← Back to Dashboard
S-465Senate2025-02-06Energy

GRID Power Act

YourVoice.Now Summary

This is the Senate companion to H.R. 1047. It directs the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to rewrite how new power plants get connected to the electric grid — giving priority to 'dispatchable' sources like natural gas, nuclear, and coal that can generate power on demand. Within six months, FERC would issue final rules letting utilities move these projects to the front of the interconnection queue. Wind, solar, and battery projects — not considered dispatchable under current definitions — could end up waiting longer. Supporters cite grid reliability; critics say it slows the clean energy transition.

Congressional Summary

Guaranteeing Reliability through the Interconnection of Dispatchable Power Act or the GRID Power ActThis bill requires the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to issue and periodically review a rule that revises the approval process for interconnection requests of generating units that produce electricity to prioritize dispatchable power projects (e.g., certain fossil fuel projects). Under the bill, dispatchable power generally refers to an electric energy generation resource, such as a generating unit that produces electricity from fossil fuels, capable of providing known and forecastable electric supply in time intervals necessary to ensure grid reliability. Currently, FERC receives interconnection requests from those projects and other generating units, such as units that produce electricity from renewable energy. Interconnection requests are requests from generating units to connect to the high voltage transmission lines of the electric grid.First, the rule must address the efficiency and effectiveness of the existing procedures for processing interconnection requests to ensure that new dispatchable power projects that improve grid reliability and resource adequacy can interconnect to the electric grid quickly, cost-effectively, and reliably. Second, the rule must revise the pro forma Large Generator Interconnection Procedures, and the pro forma Large Generator Interconnection Agreement as appropriate, to authorize transmission providers to submit proposals to FERC to prioritize new dispatchable power projects that will improve grid reliability and resource adequacy by assigning those projects higher positions in the interconnection queue of the provider. FERC must review and approve or deny such proposals within 60 days after the proposal is submitted.

Legislative Subjects

Electric power generation and transmissionEnergy efficiency and conservationEnergy storage, supplies, demand

Details

Congress
119th
Chamber
Senate
Status
summarized
Action
Introduced in Senate
Action Date
2025-02-06
Date Added
2026-04-19