
Puerto Rico Needs Power, Not Political Lawsuits
Puerto Rico is in the dark—literally and figuratively.
On New Year's Eve 2024, the lights went out across the island while families prepared to celebrate. Roughly 1.4 million customers lost power. Just four months later, during Holy Week, it happened again within the past 72 hours––another island-wide blackout crippled electricity and water service for millions. In San Juan, traffic lights failed, businesses shuttered, and families scrambled to preserve food and care for loved ones.
These blackouts aren't anomalies—they're symptoms of a broken, mismanaged grid that's been on life support since Hurricane María. And while Puerto Ricans face sweltering nights and stalled businesses, their governor is picking a fight with American energy producers.
Instead of rebuilding the grid, newly elected Republican Governor Jenniffer González-Colón is pressing ahead with a climate lawsuit against oil and gas producers. Filed last year by her predecessor, Democratic Governor Pedro Pierluisi, the lawsuit seeks at least $1 billion in damages from energy companies—accusing them of allegedly deceiving the public about the risks of fossil fuels and contributing to climate change.
Let's be clear—the lawsuit won't bring back the power. It won't deliver a single kilowatt-hour to a hospital, school, or home. What it will do is tie up taxpayer resources in a years-long legal circus while Puerto Ricans sit in the dark.
Even if this lawsuit were to succeed—a big 'if'—any payout would be decades away. In the meantime, it does nothing to fix the real issue––a grid that can't stay online on a sunny day, let alone during a hurricane.
Puerto Rico doesn't need more climate litigation. It requires energy security.
Governor González-Colón has shown no signs she understands the urgency. She was on vacation and forced to return to respond to the Easter week blackout. Even her energy czar, Josué Colón, stated in response, 'It's regrettable. If you ask me, it is unacceptable that this is happening. There's no way we can accept for this to happen in Puerto Rico's electric system.'
Any action the governor takes to address the electricity crisis are being undermined by the climate lawsuit.At best, it's a distraction. At worst, it's political theater—a way to score points with the environmentalists while Puerto Rican families suffer the consequences of a failed energy policy.
Let's talk about priorities.
Puerto Rico's energy utility, PREPA, has been in bankruptcy for eight years. Billions in federal recovery dollars are sitting unspent. Contract disputes, regulatory delays and political gamesmanship have choked off investment in transmission and generation. The island's grid was handed over to private operators with little experience and poor track records—and the results have been catastrophic.
Justin Peterson, the former Trump appointee to Puerto Rico's Financial Oversight and Management Board, posted on X this week, 'When will Puerto Rico's elected officials stand up for its American citizens and get results?'
Instead of investing political capital in suing America's energy producers, the governor should be focused on stabilizing the grid, enforcing accountability for private operators, and accelerating the deployment of reliable, affordable energy.
And here's the kicker––even as Puerto Rico sues Big Oil, it remains overwhelmingly dependent on fossil fuels for electricity. Oil, gas, and coal still generate the vast majority of power on the island. The governor herself has backed natural gas conversions and extended coal operations. The governor's pursuit of a climate lawsuit is at the height of hypocrisy.
If Puerto Rico wants to reduce emissions, let's have that conversation. But it starts with reliability. It starts with a grid that works. You don't transition to cleaner energy by litigating your way there—you do it by building the infrastructure that can support the transition.
President Donald Trump has made clear where his administration stands. Just this month, he signed an executive order directing the Department of Justice to investigate state-level attempts to drag energy producers into court over climate change.
The President has made 'positioning American energy for the next century' a cornerstone of his domestic agenda. That starts with protecting the companies that power our economy from being weaponized in court by politicians looking for headlines.
Puerto Rico should take note. This meritless lawsuit is a luxury the island can't afford. It's a political statement dressed up as policy. And while it may win applause from the environmental activist class, it won't keep the lights on in San Juan, Ponce or Mayagüez.
Governor González-Colón has an opportunity to change course. She should drop the lawsuit and focus on the job Puerto Ricans elected her to do—fix the grid, restore reliability, and build the foundation for a stronger energy future.
