By Craig Rucker President of CFACT
CFACT student chapters are thriving on college campuses from coast to
coast. Our bright young collegians are speaking out on issues of
energy, environment, and individual liberty at public and government
forums alike -- and making their voices heard.
Maggie Immen, one of our Driessen Fellows at the University of Wyoming,
recently presented hard-hitting facts on how wind turbines are a threat
to birds before her state's Public Service Commission. She did it dressed as an eagle.
The media loved it! She got a full writeup in the Cowboy State Daily showcasing her stunt.
At stake in Wyoming is a proposed 30 percent hike in electricity prices
being sought by the utility called Rocky Mountain Power (RMP). The rate
increase, according to RMP, is necessary to pay for the escalating costs
attributed to new wind power being deployed throughout the state.
Wyoming, rich in fossil fuels, used to get 97% of its power from coal
and gas, but that has dropped to 70% in recent years. It was this rate
hike to fund more wind power that Maggie was protesting. We now await
the Commission's final decision.
Meanwhile on the East coast, CFACT students in Maryland and Virginia weighed in with public testimony opposing the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management̢۪s (BOEM) stamp of
approval for two proposed wind farms 10 miles offshore of Ocean City,
Maryland. Jamahl Evans, a CFACT Driessen Fellow from Old Dominion, took
the lead in offering testimony. He stated during the online hearing, Despite substantial subsidies, inflation has driven up the cost of
building these steel wind towers to such a degree that companies have
abandoned projects mid-build. To bail out these failing companies would
require major electricity rate increases. This places an undue burden on
the average and lower-income families in America, who are already
struggling with rising costs of living.
Of course, our student interns weren't the only ones at CFACT taking
aim at Big Wind over the past couple weeks. I too had the honor of offering my testimony to BOEM against a ridiculous offshore wind proposal in Oregon.
That proposal called for employing "flimsy floating wind" turbine
technology to provide a pitiful amount of unreliable electricity
generation to that state. You can read the full story about this and
also find my comments HERE at cfact.org.
Biden Administration officials are beginning to discover that tremendous
numbers of citizens are now embolden to stand up in opposition to their
irresponsible push for renewable energy expansion.
Best of all, the numbers keep growing and they're from diverse political affiliations.
For our part, CFACT is dedicated to providing the policy expertise and
grassroots creativity needed to help the public not just push back, but
one by one, score important energy victories that count.
For nature and people too.
No comments:
Post a Comment