The New York Times Publishes False Energy and Climate Information and Refuses to Correct Its Errors

By Howard Gruenspecht

Articles addressing energy and climate topics in The New York Times (NYT) increasingly include Inaccurate data and false information. The problem is compounded by the paper’s failure to follow its own corrections policy when errors are called to its attention. 

Readers look to the NYT to deliver well-reasoned and fact-checked information and analysis in areas where they are not themselves experts. However, based on my professional focus on data and analysis of energy and related environmental issues over the past 45 years, which includes White House and Department of Energy senior positions in the Carter, Bush 41, Clinton, Bush 43, Obama, and Trump 45 administrations as well as work at leading universities and think tanks, NYT coverage of these subjects too often fails to live up to its own standards for accuracy and journalistic integrity. 

As a lifetime reader of the NYT, the frequency of errors and a refusal to fix them raises doubts regarding the accuracy of information presented on other topics. Whether or not the problem extends beyond energy and climate, the NYT readership clearly deserves better. 

Three recent NYT articles illustrate the problem: a July 22 article by Max Bearak, ostensibly reporting on remarks by UN Secretary-General Guterres’ on renewable energy; a May 26 article by Ivan Penn on competition between electric vehicles (EVs) and vehicles powered by internal combustion engine (ICEVs); and an April 23 column by David Wallace-Wells on the loss of cultural and political momentum for action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. These are considered in turn below, followed by some summary conclusions. 

  1. Max Bearak’s July 22 2025 article “U.S. Is Missing the Century’s ‘Greatest Economic Opportunity,’ U.N. Chief Says” (July 23 print edition).

The article opens with a review of UN Secretary-General Guterres’ remarks promoting renewable energy investment as both an economic opportunity and an environmental imperative. With deft mixing of quoted and unquoted words, Bearak reports that Guterres explicitly criticized the U.S. and other countries that follow its policies on fossil fuels. Though that may well be the Secretary-General opinion, that view is not borne out in the as-delivered transcript of his remarks.

The bulk of the article turns to a discussion of energy data and climate policy that attempts to explain why the current situation has arisen, noting that this material was “left unsaid” by Mr. Guterres. From this point forward the reporter’s own analysis seeks to establish that China, in contrast to the U.S., is constructively pursuing a green energy transition. Unfortunately, the article presents faulty and misleading data. 

In seeking to highlight China’s constructive role the article states “Over the past decade, China has gone from a largely coal-powered economy to one that is deploying more renewable energy than anywhere else.”  Growth in China’s production and deployment of a wide range of renewable energy technologies is indeed very impressive. However, data in the 2025 Statistical Review of Word Energy (a widely-respected source of energy data available online here), show that China is still largely powered by coal. In 2024 coal provided 58.1% of China’s total energy use (92.2 out of 158.9 exajoules), while in 2014 it accounted for 69.8% of China’s energy use (82.1 out of 117.6 exajoules). (FYI, 1 exajoule = 947.8 trillion British Thermal Units).Thus, coal still dominates in China’s energy mix, although coal use grew more slowly than total energy use over the past decade.   

Following its discussion of China’s renewable energy progress, the article turns to energy use and production the U.S. and other rich countries. It incorrectly states that “Relatively wealthy countries like the U.S., Canada, Australia and Saudi Arabia are also the world’s biggest producers of fossil fuels.”   Data in the 2025 Statistical Review show that China’s total production of coal, oil, and natural gas totaled 112.3 exajoules in 2024, 32% higher than that of the second leading producer, the U.S., which totaled 85.0 exajoules. Indeed, China’s production of coal (94.5 exajoules) alone exceeds the total fossil fuel production of any other country. Moreover, the 2024 data is no anomaly; China has been by far the world’s largest fossil fuel producer in every year since 2005.        

Despite having contacted the NYT corrections team and the author to point out these errors, as well as the article’s mischaracterization of the temperature-related aim of the 2015 Paris Agreement, no corrections have been made to date. 

  1. Ivan Penn’s May 26 2025 article “Electric Vehicles Died a Century Ago: Could that Happen Again?”  (May 27 print edition).

