Electric Transmission Buildout Could Cost Americans Trillions of Dollars

By Bernard L. McNamee

March 14, 2024

Though windmills and solar panels get the headlines, the big energy topic in Washington is electric transmission. Whether it is Congress’s newfound interest in permitting reform, the U.S. Department of Energy’s new Grid Deployment Office, or the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (FERC) upcoming final rule on transmission planning and cost allocation, how to build and pay for long-range transmission to connect generators to customers is considered the final piece in the quest to meet net-zero goals.   

Like so many issues in Washington, the need for more transmission lines is accepted without question and the costs are not considered. But for American consumers, especially low-income and elderly, as well as small businesses and energy intense manufacturers, building new transmission lines could result in much higher monthly bills and leave them on the hook for stranded assets.

Traditionally, high-voltage transmission lines, consisting of 150-foot lattice towers crossing the landscape for hundreds of miles, were planned for by local utilities to meet their customers’ energy needs and subject to approval by state public utility commissions. But public policy goals to promote renewables are changing how the grid is being developed.

Over the past few years, States established renewable energy mandates; Congress enacted over $1 trillion in taxpayer subsidies for renewable energy; and President Biden issued an executive order setting net-zero goals for electricity generation by 2035. To fulfill these policies, the grid needs new high-voltage transmission lines—lots of them—and they will be expensive.

According to the “Net-Zero America” analysis published by Princeton researchers, achieving net zero goals with 100% wind and solar by 2050 will require an additional $3.5 trillion in capital spending for new transmission lines. If net-zero goals are pursued with a mix of renewables, nuclear, and natural gas generation (which may include carbon capture), then a significant portion of this transmission investment would be unnecessary. Furthermore, a balanced resource mix of dispatchable and renewable resources would enhance grid reliability without overbuilding renewables or transmission.

Contributing to the cost is that renewable projects are often built far away from where the electricity will be consumed. For example, the Midwest is a great place to build windmills, but long-distance transmission lines are needed to deliver their electricity to big population centers on coasts. Not only are these lines capital intensive, but they also require purchasing or condemning private property to site them. Adding insult to injury, many of these transmission lines will not serve the people whose land is used.       

Renewable power developers see the potential for selling their electricity in higher priced power systems near urban centers, while also being able to harvest generous taxpayer subsidies. But having to pay for transmission cuts into profits. Furthermore, property owners impacted by the transmission lines are objecting. The solution: a wave of lobbyists and special interests pressing policy makers to eliminate permitting barriers and to socialize the $3.5 trillion cost of building new transmission lines to more Americans.   

In response, FERC is engaged in a rulemaking to change transmission planning and cost allocation.Among the proposals is requiring grid planners to consider factors like “geographic zones”, such as wind potential in the Midwest; state and federal “public policy goals”; and “trends” in technology. If adopted, these factors would provide more subjective ways to justify building big, expensive, long-range transmission projects that would be paid for by a broader number of Americans.  

With public concerns about costs, transmission advocates now argue that more transmission is needed for grid reliability. Yet, the threat of blackouts is the result of the very net-zero policies that now require more transmission. For example, Maryland’s recent decision to shut down the Brandon Shores coal plant will cause customers across 12 states and the District of Columbia to pay $796 million for new transmission projects to support reliability.  

Customers may also be left paying for transmission projects that are no longer needed. New technology, such as small modular nuclear reactors that can be built at existing power plants that already have transmission access, may negate the need for new transmission lines to serve renewable generators. The current push for transmission reform may be another expensive example of Washington trying to solve yesterday’s problem. This is not mere speculation, since 2008 customers have paid $250 million for the PATH transmission line that crossed three states, even though it was never built and never served customers.  

It is time for policy makers to reaffirm that the electric grid exists to serve customers, not developers and investors. Transmission planning and cost allocation should be driven by the needs of customers and overseen by the state regulators who are best suited to protect their citizens. At a time when inflation is making its tougher from families and businesses to thrive, imposing additional costs for transmission buildouts for special interests makes little sense.  

Bernard L. McNamee was a Commissioner on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission from 2018-2020. 

This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.

4.9 16 votes
Article Rating
21 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Coeur de Lion
March 16, 2024 3:07 am

What precisely are ‘Net Zero Goals’? I see these mentioned everywhere but I see no numbers or descriptions of what they look like. Does any policymaker know? I don’t think so.

spetzer86
Reply to  Coeur de Lion
March 16, 2024 6:24 am

The WEF has a vision on these. Something like 5 billion fewer people on the planet.

Reply to  spetzer86
March 16, 2024 9:08 am

Or at least fewer people cluttering up the lifts at their preferred ski resorts.

atticman
Reply to  Frank from NoVA
March 16, 2024 10:43 am

But… but… but… I thought they’d said there wasn’t going to be any more snow…

rovingbroker
March 16, 2024 3:09 am

Classic OPM — Other Peoples’ Money. Or maybe, “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today”.

<a href=”https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Wellington_Wimpy”>Wikipedia</a>

strativarius
March 16, 2024 4:10 am

Story tip. – going green in Brighton

“”…residents say the once-beautiful seaside resort is a shadow of its former self, ruined by a council – which has announced it will increase tax – that has wasted money on pet projects like banning weedkiller and a futile Low Traffic Neighbourhood (LTN) scheme.
….
A ban on glyphosate-based weedkiller in 2019 has had to be ditched after the city’s streets became infested with weeds.

