Reshini Premaratne

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Reshini Premaratne

Reshini Premaratne

@reshinip

obsessed with & writing about the power grid of the future. @BCG. prev @nationalgrid @USTreasury. tweets are my own. 🇱🇰

New York, NY Katılım Eylül 2013
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Reshini Premaratne
Reshini Premaratne@reshinip·
I've spent the last ~3 yrs working in energy for major utilities, companies & federal agencies. Excited to be at @nationalgrid & learning in public on my substack. Wrote my favorite piece so far on the rise of electrostates & how the US is falling behind China. Link below👇
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Robinson Meyer
Robinson Meyer@robinsonmeyer·
It’s the age of electricity and America isn’t ready. Virtually every goal that Americans care about requires big changes to the power grid. I’m in @nytopinion today on why power bills are going up, whether AI is to blame, & what we need to do about it: nytimes.com/interactive/20…
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Jane Flegal
Jane Flegal@JaneAFlegal·
This is excellent, including the discussion of leveraging the data center buildout for grid modernization—an idea I’ve written a lot about in the last few weeks! 1. American grid infra fund: searchlightinstitute.org/research/seizi… 2. Conditional state tax abatements: searchlightinstitute.org/research/state…
Alex Bores@AlexBores

What can government actually do to make AI work for people? Sat down with @ezraklein to talk through it—my AI safety bill in NY, the millions in PAC spending against our campaign, and how to stop Trump's megadonors and AI oligarchs from gaining unchecked power over us. This is the conversation I've been wanting to have. nytimes.com/2026/04/21/opi…

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Jigar Shah
Jigar Shah@JigarShahDC·
For the first time in history clean energy (solar wind, nuclear) met the entire growth (~850TWh) in global electricity (2025). Fossil generation was flat last year.
Ember@ember_energy

#1 A RECORD surge in solar halted the rise of global fossil generation last year 🚫💨 Unpack the full story of the global power sector in 2025 👇 🧵1/11 ember-energy.org/latest-insight…

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Jeff St. John
Jeff St. John@jeffsaintjohn·
Data centers and other big customers of Georgia Power have won a way to pay for their own new clean energy projects—a big win for BYONCE in the Southeast. But can this new clean energy offset the utility's massive and costly gas-fired power plant plans? canarymedia.com/articles/data-…
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Derek Thompson
Derek Thompson@DKThomp·
New pod: SUDDENLY, EVERY NEWS STORY IS A FIGHT ABOUT ENERGY -> The Iran War is about energy flows -> The AI buildout is an energy project -> The future of populism—i.e., AI, electricity prices, data center moratoria—is an energy debate w/ @NatBullard Plus: - why politicians are wrong about the drivers of rising electricity prices - is the US auto industry doomed? - implications of the end of energy-demand stagnation - if the renewables vibes are so bad, why is solar still soaring? open.spotify.com/episode/2IBmF6…
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Nicolas Fulghum
Nicolas Fulghum@nicolasfulghum·
NEW US electricity data ⚡️ In March, renewables produced more than a third of US electricity for the first time ever, even overtaking gas generation! Wind and solar combined reached over a quarter (26%) for the first time.
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Matthew Zeitlin
Matthew Zeitlin@MattZeitlin·
Hawaiian Electric, the utility that covers basically the entire state, says that the cost of a transformer has more than doubled since 2020:
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Joshua Basseches (joshuabasseches.bsky.social)
This is a big deal as monopoly investor-owned utilities increasingly seek to own (as regulated assets incl. in rates) technologies associated with distributed energy resources.
Utility Dive@UtilityDive

Minnesota approves Xcel’s utility-owned battery program Xcel will own up to 200 MW of energy storage under the second phase of its Capacity*Connect program. utilitydive.com/news/minnesota…

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Danielle Deiseroth
Danielle Deiseroth@danielledeis·
Wise words from @JaneAFlegal: "We’ve got to find a better way to take advantage of the potential upside here and avoid the downside of them basically building a secondary grid behind the existing grid that benefits only them.” grist.org/accountability…
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Jeff St. John
Jeff St. John@jeffsaintjohn·
Illinois utility ComEd, solar developers and environmental groups collaborated to enable flexible interconnection to fast-track 50+MW of community solar in record time. Participants think other states and utilities can follow their collaborative lead: canarymedia.com/articles/trans…
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Brian Deese
Brian Deese@BrianCDeese·
Most electricity price data focus on rates—but households experience bills, which depend on usage, efficiency, and system costs. That’s why places can have average-looking rates but still some of the highest bills in the country.
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Stephen Lacey
Stephen Lacey@Stphn_Lacey·
If you want to understand how utilities are going to handle AI, you need to start with rate design. That’s where a lot of the real decisions are getting made. We just dug deep into 25 new data center tariffs across 19 states. A few years ago, this category didn’t really exist. With a ton of speculative development, there’s a lot of uncertainty around how data center demand shows up and whether it sticks around. Utilities don’t want to build out a bunch of infrastructure and then get stranded. So we're seeing similar design choices that require longer-term commitments, fairly high minimum demand charges, and significant financial guarantees. Interestingly, flexibility is not showing up yet. Grid stress is often concentrated in a relatively small number of hours each year. And outside of those windows, there’s often quite a bit of capacity available. So in theory, large loads like data centers could be incentivized to reduce demand to create more headroom on the system. There's lots of debate over how data centers could deploy this flexibility (batteries, on-site gas, turning down compute), but it's 100% possible. But when you look at these tariffs, that idea just isn’t really built in. Utilities are doing a lot to lock in reliable demand and protect against downside. But so far there isn't much thought about how to actually coordinate that load with the needs of the grid. We pulled all of this together in a free report at Latitude Media.
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Jesse D. Jenkins
Jesse D. Jenkins@JesseJenkins·
I made a thing: jessejenkins.github.io/heat-pump-map/ By which I mean I told Claude to make a thing. The economics of heat pumps are very challenging in a country that has cheap gas and where policy makers load retail electricity rates with a whole bunch of policy-related costs (rooftop solar cross-subsidies; 'decoupling' policies that raise volumetric rates to compensate utilities for implementing efficiency programs; public benefits charges, etc.) and price network services volumetrically. If folks want electrification, affordable electricity is essential, and we need rate reforms that more accurately price electricity's real cost.
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Aaron Bryant
Aaron Bryant@ajbry·
Interesting commentary from FERC chair Swett about tech companies not knowing the landscape of power markets, per Axios at CERAWeek: “Hyperscalers […] come to FERC to complain about electric utilities, but when they do, they "show a lack of understanding" about how utilities and the grid typically function, she said. "I think it's improving, but I don't know, because I don't talk to them as much as I think I would."”
Amy Harder@AmyAHarder

The @FERC chairman publicly prodded tech companies on Thursday to engage more as they race to power a massive buildout of AI data centers. axios.com/2026/03/26/fed… via @axios

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Tyler Norris
Tyler Norris@tylerhnorris·
“How Big Tech & Big Power are locking arms to save the grid” @Politico today
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Governor Abigail Spanberger
Governor Abigail Spanberger@GovernorVA·
Great news! The Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project — the largest in the country — is delivering reliable energy to Virginia!⚡️

High utility bills are many families’ top concern. This project will power hundreds of thousands of homes and help provide more affordable energy.
The Virginian-Pilot@virginianpilot

Dominion Energy’s Virginia offshore wind project delivers its first power: pilotonline.com/2026/03/23/dom…

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