The Public Aggregator

The illusion of choice, affordability, and green energy

Screenshot, CT-N

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“It’s profitable to buy and sell electricity,” said Peter Millman, Vice President, People’s Action for Clean Energy, testifying in support of HB 6928

Every one needs energy to live in a modern world. We are captured buyers, rate payers, whatever the word used to describe us. We are dependent on the energy that illuminates, warms, and cools us. Climate change is the jingo on the street with a green rush to net zero and decarbonization. There’s billions of dollars flying around from investors and venture capitalists with their new shiny green energy pet projects. What a convenience it is for them to have a captured audience, the rate payer. No one choses to be a rate payer, but if you want to live in the modern world, this is what you have become to policy makers.

It’s a bitter cold February day, a small space heater is clunking away in the backroom of my old New England farmhouse with it’s creaky floors and blown glass windows. My windows definitely would not pass today’s muster as “energy efficient”. What does energy efficient really mean? I may live in an old home, but I am not the only one on the block that shutters every time the Eversource bill arrives. New homes on my street with all the bells and whistles struggle with large bills too. It’s dawned on me recently that this is all just marketing, energy efficient, clean energy, green energy, wind energy, solar, ahhh the golden sun. So much better than those nasty fossil fuels and that dirty coal. Coal is actually carbon, and carbon is the element of life. Fossil fuels runs our lives and the green energy initiatives too. Sadly it is an energy war, a war for who can pretend to have the cleanest energy and how much money they can make on kilowatts. Energy generates billions in profit, green energy generates TRILLIONS! Green energy makes just as much if not more toxic waste in landfills than traditional energy sources.

Government loves the energy war, it feeds their quasi government agencies and public, private, partnerships. Politicians get to play good cop, while industry is the bad cop. But the truth is they are bedfellows. They thrive on each other’s ability to create policies that lead to industry cashflows while they try to deceive the public that it’s all in their best interests. Remember when deregulations was sold to us as means to get more consumer choice and lower energy prices? All deregulation has given us is a small board of bureaucrats we can grovel to when the energy giants and their aggregators do not deliver affordable energy prices. There are no real choices. The policies enacted by the government delivers major profits for industry, not efficiency and affordability for citizens. I wonder what our forefathers would’ve thought of our government and it’s close partnership with Eversource and UI? In today’s modern world, a sound bite with the right lingo is all that’s needed to deliver a message to the beleaguered citizenry. Our legislative body is a super majority riding high on the “climate change” $cha−ching$ train! We’re talking about a trillion dollar captured market here.

The Chair of the Energy and Technology Committee, Representative Jonathan Steinberg, was blunt when he said, “We’re not going to be lowering rates substantially in the future.” Much of the day’s testimony was for a new version of a failed bill from last session, HB 6928: AN ACT ESTABLISHING A MUNICIPAL ELECTRIC AGGREGATION PROGRAM. This program will create “enabling legislation” to create and allow another market for industry to sell municipalities solar farms, battery storage, and wind farms, to achieve net zero and decarbonization mandates, and yes, maybe it will save some money too. There will be a contract to sign, but no one ever wants to talk about the contracts that trap towns into deals that can last for decades. How is the deregulated electricity worked out so far? Access to energy suppliers has not made anything better. Our energy costs are the highest in the nation. So here’s another law to give us more of the same at the local level. Nonetheless lobbyists and nonprofits lined up to testify how wonderful it will be for “rate payers”. Only a small portion of testimony came from the public. One lady representing a nonprofit testifying in favor of HB 6928 lamented how she loves the “public benefit charges” and looks forward to paying for all the wonderful green energy. The irony is she doesn’t pay public benefits, she gets her energy from one of the 6 municipal utilities in Connecticut, which is apples to oranges compared to HB 6928 and green energy aggregators.

Screenshot, energyrates.ca

Sure, a community aggregation project sounds nice, people mean well, but all it is is more solar, battery storage centers, and wind farms. Not to mention it runs on data and SMART technology. This technology is expensive and and its longevity is questionable. What about privacy? Never mind the toxic waste from solar, wind and batteries. What about the fire risks with batteries?! How much extra money will have to be spent on fire safety by towns that adopt this? It’s a venture capitalist’s dream and a citizen’s ball and chain. The race to “net zero” is a major shift in vital resources like farmland, wetlands, open spaces, and fresh water to public aggregator’s investment projects.

There were 10 bills to consider on the hearing agenda. This is always what the committees do in Hartford, they cram a bunch of bills into one hearing and have all the “important people” testify first. After hours of the officials’ testimony, the citizens have a right to speak. It’s a long and tiring process which is by design. People do not see the sausage being made in the windowless hearing rooms. The citizen has been reverted into a rate payer, barely a thought in the rush to green energy. While legislators pat each other on the back and make nice with the lobbyists that they know all too well.

We are the net zero and decarbonization they want to create.

Screenshot, CGA

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Author

Jennifer Sparks aka J.Cherry

Jennifer Sparks aka J.Cherry is an independent journalist, radio host, and producer. On the airways she was known as J.Cherry where she produced a popular local radio show, VOICE of the CITY, airing on WESU 88.1FM. There she conducted in depth and candid interviews with artists, politicians, authors, activists, scientists, and community leaders. In 2020 Jennifer left WESU to pursue an independent podcast where she could freely talk about controversial subjects. A mother and wife before being a journalist, she felt compelled to break free and dig into medical freedom, government policy, parental rights, public health, corruption, and big pharma. Over the years Jennifer has been published in local newspapers as a freelance writer. Frustrated with being censored and not being able to publish the stories she felt were important and under reported, she began her own blog. Her work can be found at jcherrrypresents.com and on Substack https://jcherry152.substack.com/.

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