FACT SHEET: The “Baseload Fallacy”: Undercutting Wind, Solar, and Batteries While Supporting Nuclear and Geothermal Won’t Protect the Grid—Or Families’ Energy Bills

Utility bills are surging across the country in the face of rising demand from data centers and new manufacturing facilities. As noted by major utilities, tech companies, the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and CBS News, the reconciliation bill passed by House Republicans in May and under consideration in the Senate would make that crisis worse for families and businesses, raising consumer energy prices by as much as $400 per year over the next decade by repealing job-creating incentives for installing new, clean, affordable electricity generation on the grid.

Now, some Republicans in Congress—and Secretary of Energy Chris Wright—are trying to muddy the waters by claiming that only “non-intermittent,” “baseload power” sources like nuclear and geothermal are important for meeting load growth, and even calling renewable energy resources “parasites” on the grid.

This stance belies a childlike misunderstanding of how the modern electricity grid operates.  Throughout the United States, grid operators have successfully incorporated growing shares of renewable energy resources in ways that enhance rather than undermine grid reliability — indeed, in states like Iowa, Oklahoma, and South Dakota, renewables already account for the bulk of electricity generation for the state. 

Here are the facts:

The bottom line: More demand + less new clean electricity = higher prices. Electricity rates are already rising faster than inflation for a variety of reasons, including increasing damage from natural disasters and volatile natural gas prices. If Congressional Republicans make it harder and more expensive to build new clean sources of electricity generation (and especially the fastest-to-develop sources like wind, solar, and battery storage) at a time of rapidly rising electricity demand, the only outcome can be higher prices for families and businesses. That’s why multiple studies have concluded that repealing clean energy tax incentives will cost families as much as $400 more per year.

Senate Republicans should resist falling for anti-renewable energy propaganda and maintain support for all forms of clean energy. After all, as former FERC Chair (and former aide to then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY)) Neil Chatterjee said recently, “We need every available electron” to meet rising electricity demand.