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Triad seems out of hurricane's reach
Triad seems out of hurricane's reach

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Climate
  • Yahoo

Triad seems out of hurricane's reach

HIGH POINT — Hurricane Erin shouldn't have dramatic effects on the weather this week in the High Point area, though the same can't be said for the North Carolina coast, where some residents are evacuating and those staying are bracing for storm surge and high winds. Hurricane Erin chugged slowly toward the eastern U.S. coast Tuesday, stirring up treacherous waves that already have forced dozens of beach rescues days before the biggest storm surges are expected, and Gov. Josh Stein declared a state of emergency Tuesday as North Carolina mobilizes resources and personnel to assist along the coast. But if Erin follows the forecast path, the massive storm will remain off the coast, so in the Triad its greatest effects will be making conditions breezy Wednesday and Thursday, said Brian Slocum, meteorologist with WXII-TV. 'Winds might gust at 20 to 25 mph,' Slocum told The High Point Enterprise. 'Rain chances are a little bit higher, but we're not going to see any rain bands from Erin coming in here unless something significantly changes with the track. And the track has been consistent for the last few days.' Erin has become an unusually large and deceptively worrisome storm while moving through the Caribbean, with its tropical storm winds stretching 200 miles from its expect it will grow larger in size as it moves through the Atlantic and curls north. Warnings about rip currents have been posted from Florida to the New England coast, but the biggest threat is along the barrier islands of North Carolina's Outer Banks, where evacuations have been ordered for Dare and Hyde counties. Erin is expected to produce tropical storm force winds, dangerous surf with waves of 15-20 feet, inundation to roadways and neighborhoods and rip currents along shorelines. AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Expert Alex DaSilva said that the Outer Banks will receive the worst impact from Erin of any area along the East Coast of the United States. 'Coastal North Carolina could experience gusts of 40-60 mph between Wednesday night and Thursday night as the storm passes offshore,' DaSilva said. 'Rough surf from Erin could cause significant beach erosion along the Carolina coastline this week. Some beachfront homes in erosion-prone areas could be damaged or even at risk of collapsing into the water.' Slocum told The Enterprise that the High Point area and Piedmont Triad as a whole were fortunate with the track of Erin. 'A worst-case scenario is that this could have taken more of a northwest track and came in along Charleston and then into central North Carolina,' Slocum said. 'You'd be looking at a Category 2 or 3 at landfall with 100 mph winds by the time it reached us. The fact that this is staying offshore is a godsend.' Solve the daily Crossword

Trump looks to radically reshape power plant oversight — and boost coal
Trump looks to radically reshape power plant oversight — and boost coal

Yahoo

time09-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Trump looks to radically reshape power plant oversight — and boost coal

