Who needs a national energy policy? Not the U.S.

The Republican tax plan about to pass Congress and get President Trump’s signature is proof positive that the United States does not have a national “energy policy.” And that’s a good thing. During the Obama administration, national energy policy was “all of the above.” That’s my idea of a good national energy policy: a meaningless… More Who needs a national energy policy? Not the U.S.

No holiday cheer for coal and nukes

Three studies released in recent days – the North American Electric Reliability Corp.’s “2017 Long-Term Reliability Assessment,” the Energy Information Administration’s “Short-Term Energy Outlook,” and natural gas guru Andy Weissman’s “Natural Gas Market Update,” – provide no holiday cheer for the U.S. nuclear and steam coal industries. All three reports see continued slow growth or… More No holiday cheer for coal and nukes

GAO: Trump impounded $91M in DOE funds illegally

The Trump administration illegally withheld $91 million in fiscal year 2017 research funding at the Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E), violating the 1974 Impoundment Control Act, according to a Government Accountability Office report yesterday. GAO said that under the law, “Agencies may only withhold budget authority from obligation if the President has… More GAO: Trump impounded $91M in DOE funds illegally

UK energy impact: continental Brexit or full English Brexit?

Now that British Prime Minister Theresa May and the European Union have reached a deal on initial Brexit issues around the status of European citizens living in Britain and British citizens living in the EU, keeping the border between the Irish Republic and Northern Ireland open, and a transfer of some $50 billion to the… More UK energy impact: continental Brexit or full English Brexit?

What killed Kemper?

Mississippi Power’s 582-MW Kemper integrated coal-gasification with carbon capture project is officially dead. The Southern Co. subsidiary and the Mississippi Public Service Commission staff at the end of November reached a settlement that will see the utility eat about $270 million in costs of the failed lignite gasification piece of the project. Mississippi Power last… More What killed Kemper?

Cape Wind sails into the sunset after 16 years of futility

Cape Wind Associates has ended its ambitious and controversial 468-MW offshore wind project in Massachusetts, as first reported in the Cape Cod Times. In a statement to the newspaper, Dennis Duffy, Cape Wind veep, said, “Cape Wind has confirmed to the [Interior Department’s] Bureau of Ocean Energy Management that it has ceased development of its… More Cape Wind sails into the sunset after 16 years of futility