The people of Puerto Rico deserve leadership grounded in results. It's time to stop suing energy producers and start producing more power.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
43 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
New crime novels feature a locked-room mystery, a Scarborough stabbing and a Jan. 6 insurrectionist
It's a weird time in American politics, which means it's a perfect time for Florida novelist Carl Hiaasen to plumb the satirical depths of corruption and malfeasance in his home state. His last novel, 2020's 'Squeeze Me,' suffered from a subplot that attempted to satirize the once-and-current occupant of the White House, a Falstaffian spray-tanned figure so outrageous as to be almost impervious to satire. For 'Fever Beach,' Hiaasen wisely steers clear of POTUS and his inept administration, preferring instead to focus on wanton corruption at a lower level. 'Fever Beach,' by Carl Hiaasen, Alfred A. Knopf, $34.99. The new novel begins with a meet-cute on an airplane between Twilly Spree and Viva Morales. Twilly is a stock Hiaasen character: an independently wealthy Florida do-gooder who spends his time making life miserable for folks who litter, antagonize the local wildlife or otherwise cause environmental or social havoc. Viva's job is administering the foundation of a couple of rich right-wing octogenarians whose fundraising operates as a money-laundering front to finance the campaign of far-right (and profoundly stupid) congressman Clure Boyette, in hot water with his obstreperous father over a scandal involving an underage prostitute named Galaxy. Add in Viva's landlord — a Jan. 6 insurrectionist named Dale Figgo who heads the Strokers for Freedom (a white nationalist militia whose name is a rebuke to the Proud Boys' insistence on refraining from masturbation) — and his cohort, the violent and reckless Jonas Onus, and you have all the ingredients for a classic Hiaasen caper. Twenty years ago, German-born author Leonie Swann debuted one of the most delightful detective teams in genre history: a flock of sheep on the trail of the person responsible for killing their shepherd with a spade through the chest. After a two-decade absence, Miss Maple, Othello, Mopple the Whale, and the other woolly sleuths are back on the case, this time on behalf of their new herder, Rebecca, the daughter of the early book's victim. 'Big Bad Wool,' by Leonie Swann, Soho Crime, $38.95. Rebecca, her intrusive Mum, and the sheep are overwintering in the lee of a French chateau where there are rumours of a marauding Garou — a werewolf — that is responsible for mutilating deer in the nearby woods. Among other strange occurrences, Rebecca's red clothing is found torn to pieces and some sheep go missing — and soon enough there's a dead human for the flock, in the uncomfortable company of a group of local goats, to deal with. 'Big Bad Wool' is a charming romp, whose pleasure comes largely from the ironic distance between the sheep's understanding of the world and that of the people who surround them. ('The humans in the stories did plenty of ridiculous things. Spring cleaning, revenge and diets.') Their enthusiasm and excitement results in prose that is a bit too reliant on exclamation points, and some of the more heavy-handed puns (like the sheep's insistence on 'woolpower') seem forced, but this is nevertheless a fun variation on the traditional country cosy. Romance novelist Uzma Jalaluddin takes a turn into mystery with this new book about amateur sleuth Kausar Khan. A widow in her late 50s, Kausar returns to Toronto from North Bay to help her daughter, Sana, who has been accused of stabbing her landlord to death in her Scarborough mall boutique. The police — including Sana's old flame, Ilyas — are convinced Sana is the prime suspect, but Kausar is determined to prove her daughter innocent. 'Detective Aunty,' by Uzma Jalaluddin, HarperCollins, $25.99. Her investigation involves a couple of competing developers, both of whom want to purchase the land on which the mall stands, along with members of the dead man's family and fellow shopkeepers. On the domestic front, Kausar finds herself concerned with Sana's deteriorating marriage to her husband, Hamza, and her teenage granddaughter's sullenness and mysterious nighttime disappearances. Jalaluddin does a good job integrating the various elements of her plot, and the familial relationships are nicely calibrated. The momentum is impeded, however, by a preponderance of clichés ('Playing devil's advocate, Kausar asked …'; 'Kausar's blood ran cold') and a tendency to hold the reader's hand by defining every easily Googleable Urdu word or greeting too programmatically. More attention to the writing on the line level would have helped move this one along. Yukito Ayatsuji's clever postmodern locked-room mystery was first published in Japanese in 2009; it appears for the first time in English translation, which is good news for genre fans. 