The article draws a parallel between the current competition between electric vehicles (EVs) and those with internal combustion engines (ICEVs) and the competition between them at the dawn of the automobile age. According to the article “scholars who have studied the earlier age of electric vehicles see parallels in their demise in the early decades of the 1900s and the attacks they are facing now. In both eras, electric cars struggled to gain acceptance in the marketplace and were undermined by politics.” 

Actions taken since the start of the Trump Administration to eliminate EV subsidies and to modify mandates and regulations that would have forced very rapid rates of EV adoption do matter.These actions are widely expected to slow, but not stop, EV market share growth, compared to the outlook assuming a continuation of Biden-era policies. However, available data and research clearly refute the claim that the market extinction of EVs a hundred year ago can be attributed to lawmakers of that era having “put their thumbs on the scale — and coming out on the side of oil” by enacting a very generous oil depletion allowance in 1926.

The oil policy changes discussed in the article cannot have played a major role in the demise of EVs a century ago because EVs were already on their deathbed before they occurred. Data on vehicle manufacturing and registrations show that at least 98%, and possibly more than 99%, of the 17.5 million vehicles registered to operate in 1925 were already ICEVs. The article avoids recognizing that reality, which directly undercuts its line of argument. 

The Department of Energy’s History of Electric Cars paper, prepared during the Obama Administration, specifically notes that the market share of EV sales peaked in 1899 and 1900 and declined thereafter, while the absolute level of EV production peaked in 1912 and declined thereafter. The early peaking of both EV market share and production occurred against the backdrop of explosive growth in both annual vehicle sales (from 4,200 in 1900 to 181,000 in 1910 and 3.74 million in 1925) and total vehicle registrations (from 8000 in 1900 to 459,000 in 1910 to 17.5 million in 1925). The History of Electric Cars paper also identifies the four major drivers of the EV decline in the early 20th century: improved roads, which favored ICEVs that could offer long range capability; oil discoveries in Texas that led to lower gasoline prices; the invention of the electric starter, which eliminated the need for a hand crank to start ICEVs; and mass production of ICEVs, which dramatically lowered their cost. The 1926 oil tax policy change does not make the list. Indeed, it is not even mentioned in the paper.

Federal policy can sometimes be a key driver of energy market outcomes, as has arguably been the case with the Price Anderson Act that enabled commercial nuclear power, the Natural Gas Act, and renewable fuel content mandates. That said, the fate of EVs a century ago shows that federal policies are not always a significant factor in market outcomes. Today’s EV advocates can draw solace from that point, since modern EVs have many positive attributes that should favor continued EV market share growth, and perhaps a future market-leading role, even with the recent removal of some policy stimulants.

  1. David Wallace-Wells’ April 23, 2025 article, “The World Seems to Be Surrendering to Climate Change” (subsequently revised twice).

Wallace-Wells discusses the declining cultural and political momentum for ambitious action to limit greenhouse gas emissions in recent years, noting that this trend applies both domestically and globally. 

In closing, the article observes that when climate advocates reckon with the loss of cultural and political momentum they often point to green records set each year. After reviewing some of these recent records and pointing out that a staggering share of global progress is taking place in China, Wallace-Wells notes that progress in the U.S. can be similarly breathtaking. It is here that problems in both the data cited and in the NYT corrections process are clearly evident.

In describing U.S. green energy progress, the original version of the article stated that electricity generation from renewables exceeded that from fossil fuels in 2024, which is woefully incorrect. Data readily available from the U.S. Energy Information Administration website and many other sources show that renewables provided 20% of 2024 US generation compared to 60% from fossil fuels. 

The NYT did issue a correction, but the initial one it posted on April 25 claimed that monthly electricity generated by renewables in the U.S. exceeded the amount generated using fossil fuels for the first time in March. That updated claim was also wrong, as fossil generation substantially exceeded renewable generation in both March 2024 and March 2025. When this new error was called to its attention, the paper issued a further correction, still dated April 25, that now appears on its website. The final correction took an approach that is simultaneously misleading for readers and instructive regarding how hard the NYT strives to avoid issuing clear substantive corrections that may embarrass its authors or cast doubt on its preferred narratives. Rather than simply strike the original errant point or its errant replacement, which are not at all central to the main focus of the article, the second correction reframes it as a comparison between generation from clean sources and fossil fuels. The trick here is that “clean sources” evidently includes include nuclear generation, which provides roughly 20% of U.S. generation, to finally make the comparison valid. However, nuclear is not once mentioned in the article or in the final correction note, which even suggests that the original article was also comparing generation from clean sources and fossil fuels. The losers here are the general readers, who would likely assume that “clean sources” is simply a synonym for “renewables” and never know that they had been badly misled.

