FERC Order 1000 as a New Tool for Promoting Energy Efficiency and Demand Response

November 2012
Citation:
42
ELR 11025
Issue
11
Author
Shelley Welton and Michael B. Gerrard

In July 2011, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) issued Order No. 1000, the latest in a series of orders directed at improving federal transmission access, planning, and coordination. Order 1000 requires, for the first time, that electricity transmission providers engage in regionwide transmission planning, and further mandates that such planning consider how federal and state public policies affect transmission needs. Public utility transmission providers are now in the process of amending their operating tariffs to comply with this new order. It is therefore an important time for all those with an interest in the future of the electric grid to pay attention to how Order 1000 is being interpreted and implemented by various regions across the country.

Shelley Welton is the Deputy Director and Earth Institute Climate Law Fellow at Columbia Law School’s Center for Climate Change Law. Michael B. Gerrard is the Director of the Center for Climate Change Law and the Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice at Columbia Law School. He is also Senior Counsel to Arnold & Porter LLP, and editor of The Law of Clean Energy: Efficiency and Renewables (ABA 2011).

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FERC Order 1000 as a New Tool for Promoting Energy Efficiency and Demand Response

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