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Whitepaper: Grid Reliability in the Era of Extreme Weather

23 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Whitepaper: Grid Reliability in the Era of Extreme Weather

Descripción

The U.S. electric power system has entered a reliability era defined by compound stress. Extreme weather is no longer an occasional external disruption managed through emergency restoration after the fact. Heat waves, winter storms, hurricanes, wildfires, drought, high winds, and flooding now shape core assumptions about resource adequacy, transmission planning, distribution investment, fuel assurance, operating reserves, and emergency procedures. This shift is forcing utilities, ISOs/RTOs, state regulators, FERC, NERC, and reliability coordinators to reconsider long-standing planning practices developed around historical weather patterns, deterministic contingency analysis, and relatively stable load growth. The grid reliability challenge is no longer limited to whether enough nameplate capacity exists on paper.

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episode Whitepaper: Grid Reliability in the Era of Extreme Weather artwork

Whitepaper: Grid Reliability in the Era of Extreme Weather

The U.S. electric power system has entered a reliability era defined by compound stress. Extreme weather is no longer an occasional external disruption managed through emergency restoration after the fact. Heat waves, winter storms, hurricanes, wildfires, drought, high winds, and flooding now shape core assumptions about resource adequacy, transmission planning, distribution investment, fuel assurance, operating reserves, and emergency procedures. This shift is forcing utilities, ISOs/RTOs, state regulators, FERC, NERC, and reliability coordinators to reconsider long-standing planning practices developed around historical weather patterns, deterministic contingency analysis, and relatively stable load growth. The grid reliability challenge is no longer limited to whether enough nameplate capacity exists on paper.

Ayer23 min
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Late-Spring Congestion and Market Readiness Watch

Wholesale power markets across North America remained broadly orderly during the seven-day period ending May 22, 2026. The week’s clearest stress points were localized transmission constraints, operator notices, and ongoing market-implementation work—not broad emergency conditions. Real-time pricing reflected typical late-spring fundamentals: moderate load across most regions, recurring congestion-driven price separation, and episodic nodal volatility around outages and facility constraints. Public postings highlighted ERCOT manual action for an unsolved contingency in the Taylor County area; PJM post-contingency local load relief warnings on May 20; CAISO daily real-time market and EDAM reports; MISO pricing approvals and report-availability notices; ISO-NE daily market postings; IESO renewed-market engagement activity; and AESO REM readiness work.

22 de may de 202621 min