April 9

Christie: FERC Not a Transmission “Sugar Daddy” // Russian LNG Exports to Europe Grow

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Welcome to Grid Brief! Here’s what we’re looking at today: FERC’s Christie presages transmission revisions, the EU imports more Russian LNG, and more.

Photo by Thomas Despeyroux on Unsplash

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission plans to revamp its requirements for regional transmission planning and cost allocation at the end of this month. No doubt some are hoping for anything to ease the difficulty of building massive transmission projects. Commissioner Mark Christie spoke at an industry event last week, offering glimpses into how FERC is thinking about the issue in the lead up to its revision.

Christie drove home two major points. First, state buy-in are non-negotiable when it comes to cost allocation. To try and steamroll state governments and regulators will provoke backlash and litigation that will only make the process more difficult.

The second point Christie emphasized is that FERC cannot force anyone to build a power plant or a transmission line.

“So let’s not look to FERC as the big sugar daddy in Washington that is going to get all this stuff done,” Christie said, as quoted in Utility Dive’s coverage of the conference. “Ultimately, assets get built at the state level because states have the authority to order the construction of generating units, which we need a lot more of, especially combined cycle units, and transmission assets.”

As the share of renewable energy projects has grown, transmission has become a big issue. Utility-scale wind and solar projects are generally built far away from the places that can use their power, necessitating regional transmission to make the projects viable. Christie’s comments likely dampened hopes that major reforms might resolve the interstate politics of regional transmission construction.

New data reveals that Europe has become the largest importer of Russian LNG in the world.

“Citing a 4.3% (8.7 million metric ton) increase in unsanctioned LNG exports in Q1 2024 based on data from Kpler, Kommersant.ru said exports to the European Union were rising, while those to Asia were declining. Russia’s LNG exports to Asia for the first quarter of the year saw a 7% decline, which was made up for by a 4% increase in exports to Europe, which received some 5 million tons of Russian LNG during that time period,” reports Oilprice.com.

Most of Russia’s LNG production comes from Novatak’s Yamal Project, which is located on Russia’s northern coast, and Gazprom’s Sakhalin Energy Project, sited just north of Japan.

Energy News Beat 


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