Conclusion

Unfortunately, I could go on – the three articles reviewed above are only examples of a larger problem that has been evident for some time. 

The NYT, which has a very deep bench of staff who specialize in energy and climate matters, including the authors of these articles, must do better. Bearak should be able to correctly identify the world’s largest fossil fuel producer and coal’s continuing role as the dominant energy source in China. Penn should be able to recognize that history does not support the notion that EV developments today are repeating, or even closely rhyming with, the history of EVs a century ago. The temptation to craft tidy morality fable or reprise the origins dubious oil depletion policy first introduced in the mid-1920s that provided a huge windfall to the oil industry does not grant a license to posit a clearly invalid parallelism. The editors overseeing these articles also bear responsibility. 

Finally, even when factual errors do slip into articles, a sound and well-implemented corrections policy can greatly mitigate the damage. The stated NYT correction policy that “when we learn of a mistake, we acknowledge it with a correction” is sound, but its current implementation is atrocious. The so-called Grey Lady of journalism should be blushing in shame. The paper quickly corrects errors that are of minor importance to most readers, such as misspelled names, incorrect job titles, or inaccurate event dates. However, when substantive factual errors are identified and reported to the paper, as in the examples discussed above, its response is to either stonewall, as in the case of the Bearak article, or to obfuscate and evade, as in its correction of the comparison of renewable and fossil fuel generation levels in the Wallace-Wells article. In the latter case, the common observation that the cover-up is often worse than the crime clearly applies.  

The NYT must always remember that the purpose of corrections is to inform the reader of what is actually true, rather than to protect its writers from embarrassment or protect preferred narratives that cannot withstand scrutiny. 

Howard Gruenspecht served in senior White House positions in the Carter and Bush 41 Administrations, in Deputy Assistant Secretary and Office Director roles in the Department of Energy policy office during the Bush 41 and Clinton Administrations, and as the Deputy Administrator (top non-political position) of the U.S. Energy Information Administration, which provides independent energy data and analysis, during the Bush 43, Obama, and Trump 45 Administrations. 

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

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Neil Pryke
August 21, 2025 10:41 pm

It’s like using a pea-shooter against an elephant…but better than nothing,,,

Leon de Boer
August 21, 2025 10:56 pm

Yeah China is going all in on renewables … oh wait 🙂

https://theelectricityhub.com/china-greenlights-10-nuclear-reactors-to-boost-energy-capacity-by-2025/

China intends to build 150 new nuclear reactors between 2020 and 2035, with 27 currently under construction 🙂

heme212
August 21, 2025 10:57 pm

“Readers look to the NYT to deliver well-reasoned and fact-checked information and analysis in areas where they are not themselves experts.”

knoll’s law

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  heme212
August 22, 2025 8:19 am

Knoll’s law of media accuracy is the adage that “everything you read in the newspapers is absolutely true, except for the rare story of which you happen to have firsthand knowledge”.

Funny that Google AI could not recognized this:

“There is no recognized concept or established “Knoll’s Law of Media Accuracy”; searches for this specific phrase do not yield results describing a known law or principle in media studies. It is possible this refers to a less-known principle or a misremembered term, as there are established concepts like Marshall McLuhan’s Laws of Media or cognitive biases like the Law of the Instrument, but nothing specifically linked to someone named Knoll regarding media accuracy. “

There were at least 3 pages of links related to Knoll’s Law in the Google search.

AI? Hmmmm.

