Skip to content
Select Your Language

Selecting a language changes the language and content on the Trane site.

  • United States English
  • Canada English French
  • Argentina Spanish
  • Mexico Spanish
  • Brazil Portuguese
  • Aruba English
  • Bahamas English
  • Belize English
  • Bermuda English
  • Bolivia Spanish
  • Bonaire English
  • Chile Spanish
  • Colombia Spanish
  • Costa Rica Spanish
  • Dominican Republic Spanish
  • Ecuador Spanish
  • El Salvador Spanish
  • Grenada English
  • Guadeloupe English
  • Guatemala Spanish
  • Guyana English
  • Haiti English
  • Jamaica English
  • Martinique English
  • Netherland Antilles English
  • Nicaragua Spanish
  • Panama Spanish
  • Paraguay Spanish
  • Peru Spanish
  • Puerto Rico Spanish
  • Saint Lucia English
  • St. Vincent & Grenadines English
  • Suriname English
  • Trinidad & Tobago English
  • Venezuela Spanish
  • Armenia English
  • Austria German
  • Azerbaijan English
  • Belgium French Dutch English
  • Croatia Croatian
  • Czech Republic Czech
  • Denmark English
  • Estonia English
  • Finland English
  • France French
  • Georgia English
  • Germany German
  • Greece Greek
  • Hungary Hungarian
  • Israel English Hebrew
  • Ireland English
  • Italy Italian
  • Kazakhstan English
  • Kyrgyzstan Russian
  • Latvia English
  • Lithuania English
  • Luxembourg French German
  • The Netherlands Dutch
  • Norway English
  • Poland Polish
  • Portugal Portuguese
  • Romania Romanian
  • Serbia English
  • Slovakia Czech
  • Slovenia English
  • Spain Spanish
  • Sweden Swedish
  • Switzerland French German Italian
  • Turkey Turkish
  • Ukraine English
  • United Kingdom English
  • Tajikistan Russian
  • Turkmenistan Russian
  • Uzbekistan Russian
  • United Arab Emirates English
  • Qatar English
  • Kuwait English
  • Egypt English
  • Lebanon English
  • China Simplified Chinese English
  • Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Korean English
  • Vietnam Vietnamese English
  • India English
  • Australia English
  • Japan Japanese
  • Guam English
  • Thailand Thai English
  • Taiwan Traditional Chinese English
  • Hong Kong SAR English
  • Indonesia English
  • Malaysia English
  • Philippines English
  • Singapore English
  • New Zealand English

ComfortSite Login

Trane ComfortSite is an extranet site designed to save you time. With your secure login, you can:

  • Order Equipment, Parts, Literature and track Order Status
  • View product literature
  • Register for Training programs
  • Complete Warranty requirements online
  • Search for specific Product Information
  • Use interactive Product Support functions
  • View and print invoices through Account Track Online
  • and More
Log In

Trane Connect

This is the login for Trane® Connect™ and other Trane® commercial applications. Trane® Connect™ is our secure, cloud-based customer portal to access your building systems to remotely monitor and manage building systems, and conduct routine maintenance.

Log In
Trane Commercial
  • Products
    • Products

    • Air Handling
      • Air Handling
      • Performance Air Handlers
      • Air Handlers for Data Centers
      • Variable-Air-Volume Units
      • Terminal Units
      • Air Rotation Units
      • Terminal Units
      • Unit Heaters
    • Chillers
      • Chillers
      • Air-Cooled Chillers
      • Chiller Heaters
      • Modular Chillers
      • Process Chillers
      • Water-Cooled Chillers
    • Design & Analysis Software
      • Design & Analysis Software
      • TRACE®
      • Trane® Design Assist™
      • myC02e™
      • myPLV®
      • Trane® Select Assist™
      • System Analyzer
    • Heat Pumps
      • Heat Pumps
      • Heat Pump Chillers
      • Domestic Hot Water Heat Pump
    • Liquid Cooling Systems
      • Liquid Cooling Systems
      • Coolant Distribution Unit (CDU)
    • Packaged Units & Split Systems
      • Packaged Units & Split Systems
      • Dedicated Outdoor Air Units
      • Rooftop Units
      • Self-Contained Units
      • Split Systems
      • Water Source Heat Pumps
    • Thermal Energy Storage
      • Thermal Energy Storage
      • Thermal Battery Systems
      • Thermal Energy Storage Solutions
    • Trane Drives
      • Trane Drives
      • TR200 Variable Frequency Drive
    • Smart Buildings
      • Smart Buildings
      • AI Solutions
      • Building Control Solutions
      • Cybersecurity
      • Digital Technology
      • Equipment Controls
      • Systems Integration
    • Systems
      • Systems
      • Comprehensive Heat Pump Chiller Systems
      • Comprehensive Chilled Water Systems
      • CoolSense Systems
      • Geothermal Systems
      • Indoor Agriculture System
      • Intelligent VAV Systems
      • Thermal Battery Systems
      • VRF Systems
      • Zoned Rooftop Systems
  • Services
    • Services