‘If you hit any one of a number of potholes in this city it could cost you your life. Trying to avoid these gigantic holes while on your bike is a real mission.
‘It’s not helped by the fact the roads have been damaged by weeds and plants which had been left to grow out of control.’

The weeds got out of control and then, to add insult to injury, the council tried to get residents to weed their own streets for free.””
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13191975/Roads-potholes-failed-LTN-plan-drug-fuelled-homeless-crisis-bins-overflowing-woke-councillors-ignore-furious-locals-plough-cash-crazy-pet-projects-whats-happening-Brighton.html

Drake
Reply to  strativarius
March 16, 2024 7:36 am

Nice article. All I can say is LOLOLOLOLOLOL!

You get what you vote for.

Ron
Reply to  Drake
March 16, 2024 1:24 pm

So who voted for Net Zero? I don’t ever recall that being a proposition on anyone’s campaign? At least we know where Trump stands! MAGA.

March 16, 2024 4:47 am

State regulators ‘who are best suited to protect their citizens’ require state voters who habitually don’t vote for the Left.

March 16, 2024 5:24 am

This essay only covers a small portion of the problems with long transmission lines. One additional cost is the roads needed to access the tower structures and their ongoing maintenance.

Another is the lengths of these lines multiply the failure possibilities from mechanical and environmental occurrences. Losing the power transmitted over these lines will results in overloads and blackouts unless duplicated transmission paths are also built using large geographical separation to insure paths are constantly available. This will increase costs tremendously.

The distribution portion of the grid will probably dwarf the costs of transmission lines. Substations, medium voltage lines, transformers, drops, breaker box upgrades, etc. will need to be upgraded to handle the load introduced by moving to heat pumps, electric water heaters, EV charging units, etc.

Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 16, 2024 6:49 am

In other words, at some point the all-electric nuttery will run head-on into a concrete wall named the US National Electric Code.

0perator
Reply to  Jim Gorman
March 16, 2024 7:36 am

Just getting ROW for transmission structures takes lots of money, lawsuits, and time.

Reply to  0perator
March 16, 2024 9:13 am

For today’s grid, where states and locales have to agree, absolutely. Hence the drive to ‘Federalize’ the permitting process.

John XB
March 16, 2024 6:11 am

To carry and distribute the greatly increased load, if energy from motor fuels and natural gas is to be provided exclusively by electricity, substantial replacement and extension of the grid in its entirety – from generator to point of use – will also be required not just long range transmission lines to connect up dispersed wind and solar.

That will require huge amounts of alumin(i)um and copper – and of course the mined raw materials from which these are produce. Yet there is no increase in mining – none planned – to meet the sudden anticipated demand, not just from the US, but all the suicidal developed Countries. As the raw material output increasingly falls behind demand, prices will skyrocket.

Where exactly will the resources come from: capital, labour, manufacturing and processing, construction, mining, transportation and energy?

They imagine they can replace the foundations of the economy within 25 years, which took over 200 years to put in place.

Mr Ed
March 16, 2024 7:47 am

Until the radicals running this cult fail nothing will change. The wind/solar no
fossil fuel energy is not deployable and will crash. Natural gas pipelines or LNG and
local generation units would work or even small nuclear plants, but the huge
transmission lines and all electric society will fail.

March 16, 2024 8:14 am

If natural gas is available in an area, a CCGT can be installed that can feed the grid locally thereby saving much of the cost of transmission lines and have fuel efficiency exceeding 50%, 24/7 availability, take up a very few % of the real estate required by wind or solar.
And if you are an old school believer that money is representative of human toil, you can save a huge amount of human toil by just going CCGT….

Dave Andrews
Reply to  DMacKenzie
March 16, 2024 10:21 am

This link provides a comparison of the resources required to build a 100MW gas turbine and an equivalent wind or solar farm. The resources for the gas plant are far far less than those for the unreliables and the gas plant, as you say, can be built locally far more easily than the unreliables.

‘The Hard Math of Minerals’ Mark P Mills

https://issues.org/environmental/-economic-costs-minerals-solar-wind-batteries-mills/

oeman50
March 16, 2024 8:23 am

Bernie did an excellent job of pointing out issues with the NetZero inflated grid, something many people ignore are unaware of.

Case in point is the Skiffes Creek transmission project in tidewater, Virginia. It was delayed for years because the line had to cross the “historic” James River. NGOs fought tooth and nail against it in court, finding every undotted I and uncrossed t. It caused an old coal power plant to extend its life (with the accompanying emissions) by over 2 years to keep from blacking out the area. It ultimately went into service about 5 years ago, after the developer promised to pay tens of millions for “mitigation.” I call it bribery.

March 16, 2024 11:15 am

Renewable power developers see the potential for selling their electricity in higher priced power systems near urban centers, while also being able to harvest generous taxpayer subsidies…..It is time for policy makers to reaffirm that the electric grid exists to serve customers, not developers and investors.

This is what it’s really all about. The electrical supply industry has been an unholy marriage of power producers and regulators from the beginning but the spectre of “climate change” has justified a more intimate relationship, spurred by the growing environmental bureaucracy. The adoption of subsidized “renewable” energy has created expanded financial opportunities that were once only available to hydrocarbon companies and the heavily regulated dam developers and nuclear industries. It’s no surprise that such a situation should occur, but the idea that it has been embraced by the elected and appointed government is particularly troubling.

Bob
March 16, 2024 1:40 pm

Fire up all fossil fuel and nuclear generators, build new fossil fuel and nuclear generators, remove all wind and solar from the grid and update the grid.