New York Post

Endless Electric-Bill Hikes

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New Yorkers still reeling from this past winter’s higher electric bills must now expect summer prices to be 12% higher than last year. And the pain will only keep on coming, thanks to the state’s demented energy plans.

Con Edison just told customers in New York City and Westcheste­r that summer-bill hikes could be “in the range” of 11% to 12%. Covering for Albany, the state Public Service Commission says the jump can “broadly be attributed to the global increase in natural gas prices.”

Broadly, yes. But state policy guarantees soaring electric bills. Gov. Hochul has embraced her disgraced predecesso­r’s drive to make New York carbon-neutral long before the technology makes that affordable, and the Legislatur­e is largely on board.

After all, lawmakers wrote then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s ban on fracking into law, so abundant natural gas is stuck in the ground in the Marcellus and Utica shales. Plus, Cuomo forced the early shutdown of Indian Point, killing reliable, affordable, carbonfree nuclear power that used to provide 40% of the city’s electricit­y. Now natural gasfired power plants produce over a third of the electricit­y consumed by New York businesses and residences, so we’re more vulnerable to those global price shocks.

Meanwhile, Con Ed needs a rate hike of $1.2 billion-plus to fund the next round of “upgrades” required by the state Climate Protection Act, which forces utilities to burn cash on expensive new wind and solar power sources, plus new transmissi­on lines and backup capacity to keep the lights on when the sun and wind aren’t cooperatin­g.

More rate hikes are ahead: Meeting the climate goals requires over $100 billion in capital investment, and utilities only have one source of income: you.

And Hochul wants to make it all worse, faster: Only Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie stopped her from banning natural-gas hookups in all new constructi­on statewide. And her team has nixed permits for new gas pipelines needed to keep power plants running.

New Yorkers already face among the highest electric bills in the country, and it’s only going to keep getting worse. Until they vote to change the leadership in Albany, the only thing that’s going to reduce the pressure is the exodus of business and residents to states that aren’t run by lunatics.

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