By Steve Haner
Here we go again. As the 2025 election year heats up and warnings rise about electricity shortfalls this summer, the legislators behind Virginiaโs coming ban on hydrocarbon electricity are pretending they see the problem.ย
A May 22 headline out of a recent legislative meeting on energy claimed that โDemocratic leadership signals willingness to reexamine Virginia Clean Economy Act.โย The reporter cited comments to him by two legislators made after the meeting, after the microphones and public streaming camera were turned off.ย
Fool us twice, shame on us.ย During the 2024 session of the General Assembly, similar โsignalsโ that VCEA would be reviewed were sent and widely reported.ย But the legislation proposed and passed by the majority party this year focused instead on ways to hasten the path to an electricity grid more dependent on weather-vulnerable, intermittent generation from wind and sun.ย Ask the folks in Spain how that is working out.ย ย ย
Virginia was saved from most of those new laws only by a series of vetoes from Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin.ย The vetoes only kept an existing crisis from getting worse.ย It fixed nothing. The long outage in Spain and Portugal, coupled with fresh warnings from the regional electricity trading entity PJM and the North American Electricity Reliability Corporation, should keep Virginiaโs shaky grid infrastructure in focus.ย Wrote PJM of this summer:ย ย
This season also marks the first time in PJMโs annual assessment, however, that available generation capacity may fall short of required reserves in an extreme planning scenario that would result in an all-time PJM peak load of more than 166,000 MW.
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