Yiddy Scher
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 24, 2025 2:29 pm

That would be known as the “Gell-Mann amnesia” effect.
Michael Crichton popularized the term: you notice a newspaper (or reporter) getting things spectacularly wrong in an area you know well, you shrug it off, then you read the same paper’s story on something you don’t know and assume it’s accurate. Crichton named it after physicist Murray Gell-Mann to make the point about misplaced trust in the media.

altipueri
August 22, 2025 12:10 am

It’s as bad in the UK with the BBC and The Guardian.
Fibs, exaggeration and downright lies.

Even The Times and Financial Times print climate change nonsense.

Carl
August 22, 2025 12:48 am

It’s like the writer thinks the NYT is a genuine newspaper doing its best to inform the public, but the writer has noticed a few mistakes. No, the NYT is a fake news purveyor of lies trying to deceive the public and to push their left wing agenda. If the writer understands that, things won’t be so confusing.

Reply to  Carl
August 22, 2025 4:30 am

I agree with Carl.

The New York Times is a leftwing propaganda organ and always has been. Expecting to get the truth out of the New York Times is a “bridge too far”.

We can go back to when the New York Times covered up for Stalin when he starved millions of Ukrainians to death.

Or their Pulitzer Prize for reporting the fake Russia/Trump collusion Hoax as if it were an established fact. Where’s their correction of this lie they promoted?

I keep seeing gullible people who keep scolding the leftwing media to do the right thing. It’s not going to happen. They are doing the wrong thing on purpose. Your scolding has no effect on them. Wake up and smell the coffee!

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Abbott
August 22, 2025 8:25 am

It is curious how the Holodomor 9 million dead of starvation over 15 months or so has been rewritten at 5 million. I suppose this is to ensure Stalin is portrayed as less evil than Hitler.

MarkW
Reply to  Carl
August 22, 2025 7:54 am

In the 1930’s the NYT won a Pulitzer for their efforts to cover up the Holodomor in Russia.

strativarius
August 22, 2025 1:30 am

The Germans have a name for it…

Lugenpresse

Reply to  strativarius
August 22, 2025 2:37 am

Lügenpresse, to be precise 😉

strativarius
Reply to  varg
August 22, 2025 5:11 am

You get the Nick Stokes prize. Well done.

Reply to  strativarius
August 22, 2025 6:03 am

Indeed, no umlauts for you, my friend!

Reply to  Frank from NoVA
August 22, 2025 6:20 am

Umlaute 😆😉

Reply to  strativarius
August 22, 2025 6:19 am

Haha hey I also have typos once in a while, trying to do my best managing 5 languages without mixing them 😉

observa
August 22, 2025 2:37 am

Meanwhile in Victoristan the Californy of Oz some are coming around to the Trump view-
‘Murder waiting to happen’: plea for crime crackdown
With lefty Utopia and conspicuous empathy you just have to be patient while they stick their fingers in their ears and go ting aling aloo!

Reply to  observa
August 22, 2025 4:37 am

It was reported this morning that there has not been a murder reported in Washington DC since Trump took charge of security for the city a week ago.

Trump says he is also going to beautify Washington DC, including planting new grass in all the open spaces and fixing all the roads.

Trump is going to set an example for all other crime-ridden cities. You actually can crack down on criminals and have a safe city, if you know what you are doing. Trump knows, and is going to show others his technique.

August 22, 2025 2:40 am

Something tells me that the New York Times suffers from dwindling subscribers, as so many other newspapers…well deserved if you only print crap and propaganda.

Derg
August 22, 2025 4:01 am

Simon didn’t the Times win a Pulitzer for their stories on Russia colluuuusion 😉

Reply to  Derg
August 22, 2025 4:50 am

Yes, the New York Times lied about Trump and knew they were lying, or at least, knew they were promoting Obama administration propaganda.

Maybe some of these New York Times reporters and editors will be called into testify before Congress on their role in the Obama administration’s treasonous attack on Democracy, and their political opponents, using the power of the federal government as their weapon.

It looks like the Obama administration was too stupid or arrogant to hide the documents. All their crimes are laid out nicely.

Barack Obama, and Joe Biden and the members of their Cabinet are Traitors to their country. They tried to rig the election process, using the power of the federal government, to prevent their political opposition from gaining power, and keeping the Democrats in power in perpetuity. They tried to take away the votes of anyone who didn’t vote for them.

