
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


If the US PWR fleet and their owners could convince regulators to the fleet to bid on day-ahead reserves and draw up new contracts to support it, they could keep more reactors running producing low-carbon electricity longer in the face of competition from cheap gas, wind, and solar. This is a podcast version of the article of the same name on the TFIE Medium publication.
By Michael Barnard5
33 ratings
If the US PWR fleet and their owners could convince regulators to the fleet to bid on day-ahead reserves and draw up new contracts to support it, they could keep more reactors running producing low-carbon electricity longer in the face of competition from cheap gas, wind, and solar. This is a podcast version of the article of the same name on the TFIE Medium publication.