Trump order to keep Michigan coal plant running will mean higher energy bills in Wisconsin
Families and businesses across the Midwest, including here in Wisconsin, will be footing the bill to bring an empty coal plant back online in Michigan. In May, the Trump Administration used an emergency order to force Consumers Energy to truck coal back on site and fire up the old plant. So far, that has come with a price tag of $29 million in just 5 weeks.
Consumers Energy, the utility that owns the plant, will be allowed to recoup its costs to bring the plant back online through price increases on customers across the Midwest grid, including families and businesses in Wisconsin. Gallagher says the Trump Administration will likely issue similar orders in the coming months to keep other imminently retiring coal plants open. Complying with those orders will come with high costs that ultimately fall to customers.
“The Trump Administration is pushing chaos into our carefully planned energy system. It’s expensive, wasteful, and there is absolutely no benefit to customers or utilities. Coal plants are retiring because they don’t make economic sense anymore, and the pollution they cause is devastating for the communities where they are located,” Gallagher says.
The Trump tariffs are already increasing costs for all energy resource installations including solar, wind, batteries, and gas, and the Administration’s focus on increasing natural gas exports has raised electricity costs across the country. Meantime, Congress has eliminated clean energy incentives that had been available the Inflation Reduction Act that helped lower electricity prices.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.