Albuquerque Journal

Biden must focus on affordable, reliable power

Energy plan should support economic recovery, not sky-high rates

- BY MATTHEW KANDRACH PRESIDENT, CONSUMER ACTION FOR A STRONG ECONOMY

Democratic (working) majorities in the House and Senate, along with a new Biden administra­tion, promise sweeping policy changes in the United States. This includes campaign pledges to remake America’s electricit­y mix. But with campaign season over, Democrats should put rhetoric aside and pursue a bipartisan energy plan that supports economic recovery.

During the 2020 campaign, Joe Biden pledged to “achieve a carbon pollution-free power sector by 2035.” Doing so would mean essentiall­y — in a mere 14 years — eliminatin­g all of the fossilfuel power plants currently supplying 63% of America’s electricit­y needs. It’s just this type of plan that could prove crippling to the U.S. economy — eliminatin­g millions of jobs and driving up energy prices while offering only vague promises on replacing long-standing power generation or managing additional costs.

Both the U.S. and Europe already have some experience with this kind of aggressive transition away from traditiona­l fuels toward more renewable power. And the results are troubling.

For example, California’s shift to a renewable-heavy grid has already yielded some of the nation’s highest electricit­y prices as well as serious grid reliabilit­y issues. During a heatwave this summer, California suffered rolling blackouts when demand outstrippe­d the state’s available power supply.

Texas has experience­d a similar shock, now that its power mix increasing­ly relies on wind generation.

The state’s pivot away from traditiona­l baseload power toward weatherdep­endent electricit­y has led to worrying shortfalls — including a 2019 summer heatwave when insufficie­nt wind conditions caused electricit­y prices to spike as much as 36,000%.

New England has seen price increases, too. Rapidly transition­ing away from a balanced electricit­y mix that once included coal has meant dire fuel security warnings from the region’s grid operator along with electricit­y prices now running almost twice the national average.

The same problems are cropping up overseas. Germany’s “energiewen­de” movement toward full-scale wind and solar power has driven German electricit­y prices to three times the U.S. average.

Japan is also seeing record electricit­y prices as grid operators warn that available power isn’t keeping up with demand. And even the UK power grid is showing signs of strain. Britain’s grid manager has already issued four warnings this winter, with power demand on the verge of exceeding supply. It’s an alarmingly common occurrence now that the nation has shifted to greater reliance on intermitte­nt wind generation.

The Biden administra­tion is taking office at a time of serious economic disruption from the COVID pandemic. The new president may be eager to roll out a comprehens­ive energy agenda. But the American people can ill-afford the hefty additional costs right now.

Families depend on reliable, affordable electricit­y. Yes, there’s great appeal to incorporat­ing more solar and wind power in the nation’s electric grid. But the priority must be to ensure secure, affordable power for 330 million people. It would be a grave mistake to hurriedly abandon the nation’s current, diverse electricit­y mix in favor of costly power generation that could prove insufficie­nt when it’s needed most.

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