The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission announced it will take action in June on proposed reforms for connecting data centers and other large loads to the transmission grid, missing the Department of Energy's original April 30 deadline. The delay signals that the jurisdictional questions are more complicated — and more politically sensitive — than the original timeline assumed.
FERC Chairman Laura Swett: “I want to know exactly where the lines are of FERC jurisdiction versus state jurisdiction.” The National Association of Regulatory Commissioners urged FERC to respect state authority, noting that state commissions are “in the best position to ensure rational and efficient interconnections of new large loads while protecting all customers from improper cost-shifts."
The stakes are concrete. This week, we've tracked large-load tariffs spreading to 60 utilities in 36 states, Governor Shapiro forcing PECO to withdraw a $510 million rate hike, and Michigan's AG challenging secret data center energy contracts. All of those actions relied on state-level authority. If FERC preempts that authority, the toolkit communities have been using shrinks.