Now their treasonous plan is all unraveling. And thank God for that. One-Party Democrat control of the United States would be nothing but a Dictatorship.

We dodged this bullet, but the battle is not over by a long shot. The Traitorous Democrats are still trying to implement their One-Party Rule, by hook or crook.

The latest headline is: The FBI has just raided John Bolton’s house. The FBI Director says “NO ONE is above the law.”

MarkW
Reply to  Tom Abbott
August 22, 2025 7:58 am

The writers at the NYC and most other news organizations serve a higher calling.
Promoting a one world government run by their ideological brethren.
One in which everyone is happy and loving. And those who aren’t, just disappear.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Tom Abbott
August 22, 2025 8:27 am

Giving the unearned benefit of the doubt, they may, possibly, have not been behind it. They certainly were aware of it and did nothing to stop it.

Walter Sobchak
August 22, 2025 4:39 am

You are far to kind to the NYTimes. It is now and has been for at least a century a left wing propaganda rag. Symptoms have included Walter Duranty shilling for Stalin, Herbert Mathews propagandizing for Castro, and the “1619 Project” and its racist propaganda.

It hasn’t changed and it is not going to change.

Erik Magnuson
Reply to  Walter Sobchak
August 22, 2025 9:20 am

Glad someone brought up Duranty as that story blends in well with Dergs comment. The fact that neither the NYT or the Pulitzer prize folks have renounced Duranty speaks poorly of their commitment to truth in reporting.

rovingbroker
August 22, 2025 5:00 am

My experience has been that newspapers are generalist reporters of “news” and their job is to sell advertising. That worked when communication was slow and scarce and, short of owning a telegraph, newspapers were the only source of “news.” Technology has advanced and today delivers news from specialist reporters and experts in many fields.

So now, as consumers of “the news”, it is left to us to vet our sources and concentrate on those which are experienced experts in their chosen field.

The New York Times has a lot of reporters, readers and subscribers but I wouldn’t go to them for information about cardio-vascular disease — an industry that I’ve worked in for decades.

MarkW
Reply to  rovingbroker
August 22, 2025 8:00 am

About the only thing I would ever go to the NYT for information on, is whatever the far left is thinking these days.
Counting on them for facetual information on anything else is a fools errand.
(That applies to just about every other major news organization as well.)

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  rovingbroker
August 22, 2025 8:29 am

The one proud bearers of the torch of freedom, free speech, etc., have been acquired by large corporations that have taken away their independence and transformed them into profit centers.

Ad clicks generate revenue. Follow the money.

Dave Fair
Reply to  rovingbroker
August 22, 2025 10:04 am

I first learned that as a young combat soldier in Vietnam (both pro and con reported views), continuing that observation into later life. The most egregious example is CBS’s 60 Minutes: In every instance they did a segment on electric power topics they screwed up on some major issues.

August 22, 2025 5:32 am

in today’s WSJ

Why Solar and Wind Power Can Thrive Without SubsidiesRising electricity demand, in part due to AI needs, along with the increasing cost of alternatives should cushion the impact for green energy
https://www.wsj.com/business/energy-oil/why-solar-and-wind-power-can-thrive-without-subsidies-cee47663?st=EigRoZ&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

rhs
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
August 22, 2025 5:53 am

Good, let’s prove wind and solar can thrive without subsidies.
If the critics are wrong, no one will be worse for ware.
If the critics are right, then we’ve stopped throwing good money into a money pit.
Either way something is learned and the tyranny of the status is broken.

MarkW
Reply to  rhs
August 22, 2025 8:03 am

We also have to remove the mandates that require the production of wind and solar. Otherwise, the situation hasn’t improved. We’ve just changed the financing of this boondoogle so that consumers are now bearing all the burden directly.

rxc6422
August 22, 2025 5:52 am

“As a lifetime reader of the NYT, the frequency of errors and a refusal to fix them raises doubts regarding the accuracy of information presented on other topics. Whether or not the problem extends beyond energy and climate, the NYT readership clearly deserves better. ”

Whenever you read a story in the popular media which covers a subject for which you have personal knowledge and experience, you can ALWAYS find errors, omissions, and spin. Because the author is not trying to just report the news, but to tailor it to his/her messages. Which naturally leads to the conclusion that the rest of the information in that publication, for which you have no personal experience, is automatically suspect. You cannot trust ANYTHING said in publications like the NYT, except, perhaps, who actually won the big game last night. Nothing else.

