Sarah Greenberg is an associate in the Washington, D.C., office of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, where she is a member of the firm’s energy and climate solutions practice. Sarah helps independent power producers, project developers, large energy consumers, and trade associations navigate an increasingly complex energy sector.
Sarah regularly represents clients before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) at every stage of the regulatory process. She is skilled at both navigating and shaping the federal energy regulatory landscape, and she specializes in advocacy related to interconnection and participation in organized wholesale electric markets. Sarah has extensive experience guiding project developers through the regulatory frameworks governing interconnection, transmission planning, and wholesale market rules. She also regularly advises clients operating generation, transmission, energy storage, and demand response resources.
Prior to joining the firm, Sarah worked in the Office of General Counsel at FERC, where she served as lead attorney on Order No. 2023, a landmark rulemaking amending the rules governing generator interconnection. She also provided counsel on matters involving transmission planning and wholesale electricity markets. Before that, she was an associate in the environmental and natural resources group at a large international law firm.
Sarah Greenberg is an associate in the Washington, D.C., office of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, where she is a member of the firm’s energy and climate solutions practice. Sarah helps independent power producers, project developers, large energy consumers, and trade associations navigate an increasingly complex energy sector.
Sarah regularly represents clients before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) at every stage of the regulatory process. She is skilled at both navigating and shaping the federal energy regulatory landscape, and she specializes in advocacy related to interconnection and participation in organized wholesale electric markets. Sarah has extensive experience guiding project developers through the regulatory frameworks governing interconnection, transmission planning, and wholesale market rules. She also regularly advises clients operating generation, transmission, energy storage, and demand response resources.
Prior to joining the firm, Sarah worked in the Office of General Counsel at FERC, where she served as lead attorney on Order No. 2023, a landmark rulemaking amending the rules governing generator interconnection. She also provided counsel on matters involving transmission planning and wholesale electricity markets. Before that, she was an associate in the environmental and natural resources group at a large international law firm.
Cum Laude, Legal Research and Writing Fellow
Summa Cum Laude
Cum Laude, Legal Research and Writing Fellow
Summa Cum Laude