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Senate Bill 540 aims to enhance California’s role in a unified Western energy market, removing governance barriers to grow renewable cooperation. Don Bartletti TNS The electric grid is a giant ...
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Newsom strikes global deal with Denmark to power California’s clean energy revolution
California has taken another big step in its fight against climate change by signing a new agreement with Denmark. A major ...
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Texas challenges Newsom’s gas car crackdown, warning California can’t dictate US auto market
A legal showdown between California, Congressional Republicans and the Trump admin escalates as Texas enters the mix to try ...
In a landmark decision, the California Supreme Court is revisiting the state's NEM 3.0 solar policy in a major financial win ...
Clean energy costs just over three cents more per kilowatt-hour than fossil power for California’s major utilities — a gap driven mostly by older, more expensive contracts and other market ...
Trump administration reopens California's Santa Ynez offshore oil project with 190 million barrels potential, drawing Republican praise and Democratic opposition from Adam Schiff.
Stepping backward, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) increased the stringency of the state’s low carbon fuel standards (LCFS). As of July 1, 2025, the new target reductions in the carbon ...
SB 540, California’s electricity reform bill, faces scrutiny as amendments complicate renewable energy goals and threaten west-wide collaboration.
The California Energy Commission announced $55 million in new funding to develop high-speed electric vehicle charging.
The high court sent the third iteration of the state’s net energy metering tariff program ... and the Court of Appeal must revisit their NEM 3 decision, which gutted California’s rooftop solar market.
Last month, the California Senate passed Senate Bill 540, authored by Sen. Josh Becker, D-Menlo Park, a bill that could raise electricity prices and reverse our state’s clean energy progress.
For years, California refused to create a Western mega energy market over concerns about fossil fuels and union jobs. But now, the idea is closer than ever.
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