


How much would you pay for an Uber if you didn’t know when it would pick you up or where it was going to drop you off? Probably not much.
Yet this is the same effect that variable generation sources like wind and solar have on our power grids.
You never know if these energy sources will actually be able to produce electricity when you need it — because you don’t know if the sun will be shining or the wind blowing.
Even so, the federal government has subsidized these sources for decades, resulting in higher electricity prices and a less stable grid.
President Donald Trump knows what to do: Eliminate green tax credits from the Democrats’ so-called Inflation Reduction Act, including those for wind and solar power.
The One Big Beautiful Bill seeks to do that: Along with other proposals, like canceling billions in Biden Green New Deal money and making much-needed investments in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, it aims to set an aggressive end date for these subsidies and build on the president’s push for affordable, abundant, and secure energy for the nation.
The House bill begins phasing out these tax credits within three years, saving hundreds of billions for American taxpayers.
As secretary of energy — and someone who’s devoted his life to advancing energy innovation to better human lives — I, too, know how these Green New Deal subsidies are fleecing Americans.
Wind and solar subsidies have been particularly wasteful and counterproductive.
One example: The Renewable Electricity Production Tax Credit was first introduced in 1992, when wind energy was a nascent industry. This tax credit, originally set to phase out in 1999, was sold on a promise of low-cost energy with fewer tradeoffs.
Since 1999, the REPTC has been extended a whopping 12 times, yet consumers continue to pay more on average for their home electric bills than in 1992, even after adjusting for inflation.
Plus, today, more than 75% of US electricity comes from natural gas, nuclear and coal — and they supply it 24/7, independent of the weather.
Climate change activists are predictably up in arms over efforts to end the subsidies. But like Uber rides, energy generation is pointless if it flunks the test of reliable delivery.
At 8 p.m. on Inauguration Day, amid bitter cold across much of the Eastern seaboard, we reached peak demand for electricity in the mid-Atlantic region. At that point in time, PJM Interconnection, which supplies the Mid-Atlantic United States, got approximately 44% of its power from coal, 24% from natural gas, 25% from nuclear, 3% from oil, 3% from wind, 1% from hydro and 0% from solar.
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Think about that: When Americans most needed dependable power to heat their homes and businesses to stay alive, solar and wind were non-factors.
Our homes, hospitals and businesses only continued to operate because there was enough reliable, baseload energy from natural gas, coal and nuclear available to meet demand.
How valuable is a teammate who occasionally shows up for practice but is never there at game time?
And the more we load our grid with intermittent generation, the worse the grid performs during times of maximum stress and demand.
Subsidies are meant to drive prices down and boost supply. But subsidizing wind and solar has done exactly the opposite.
These sources force grid operators to maintain two separate systems — one for legacy power and another for renewable sources.
When wind and solar come online, legacy resources must be scaled back.
But it’s difficult to store electricity from wind and solar. So when wind and solar aren’t available at times of peak demand, reliable baseload sources must scale up.
Bottom line: higher costs. Indeed, wind and solar subsidies not only cost taxpayers but also force providers to add more dispatchable resources to the grid, at their expense.
These costs are then passed on to ratepayers.
In other words, more wind and solar brings us the worst of two worlds: less reliable energy delivery and higher electric bills.
It’s time to stop subsidizing such insanity in perpetuity. If sources are truly economically viable, let’s allow them to stand on their own, and stop forcing Americans to pick up the tab if they’re not.
Since Day 1, President Trump has been focused on lowering energy costs and promoting affordable, reliable and secure energy sources.
The One Big Beautiful Bill brings us one step closer to cementing this legacy — and unleashing economic prosperity for the American people.
US Energy Secretary Chris Wright is a self-described energy nerd turned entrepreneur. He’s spent his entire career in the energy industry, working in oil and gas, nuclear, solar and geothermal.