EDF policy director Will Scott discusses Duke Energy’s Carbon Plan and NC’s future energy needs
When a utility company like Duke Energy plans for the future, it tries to predict how much electricity its customers will need a decade from now. Unfortunately, and not surprisingly, much of that process amounts to a guessing game in which utility company profits often play a much bigger role than keeping ratepayer bills low or protecting our natural environment.
And right now, this appears to be very much the case at the state Utilities Commission as it reviews Duke’s latest carbon plan for the years to come. As NC Newsline learned in a recent conversation with the Environmental Defense Fund’s North Carolina Policy Director, Will Scott, while Duke’s current proposal calls for building a fleet of new gas power plants by 2033, expert testimony indicates that North Carolinians should be deeply skeptical and supportive of alternative proposals that would emphasize improvements to the electric transmission grid and continued rapid development of less expensive and sustainable energy sources like wind and solar power.