Coalition efforts to block monopoly construction legislation

Posted October 8, 2023
Categories: Uncategorized

Anti-competition, anti-consumer legislation was unfortunately reintroduced as AB 470 and SB 481. Wisconsin’s electric rates are already too high for businesses. Please contact us to find out how you can be part of the growing coalition.


Pushing back against a half billion in rate hikes

Posted August 15, 2023
Categories: Uncategorized

The first round of testimony is due around Labor Day for most of Wisconsin’s investor-owned utilities.

WIEG has prepared expert testimony to mitigate the impact. WIEG is the only organized voice questioning, challenging, and working to minimize the increase on behalf of large energy consumers. We continue to work to ensure Wisconsin’s manufacturers are not burdened with rates that further hurt economic competitiveness.


Utilities request over a half billion dollars in higher rates

Posted May 15, 2023
Categories: Uncategorized

Wisconsin’s utilities have recently filed for over a half billion dollars in higher electric rates, fuel surcharges and natural gas rates for 2024 and 2025.

WIEG has intervened in all the pending rate cases and fuel cases at the Public Service Commission. Contact WIEG today to be part of our growing coalition and protect your company from the pending rate hikes.


Utility Dive: Justice Department, FTC urge FERC to expand competition for building new transmission, deny utility exclusivity

Posted August 18, 2022
Categories: Uncategorized

There is bipartisan support for transmission competition. The FTC voted 5-0 (no more than three Commissioners can be of the same political party. Trump’s DOJ also supported transmission competition. Four of the five FERC Commissioners recently defended competition in a concurrence.


WPR: Utilities set to spend more than $2B on new transmission lines in Wisconsin

Posted August 2, 2022
Categories: Uncategorized

Manufacturers and customer groups are very concerned about MISO’s additional regulatory barriers to transmission competition and the unnecessary costs passed along to the ratepayers.

Four commissioners attached a concurrence that expresses concern “that existing processes may not adequately protect consumers with regard to the selection and construction of many transmission projects. This order has the negative consequence of expanding the scope of projects for which the transmission owner has less incentive to reduce cost and maximize benefits to the greatest extent possible.”