Subsidizing coal and nuclear power could drive customers off the grid

The following article by Joshua M. Pearce, Professor, Michigan Technological University, was posted on the Conversation website November 14, 2017:

Solar home designed by University of Maryland students for the Department of Energy’s 2017 Solar Decathlon. DOE Solar Decathlon

Within the next month, energy watchers expect the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to act on an order from Energy Secretary Rick Perry that would create new pricing rules for certain power plants that can store fuel on site to support grid resilience. This initiative seeks to protect coal-fired and nuclear power plants that are struggling to compete with cheaper energy sources.

Perry’s proposed rule applies to plants that operate in regions with deregulated power markets, where utilities normally compete to deliver electricity at the lowest price. To qualify, plants would have to keep a 90-day fuel supply on site. Each qualified plant would be allowed to “recover its fully allocated costs.”

In other words, plant owners would be able to charge enough to cover a range of costs, including operating costs, costs of capital and debt, and investor returns. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chair Neil Chatterjee has stated that the extra money to keep coal and nuclear plants running “would come from customers in that region, who need the reliability.” Continue reading “Subsidizing coal and nuclear power could drive customers off the grid”

Sierra Club calls on Rick Perry to resign after he implies fossil fuels could reduce sexual assault

The following article by Anna Swartz was posed on the mic.com website November 2, 2017:

Secretary of Energy Rick Perry standing behind President Donald Trump at the 2017 National Boy Scout Jamboree at the Summit in Glen Jean, West Virginia, July 24. Steve Helber/AP

At least one organization is calling on Energy Secretary Rick Perry to resign after comments he made Thursday morning suggesting that developing the fossil fuel industry in “villages in Africa” could help reduce instances of sexual assault.

Speaking at an energy policy event hosted by Axios and NBC News in Washington, D.C., Thursday morning, Perry said that “a young girl” had told him about the safety benefits of electric lights, NBC News reported on Thursday.

“But also from the standpoint of sexual assault, when the lights are on, when you have light that shines, the righteousness, if you will, on those types of acts,” Perry said. “So from the standpoint of how you really affect people’s lives, fossil fuels is going to play a role in that. I happen to think it’s going to play a positive role.” Continue reading “Sierra Club calls on Rick Perry to resign after he implies fossil fuels could reduce sexual assault”

Rick Perry Defends Private Travel Costs at House Energy Hearing

The following article by Elvina Nawaguna was posted on the RollCall.com website October 13, 2017:

Some sites are too remote to be accessed by commercial airlines, secretary says

Energy Secretary Rick Perry testifies during a hearing before the House Energy and Commerce’s Energy Subcommittee on Thursday. (Bill Clark/Roll Call)

Energy Secretary Rick Perry told lawmakers Thursday that his use of private aircraft for work travel is sometimes justified because his department’s national laboratories and some sites he has to visit are too remote to be accessed by commercial airlines.

Perry and four other administration officials are under scrutiny for exorbitant private travel at taxpayer expense.

Both Democrats and Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce’s Energy Subcommittee, where Perry was testifying Thursday about the department’s priorities, demanded that he address the allegations surrounding his travel expenses. Continue reading “Rick Perry Defends Private Travel Costs at House Energy Hearing”