NEWS NUGGETS
Don’t miss Sen. John Hoeven’s new op-ed in Roll Call, explaining how the U.S. can lead on carbon capture and more broadly on global fossil energy innovation. “You can’t find a better example of how public-private partnerships can spur innovation than Project Tundra,” a joint effort to retrofit a North Dakota lignite coal power plant with carbon capture technology that DOE recently awarded $6 million.
Ahead of the omnibus rollout, Energy Secretary Rick Perry this week offered support for ARPA-E before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee. “I have found some very, very positive things that have come out of it,” he said. If Congress funds it, “it will be operated in a way that you will be most pleased with,” he added.
NRC Chairwoman Kristine Svinicki told the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee that pre-licensing conversations with NuScale and Oklo on their advanced nuclear designs “continues to be very active.” While NuScale has submitted their small modular reactor design, Oklo appears “to be moving out of the pack with some serious intent there to submit a design in the coming years” that will be even more advanced, Svinicki said.
Congress should ease restrictions on purchase power agreements between federal agencies and electric utilities, instruct DOE to relax certain export control regulations that have become unnecessarily cumbersome and order NRC to create a new regulatory regime for future nuclear reactors that is better able to assess risks, according to a set of recommendations by R Street Institute.
FERC has granted an additional 30 days, until May 9, for public comments regarding an analysis by regional grid operators about the resilience of the nation’s power grid. FERC has directed regional transmission operators to report on grid resilience.
BP American President John Minge will leave that job at the end of April to chair a National Petroleum Council study on carbon capture and storage technology.
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