The bill makes some state-regulated utilities plan to meet a new “reliable generation” standard for at least the next 10 years. State regulators must review whether to adopt the standard on a set timeline, and GAO must report to Congress on how well current planning works.
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State Planning for Reliability and Affordability Act is a Senate bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Latest action on H.R. 3628: Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
Who this affects: The bill mainly affects state-regulated electric utilities that use integrated resource planning and the state agencies that regulate them. It can also affect customers if utilities change what they build, keep running, or contract for to meet the new definition of “reliable generation.” Power plant owners and fuel suppliers could see different incentives if states and utilities favor resources that can meet the bill’s 30-day fuel-and-operation requirements. Congress and GAO are involved through the required GAO report.
Why this matters: Reliable electricity during long emergencies and severe weather can depend on whether enough resources can keep running when supply chains and fuel deliveries are disrupted. By writing a specific federal definition of “reliable generation facility” into law and tying it to long-term planning, the bill could influence which resources states and utilities prioritize—especially where integrated resource planning is the main tool for setting future investments. The bill itself does not force a particular type or amount of power plant to be built, so the real-world effects would vary by state decisions, utility plans, and future grid conditions. The GAO report could also shape what Congress considers next, but the bill does not require Congress to act on the findings.
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