Clean Wisconsin Joins Federal Lawsuit Over Plan that Fast-Tracks Gas Plants
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Earthjustice filed a lawsuit today on behalf of environmental groups Clean Wisconsin and Natural Resources Defense Council, and together with Sierra Club, challenged the approval of a plan to fast-track the interconnection of mostly fossil-fueled generation in states where Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) operates.
So far, requests for the FERC-approved fast track are three-quarters gas capacity. That would add at least 18 gigawatts of gas-burning generation in MISO’s footprint, which stretches from Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan south to Louisiana and Mississippi. Some of the largest projects include a 1.2 gigawatt gas plant in Paris, Wisconsin—where Clean Wisconsin has already challenged another new gas plant—and three new 1.5 gigawatt gas units to serve Meta data centers in Louisiana, where the state Public Service Commission ignored Earthjustice’s partners’ concerns in fast-tracking state processes as well.
Gas-fired generation is more expensive for consumers than the affordable clean energy that dominates MISO’s normal interconnection queue. This year, solar had the lowest levelized cost of energy value at $38-79 per megawatt hour.
This petition parallels a lawsuit also initiated today by the Sierra Club and clean energy trade organizations, which challenges a similar fast track in MISO’s neighboring grid operator, Southwest Power Pool.
“Clean energy is facing unprecedented challenges, including cancellation of federal tax incentives and the ban on federal environmental permits. This is just another example of the unfair advantage given to polluting, last-century technology,” said Katie Nekola, General Counsel for Clean Wisconsin.
“FERC is letting grid operators like MISO rewrite the rule book to the benefit of fossil fuel and data center companies, and at the expense of everyone else,” said Ada Statler, Senior Associate Attorney at Earthjustice. “FERC is sidelining cheaper clean energy projects, and allowing utilities to pass on the higher costs of methane gas to other customers, despite its legal mandate to ensure just and reasonable rates.”
“ERAS creates a system where a handful of projects, primarily gas plants, get to shortcut the line and receive major financial advantages. It lacks meaningful guardrails that ensure new energy projects come online on a timeframe that keeps up with MISO’s claimed needs,” said Caroline Reiser, Senior Attorney for Climate & Energy at NRDC. “We need an interconnection process that is fair, transparent, and focused on getting the most reliable and affordable resources on the grid quickly. ERAS does the opposite.”
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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