Tyson Slocum knew the Trump administration had an aggressive plan to bail out dirty, expensive coal plants. He was just waiting for it to put the idea in writing. His wait is over. President Donald Trump signed several executive orders on Tuesday to boost the moribund U.S. coal industry. Among those directives, one stands out for its potential to radically reshape how the U.S. regulates power plants: an executive order titled 'Strengthening the Reliability and Security of the United States Electric Grid.' The order instructs Energy Secretary Chris Wright, a former gas industry executive who denies that climate change is a crisis, to give the Department of Energy sole control over key grid-reliability decisions currently made by independent agencies. The Energy Department would be empowered to keep unprofitable and polluting coal plants open in the name of reliability — and stick utilities, customers, and communities with the hefty financial and health costs. Slocum, director of the energy program at nonprofit watchdog group Public Citizen, says the executive order closely follows a plan leaked during the first Trump administration to use federal emergency powers to override state, regional, and federal authorities that now govern reliability across the U.S. electricity sector. Administration officials disavowed that approach when it came to light in 2018. Still, in a blog post published two days after the November 2024 election, Slocum predicted the Trump administration would revive this strategy, which he described in a Tuesday interview as 'the Department of Energy muscling in on reliability in ways that can be abused.' Trump's other Tuesday executive orders aim to lift restrictions on coal mining, fast-track coal leases on federal lands, and free coal plants from air-pollution regulations. But among those actions, the executive order focused on reliability may be the surest way to protect the industry from the economic realities that have pushed it into decline. Coal, the most polluting and carbon-intensive source of electricity, has fallen from nearly half the country's generating capacity in 2011 to just 15% last year. Cheaper fossil gas and even cheaper clean energy and batteries have decimated its economics. Over 120 U.S. coal plants are slated to shutter over the next five years. 'The only way to revive coal is to do two things,' Slocum said. 'One is to force ratepayers to pay for it. That means electricity's going to get more expensive to bail out what's probably, at this point, one of the most expensive forms of energy out there. The other thing they need to do is pollute clean water, foul the air, and contribute to the climate crisis — because that's what coal plants do.' States regulate utilities and thus have primary authority over the nation's electricity generation. Even within competitive energy markets, where many power plants are owned and operated by companies that aren't regulated utilities, states retain significant say over which plants are built, kept open, or closed down. But the federal government also has significant powers, as laid out in the 1935 Federal Power Act. Those include regulating the bulk power system — the network of high-voltage transmission lines crossing state borders and the power plants, solar and wind farms, battery banks, and other resources that keep those grids humming. Two entities are primarily responsible for grid reliability under current law: the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, an agency with commissioners appointed by the president but traditionally independent from political interference, and the North American Electric Reliability Corp., a nonprofit regulatory authority that includes utilities and grid operators in the U.S. and Canada. FERC and NERC commonly issue recommendations or mandates on grid reliability. NERC warned last year that much of the country faces looming reliability challenges due to power plant closures, bottlenecks in interconnecting new generation, lack of investments in expanding transmission grids, and expectations of rapid growth in electricity use. Republican lawmakers and a number of utilities have cited these conditions to call for keeping coal plants open past planned closure dates. The mechanisms by which the federal government ensures the reliability of the grid are set out in Section 215 of the Federal Power Act, said Sanjay Narayan, a managing attorney at Sierra Club's environmental law program. Over the decades, he said, FERC, NERC, regional grid operators, and state-regulated utilities have established 'elaborate regulatory processes that ensure there are adequate reserve margins.' Reserve margins are the generation capacity needed to maintain grid reliability during peaks in power demand, major grid failures, extreme weather events, and other emergencies. But another section of the Federal Power Act — Section 202(c) — gives the federal government some extraordinary powers. It