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— row

The Agreement That Went Silent

The parcel that blows a right-of-way schedule is almost never the one you're fighting over. It's the easy one that went quiet -- an offer went out, the owner didn't sign, nobody was counting the days, and three weeks quietly became three months. Here's why the silent stall is the most expensive failure mode in ROW acquisition, why a line list can't see it coming, and what it takes to catch it before it costs you the in-service date.

July 2026 · 7 min read
— ferc

What FERC's Data-Center Orders Mean for the Land-Rights Desk

On June 19 FERC issued six orders telling the country's regional grid operators to write new rules for how data centers plug into the grid. Read quickly, they look like procedural homework for grid engineers. Read closely, they are about three things -- cost, accountability, and documentation -- and all three eventually land on the desk of the people who acquire the land a transmission line has to cross. Here is what the orders say, and why the right-of-way workload behind the data-center buildout just got more scrutinized, not less.

June 2026 · 8 min read
— row

What 2.2 GW Means for Land Rights

AWS announced an Indiana data center campus that needs 2.2 gigawatts -- roughly half the electricity all Indiana households use combined. That power has to come from somewhere, and it has to travel over wires that don't exist yet. Behind the data-center buildout sits a transmission expansion of historic scale, and behind that sits a less-talked-about bottleneck: every mile of new line requires parcel-by-parcel land rights work. The shape of the market that's about to need ROW software is not the shape the incumbents were built for.

June 2026 · 8 min read

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