Otherwise, we’re going to be getting more situations like this: www.detroitnews.com/story/busine...
Otherwise, we’re going to be getting more situations like this: www.detroitnews.com/story/busine...
Basically, that’s what the administration is doing through the orders David and I discuss. We need specific analyses about how much new load is really going to show up, when, and where, then a review of all the ways (supply-side, demand-side, transmission) the system can handle that new load.
Glad you found it interesting. I have no argument with the last part of your comment generally. But, w/o attributing this further step to you, I'll add that a serious problem arises when blanket statements like that are lazily used as a justification for specific energy resource decisions.
Utilities are not holding up their end of the bargain when it comes to keeping electricity costs down, and consumers pay the price: bit.ly/3RAUHqR
Utilities push out lower-cost resources--Joe Daniel @rockymtninst.bsky.social gives a 30-second drill-down on a hidden, market-distorting practice that unjustly rewards fossil power plants and raises electricity bills.