CD in Wisconsin
August 22, 2025 6:13 am

“Articles addressing energy and climate topics in The New York Times (NYT) increasingly include Inaccurate data and false information. The problem is compounded by the paper’s failure to follow its own corrections policy when errors are called to its attention.”
———————–

Orwell’s “Ministry of Truth” in his “Nineteen-Eighty-Four” is very much alive and well here in the real world.

As much as anything else, the novel remains an instruction manual for doing things in politics today.

Erik Magnuson
Reply to  CD in Wisconsin
August 22, 2025 9:23 am

Unfortunately it seems that 1984 is not used as much in high school as it was back in the 60’s and 70’s. Almost makes me think that the current crop of educators want to memory-hole it.

CD in Wisconsin
Reply to  Erik Magnuson
August 22, 2025 12:37 pm

“…….the current crop of educators want to memory-hole it.”

Yes, probably. We here in Oceania are not supposed to know what is being done to us.

August 22, 2025 6:28 am

This isn’t new for the NY Times. Just read The Gray Lady Winked

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  MIke McHenry
August 22, 2025 8:31 am

Washington Post is also on the list of read with care.

August 22, 2025 6:31 am

As much as I would line to see news outlets been shut down for their blatant lies, I’m a strong defender of free speech…lies or truth…without government intervention truth always prevails, consequences included.

A german saying: “Lügen haben kurze Beine”… sloppy and freely translated: “lies won’t get you very far”…time will tell.

Sorry for all the foreign “typo-Nazi” I sometimes can be, my teachers back in the days were truly bitches 😉

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  varg
August 22, 2025 8:37 am

Free speech is very important, no question.

However, when you are broadcasting to millions, you have an obligation to be fair and unbiased and to expedite corrections when they are pointed out.

Failure to do so treads into the realm of propaganda.
Propaganda is also Constitutionally protected, but that does not make it justified in a news organization.

What’s worse is that all of this is being used to brainwash, erm, indoctrinate our youth.

There are Constitutional limits on free speech, generally when such speech causes harm.
One cannot legally shout “fire” in a crowded theater, for example.

I submit it is time for serious consideration of addressing journalistic integrity versus free speech.

Ill Tempered Klavier
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 22, 2025 2:20 pm

When there is no fire.

Reply to  Ill Tempered Klavier
August 23, 2025 2:36 am

Yeah, if there’s a fire, it’s ok to yell. 🙂

Dick Burk
August 22, 2025 7:15 am

“Readers look to the NYT to deliver well-reasoned and fact-checked information and analysis in areas where they are not themselves experts.”

Seriously?

MarkW
Reply to  Dick Burk
August 22, 2025 8:05 am

A lifetime of bad habits, are hard to change.

MarkW
August 22, 2025 7:52 am

If renewables are such a great investment, why do they need subsidies and why do governments have to force them on us?

Reply to  MarkW
August 23, 2025 2:39 am

Trump doesn’t like windmills or industrial solar.

That’s because Trump is a rational human being.

Sparta Nova 4
August 22, 2025 8:14 am

I anticipate the trolls feasting on this.

Now to read the comments to determine if that conjecture is validated.

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 22, 2025 10:43 am

My conjecture thus far is disproven.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
August 23, 2025 2:40 am

Even the trolls won’t defend the New York Times.

Tom Halla
August 22, 2025 9:55 am

Assuming good faith reporting by the New York Times might be a decent rhetorical element, but has not existed to any great extent in history.
Offhand, I can recall the push for the Sullivan Act in the 1910’s, whitewashing Stalin in the 1930’s, and again whitewashing Fidel Castro in the 1950’s. Their Russiagate series more recently continues their tradition.

August 22, 2025 10:49 am

People take journalism in college to avoid taking higher math requirements.

