Advanced Energy United News

E&E News: Clean Energy Groups Back FERC in Battery Storage Lawsuit

Written by Rod Kuckro | Aug 14, 2019
E&E News' Energywire reported on legal filings by AEE and others in support of FERC's decision not to rehear its rulemaking to allow energy storage to participate in wholesale markets (FERC Order 841). See excerpts below and read the full E&E News story here.   A handful of clean energy groups want to intervene in support of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission as the agency faces a lawsuit over its recent order aimed at expanding deployment of energy storage technologies such as batteries. Advanced Energy Economy, the Solar Energy Industries Association, the Environmental Defense Fund, the Natural Resources Defense Council and Vote Solar have rallied to FERC's defense in two separate filings Monday in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit...

In May, FERC Chairman Neil Chatterjee, a Republican, joined with the commission's two Democrats as they agreed on an order rejecting numerous requests that they reconsider a rule approved a year earlier that aimed to support the relatively new battery storage technology sector.

FERC was sued over that order by an array of large power industry interests last month. The challengers include the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) and several trade groups representing investor-owned electric utilities, electric cooperatives and municipal power utilities...

"FERC concluded that the Federal Power Act vests it with exclusive jurisdiction to enable wholesale market participation by all resources, including those located on the local distribution grid or behind the meter," said the filing by AEE and SEIA.

"States may not regulate wholesale market participation by such resources," they said.

In May, Commissioner Bernard McNamee, a Republican, was the sole FERC member not to support the order as he laid out at length his views on FERC jurisdiction with regard to wholesale versus retail electricity under the FPA...

Read the entire E&E News story here.