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Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Texas leads 19-state coalition challenging green energy transition mandate

Texas is leading a 19-state coalition challenging a federal agency requiring states to implement a “green energy” transition.

The states filed a complaint with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) in response to a rule it passed to advance unprecedented federal control over the US electric grid.

Currently, state regulatory bodies determine the most efficient mix of energy sources for their states.

FERC’s new rule appears to be an unfunded mandate, requiring states to implement “green energy” electricity generation and cover the costs to transition to it.

Flared natural gas is burned off at Apache Corporation’s operations at the Deadwood natural gas plant in the Permian Basin in Garden City, Texas.Getty Images

Texas, which maintains its own electric grid, filed the complaint, leading a 19-state coalition.

It argues FERC’s rule exceeds its authority, is arbitrary and capricious and creates an “unjust, unreasonable, and/or unduly discriminatory rates” that violate the Federal Power Act.

The rule is “not supported by reasoned decision-making or explanation and runs counter to the evidence,” the 48-page brief states.

FERC issued the rule “attempting to do indirectly what it cannot do directly: usurp the States’ exclusive authority over generation choices by adopting planning rules designed to benefit remote renewable generation and renewable developers, and shift billions or trillions of dollars in transmission costs from those developers onto electric consumers,” the coalition argues.

FERC’s new rule appears to be an unfunded mandate, requiring states to implement “green energy” electricity generation and cover the costs to transition to it.Joshua Bauer NREL

The coalition includes Texas, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee and Utah.

At issue is the FERC’s May 13, 2024, Order No. 1920, which states, “there is substantial evidence to support the conclusion that the existing regional transmission planning and cost allocation processes are unjust, unreasonable, and unduly discriminatory or preferential because the Commission’s existing transmission planning and cost allocation requirements do not require transmission providers to: (1) perform a sufficiently long-term assessment of transmission needs that identifies Long-Term Transmission Needs; (2) adequately account on a forward looking basis for known determinants of Long-Term Transmission Needs; and (3) consider the broader set of benefits of regional transmission facilities planned to meet those Long-Term Transmission Needs.”

Natural gas is flared at the Handy Gas Unit #1, a Pioneer Natural Resources well, in Karnes County, Texas.Bloomberg

The order requires states to cover the costs of transitioning regional transmission lines to support “green energy” generation even when doing so doesn’t support the state’s energy needs and would decrease grid efficiency and reliability, the coalition argues.

In Texas, for example, the regulatory body overseeing the state’s grid, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), has repeatedly pointed out that wind and solar power cannot meet energy demands but natural gas does.

As temperatures hovered for months at 120 degrees last year, ERCOT issued voluntary conservation appeals while also publishing data showing that low wind generation could not provide a sufficient energy supply.

Texas is the world’s fifth largest generator of wind power and leads the US in generating wind energy.

The Biden administration is again attempting to auction a second round of offshore wind leases in the Gulf.AP

Recognizing the need for reliable non-intermittent energy sources, the Texas legislature, and the majority of voters, approved a plan to invest $5 billion in constructing mostly natural gas infrastructure to expand Texas’ energy grid reliability.

The new program has received an “overwhelming response,” state officials said.

By contrast, zero bids were received in Texas in response to federal offshore auctions for roughly 200,000 acres of wind energy leases in the Gulf of Mexico.

Despite this, the Biden administration is again attempting to auction a second round of offshore wind leases in the Gulf.

The Texas General Land Office has opposed such efforts, refusing to grant any easement to access state-owned submerged land for transmission lines to shore, arguing it’s not in Texas’ best interest.

GLO Commissioner Dawn Buckingham said, “The Biden Administration appears hellbent on force-feeding Americans failed ‘green’ policies” and she will “never allow the federal government to endanger the people of Texas and our state’s beautiful wildlife with untested, unproven, and ineffective technology when reliable, clean, and safe energy is already available,” referring to Texas-produced natural gas.

Texas leads the US in natural gas production and Texas and Louisiana lead the U.S. in liquified natural gas exports, The Center Square has reported.

A pumpjack operates just outside of the Odessa Ector Power Partners natural gas power plant in Odessa, Texas.AP

The 19-state coalition argues, “FERC has never been granted the authority to revamp the structure of state energy grids or force states and their ratepayers to subsidize large-scale transmission lines that don’t transport enough energy to justify the cost. This encroachment upon state authority far exceeds FERC’s limited purview and damages the ability of states to regulate their electric grids efficiently, all in the name of advancing costly climate goals.”

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said the president’s “attempt to seize unprecedented control over energy production and distribution is a recipe for disaster.”

The AGs joined together “to stop his unlawful ‘energy transition’ scheme that would drive up energy costs and reduce reliability of the resources our nation needs most to flourish.”

They did so after the former Louisiana attorney general and now governor, Jeff Landry, led a gubernatorial coalition to “unleash domestic energy production.”

“American energy has done more than any other industry to lift more people out of poverty globally than any other industry that I’ve known of,” Landry said.

https://nypost.com/2024/06/19/us-news/texas-leads-19-state-coalition-challenging-green-energy-transition-mandate/

China’s Olympic swim team loaded with athletes implicated in doping scandal

 China named a 31-member swim team for the Paris Games featuring six Olympic gold medalists on Tuesday, while a review continues of a doping case involving the country’s swimmers before the Tokyo Games in 2021.

China’s team for Paris includes Olympic women’s 200m butterfly champion Zhang Yufei and men’s 200m individual medley winner Wang Shun.

Eleven members of China’s team were implicated in the doping scandal, including Yufei and Shun, according to NBC News.

Zhang Yufei is one of 11 swimmers implicated in the doping scandal that made China’s Olympic team.AFP via Getty Images
Wang Shun was also part of the scandal.Getty Images

In April, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) said it would send a compliance team to China to assess the country’s anti-doping program after confirming media reports that 23 swimmers had tested positive for a banned substance before Tokyo.

The swimmers had tested positive for trimetazidine, a banned heart drug that is known to improve performance.

China cleared the swimmers of wrongdoing before the 2020 Games, deciding the positive tests were the result of being inadvertently exposed to the banned substance through contamination, and WADA accepted its finding.

The handling of the case sparked criticism from national anti-doping authorities and a number of leading swimmers, who said it had undermined trust in the global anti-doping system.

American seven-times Olympic gold medallist Katie Ledecky said faith in the anti-doping system was at “an all-time low” in a TV interview last month.

“It’s hard going into Paris knowing that we’re going to be racing some of these athletes,” she said.

WADA vigorously defended its processes before announcing it would launch the independent review.

Zhang Yufei competes in the heats of the women’s 50m butterfly event during the Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games.AFP via Getty Images
Members of China’s swim team pose with medals during the Asian Games.VCG via Getty Images
“It’s extremely frustrating for athletes to always have in the back of our mind that maybe this sport’s not fair,” Lilly King told Yahoo from the US Olympic swimming trials in Indianapolis.

China’s team also features men’s 100m freestyle world record holder Pan Zhanle and the 100m and 200m breaststroke world champion Qin Haiyang.

https://nypost.com/2024/06/19/sports/chinas-olympic-swim-team-loaded-with-athletes-implicated-in-doping-scandal/