Grant PUD will host a public hearing, July 28, to present its 20-year plan for providing service in the most cost-effective way possible by assembling a viable energy portfolio, preserving flexibility, managing costs and reducing exposure to myriad uncertainties. The 2026 “Integrated Resource Plan (IRP)” is a state-mandated analysis that details how the utility will meet its customers’ demand for electricity. The plan is updated every two years. This analysis covers the years 2027-2046. The good news: Grant PUD plans to have enough energy resources to meet customer demand throughout the 20-year IRP period. Resources include: Hydropower from its Columbia River dams, Priest Rapids and Wanapum. Energy purchases off the regional wholesale market. The already acquired 460 megawatts of solar power, 260 megawatts of battery storage and our 10-megawatt share of wind power from Energy Northwest’s Nine Canyon Wind Project in Kennewick. A potential “Provider of Choice” power-purchase contract from the Bonneville Power Administration. The utility’s existing portfolio, together with its purchase of Renewable Energy Credits, will satisfy its state Clean Energy Transformation Act requirements until nearing 2045, when the state requires 100% of its energy supply to be carbon-free.The challenges: Grant PUD will need to add “capacity” – the ability to deliver more power – beginning in 2030 to have the resources necessary to participate in the Western Resource Adequacy Program (WRAP), a resource-sharing pool of Western utilities and a pillar of Grant PUD’s service-reliability and energy strategy going forward. This may involve adding more, preferably carbon-free, around-the-clock available generation, such as nuclear or geothermal, and more transmission. The 20-year planning window holds much uncertainty, rising asset costs, variable weather conditions, transmission availability, clean-energy mandates, evolving markets and customer needs for electricity. Staff will present a final IRP for commission adoption Aug. 25, 2026 and must submit the IRP to the state Department of Commerce before the Sept. 1, 2026 deadline. Commissioners will host the hearing at Grant PUD’s Ephrata Headquarters, 30 C Street SW. Comment will be taken at the July 28 public hearing or submitted by email to
Commissioners expressed no opposition to a proposal to round customers’ bills to the nearest dollar in response to the federal government’s decision to discontinue minting new pennies after November 2025. Cash payments are currently rounded up or down to the nearest 5 cents. The rounding proposal is expected to have minimal impact on customer bills and Grant PUD’s annual bill revenue.
Commissioners learned Tuesday that a study commissioned in early 2025 by Pacific Northwest utility companies, including Grant, Chelan and Douglas PUDs, shows the region faces an elevated risk of electricity blackouts today and into the future unless states extend deadlines for transitioning to renewable energy, ease obstacles to building more transmission lines and/or allow natural gas be used as an interim backup energy supply.
Continued rate analysis seeks fairness, stability, reduced risk
Commissioners got their first look at an energy resource Tuesday that could be construed as a type of “hydropower” that uses water heated to steam by the earth’s core instead of the cold mountain runoff and ever-flowing Columbia River that powers Grant PUD dams.
Grant PUD’s commissioners received an update during their workshop on Tuesday, April 28 about how the ongoing Columbia River Treaty negotiations between the U.S. Federal government and Canada are impacting Grant PUD.
Volunteer bee collector Jan Dormaier inspects her net after collecting a native bee at Grant PUD’s Wanapum Overlook viewpoint. The viewpoint’s namesake dam is in the distance.
WENATCHEE, WA – Chelan, Douglas and Grant PUDs are considering a partnership to explore the potential for geothermal energy in North Central Washington. The proposal reflects a shared goal to meet regional energy needs through innovation, and deliver resilient, affordable energy for generations to come.
Grant PUD will spend much of the next two years preparing to make a big change in the way it buys the electricity it needs when generation from Priest Rapids and Wanapum dams isn’t enough and sells when the dams generate more than what’s needed to power the county.
A special group of 3,600 “electronic” juvenile salmon and steelhead will get helicopter rides in late April through May to transport them on a special mission for re-release into the Columbia River.
Commissioners hosted March 24 a public hearing on Grant PUD’s Open Access Transmission Tariff (OATT), a standardized master plan that will foster the most-efficient use of the capacity on the Grant PUD transmission system.
Want to know more about Grant PUD's new rate-setting policy? The following FAQ will help. Why the change to the rate-setting policy?
A scheduled rate increase for Grant PUD customers will start April 1 to counter inflation-fueled increases in costs on everything from wire and transformers to office supplies, plus cover increasing utility operational and capital requirements.
Work is underway to create Grant PUD’s next, state-mandated Integrated Resource Plan, which describes how the utility will meet customers’ demand for electricity from 2027 to 2046, while maintaining reliable service in compliance with the state’s clean-energy requirements at the lowest electric rates possible.