-
The Trump Energy Crisis
The miracle of our time is the availability and affordability of electricity from the sun (and wind, and batteries). That may sound hyperbolic, but I really think it’s true. Like it or not, humanity in the twenty-first century requires a lot of energy to support its lifestyle. We got here mostly by burning stuff of one kind or another, with pretty obviously bad impacts on air quality. There’s been some advancement in cleaning that up, but then there’s climate change. Less obvious yet way worse, and the advancements on “cleaning that up” have been woefully slow.
So we need a way to generate a bunch of electricity quickly & cleanly. We could hope for a sci-fi silver bullet, like nuclear fusion, or we could focus on the known, existing, and immediately deployable technologies we have: solar, and wind, and batteries. These have always been cleaner, more independent, and created good jobs. The miracle of our time is that now they’re cheaper, not only to build, but also - especially! - to run in the long term. You don’t need to ship sunlight (or wind) from halfway across the planet, or refine it, or distribute it, or clean up spills of it. The whole energy sector is now as close to a no-brainer as you can get. Yet somehow, the current U.S. administration is doing everything it can to obstruct things.
Almost a year ago, President Donald Trump declared that the United States was experiencing an “energy emergency.” At the time, the U.S. was beating national and world-historical records for oil and gas production, as well as for wind and solar generation. But since then, the threat of an energy emergency really has emerged, in large part thanks to Trump’s own interventions in the power sector.
The Trump administration has blocked construction of renewable power sources, rescinded billions of dollars allocated by Congress to expand the grid and clean energy, and helped pass a law that vaporized federal tax credits for wind and solar projects.
This fucking guy casts his oily shadow over just about everything now. Solar farms are no exception I mean, you have to hand it to the guy, he really can bring problems to life. From rampant corruption in Washington D.C. (aka “the swamp”), to America’s weaker standing on the world stage, to energy emergencies, he’s forever complaining about big problems just before he creates or seriously exacerbates them. On the energy front, that same Canary Media article goes on to list some of the specific actions Trump has taken to manifest this particular crisis:
-
Halting the five offshore wind projects under construction as of December, after unsuccessfully trying to stop two of them earlier last year.
-
Blocking new federal permits for wind farms, a step that a court ruled was unconstitutional.
-
Requiring wind or solar developments on federal lands to obtain a personal sign-off from Interior Secretary Doug Burgum; only one plant has been granted permission by the administration.
-
Canceling final approval for what would have been the nation’s largest solar farm, a 6.2-gigawatt behemoth in the Nevada desert.
-
Eliminating tax credits for wind and solar projects that start construction after July 4, 2026.
-
Revoking billions of dollars appropriated by Congress to support solar installations for low-income communities.
-
Canceling billions of dollars allocated by bipartisan legislation for major upgrades to the power grid, such as the Grain Belt Express transmission line.
The injunctions on those offshore wind projects in the first point have been lifted (for now) after lawsuits showed the obvious: they were spurious and illegal. But that third point, about requiring Burgum’s sign-off, is still keeping tons of potential power in limbo:
Over 22 gigawatts of utility-scale wind and solar projects on public lands have been canceled or are held up as a result of the order, according to Wood Mackenzie data and the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management website. That’s enough capacity to power roughly 16.5 million U.S. homes — a significant amount at any point, but especially when the country is clamoring for more low-cost electricity as energy demand and utility bills soar.
“We’re seeing electricity costs go up all around the country, and the cheapest electrons that we can put into the supply side of that equation are all stuck on Secretary Burgum’s desk,” Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) told Canary Media.
This isn’t a bunch of starry-eyed hippies with idealistic dreams. This is electricity generation that simply makes so much sense that the solar (and wind, and batteries) industries are making forward strides in spite of these dumb ideological barriers. Take it from the definitely-not-hippies at the Wall Street Journal and JPMorgan Chase:
Pressure on where to garner energy has shifted with the advent of power-hungry AI. Heather Zichal, global head of sustainability at JPMorgan Chase, said renewables “are vital strategic resources in the race to meet growing energy demand and power AI innovation,” adding that solar “is too cheap and too fast to build to ignore.”
Sun-drenched red states such as natural gas-rich Texas are reaping the benefits of solar. According to a report on the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s website posted in October, the Texas electricity grid is increasingly relying on solar and wind. Utility-scale solar generated 50% more electricity in the first nine months of 2025 than in the same period of 2024—nearly four times as much as the same time frame in 2021, the report said.
Texas! Not exactly a bastion of progressive woke-ism, is it? (And that quote focuses on solar; Texas has tons of wind generation, too.)
So here’s solar (and wind, and batteries), ready to be quickly deployed wherever needed to help bring down electricity prices for all of us (and reduce air pollution, and slow climate change, and give us more energy independence). And then here’s this crook: Trump order to keep Michigan power plant open costs taxpayers $113m. That’s the story of an “aging, unneeded” old power plant, that was on the verge of being retired. Yet against all common sense (not to mention any sliver of the pre-MAGA Republican party’s opposition to the meddling of “Big Government”), the Trump administration has ordered it to keep running. Sorry, Michigan! You just have to eat an extra $615,000 per day for no other reason than Trump trying to prop up the coal industry.
This old coal plant was like, "Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!" (Also, please think of the elegant and appealing architecture on display here the next time you hear someone complain that windmills or solar panels are eyesores.) That’s not a weird one-off case in Michigan, either. There’s a similar story in Colorado, where it’s estimated that forcing a broken-down old plant to keep “running for 90 days would cost at least $20 million”. The Trump EPA is, of course, also pitching in to abet this ridiculous scheme, by giving coal plants a free pass on toxic ash disposal:
The move tosses a lifeline to the polluting power plants. If the facilities were barred from dumping ash into unlined pits, they would be forced to close, since they can’t operate if they don’t have a place to dispose of the ash, and the companies say finding alternative locations for disposal would be impossible.
That’s “clean, beautiful coal” for you, as Trump idiotically calls it. Easy for him to say, since he doesn’t have to drink the water that’s contaminated by a devil’s brew of arsenic, molybdenum, cobalt, radium, and god knows what else.
Look, this is classic Trump: pushing bad policies that enrich and empower him and/or his cronies, and to hell with everyone else. But there’s a better, cleaner, and cheaper way. Here’s just one study, for example: Kentuckians could save billions if utilities moved beyond fossil fuels (note that’s billions, with a ‘b’).
“Here in Kentucky, coal was the least-cost way to produce electricity, but as our coal plants age and as the cost of renewable energy continues to fall, that’s simply no longer the case,” Wilmes said. “Continuing to rely on aging, uneconomic power plants simply leads us to less stable, less dependable and higher-cost electricity when compared to the other pathways that are modeled in our report.”
The Biden administration took some great, groundbreaking steps toward accelerating solar (and wind, and batteries). It wasn’t perfect, but it was a good start. Trump feels he has to pit himself against anything Biden was for, and all that fossil-fuel industry campaign money has to be repaid, too. But this particular grift of his is costing all of us, both directly, through higher power bills, and indirectly, through unnecessary air pollution and continuing to pour greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
I’ll give the final word to Armond Cohen, executive director of the Clean Air Task Force, with a great quote from the first story I linked above:
There is a crisis. It’s like we’re back in the ’70s, but instead of OPEC squeezing us, it’s us squeezing us.
It’s 269 days until Election Day, when we can start putting a stop to some of this nonsense. See you at the polls.
-