    • Optimization
      • Optimization
      • Energy Efficiency
      • Controls Upgrades
      • HVAC Upgrades
    • Repair & Maintain
      • Repair & Maintain
      • Controls System Maintenance
      • HVAC Maintenance
      • HVAC System Repair
      • Warranty
    • Rentals
    • Sustainability & Resiliency
      • Sustainability & Resiliency
      • Decarbonization Solutions
      • Resiliency Solutions
    • Whole Building Solutions
      • Whole Building Solutions
      • Building Modernization
      • Energy Services
  • Education & Training
    • Education & Training

    • Education & Training
      • Education & Training
      • Trane University
      • Design & Analysis Tools Training
      • Engineers Newsletters & Engineers Newsletters Live!
    • Roles
      • Roles
      • Engineers
      • Contractors
      • Facility Managers
  • Industries
    • Industries

    • Commercial Real Estate
    • Data Centers
    • High Tech
    • Industrial
    • National Accounts
  • About
    • About

    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Locate a Sales Office
    • Trane Newsroom
    • Customer Stories
    • Trane Blog
    • Events & Webinars
    • Press Releases
    • ComfortSite Login
    • Trane Connect
      • North America

      • United States English
      • Canada English French
      • Latin America

      • Argentina Spanish
      • Mexico Spanish
      • Brazil Portuguese
      • Aruba English
      • Bahamas English
      • Belize English
      • Bermuda English
      • Bolivia Spanish
      • Bonaire English
      • Chile Spanish
      • Colombia Spanish
      • Costa Rica Spanish
      • Dominican Republic Spanish
      • Ecuador Spanish
      • El Salvador Spanish
      • Grenada English
      • Guadeloupe English
      • Guatemala Spanish
      • Guyana English
      • Haiti English
      • Jamaica English
      • Martinique English
      • Netherland Antilles English
      • Nicaragua Spanish
      • Panama Spanish
      • Paraguay Spanish
      • Peru Spanish
      • Puerto Rico Spanish
      • Saint Lucia English
      • St. Vincent & Grenadines English
      • Suriname English
      • Trinidad & Tobago English
      • Venezuela Spanish
      • Europe

      • Armenia English
      • Austria German
      • Azerbaijan English
      • Belgium French Dutch English
      • Croatia Croatian
      • Czech Republic Czech
      • Denmark English
      • Estonia English
      • Finland English
      • France French
      • Georgia English
      • Germany German
      • Greece Greek
      • Hungary Hungarian
      • Israel English Hebrew
      • Ireland English
      • Italy Italian
      • Kazakhstan English
      • Kyrgyzstan Russian
      • Latvia English
      • Lithuania English
      • Luxembourg French German
      • The Netherlands Dutch
      • Norway English
      • Poland Polish
      • Portugal Portuguese
      • Romania Romanian
      • Serbia English
      • Slovakia Czech
      • Slovenia English
      • Spain Spanish
      • Sweden Swedish
      • Switzerland French German Italian
      • Turkey Turkish
      • Ukraine English
      • United Kingdom English
      • Tajikistan Russian
      • Turkmenistan Russian
      • Uzbekistan Russian
      • Middle East

      • United Arab Emirates English
      • Qatar English
      • Kuwait English
      • Egypt English
      • Lebanon English
      • Asia Pacific

      • China Simplified Chinese English
      • Korea, Republic of (South Korea) Korean English
      • Vietnam Vietnamese English
      • India English
      • Australia English
      • Japan Japanese
      • Guam English
      • Thailand Thai English
      • Taiwan Traditional Chinese English
      • Hong Kong SAR English
      • Indonesia English
      • Malaysia English
      • Philippines English
      • Singapore English
      • New Zealand English
  • Air Handling
  • Performance Air Handlers
  • Air Handlers for Data Centers
  • Variable-Air-Volume Units
  • Terminal Units
  • Air Rotation Units
  • Terminal Units
  • Unit Heaters
  • Chillers
  • Air-Cooled Chillers
  • Chiller Heaters
  • Modular Chillers
  • Process Chillers
  • Water-Cooled Chillers
  • Heat Pumps
  • Heat Pump Chillers
  • Domestic Hot Water Heat Pump
  • Thermal Energy Storage
  • Thermal Battery Systems
  • Thermal Energy Storage Solutions
  • Packaged Units & Split Systems
  • Dedicated Outdoor Air Units
  • Rooftop Units
  • Self-Contained Units
  • Split Systems
  • Water Source Heat Pumps
  • Trane Drives
  • TR200 Variable Frequency Drive
  • Systems
  • Comprehensive Heat Pump Chiller Systems
  • Comprehensive Chilled Water Systems
  • CoolSense Systems
  • Geothermal Systems
  • Indoor Agriculture System
  • Intelligent VAV Systems
  • Thermal Battery Systems
  • VRF Systems
  • Zoned Rooftop Systems
  • Design & Analysis Software
  • TRACE®
  • Trane® Design Assist™
  • myC02e™
  • myPLV®
  • Trane® Select Assist™
  • System Analyzer
  • Liquid Cooling Systems
  • Coolant Distribution Unit (CDU)
  • Smart Buildings
  • AI Solutions
  • Building Control Solutions
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital Technology
  • Equipment Controls
  • Systems Integration
  • Optimization
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Controls Upgrades
  • HVAC Upgrades
  • Sustainability & Resiliency
  • Decarbonization Solutions
  • Resiliency Solutions
  • Repair & Maintain
  • Controls System Maintenance
  • HVAC Maintenance
  • HVAC System Repair
  • Warranty
  • Whole Building Solutions
  • Building Modernization
  • Energy Services
  • Rentals
  • Education & Training
  • Trane University
  • Design & Analysis Tools Training
  • Engineers Newsletters & Engineers Newsletters Live!
  • Roles
  • Engineers
  • Contractors
  • Facility Managers
  • Commercial Real Estate
  • Data Centers
  • High Tech
  • Industrial
  • National Accounts
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Locate a Sales Office
  • Trane Newsroom
  • Customer Stories
  • Trane Blog
  • Events & Webinars
  • Press Releases
Find Trane Rep

