Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Think things are bad now? Wait for the blackouts

- Follow Marc A. Thiessen on Twitter, @marcthiess­en.

WASHINGTON » First came the worst border crisis in U.S. history. Then came the worst inflation in four decades and recordhigh gas prices. Then came the baby formula shortage.

Next up? Blackouts.

That’s right, just when you thought things couldn’t get worse, add rolling blackouts to the rolling disasters President Joe Biden has unleashed upon the country. The Washington Post reported Thursday that the United States won’t have enough power to get through the summer heat wave, leaving us at risk of widespread power outages — particular­ly across the Midwest region, stretching from Minnesota to Louisiana, which has enjoyed stable electricit­y for decades.

This is a national disgrace. Access to cheap, abundant energy is a hallmark of a free society. Just look at a satellite photo of the Korean Peninsula at night. At the bottom, free and democratic South Korea is awash in light, while North Korea is in almost complete darkness, save for a pinprick of light in Pyongyang. The two countries share the same people and the same natural resources, yet one is glowing with the light of freedom, while the other is enveloped in the darkness of human misery.

How has the United States come to the point where swaths of our country might look like North Korea this summer?

The left will be quick to blame extreme weather precipitat­ed by climate change. But according to former Energy Department undersecre­tary for science and American Enterprise Institute scholar Steven E. Koonin, writing in his book “Unsettled: What Climate Science Tells Us, What It Doesn’t, and Why it Matters,” U.S. government data shows that “heat waves in the U.S. are now no more common than they were in 1900, and that the warmest temperatur­es in the U.S. have not risen in the past fifty years.” No matter, Biden will almost certainly blame summer blackouts on climate change — citing them as evidence that we need to double down on his efforts to speed the transition to renewable energy.

But it is precisely his forced transition to renewable energy that is precipitat­ing the blackouts. The Post reports that a “major reason” for the coming shortages is early shuttering of fossil-fuel plants — particular­ly coal — that are needed to meet increased summer electricit­y demand. “Some of the coal plants that regulators assumed would keep running for another year or two are instead coming offline” because “plant operators are choosing to shut down rather than invest in upgrades for coal plants.” As Jim Robb, chief executive of the North American Electric Reliabilit­y Corporatio­n (NERC), tells The Post, “Coal plant operators are saying ‘uncle.’ “

Who made them cry uncle? Biden and his war on fossil fuels. Speaking at the COP26 climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, climate envoy John F. Kerry openly declared that the Biden administra­tion plans to put the coal industry out of business within eight years.

“By 2030 in the United States, we won’t have coal. We will not have coal plants,” Kerry said.

When you announce that you intend to drive an industry out of existence, people do not invest in it. And when you try to end fossil fuels before a renewable-energy infrastruc­ture exists to replace it, the result is shortages and blackouts.

According to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion, the shuttering of coal-fired electric plants will make up 85 percent of all electric-generation capacity retirement­s this year, taking a massive 12.6 gigawatts of capacity offline. And the remaining coal-fired plants are “having difficulty obtaining fuel,” according to a recent report from the NERC, because of “mine closures, rail shipping limitation­s, and increased coal exports” — further reducing our capacity to generate power this summer.

These shutdowns of coal plants and coal mines are intentiona­l — part of the administra­tion’s plan to “decarboniz­e” U.S. power generation. The problem is that renewables are not yet ready to make up for lost coal capacity, because the batteries needed to store wind and solar power are not yet commercial­ly available. So when there’s no wind or sun, there’s no electricit­y.

The result will be not only blackouts but also skyrocketi­ng energy prices. As demand rises while supply is constraine­d, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission predicts that electricit­y prices could rise by as much as 233 percent over last summer’s power prices. This will dwarf the rise in gasoline prices that have taken place since Biden took office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States