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Michigan cities , regulators clash in court over renewable energy law

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How much power should Michigan regulators have when they want to approve renewable energy projects over the objections of local governments? That was the question at the center of a courtroom battle on Wednesday between state officials and a coalition of rural Michigan townships and counties that have challenged a 2023 law that empowers the Michigan Public Service Commission. During an hourlong oral argument in Detroit, a lawyer for dozens of Michigan counties and townships told the state Court of Appeals that Michigan utility regulators unlawfully expanded their powers under a state law that allows renewable energy developers to bypass local governments when siting projects. Attorney Michael Homier told the court that the Michigan Public Service Commission’s implementation of the law ties the hands of local governments in determining how and where wind, solar and battery projects are built.

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Appeal April 16, 2026

Michigan cities , regulators clash in court over renewable energy law

In a courtroom battle on Wednesday, state officials in Michigan clashed with a coalition of rural townships and counties over a 2023 law that grants the Michigan Public Service Commission the authority to approve renewable energy projects without the consent of local governments. The lawyers argued that the law unlawfully expands the power of utility regulators, limiting the ability of local governments to determine the siting of wind, solar, and battery projects.

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