
Fitch gives United Power A rating
Plans to leave Tri-State G&T on May 1, but exit fee still uncertain

Plans to leave Tri-State G&T on May 1, but exit fee still uncertain

Colorado has a new greenhouse gas reduction plan. Enviro groups say hurry up; one electric utility says slow down!

El Paso County legislator wants to keep fossil fuels but has a kind of interesting bill this year

With a deadline looming, will the key decision-makers finally deliver plans that accept the new reality of the Colorado River?

The San Juan River of the Four Corners region above all delivers sediment. Receding levels of Lake Powell reveal a shrouded landscape.

Colorado Water Center’s John Tracy said we’re in a new phase of understanding water. It’s not building dams or canals. It’s not new technology. It’s something else.

Agricultural interests found prices at Northern Water’s water auction in Longmont to their liking, a sharp contrast to the long-term trend

Senate president Fenberg takes a hard question about his choice of a committee for the first hearing: it was a statement bill.

Mark Gabriel, the CEO of United Power, says transmission is nice but his and other utilities must embrace what is close at hand

At Wyoming Capitol, a denial of climate change — and continued support for carbon capture technology

New Mexico cooperative moves forward with plans for microgrids at Taos ski area and Picuris Pueblo and elswewhere

Advanced La Plata Electric Association on several fronts but co-op remains a full member of Tri-State G&T

A bill being readied for introduction in March would create a state standard for review of renewable energy projects by Colorado jurisdictions. Is this really needed?

Platte River Power Authority issues RFP for up to 200 MW of dispatchable generation. Opponents of natural gas fuming.

And there’s still plenty of roof space for more panels

They use water, deliver relatively few jobs and could stall Colorado’s progress toward decarbonization. So why would we deliver subsidies?

A corn farmer who proposes to reduce use of Colorado River by 600 acre-feet would get enough money to buy what he calls an nice-sized tractor

An acre-foot once cost $75 but could rise to $500as water managers struggle to find balance between demands and supplies — and the compact with New Mexico and Texas, too

Gov. Polis hosts conference today on the topic. New MOU with Alberta explicitly mentions it as a topic for cooperation

FERC issued documents that seem to provide Tri-State G&T members a clear idea about the cost of exiting. As always, there are asterisks aplenty.