The latter judgment reiterates a similar point in substantive terms: not only can Member States
organize transmission system operators as public companies, they can also impose additional obligations on energy providers, if these requirements are justified on overriding grounds of the public interest.
Not exact matches
In January, FERC, an independent regulatory government agency that is officially
organized as part of the Department of Energy (DOE), thwarted a DOE proposal to require independent
system operators and regional
transmission organizations to establish «just and reasonable» rates for resilient and reliable plants, such as coal and nuclear baseload generators.
On September 14, 2017, academics, policy makers, representatives of Independent
System Operators / Regional
Transmission Organizations and other stakeholders engaged in a discussion of the future of electricity markets over the next two decades, with an emphasis on the potential for high penetrations of zero and low marginal cost generation, and various options for
organizing wholesale electricity transactions in the face of rapid technological change.