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In the latest warning that New Yorkβs Climate Action Plan is a slow-rolling disaster, the pragmatic liberals at the Progressive Policy Institute have called out the absurd green-energy law as an βundeniableβ failure.
The PPI report talks politely about the ideals behind the 2019 law, pushed by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and (until recently) fully embraced by Gov. Kathy Hochul, but grimly sums up that its only real impact has been βdriving up costs for familiesβ while βconstraining reliable supply.β
Indeed, the New York Independent System Operator, the outfit in charge of the stateβs grid, recently warned that the grid is at rapidly increasing risk of failure, as the βclimateβ mandates are making power supplies ever-less reliable, while also stressing electric transmission lines.
PPI details the grim costs of the Cuomo-Hochul agenda:
- New York electricity prices are 44% higher than the national average.
- Residential rates have risen 36% since 2019 β almost three times as faster than in the rest of the country.
- Utilities this year are seeking 20% rate hikes to cover the costs the stateβs imposing.
- New Yorkβs wildly impractical plans for new offshore-wind-power generation are only 1% operational; it has reached just 8% of its 2030 goals for energy-storage capacity.
The state simply βignored the economic and technical realities requiredβ to meet its goals, explained Neel Brown, a report co-author.Β
Now comes the rapid retreat from the plan, after billions have already gone down the drain.
The New York Energy Board recently recommended pushing back the date to achieve a 40% reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions from 2030 to 2036, though even thatβs impractical: The stateβs burning more fossil fuels than it was a decade ago.
The board urges looking to build a two- to three-gigawatt nuclear plant, for starters, as its chair calls nuclear βa real bright spotβ when it comes to cost and reliability.
Even the Clean Power Alliance is calling out the βclimate madness.β
Meanwhile, Hochul last month βpausedβ the stateβs all-electric building mandate, including the first step in her ban on gas stoves.Β
Staring at next yearβs election, the gov confessed that she needs to βreview all our optionsβ and perhaps rewrite the climate law to avoid sending consumersβ bills soaring even higher; sheβs even making kind noises about nuclear plants.
What she wonβt do is admit that the entire green-energy push is completely at odds with making New York life more βaffordable.β
Or that itβs her fellow Democrats whoβve repeatedly killed nuke plants in New York, with Andrew Cuomo forcing Indian Point to shut down while Gov. Mario Cuomo stopped the Shoreham plant from ever even opening.
Let alone that the state would be far better off if it abandoned Cuomoβs ban on fracking, and so allowed the completely safe extraction of natural gas thatβs proved such a huge boon next door in Pennsylvania.
At least Hochul seems to have realized that lame-brained (and taxpayer-funded) ad campaigns wonβt convince the public to suffer in silence.
Yet the truth she doesnβt dare face is that the Empire State needs to scrap this scheme altogether, and embrace energy policy that serves New Yorkersβ needs, not the radical green agenda.

