Across the United States, distribution grids are under unprecedented pressure. The rapid growth of distributed energy resources (DERs) – from residential solar systems to battery storage and electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure – is transforming the way electricity is generated and consumed.
However, while customer demand and clean energy adoption accelerate, many utilities still rely on fragmented data, manual studies, and legacy workflows that create backlogs, uncertainty, and frustration for developers and customers alike. Interconnection queues have become a bottleneck for the energy transition.
To address this challenge, the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) introduced grid modernization rules (PRN 2024-067, N.J.A.C. 14:8-4 and 14:8-5) aimed at overhauling interconnection processes and laying the foundation for a comprehensive grid modernization effort.
This regulatory initiative represents a national signal for grid modernization. Utilities must move from reactive, paper-based processes toward digital, data-driven systems that enable transparency, automation, and collaboration.
Together, these measures aim to reduce uncertainty, eliminate redundant steps, and accelerate viable interconnections while preparing the grid for higher DER penetration.
(Source: New Jersey Register, June 3, 2024 – PRN 2024-067)
New Jersey’s approach acknowledges that integrating renewables successfully depends on process and data capacity, not just generation capacity.
For utilities, the proposal means:
It also creates the foundation for a data-driven planning culture, where interconnection and grid planning workflows are integrated into a cohesive digital ecosystem.
Digital platforms like envelio’s Intelligent Grid Platform (IGP) enable utilities to:
Utilities in Europe – including E.DIS, Elektrilevi, and Syna – have already shown that digital interconnection processes reduce processing times dramatically and improve data quality.
Explore how the IGP supports modern interconnection workflows
The BPU’s proposal is only the beginning. The Grid Modernization Forum will address non-wire alternatives, DER flexibility services, and future reforms.
Utilities should begin to:
New Jersey signals a national trend: grid modernization is becoming essential infrastructure for the clean energy transition.
New Jersey’s grid modernization proposal (PRN 2024-067) sets a clear path for modernizing interconnection processes with transparency, automation, and standardization. Utilities that digitize their grid processes now will be best positioned to meet clean energy goals and manage interconnection growth.
The future of interconnection is digital — and it starts with data.