'The Labyrinth House Murders,' by Yukito Ayatsuji, Pushkin Vertigo, $24.95. Ayatsuji's narrative is framed by Shimada, a mystery aficionado, who is presented with a novelization about murders that took place at the home of famed mystery writer Miyagaki Yotaro, found dead by his own hand soon after the manuscript opens. Miyagaki has left a bizarre challenge for the writers gathered at his Byzantine Labyrinth House: each must write a story featuring a murder, and the victim must be the writer him- or herself. The winning author, as adjudicated by a group of critics also convened at Labyrinth House, will inherit Miyagaki's sizable fortune. As the writers compete for the reward, bodies start falling in real life and Ayatsuji has a grand time playing metafictional games with his readers, challenging them to figure out who the culprit is in the context of a story that owes more than a small debt to Agatha Christie's 'And Then There Were None.' But Ayatsuji does Christie one better; it is only once the afterword, which closes the framed narrative, has unfolded that the reader fully understands how cleverly the author has conceived his multi-layered fictional trap.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Bengals' Trey Hendrickson contract standoff gets a hot take from VP JD Vance
Bengals' Trey Hendrickson contract standoff gets a hot take from VP JD Vance Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Trey Hendrickson now has politicians talking about his contract standoff with the team. Appearing on Theo Von's podcast this week, Vice President JD Vance joked around about the contract standoff, with the Middletown, Ohio, politician expressing optimism about the Bengals in the process. "Trey, if you're watching this show: If you're a Republican, I will show up to a Bengals game and take a photo with you if you sign on with the Bengals," Vance joked. "And if you're a Democrat, I'll stay the hell away. Just sign with the Bengals, because we've got a chance, man." RELATED: Bengals news: Jermaine Burton buzz, practice urgency and more As Bengals fans know all too well, though, outside noise doesn't really have a way of impacting how the team does business. That's a rule that will certainly apply to an office as high as Vance's right now, even if he does happen to hail from Ohio. Joe Burrow and others have commented on Hendrickson's standoff with the team recently, too. The next entry in the saga will happen soon when it's revealed if the star pass-rusher shows up to mandatory minicamp or gets fined by the team. RELATED: Bengals' Andrei Iosivas adds 15 pounds while eyeing breakout season


The Hill
2 hours ago
- The Hill
Latinas for Trump co-founder blasts ‘inhumane' immigrant arrests
Florida state senator Ileana Garcia (R), co-founder of Latinas for Trump, issued a sharp rebuke of President Trump on Sunday as his administration seeks to ramp up deportations and other actions against undocumented immigrants. Garcia took particular issue with reported tactics in southern Florida, where immigration officials have allegedly been making arrests in immigration courts and taking other steps to target individuals otherwise in compliance with legal orders. 'This is not what we voted for,' Garcia wrote in a post on X. 'I have always supported Trump, @realDonaldTrump, through thick and thin. However, this is unacceptable and inhumane.' 'I understand the importance of deporting criminal aliens, but what we are witnessing are arbitrary measures to hunt down people who are complying with their immigration hearings—in many cases, with credible fear of persecution claims—all driven by a Miller-like desire to satisfy a self-fabricated deportation goal,' she continued in her post, referring to White House homeland security adviser and deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller. 'This undermines the sense of fairness and justice that the American people value,' Garcia added. The Hill has reached out to the White House for comment. Garcia's comments followed criticism from Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-Fla.), who issued a statement saying she's 'fully aware' of and 'heartbroken… because of the recent immigration actions of the administration.' She said the administration's actions have 'left thousands exposed to deportation' and jeopardized 'our duty to due process that every democracy must guarantee.' Salazar said anyone with a pending asylum claim 'deserves to go through the legal process,' noting that, 'It is an indisputable fact' that most of these claims come from people who fled Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua, which Salazar noted are 'the three most brutal regimes in our hemisphere and sworn enemies of the United States.' 'I wholeheartedly agree that the administration must kick out every criminal here illegally, just as President Trump promised. Many still remain, and we should keep our focus on them,' Salazar added, noting that she plans to meet with administration officials this coming week. Garcia issued her statement in response to Salazar's remarks, saying, 'I stand with Congresswoman Salazar.' 'As the state senator who represents her district and the daughter of Cuban refugees, who are now just as American, if not more so than Stephen Miller, I am deeply disappointed by these actions. And I will not stand down,' Garcia wrote.