By Steve Haner
A recent headline indicated that Abigail Spanberger, Democratic nominee for Governor of Virginia, had โembracedโ natural gas in an interview.ย A reading of the text left a very different conclusion, as in reality what she embraced was the anti-natural gas Virginia Clean Economy Act.

Spanberger did tell Inside Climate News that natural gas will be โpart of the energy mix into the future,โ which is a statement of the obvious. The reporter noted her support was โfor now.โ But then the reporter quoted her saying:
โHowever, I think when it comes to new natural gas infrastructure, thatโs where we really need to be focused and sort of thinking carefully about the lifespan of those projects and whether indeed they are the most cost-effective solution.โ
Letโs break the code on that one.ย Dominion Energy has an application pending to build a new, 944-megawatt natural gas plant in Chesterfield County.ย The plant would open in 2029 and under the Virginia Clean Economy Act, it would have to close by 2045.ย One major argument the opponents are raising is that it would become a stranded asset, far too expensive to build with the assumption of a mere 15-year life span.ย
The Sierra Club and others fighting the plant read that line and knew they have an ally in Spanberger, as if they didnโt already know. The fight over that application at the State Corporation Commission is the ultimate test case on natural gasโs future in Virginia, although the law only prohibits utility-owned generation, not merchant generators.

A few days before the Inside Climate News report, Republican nominee Winsome Earle-Sears provided a guest editorial column to the Washington Examiner.ย She was quite clear in her endorsement of Dominionโs application for the Chesterfield County plant.ย โThe Spanberger-Hashmi-Jones ticket willย killย this project, and consumers will suffer. Itโs not just expensive, itโs offensive,โ she wrote.
The Earle-Sears column was the longest exposition on energy she or her campaign has produced, but apparently it was only distributed on social media, and that by the Examiner itself, not her campaign. It was not picked up and shared in the daily news feed of the Virginia Public Access Project, which reaches thousands of key inboxes. In fairness, VPAP might not have seen it.ย
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