by Diane Cherry | Feb 4, 2022 | Energy Market Reform
Like most of the Southeast, North Carolina has a vertically integrated electric system in which government regulated monopolies own most power production and delivery and essentially receive a guaranteed rate of return. The state is also home to large energy...
by Chris Carmody | Oct 7, 2021 | Energy Market Reform
If you or your colleagues are attention Solar & Storage Southeast, please join us for a CCEBA update on energy legislation policy and regulatory developments in North and South Carolina. We will review the major developments of this past year, provide a post...
by Staff | Sep 1, 2021 | Energy Market Reform
Brattle Economists Find 74% GHG Reduction Achievable in North Carolina with $590 Million in Generation Savings by 2030 Economists at The Brattle Group have released a new study, prepared for Cypress Creek Renewables, which analyzes the generation costs and...
by Chris Carmody | Jul 19, 2021 | Energy Market Reform
The Carolinas’ Energy Landscape North Carolina and South Carolina share many similar characteristics. Their geography and climate, for example, mirror each other in terms of heat, storm impacts, and the Atlantic and mountains of their east and west borders. The...
by Staff | Jun 25, 2021 | Energy Market Reform
The John Locke Foundation (JLF), which claims to be a ‘free market think tank,’ in fact supports the aims of government regulated monopolies that seek to avoid private sector competition at all costs. Yesterday, the JLF distributed a paper to North Carolina...
by Suzanne Sabin | May 31, 2021 | Energy Market Reform
Image courtesy of the Charlotte Business Journal In July of 2020, reporters discovered that Duke Energy had been in secret negotiations with at least sixteen other utilities to create SEEM — a bilateral trading market. Duke had maintained secrecy despite having...
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