Blog

Published: December 17, 2016

Electric Imports and the Environment: What the New England Clean Power Link Tells us About Demand

Electric Imports and the Environment: What the New England Clean Power Link Tells us About Demand

By: Trevor Sutherland

December 16, 2016

North American Electricity

On December 5th the New England Clean Power Link (NECPL) received its Presidential Permit, a required license for any transmission project that links the U.S. power grid to that of another country.  The $1.2 billion project, financed by the Blackstone Group and executed by TDI New England, will run nearly one hundred miles under Lake Champlain before the six-inch diameter cable goes an additional fifty miles underground to two substations in Vermont.  Once finished in 2020, the transmission line will deliver up to 1,000-MW of Canadian-created electricity to the ISO-NE footprint.

The power will be sorely needed.  New England is well-known for spurning natural gas pipeline build-out on environmental grounds, choosing to focus instead on non-dispatchable renewable resources.  This will create a reliability crunch as existing resources will not meet expected demand, meaning a stable source of power generated outside the region using low-carbon technologies will be required.  Eastern Canada, having an excess of hydro and wind generation capability, is a natural exporter.

As Canada continues to focus on clean power production through a number of means at all levels of government, it is more-and-more finding U.S. customers willing to buy its electricity.  This is facilitated by an established integration of the U.S. and Canadian electric systems, with NERC reliability regions in Canada also operating in the United States.  For these reasons, U.S. demand for Canadian electricity has more than doubled in the past decade from 24 TWh to 60 TWh (roughly equal to the 2015 generation of New Hampshire and Missouri, respectively) and will likely continue to grow in the near future.

Moving southward, the U.S.-Mexico electricity market is not as well integrated as that of the U.S. and Canada.  Although, like the U.S. and Canada, Mexico utilizes a 120 V, 60 Hz electric grid, transmission lines only cross the border in three locations: southern Texas into the states of Coahuila and Tamaulipas, western Texas from El Paso into Juarez, and southern California into Baja California.  Of the three areas, only Baja California is part of a U.S. reliability region.  Additionally, the lines from ERCOT are DC connections, meaning that while power can flow from one region to the next additional connections will be costly.

Looking forward, international electricity trade between the U.S. and its neighbors will continue to grow, albeit for different reasons and in different ways.  As Mexico deregulates its power sector and opens up to private money and resources, flows with the U.S. will grow accordingly.  At the moment higher pricing in the less-efficiently run Mexican power system are causing some generation facilities within ERCOT to sell their power into Mexican markets rather than the U.S.  This could possibly result in the U.S. becoming a net exporter of electricity into Mexico in the medium term, though this would require significant changes in the present ERCOT infrastructure.  Additionally, the likely inclusion of Baja California into CAISO’s energy imbalance market will increase and regularize these power trades.

From Canada, our net imports will likely continue to grow, driven by increased demand for clean energy in the eastern and western U.S. and existing transmission infrastructure in the mid-continent.  Assuming current growth rates, the NECPL alone could account for more than 10% of the net  electricity imported from Canada when it comes online in 2020, an amount greater than net imports from Mexico.  Mid-Continent, U.S. transmission lines, much like railways, are congested a significant portion of the time, resulting in Canadian-made power often being less expensive than American.  MISO is seeking to remedy this with their recent approval of the MTEP transmission enhancement project, though it will take several years for this individual projects to come to fruition.

Looking For Parts?

Visit Trane Supply

For General and Corporate Questions:

Contact Us
  • Energy and Building Services
  • Products and Systems
  • Education & Training
  • Newsroom
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Indoor Environmental Quality
  • Locate a Sales Office
  • Engineering Support
  • Contractor Support
  • Careers
  • Environmental Compliance
  • Quality
  • Ethical Business Conduct
  • Supplier Terms
  • Safety Data Sheets
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

Privacy Policy English | French 
Terms of Use English | French

All trademarks referenced are the trademarks of their respective owners.

© 2025 Trane. All Rights Reserved.

Trane Technologies