COAL: A federal judge allows a Sierra Club lawsuit, which claims a large southern Illinois coal plant is violating the Clean Air Act, to move forward as the plant operator seeks to dismiss the suit. (St. Louis Public Radio)
ELECTRIC VEHICLES:
- Production is delayed until 2027 at an Indiana electric vehicle battery plant jointly run by GM and Samsung as EV sales slow and the companies finalize contract details. (Associated Press)
- General Motors will bring its electric commercial van startup BrightDrop under the Chevrolet brand in an effort to expand sales beyond delivery companies. (Detroit News, subscription)
SOLAR:
- Construction has started on an 800 MW solar project 30 miles west of Springfield, Illinois, that the developer says will contribute $100 million in tax revenue. (Newsweek)
- A developer breaks ground on a 251 MW solar project in southwestern Indiana. (Solar Industry)
- A central Ohio city council votes down proposed commercial solar regulations that would have accommodated a potential 200-acre project. (Peak of Ohio)
PIPELINES: A carbon pipeline development official tells Iowa landowners that its proposed project is less of a hazard than gas pipelines that already traverse the state. (KCCI)
RENEWABLES: U.S. renewable energy investment is up 63% from pre-Inflation Reduction Act levels, as developers target large wind projects while investment wanes in solar. (Utility Dive)
NUCLEAR: A Michigan electric cooperative says a contract to buy electricity from a reopened nuclear plant will help get it to 100% carbon-free power by 2030, as opponents seek to block the reopening plan. (Crain’s, subscription)
COMMENTARY:
- A Natural Resources Defense Council official says updating Michigan’s building codes can make homes more resilient to extreme weather and save homeowners money on utility bills. (Bridge)
- The mayor of Michigan’s capital city hits back at a GOP congressional candidate’s claims that public electric vehicle investments have failed, saying that the state risks ceding jobs and market share to China by not supporting the industry. (Bridge)
- PJM’s latest capacity auction with sky-high prices should not be a cause for panic and shows that the grid operator’s market is catching up to the rest of the country in needing to manage supply changes, a former regulator writes. (Utility Dive)
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