Levelized Cost of Electricity (LCOE)

The levelized cost of electricity (LCOE) is a metric used to evaluate the average cost of generating electricity over the lifetime of a power plant. It includes all costs associated with the plant, such as initial investment, operation and maintenance, and fuel, divided by the total electricity generated.This measure helps compare different energy generation methods on a consistent basis, aiding in investment planning and policy decisions.

Everything’s Bigger in Tech-SaaS | Fermi Plans 11 GW AI Campus With TTU

data-center-demand

The Texas Tech University (TTU) System and Fermi America announced an 11 GW data center powered by a mix of natural gas, utility grid power, solar, wind and nuclear energy. The newly founded power company is building one of the largest behind-the-meter advanced energy and artificial intelligence campuses in the U.S., covering about 5,800 acres […]

It’s Getting Hot in Here | Heat Dome in PJM

A massive heat dome swept across the eastern U.S. last week, driving temperatures into the triple digits and pushing the PJM Interconnection grid to its highest peak load since 2006.

Find High-Capacity POIs Fast With ATC Data in Enverus PRISM®

Enverus Press Release - Redesigning ancillary markets: Reliability in a renewable future

Are you struggling to find substations with real injection potential? In this blog, you’ll learn how developers use planning models and historical ATC data in PRISM to identify viable POIs, avoid costly surprises in the queue and confidently move forward with high-potential projects. First off, what is available transfer capacity (ATC)? ATC refers to the […]

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