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Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)

company

The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is an independent agency that regulates the interstate transmission of electricity, natural gas, and oil. It also reviews proposals to build liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminals and interstate natural gas pipelines, and licenses hydropower projects. FERC's primary role is to ensure reliable, safe, secure, and economically efficient energy infrastructure.

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Founded 1977 1,500 employees
Government Regulatory AgencyGovernment

Strategic Overview

  • FERC's role is regulatory, not investment-oriented. It approves, denies, or sets conditions for energy infrastructure projects and market rules.
  • Key focus areas include grid reliability, market efficiency, environmental protection, and ensuring fair rates for transmission services.
  • Recent policy initiatives often revolve around improving interconnection processes for renewable energy, transmission planning, and market design for new technologies like battery storage.

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Key People

Willie L. Phillips
Chairman
Allison Clements
Commissioner
Mark C. Christie
Commissioner
Andrea Kidd Taylor
Commissioner

Track Record

47
Years Active

Detailed Analysis

Sectors
UtilitiesEnergy Transition
Technologies
TransmissionHydropowerNatural GasOil & Gas PipelinesSolar PVOnshore WindOffshore WindBattery Storage
Geographies
United StatesNorth America

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