allows the energy secretary to order certain power plants to keep running during emergencies, and to waive federal and state environmental rules to allow them to do so without threat of lawsuit or regulatory punishment. Those orders are almost always temporary, lasting a few hours to a few days, and reserved for 'when unexpected events, mostly weather-related, threaten short-term outages,' Narayan said. In a few instances, DOE has ordered a power plant to stay open until new power lines can be built to prevent grid-reliability threats, he said. Utilities and grid operators have similar authority, which they have used to keep plants running for years past their planned retirement dates. But Section 202(c) authority has never been used 'to force ratepayers to subsidize politically favored parties who can't compete in the market,' Narayan said. 'And nothing about long-term reserve margins fits within the statutory or common understanding of an emergency, which is what Section 202 is meant to address.' Tuesday's 'reliability and security' executive order seeks to extend those emergency powers indefinitely, Slocum said. It gives DOE sole jurisdiction to determine whether any power plant in the country can close or whether it must stay open until DOE says it isn't needed anymore. First, the executive order tasks DOE with creating a 'uniform methodology' for analyzing 'current and anticipated reserve margins' for all transmission grids regulated by FERC. Then it orders DOE to identify regions where reserve margins are or could be 'below acceptable thresholds' — essentially, telling DOE to recreate the reliability risk-assessment work that FERC, NERC, regional grid operators, and state regulators and utilities already do, but with no outside input or oversight. Finally, it orders DOE to establish a 'protocol to identify which generation resources within a region are critical to system reliability,' and use 'all mechanisms available under applicable law, including section 202(c) of the Federal Power Act,' to prevent any 'critical' generator larger than 50 megawatts 'from leaving the bulk-power system' — or changing the type of fuel it uses — if that would violate DOE's reserve margin methodology. In simple terms, instead of FERC, NERC, grid operators, utilities, state regulators, and policymakers working together under their established spheres of authority to independently study and manage grid-reliability needs, the energy secretary would 'unilaterally set his own reserve margins,' Slocum said. Then, 'if things fall below his arbitrarily set reserve margin, he can declare a Section 202 emergency' to prevent power plant closures in the relevant grid region, he said. Because power plant owners must be compensated for operating those facilities, this equates to forcing utilities or energy markets to pay them to stay open, whether or not their electricity is cost-competitive. The executive order outlines no role for any other federal agency or other stakeholder in this new process. 'The Secretary of Energy can set whatever reserve he wants,' Slocum said. 'It's not in consultation with [grid operators], or FERC, or NERC. It's a unilateral, arbitrary standard.' Many utilities already plan to delay coal plant retirements to ensure they can meet growing power demand from AI data centers. Representatives of U.S. regional grid operators told members of Congress in a hearing last month that retaining existing generation is their top reliability priority. But giving one agency complete control over those decisions 'could undermine years of industry progress in determining the reliability value of different power-generating resources,' said Devin Hartman, director of the energy and environmental policy team at free market–oriented think tank R Street Institute. 'Ensuring economical power plants are not forced to close by the government should be a reform priority. But this intervention risks disrupting markets and deterring new supply.' Meanwhile, clean-energy backers and climate advocates argue that the nation's biggest grid-reliability problem isn't coal plants closing. Instead, they blame the inadequate grid buildout and clogged interconnection queues that have prevented developers from bringing online hundreds of gigawatts of solar, wind, and battery projects — all cheaper than coal and often fossil gas, too. Energy law and policy experts were quick to point out how radically Tuesday's executive order would undermine decades of regulatory and legal precedent. 