Utilities Commission to approve a plan under which the utility would pay local industries to fire up their back-up generators during power emergencies this summer.

SDG&E estimates that its industrial customers could put 50 megawatts of power on line when it's needed most, and significantly minimize if not eliminate the need for blackouts in the company's service territory.

The utility has checked with some of its customers and found them willing to go along with the plan. "Customer willingness to participate has been quite strong, if the proper incentive are in place," said Debra Reed, SDG&E president.

The California Air Resources Board is against the plan because the back-ups are mostly diesel-fueled generators. Michael Kenny, executive director of the board said in a letter "The SDG&E proposal would expend ratepayer dollars on extremely polluting and expensive power, decrease participation in more sound conservation programs and not make a significant difference in the number or extent of blackouts."

But Richard Smith, assistant director of the San Diego County Air Pollution Control District, said his board believes the plan would not only spare businesses millions of dollars in lost revenue but would prevent the even greater air pollution that will occur when every back-up generator kicks in during a blackout.

CPUC to Evaluate Residential 'Baselines'
CPUC President Loretta Lynch said her agency is looking into whether residential "baselines," the level of use upon which rate hike amounts are predicated, are fair and reflect the realities of households to which they apply.

"I think it's clear that baselines were set too low and didn't reflect actual electricity usage," Lynch said.

She is correct, in that the baselines were not set to be the basis of rates paid for ordinary power use. The baselines were set in the 1980s as standards for reduced usage on which "lifeline" service could be based.

As it is, a typical householder using 500 kilowatt-hours of electricity in a month is probably exceeding his baseline by well over 30 percent. By doing so, he is subject to significant rate increases under the recent CPUC ruling that increases state electric rates by $5.7 billion.

Power Crisis Pushes Money out of California Bond Funds
California municipal bonds represented only 3.8 percent of all tax-exempt mutual fund assets but, in April, accounted for 29 percent of the nationwide outflow of investment in such portfolios, CBS MarketWatch reported.

Investor pulled $3.5 billion out of the California tax-free fixed-income funds in the past two months, fund analyst Lipper Inc. said.

And California money market funds, representing $35 billion in assets, lost $3 billion in April, or 8.6 percent of their assets. This compares to an outflow of $420 million in March.

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