Trump wants to force utilities to buy more energy from coal and nuke plants
Environmental
advocates on June 1 responded with outrage to confirmation from the White House
that President Donald Trump has ordered Energy Secretary Rick Perry to plot
what's being called an "unprecedented intervention" by the
federal government to bail out financially strapped coal and nuclear power
plants that can't compete with the renewable energy sector.
"This
is an outrageous ploy to force American taxpayers to bail out coal and nuclear
executives who have made bad decisions by investing in dirty and dangerous
energy resources," declared Mary Anne Hitt, director of the
Sierra Club's Beyond Coal campaign.
Ahead
of a National Security Council meeting, Bloomberg News obtained an Energy Department memo detailing plans to use emergency
authority under two federal laws to require grid operators to buy electricity
from at-risk coal and nuclear facilities and establish a "Strategic
Electric Generation Reserve."
The
document argues such moves are necessary for homeland security and energy
independence.
White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders responded to the report with a statement confirming Trump has instructed Perry "to prepare immediate steps to stop the loss of these resources," claiming the need to protect the grid "from intentional attacks and natural disasters."
White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders responded to the report with a statement confirming Trump has instructed Perry "to prepare immediate steps to stop the loss of these resources," claiming the need to protect the grid "from intentional attacks and natural disasters."
Rejecting
the administration's argument that preserving coal plants is essential to
national security as "surreal" and "madness" contradicted
by experts, Earthjustice staff attorney Kim Smaczniak pointed out that clean energy sources
like wind and solar "make the grid safer from attack," and even
"the U.S. military is increasingly turning to solar, not coal, to ensure
resilience at military bases."
The Energy Department proposal outlined in the memo follows a previous plan rejected by federal regulators last year, which would have given subsidies to nuclear and coal plants on the grounds of providing "resilience" to the electric grid.
"That
attempt was rightfully denied by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission,
which determined that market rates and processes are indeed sufficient to meet
national energy demand," noted Mike Jacobs, a senior energy
analyst for the Union of Concerned Scientists.
"The
Trump administration is trying, once again, to fleece ratepayers by giving coal
and nuclear power plants billions of dollars in guaranteed profits," he
added, calling the new proposal an "absurd" abuse of authority.
While
green groups refuted the administration's claims that the new plan would
further protect the grid, chief executive of Bloomberg L.P. and former New York
City Mayor Mike Bloomberg posited that "bailing out polluting,
unprofitable coal plants has nothing to do with national security and
everything to do with special interests in Washington."
Throughout
his first term, Trump has often catered to the fossil fuel
industry's demands, and has even stocked his administration with former
lobbyists.
"Trump
will clearly try anything to help millionaire coal and nuclear
executives," Hitt concluded. "Every grid operator has unequivocally
stated that there is no grid emergency, yet Donald Trump is trying to invent
one to help his rich friends."
"The
taxpayers should never be asked to bail out wealthy fossil fuel executives who
are trying to pollute our air and water with their dirty, dangerous fuels, and
bad decisions," Hitt added, vowing that Trumps's "effort to push
these illegal directives will be met with fierce resistance in the courts and
in the streets."
The
developments come on the one-year anniversary of Trump's announcement he would withdraw the United
States from the Paris climate agreement, which aims to decrease fossil fuel use to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions and limit global temperature rise within this century
to 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.