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Colorado regulators want rules in place to shield ordinary household and business customers from getting stuck paying for increased generating and transmission capacity. Listen to "Morning Edition" host Michael Lyle, Jr. discuss this story with Colorado Sun reporter Mark Jaffe and then read the entire article at the link below.
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What about propane for rural folks? Do we have to give up gas furnaces and stoves? Who will pay? Will electric bills go way up? Listen to "Morning Edition" host Michael Lyle, Jr. get the answers to those questions with Colorado Sun reporter Michael Booth and then read the entire article at the link below.
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Some customers are stuck without checks, but dealers are happy about the boost in electric vehicle sales. Listen to "Morning Edition" host Michael Lyle, Jr. discuss this story with The Colorado Sun reporter Michael Booth and then read The Colorado Sun story at the link below.
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The state's largest energy provider recently said they are not sure they can meet Colorado’s clean-energy goals at the $12 billion price tag they promised. Xcel has gotten more time from state regulators to try and reconcile their plan. But according to Colorado Sun reporter Mark Jaffe, Colorado's Public Utilities Commission is concerned the delay could lead to consumers paying more on their energy bills.
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The Colorado Public Utilities Commission heard nearly three hours of public comment from leaders and community members about Xcel Energy’s preemptive outage in early April that left many along the Front Range without power for days.
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Colorado’s three-member Public Utilities Commission gave its approval on Monday to a proposed $2.5 billion investment in solar, wind and natural gas power…