Southeast electric utilities' plans to start an energy exchange market have hit major headwinds as a bevy of clean energy, public interest and other stakeholders pointed to perceived design flaws and shortcomings that they argued could do consumers more harm than good. Stakeholders, in comments filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, were generally supportive of the expansion of competitive wholesale power market frameworks in the Southeast, but felt that the Southeast Energy Exchange Market (SEEM) proposal (ER21-1111, et al) fell far short of the needs of the states and customers in the region.
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