The Senator of the AD state warns the collapse of energy in the state of Keystone due to the policies of Governor Shapiro
- The senator of the state of Pennsylvania, Gene Yaw, warns against an imminent electricity crisis due to the lack of reliable energy production of the state.
- The energy policies of Governor Josh Shapiro, including the electricity tax of the regional greenhouse gas initiative and the premature closure of power plants, are cited as exacerbating the crisis.
- The state faces a planned deficit of 80,000 megawatts in the next decade, threatening the reliability of the network and energy costs.
- Yaw criticizes dependence on renewable energy sources such as wind and solar energy, arguing that they are unreliable and insufficient to meet the energy needs of the State.
- The state senator introduced the law on the stabilization and security of the network and plans to relaunch the Pennsylvania energy development fund to combat the deficit, but faces the opposition of the Democrats.
The senator from the state of Pennsylvania Gene Yaw (R-District 23) has issued a disastrous warning: the state of Keystone, formerly the epicenter of the domination of American energy, is now rushing towards a catastrophic electricity crisis.
The warning came in the form of An elevator published on February 26 in the Delaware Valley Journal. YAW’s warning focused on the energy policies of the governor of the Governor of Pennsylvania, Josh Shapiro, including the Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) electricity tax and the premature stopping power plants without replacement strategy without replacement strategy
The Republican castigated the Shapiro energy agenda – a democrat – which originally promised a “new era” of job creation, lower public service bills and billions of clean energy investment. But almost a year later, Yaw stressed that the Pennsylvanians saw little progress. Instead, Shapiro’s policies have exacerbated the crisis by promoting short -term fixes while ignoring the deep cause: a lack of reliable energy production.
“The governor is right, doing nothing is not an option,” wrote the state legislator. “However, doing the bad thing again and more increases the extent of the problem.”
Yaw underlined Shapiro’s push for Rggi, a carbon tax initiative, and the abrupt The end of power plants with thermal electricity As the main engines of the imminent grid collapse. “When the supply does not meet the planned demand, prices are increasing,” noted the state senator, emphasizing the basic economic principle of supply and demand.
“We must encourage and implement the construction of the basic thermal electricity production capacity now,” ended his editorial with this call. “I hope the governor will join us in this effort.”
Shapiro policies compromise the energy future of Keystone’s state
The austere evaluation of the state senator occurs while the state faces a planned deficit of 80,000 megawatts over the next decade, threatening the reliability of the network and soar for the Pennsylvanians. Keystone’s state provides 25% of the power in the region, but it has no new power plants under construction or developing to meet growing demand.
Yaw estimates that at least 20 new factories of 1,000 megawatts are necessary to maintain the position of the state as a reliable energy supplier. However, since Rggi was proposed, there has been no new investment in the energy production of Basoad.
Yaw’s criticism extends to that of Shapiro dependence on renewable energy sources like wind and solar energy. These sources, supports the state senator, are not reliable and insufficient to meet the energy needs of the State.
“To say that we must diversify our sources of energy and create a clean, reliable and affordable energy only reorganizes the bridge chairs on the Titanic. Wind, solar, batteries and other unproven and unreliable sources do not answer this only question: where my electricity comes at 3 o’clock in a cold and calm winter night?” (In relation: Fossil fuels save New England from winter grip in the middle of the “net zero” push.))
Senator’s warnings are taken up by PJM Interconnection, the regional network operator, which has planned a massive wave of electric power plants drawn by federal and state climate policies. Up to 58 gigawatts of coal and natural gas are threatened to close by 2030representing more than 20% of the total production capacity of PJM.
“We run towards the iceberg and have no plan to slow down, and even less to stop, before getting there,” warned Yaw. He presented the network’s stabilization and security law and plans to relaunch the Pennsylvania energy development fund to remedy the deficit. However, these measures were confronted with the opposition of the Democrats, leaving the energy future of the in danger.
Without immediate action, the Pennsylvanians could cope with an outbreak of electricity prices, Mortal And a future where the energy heritage of Keystone’s state is nothing more than a relic of the past.
Watch us Senator Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) explaining to Larry Kudlow that The drop in energy costs will in turn reduce the cost of goods.
This video is from Channel of Newsclips on Brighton.com.
More related stories:
Energy costs could increase by 50% in Pennsylvania from this month.
The Great Green Rebranding: How climate activists exchange “Save the Planet” for “Save Your Wallet”.
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