Current:Home > StocksSouth Carolina considers its energy future through state Senate committee -TrueNorth Capital Hub
South Carolina considers its energy future through state Senate committee
View
Date:2025-04-12 09:12:12
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina Senate on Thursday started its homework assignment of coming up with a comprehensive bill to guide energy policy in a rapidly growing state and amid a quickly changing power- generation world.
The Special Committee on South Carolina’s Energy Future plans several meetings through October. On Thursday, the committee heard from the leaders of the state’s three major utilities. Future meetings will bring in regular ratepayers, environmentalists, business leaders and experts on the latest technology to make electricity,
The Senate took this task upon itself. They put the brakes a massive 80-plus page energy overhaul bill that passed the House in March in less than six weeks, and the bill died at the end of the session.
Many senators said the process earlier this year was rushed. They remembered the last time they trusted an overhaul bill backed by utilities.
State-owned Santee Cooper and private South Carolina Electric & Gas used those rules passed 15 years ago to put ratepayers on the hook for billions of dollars spent on two new nuclear reactors that never generated a watt of power before construction was abandoned because of rising costs.
But those dire memories are being mixed with dire predictions of a state running out of power.
Unusually cold weather on Christmas Eve 2022 along with problems at a generating facility nearly led to rolling blackouts in South Carolina. Demand from advanced manufacturing and data centers is rising. If electric cars grow in popularity, more power is needed. And a state that added 1.3 million people since 2000 has a lot more air conditioners, washing machines and charges for devices, the utility leaders said.
Senators stopped Duke Energy’s president in South Carolina, Mike Callahan, in middle of his presentation after he told them his utility’s most recent predictions for growth in electricity usage over the rest of this decade were eight times more than they were just two years ago.
“Growth is here, and much more is coming. We need clear energy policy to plan for that growth,” Callahan said,
The utility leaders told senators their companies need to know what kind of sources of power — natural gas, solar, nuclear, wind or others — the state wants to emphasize. They would like to have a stable rules from regulators on how they operate.
“A quick no is a lot better to us than a long-term maybe,” Santee Cooper CEO Jimmy Staton said.
Another complicating factor are federal rules that may require utilities to shut down power plants that use coal before there are replacements with different sources online, Staton said.
Others aren’t so sure the state needs a rapid increase in power generation. Environmentalists have suggested the 2022 problems that led to blackouts were made worse because power plants were nowhere near capacity and better cooperation in the grid would allow electricity to get to where its needed easier.
Those less bullish on the overhaul also are urging the state not to lock in on one source of power over another because technology could leave South Carolina with too much power generation in inefficient ways.
There will likely be plenty of discussion of data centers that use a lot of electricity without the number of jobs, property taxes or other benefits a manufacturer provides.
Staton estimated about 70% of Santee Cooper’s increased demand is from data centers.
“We clearly need them. I don’t want to go back in time,” committee chairman Republican Senate Majority Leader Shane Massey said. “What I’m trying to get at is a better understanding, a better handle on how much of the projected growth is based on data centers or on everything else.”
Massey’s goal is to have a bill ready by the time the 2025 session starts in January.
veryGood! (6353)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Denver Nuggets receive 2023 NBA championship rings: Complete details
- Sept. 2024 date set for trial of 2 teens as adults in fatal Vegas bicyclist crash seen on video
- How Dancing With the Stars Honored Late Judge Len Goodman in Emotional Tribute
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Iowa man found not guilty of first-degree murder in infant son’s death
- Six-week abortion ban will remain in Georgia for now, state Supreme Court determines
- As student loan repayment returns, some borrowers have sticker shock
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- California school district offering substitute teachers $500 per day to cross teachers' picket line
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- A poison expert researched this drug before his wife died from it. Now he's facing prison.
- In Rhode Island, a hunt is on for the reason for dropping numbers of the signature quahog clam
- Meet Ed Currie, the man behind the world's hottest chili pepper
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Ohio State's Ryan Day: Helmet technology should be considered to limit sign-stealing
- Leader of Lebanon’s Hezbollah holds talks with senior Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad figures
- Is alcohol a depressant? Understand why it matters.
Recommendation
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Jury selection continues in trial of boat captain in 2019 fire that killed 34 passengers
Sri Lanka is allowing a Chinese research ship to dock as neighboring India’s security concerns grow
Why Cruise driverless cars were just suspended by the California DMV
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Israeli boy turns 9 in captivity, weeks after Hamas took him, his mother and grandparents
Japan’s top court to rule on law that requires reproductive organ removal for official gender change
Live updates | Israel’s bombardment in Gaza surges, reducing buildings to rubble