Abuse of Power: Debunking the Trump Administration’s National Security Argument for Coal

The following article by Luke Bassett and Ned Price was posted on the Center for American Progress website August 16, 2018:

A coal-fired power plant sits near the Ohio River in WV, November 2011. Credit: Michael Williamson, Getty Images

After several failed attempts to bail out coal power plants, President Donald Trump and his administration have turned to co-opting national security tools and arguments to pursue their domestic energy agenda. Recently, administration officials have selectively targeted natural gas and renewable energy generation resources, falsely claiming they pose greater risks to the electric grid than do nuclear or coal resources. Specifically, Secretary of Energy Rick Perry misconstrued the facts about certain electricity generation resources and their relative vulnerability to threats, hiding behind his access to classified information to short-circuit a policy debate and thereby strengthen his proposal in a way that circumvents fact-checking.

This unprecedented use of defense arguments to favor certain electricity generators over others defies competitive energy market rules. Furthermore, it impairs the ability of experts, officials, and even the public to assess, prevent, or respond effectively to actual threats to the energy system, thereby undermining national security efforts as a whole. Continue reading “Abuse of Power: Debunking the Trump Administration’s National Security Argument for Coal”

Trump administration plan to prop up coal and nuclear markets rejected by regulators

The following article by Evan Halper was posted on the Los Angeles Times website January 8, 2018:

Secretary Rick Perry

Trump administration plan to force utilities to purchase more coal and nuclear power was rejected Monday by federal regulators, undermining the president’s energy agenda and his promise to revive the coal industry.

The five-member Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, which is dominated by Trump appointees, unanimously rejected the proposal. Its members were not persuaded by arguments from Energy Secretary Rick Perry that solar, wind and other forms of renewable power were destabilizing the nation’s power grid and needed to be backstopped with more coal and nuclear power at a considerable cost to consumers. Continue reading “Trump administration plan to prop up coal and nuclear markets rejected by regulators”