plce line - first paragarpasdkas

Progress toward letting consumers choose their electric supplier has virtually ground to a halt in the United States, the latest edition of the Retail Energy Deregulation Index (RED Index) shows. As an alternative, however, experiments with "virtual choice" in regulated markets are picking up. The fourth edition of the RED Index, issued by the Center for the Advancement of Energy Markets (CAEM) at the Edison Electric Institute's National Accounts Conference, shows that California's well-publicized troubles, the Enron collapse and the financial crisis in the energy industry have all but halted progress on electricity competition in the U.S. The most positive development in retail energy competition is the emergence of the North American Energy Standards Board (NAESB), the RED Index says. The report notes that Texas continues to lead the U.S. in electricity restructuring, while progress continues in Canada, England, Australia and New Zealand.

The most positive development in retail energy competition is the emergence of the North American Energy Standards Board (NAESB), the RED Index says.

The report notes that Texas continues to lead the U.S. in electricity restructuring, while progress continues in Canada, England, Australia and New Zealand.

Related News

renewable energy protest

Why the shift toward renewable energy is not enough

VANCOUVER - This article is an excerpt from "Changing Tides: An Ecologist's Journey to Make Peace with the Anthropocene" by Alejandro Frid. Reproduced with permission from New Society Publishers. The book releases Oct. 15.

The climate and biodiversity crises reflect the stories that we have allowed to infiltrate the collective psyche of industrial civilization. It is high time to let go of these stories. Unclutter ourselves. Regain clarity. Make room for other stories that can help us reshape our ways of being in the world.

For starters, I’d love to let go of what has been our most venerated and ingrained story…

READ MORE
powerlines

B.C. ordered to pay $10M for denying Squamish power project

READ MORE

global electricity demand

Surging electricity demand is putting power systems under strain around the world

READ MORE

offshore wind turbines

Next Offshore Wind in U.S. Can Compete With Gas, Developer Says

READ MORE

offshore wind

When will the US get 1 GW of offshore wind on the grid?

READ MORE