There’s way too much news. I’m a like thirsty man trying to drink from a firehose.
Every day I read three daily Connecticut newspapers, several Connecticut news sites, the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and then catch the evening news on BBC, France24, Deutsche Welle and PBS. (I don’t even bother with the commercial networks or the ‘terror-tainment’ on the cable channels).
But while drowning in content, I sometimes find disparate news items that present a pattern, often disturbing.
A case in point, our state’s electric future. It seems that some in Hartford want to ban the sale in our state of all but electric cars by 2035. This would be to help our state fight the impending doom of global warming (as if there’s still time). You’d still be able to keep your gas guzzler (which would probably increase in value), just not replace it with anything that doesn’t run only on batteries.
I don’t want to debate the merits of the plan beyond asking a question I first asked last November: Will Connecticut have enough electricity and transmission capacity to handle that growing demand for power?
Eversource, one of the major electricity providers in Massachusetts, expects a 20% increase in demand there in the next decade and a 150% increase by 2050, thanks to a surge in transportation and home heating. They plan to build new substations and expand others, expanding their grid by 180%, enough to handle 2.5 million more EVs and a million heat pumps in the Bay State.
I asked Eversource for the specifics of their expansion plans in Connecticut but they could not provide details in time to include here. However, Eversource says it’s committed to “building out” its transmission network.
But remember, Eversource just delivers the juice. They don’t generate it. That’s where the utility companies come in. So… where will the new electricity come from? While only 6% of current electricity comes from “renewables,” just 13% of that small amount is from wind power.
But that will change. A massive wind farm is being assembled off Martha’s Vineyard that will, next year, start supplying over 700 MW of electricity to 350,00 Connecticut and Massachusetts homes using New London’s State Pier as a construction staging area.
But wind power isn’t free of its own problems. Last week all nine members of Rhode Island’s Fisherman’s Advisory Board resigned en masse, protesting the wind farms which they say will decimate commercial and recreational fishing.
So much news, so little time, even for a self-avowed news junkie like me to try to put the puzzle pieces together.
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Jim Cameron has been a Darien resident for more than 25 years. He is the founder of the Commuter Action Group, sits on the Merritt Parkway Conservancy board and also serves on the Darien RTM and as program director for Darien TV79. You can reach him at CommuterActionGroup@gmail.com.