I thought someone on this board might have some feedback for me A friend of mine's company has a few magnetometer sensors near the PG&E Pacific DC Intertie (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_DC_Intertie) and with the sensors they can tell when this line comes on, turns off and what level of power is running. Are there any energy traders that would find knowing what energy level this route is running useful to trade on? eg is that data valuable? And if the data/info on that particular line isn't that valuable, is there another line that would be?
PG&E profit soars, despite convictions on pipeline explosion Despite a federal criminal conviction, PG&E saw its profit jump 26 percent and revenue was up by 5.7 percent in its third quarter compared with the same time last year. The San Francisco-based utility company estimated that it would have $137 million in expenses related to the penalties levied for the deadly 2010 San Bruno pipeline explosion that killed eight people. (San Jose Mercury News)
PG&E gets OK for biggest rollout of electric car chargers The California Public Utilities Commission approved a $130 million plan from PG&E to install 7,500 charging ports for electric, plug-in cars. The project is thebiggest deploymentof electric chargers in the country so far.(San Francisco Chronicle)
To answer the OP's question, this data is of no value because the real-time power flows are already publically available from the ISO (http://www.caiso.com/)
PG&E issues new fees for solar energy users PG&E customers will have topay a $145 feeto connect their solar panels to the utility company's grid, instead of getting the connection for free. Solar customers will also be charged a new monthly fee that would be about 5 percent of the monthly bill, after criticism that traditional customers were subsidizing customers with solar panels.(San Jose Mercury News)