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Independent Engineering in a Topology-Constrained Grid: Why Interconnection Defines Project Risk

By Matt Cramer

Project development has always required navigating uncertainty. But as local system realities increasingly determine which projects succeed, the ability to understand interconnection and transmission risk earlier may become one of the most important differentiators between projects that reach commercial operation and projects that do not. 

The problem is that interconnection assessment is still treated as a discrete milestone — something that happens at a defined point in the development timeline rather than an ongoing lens applied from the start.  
 
By the time a formal interconnection study is complete, most of the critical development decisions have been made. Land has been acquired, capital has been committed, procurement strategies are likely underway. If the project then encounters major upgrade costs, limited deliverability, or extended queue delays, the ability to adapt is limited — and expensive.  
 
The better approach is to evaluate interconnection and local system topology before those commitments are finalized. Developers, lenders, and investors increasingly need answers to questions that formal study queues simply weren't designed to answer quickly: 

  • Does nearby substation and transmission infrastructure have practical capacity available? 
  • How does local topology affect curtailment, congestion, and deliverability? 
  • Do queued projects nearby create risk of study restarts or network upgrades? 
  • How could outage exposure, N-1 conditions, or maintenance events affect performance? 
  • Does a project's apparent value change materially when viewed at the node rather than the region? 


The difference between a viable project and a stranded one may be measured in a few miles of transmission distance, one overloaded transformer, or a single congested interface. 

What Early Interconnection Analysis Makes Possible

Developers, lenders, and investors are looking for a clearer understanding of whether a project can realistically interconnect, operate, and deliver the performance assumed in the financial model. 
 
That means modern independent engineering must include a stronger focus on local system topology, transmission constraints, and an early understanding of interconnection risk. The goal is not simply to identify whether risk exists, but to identify which risks are manageable, which can be mitigated, and which may fundamentally change the economics of the project. 

 
Explore the Conversation Further in Houston Next Month

Join us in Houston, TX for the ACP CLEANPOWER 2026 session, “Independent Engineering in a Topology-Constrained Grid: Why Local System Realities Now Define Project Risk,” which will explore the importance of early interconnection assessment, local system topology, and transmission constraints in greater detail. 
 
The session is part of the CLEANPOWER series “Clean Power Insights: From Procurement to Cash Flow—Making Clean Power Projects Bankable” and will be held on Wednesday, June 3 from 2:30–3:15 PM. It will include perspectives from across the industry, including developers, independent engineers, and other participants involved in making clean energy projects financeable in an increasingly constrained grid. 

For more information on where you can find EPE at ACP CLEANPOWER 2026, visit our landing page.

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