My father taught journalism at a prestigious college after a long career as a newspaper reporter and journalist.

Every year during the first day of classes, he would write a big, fake integration formula concerning journalism requirements on the blackboard to weed out those students and reduce the class size to those genuinely interested in the subject. He said it always worked.

August 22, 2025 2:04 pm

They’re not the only ones. Here’s the Independent, trying to pretend that renewables aren’t high cost:

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/trump-blames-renewable-energy-for-rising-electricity-prices-experts-point-elsewhere/ar-AA1KYKkL

Where do the “experts” point?

Energy analysts say renewable sources have little to do with recent price hikes, which are based on increased demand, aging infrastructure and increasingly extreme weather events such as wildfires that are exacerbated by climate change.

The rapid growth of cloud computing and artificial intelligence has fueled demand for energy-hungry data centers that need power to run servers, storage systems, networking equipment and cooling systems. Increased use of electric vehicles also has boosted demand, even as the Trump administration and congressional Republicans move to restrict tax credits and other incentives for EV purchases approved under the Biden administration.

Natural gas prices, meanwhile, are rising sharply amid increased exports to Europe and other international customers. More than 40% of U.S. electricity is generated by natural gas.

“By quickly phasing out technology-neutral clean energy tax credits and adding complex material sourcing requirements,” the tax law will “significantly hamper the development of domestic electricity generation capacity,” the report said.

Tech neutral?? really? “complex material sourcing requirements” is banning products made by slaves. So in reality we have that renewables would now have to compete on a level playing field. And Natural Gas prices? now back under $3/MMBtu, or 1¢/kWh at Henry Hub, and on a shallow downtrend since winter.

NGV25_Barchart_Interactive_Chart_08_22_2025
August 22, 2025 8:18 pm

I’d like to address the following ‘correction point’ made in the article, which I think is misleading.

“In seeking to highlight China’s constructive role the article states “Over the past decade, China has gone from a largely coal-powered economy to one that is deploying more renewable energy than anywhere else.” Growth in China’s production and deployment of a wide range of renewable energy technologies is indeed very impressive. However, data in the 2025 Statistical Review of Word Energy (a widely-respected source of energy data available online here), show that China is still largely powered by coal. In 2024 coal provided 58.1% of China’s total energy use (92.2 out of 158.9 exajoules), while in 2014 it accounted for 69.8% of China’s energy use (82.1 out of 117.6 exajoules).”

The quoted figures above show that China has reduced its percentage of energy use from coal during the past 10 years, despite a massive increase in GDP

In other words, whilst coal consumption, as a percentage of energy use, has decreased by 11.7%, since 2014, GDP has increased by 65.22%, according to information from the internet, which means that China’s reliance upon coal is reducing whilst it’s reliance opon ‘so-called’ renewables, or alternative energy sources, is increasing significantly.

So, the New York Times was not wrong on this point.

Reply to  Vincent
August 22, 2025 9:46 pm

I think I might have made a mathematical error in my above comment. Whilst the difference between 69.8 and 58.1 is 11.7, the reduction is not 11.7%. It’s approximately 18%. So we have an 18% reduction in the energy proportion of coal use, compared with a 65.2% increase in overall energy use.

MarkW
Reply to  Vincent
August 24, 2025 7:55 pm

Except coal use in China is going up, fast. Indeed it is increasing faster than in any other country.

Yiddy Scher
August 24, 2025 2:28 pm

As a lifetime reader of the NYT, the frequency of errors and a refusal to fix them raises doubts regarding the accuracy of information presented on other topics. Whether or not the problem extends beyond energy and climate, the NYT readership clearly deserves better. 

Where there’s doubt, there’s no doubt.
Otherwise, that would be known as the “Gell-Mann amnesia” effect.
Michael Crichton popularized the term: you notice a newspaper (or reporter) getting things spectacularly wrong in an area you know well, you shrug it off, then you read the same paper’s story on something you don’t know and assume it’s accurate. Crichton named it after physicist Murray Gell-Mann to make the point about misplaced trust in the media.
BTW, Crichton named it after Murray Gell-Mann because Gell-Mann himself reportedly experienced this phenomenon and discussed it with Crichton.