'This EO imagines that a 90-year old law about power sector 'emergencies' empowers the Dept of Energy to subsidize any power plant in the country,' Ari Peskoe, director of Harvard Law School's Electricity Law Initiative, wrote in a Tuesday Bluesky post. Mike O'Boyle, acting policy team director at think tank Energy Innovation, told Canary Media that the executive order 'threatens the very heart and mission of both competitive wholesale markets as well as state planning and procurement processes. In that way, it amounts to a statement from the federal government that federal and state energy regulators are unable to do their jobs,' he said. It's also poor practice in terms of solving grid-reliability challenges, O'Boyle said. Studies from Energy Innovation, other independent energy analysts, and researchers at DOE-run national labs show that coal plants are not the linchpin of grid reliability that their backers insist they are and that power grids have been able to integrate high levels of renewable energy without sacrificing grid reliability. 'If the Department of Energy decides to do this exercise honestly,' it will find that 'reliability risk is highly concentrated in only a few hours of the year,' he said, 'and that there are in many cases more and cheaper resources than coal plants that are available to meet that need.' But Slocum said he fears Wright, the founder and former CEO of fracking giant Liberty Energy, will use unilateral DOE authority to structure a methodology that overvalues fossil fuels' contribution to grid reliability. Wright has consistently and frequently claimed fossil fuels are superior to renewables, at times citing demonstrably false information. For example, Wright said at last month's CERAWeek energy conference in Houston that 'everywhere wind and solar penetration have increased significantly, prices on the grid went up and stability of the grid went down.' That statement contradicts data that shows renewable energy penetration is not correlated to higher electricity prices and that major wintertime U.S. grid-reliability failures in Texas in 2021 and across the Southeast in 2022 were linked to failures of fossil-fueled power plants. Giving one presidential appointee with a clear bias toward fossil fuels sole authority over every proposed power plant closure in the country exposes core reliability decisions to political considerations, Slocum added. That stands in stark contrast to the role played by FERC, whose commissioners are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate, but who have traditionally made decisions independently. That distinction is important, he said: Independent FERC commissioners already rejected the first Trump administration's attempt to use federal power to force coal plants to stay open. In 2017, then–Energy Secretary Rick Perry attempted to implement federal rules that would have declared coal and nuclear plants vital to grid reliability. That plan was unanimously rejected by five FERC commissioners — four of whom were appointed by Trump — on the grounds the administration lacked legal authority to carry out the changes it had proposed. Officials serving in the first Trump administration also undermined the idea that DOE's Section 202(c) emergency authority is appropriate for ordering power plants to remain open for long periods of time outside of pressing grid emergencies. After media reports surfaced of the leaked memo laying out a plan to do so, Assistant DOE Secretary Bruce Walker stated the department 'would never' use that emergency authority to keep uneconomic generators online. That statement is in keeping with the law, said Pavel Molchanov, investment strategy analyst at financial services firm Raymond James. 'As a matter of statutory language, Section 202(c) is for emergency situations in the power market,' he said. 'It is emphatically not intended to be used for keeping non-economic power plants in operation.' Any orders to force coal plants open that would otherwise be preparing to close down would almost certainly end up driving up energy costs. Midwestern utilities are already pushing billions of dollars of unnecessary costs onto their customers by running coal plants at times when cheaper power could supplant the energy they're delivering to the grid. A 2023 Energy Innovation report found that 99% of U.S. coal plants could be replaced with solar, wind, and batteries at a net cost savings to utility customers. 'If they pull the 'must-generate' lever, they're simply going to be taking market share from cheaper gas and renewables,' Narayan said. That's the equivalent of 'taking money — the additional cost of running more expensive sources — out of ratepayers' pockets.' John Moore, senior attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council, also highlighted the climate, environmental, and health harms caused by burning coal and disposing of the toxic ash left behind. A 2023 study from the National Institutes of Health found that pollution from coal power plants was responsible for 460,000 deaths between 1999 and 2020. 'The patient is beyond recovery at this point,' Moore said of the coal industry. 'Any attempts to focus on coal specifically will just harm and kill more people and cause more environmental damage. Love Canary Media and find our reporting valuable? Please consider financially supporting our work with a donation. Thank you!

Prince George's executive candidates make their cases at forum, as clock ticks down
Prince George's executive candidates make their cases at forum, as clock ticks down

Yahoo

time16-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Prince George's executive candidates make their cases at forum, as clock ticks down

Six of the 11 candidates for Prince George's County executive at a candidates forum Saturday, from left: state Sen. Alonzo Washington, Tonya Sweat, At-Large County Councilmember Calvin Hawkins, Marcellus Crews, State's Attorney Aisha Braveboy and former County Executive Rushern L. Baker III. (Photo by William J. Ford/Maryland Matters) A few hundred voters turned out Saturday to hear pitches from seven of the 11 candidates running for Prince George's County executive, in a largely civil debate a little more than two weeks before the special primary election. Not all were there to be educated: Many in the crowd wore T-shirts emblazoned with the names of two Democratic front-runners for the seat, State's Attorney Aisha Braveboy or At-Large County Councilmember Calvin Hawkins, a fact that drew the sharpest rebuke of the afternoon from one of the other candidates. Real estate adviser Albert Slocum, noting those in candidates' shirts 'taking up half the seats in here,' asked audience members if they weren't tired of being sick and tired with the same leaders in office. 'All these [campaign] signs out there. All these trucks showing people's faces on them. This is not a game. It's not a game. It's not a joke,' said Slocum, which drew a few oohs from the crowd. 'We need real change. We need to put Prince George's first,' said Slocum, who arrived about 30 minutes late because of a scheduling conflict. The field lost one of those well-known faces last week when County Council Chair Jolene Ivey (D), who recently won a special election to an at-large county council seat, withdrew from the campaign. But the field is still heavy with current and former officeholders: In addition to Hawkins and Braveboy, state Sen. Alonzo Washington (D-Prince George's) and former County Executive Rushern L. Baker III were at Saturday's forum at Ebenezer A.M.E. Church in Fort Washington. Jolene Ivey drops out of Prince George's County executive race Besides Slocum, the other two candidates in attendance, both Democrats, were business owner Marcellus Crews and education advocate and attorney Tonya Sweat. The eighth Democrat in the race, Ron Hunt, did not attend, but people found his fliers on their vehicles when they walked outside after the forum ended. The three Republicans in the race did not attend: George E. McDermott, Jesse Peed and Jonathan White. The special election is needed to fill the remaining two years of former Executive Angela Alsobrooks' term, after her election to the U.S. Senate in November. The primary will be held March 4. Alsobrooks last month endorsed Hawkins, who said she had been 'a phenomenal leader over the last six years.' 'She's gone now. Somebody else has to fill that void,' he said. 'I'm looking for your support as we move Prince George County forward.' Candidates at the more than two-hour forum were in general agreement on several topics such as supporting public safety and federal workers, and mental health services for youths and adults. But they differed on a few of the hot-button issues of the day, including the endangered proposal to build the new FBI headquarters in Greenbelt and a plan by state leaders, grappling with a massive budget deficit, to delay implementation of parts of the Blueprint for Maryland's future, the state's school reform plan. Officially, the FBI move from downtown Washington is still on the books, but Virginia lawmakers who want the facility for the Commonwealth continue to fight the move to Maryland. More threatening is the reelection of President Donald Trump (R), a fierce critic of the agency who had talks with Republican leaders in his first term that included the possibility of relocating the FBI to Alabama. Washington said he would ask the county's Office of Law and the Maryland Attorney General's Office to sue the federal government if it interferes with the move. But Sweat said that, with Trump back in the White House, 'the FBI is gone.' 'Why do we want it? Over one-third of Prince George's County's land mass right now belongs to the federal government, yet we have a [budget] deficit,' Sweat said. But Baker, who served two terms as executive from 2010 to 2018, said the FBI headquarters would bring other businesses to the county. 'The FBI is not just a freaking building. It is the largest development project that the United States is going to do. It will change this county the way the Pentagon changed Northern Virginia,' he said. 'It is about everything you can do around it.' Baker, who had to leave early to attend a funeral, was only able to answer two questions at the forum. The other area of dispute was in response to a question about the 10-year Blueprint for Maryland's Future education reform plan, specifically a proposal from Gov. Wes Moore (D) to pause funding for 'collaborative time' for teachers. The goal of the plan is to reduce the amount of time teachers spend in the classroom, from the current 80% of their days to about 60%, freeing them up for planning, working with other teachers, working one-on-one with students, training and the like. To do that, however, the state would have to hire thousands more teachers at a time when it already faces a teacher shortage. The Moore administration has proposed delaying funding for collaborative time programming for four years: Instead of starting next year and running through fiscal 2033, funding would begin in fiscal 2030 and run through fiscal 2037. Hawkins and Braveboy said they agree with the governor's proposal because the state and the counties don't have the revenue to pay for all of the Blueprint. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE 'We also have other priorities, like cleaning up our streets, like making sure we have reliable trash pickup and snow removal,' Braveboy said. 'The government has to make choices, and I think the governor is doing the right thing.' Sweat disagrees with the governor's plan. So does Washington, who also criticized Hawkins' and Braveboy's positions. 'What State's Attorney Braveboy and Calvin Hawkins just said is they want to cut career coaches that are in every high school in Prince George's County,' said Washington, who served on a commission established that worked on implementing the Blueprint. 'The Blueprint for Maryland's future does not build schools. What it does is work on instructional activity for our students.' Crews responded to part of the question that STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) and financial literacy should be part of the standard curriculum in schools. 'It is time that we allow starting at sixth grade, apprenticeships and certifications,' he said. 'Imagine this: By the time little Johnny or Shelly reaches ninth grade, they have several certifications and experience. They start working full time. They are now professionals. It's more than just a diploma.' Mail-in ballots have already been sent out and early voting starts Feb. 26 for the March 4 primary, when voters Democratic and Republican voters will nominate candidates for county executive, as well as candidates for the Council District 5 seat vacated when Ivey won her at-large seat. A candidate's forum for that race is scheduled for Monday at the Cheverly American Legion Post 108. The primary winners will face off in a special general election June 3. Because of the overwhelming number of Democrats in Prince George's, the winner of the Democratic nominations will be the heavy favorites to win the seats and complete the remaining time in the terms, which run through 2026.

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