Many are concerned with electricity price hikes and looming blackouts, and many are fed up with a system that prioritizes ideology and utility profits over reliability. Our electric grid is the backbone of modern life ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” powering hospitals, homes and businesses ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” but itÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s being undermined by flawed policies in our organized electricity markets.
Regional transmission organizations (RTOs), tasked with ensuring reliable, affordable electricity, are stuck in an anti-competitive mess that favors subsidized renewables over dependable power. This isnÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t just bad economics; itÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s a recipe for disaster. We need bold reform to restore fairness, protect consumers and keep the lights on.
RTOs manage vast electric grids, balancing supply and demand to prevent blackouts. They procure electricity through competitive bidding, where generators submit offers to supply power. HereÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s the catch: Most RTOs use a ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥œclearing priceÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ model, paying all accepted generators the highest winning bid, not their actual bids.
Other industries donÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t pay the highest bid accepted to all suppliers. They pay the offered price of each supplier they accept.
A coal or gas plant bidding with unfair rules that prevent them from using their actual costs, including profit, gets paid the same as subsidized renewables that bid lower. They are all paid the highest cost the RTO takes. This ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥œtake-and-payÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥ system inflates prices, distorts markets, is anti-free market, and punishes reliable, on-demand power plants.
Wind and solar, while part of our energy mix, are intermittent, producing power only when the weather cooperates. Their capacity factors ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” how much power they generate compared to their potential ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” range from a meager 18% to 40%. Yet, government subsidies and renewable portfolio standards let them flood RTO markets with low bids.
Worse, RTO bidding rules often restrict dispatchable plants ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” natural gas, coal and nuclear ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” from including facility costs, making them unprofitable. Many shut down, leaving us vulnerable to blackouts when renewables canÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t deliver.
Look at Europe, where heavy renewable reliance has led to electricity rates three to four times higher than ours and frequent grid failures. SpainÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s April 2025 blackout, affecting 55 million, showed what happens when grids lean too hard on weather-dependent power without enough dispatchable generation. WeÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™re on the same path unless we act.
Our current system overpays renewables for unreliable energy while sidelining the on-demand plants that keep the grid humming. This isnÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t competition ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” itÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s market manipulation that hikes consumer bills and risks widespread outages.
We need legislation to fix this broken system.
First, RTOs must pay generators their actual bid prices, not the highest accepted bid. This levels the playing field, rewards efficiency, and stops overpaying intermittent wind and solar.
Second, we must address the unfair advantage of intermittent sources. Wind and solar should receive discounted payments reflecting their lower value for keeping our lights on. Electricity thatÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s variable and weather-dependent isnÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t worth the same as reliable, on-demand power.
Finally, we need to fairly compensate dispatchable plants for their capacity and grid inertia. This will ensure they remain viable to meet demand when wind and solar falter. Which is often.
These changes arenÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t anti-wind-and-solar; theyÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™re pro-reliability and pro-consumer. Wind and solar can still compete, but not at the expense of grid stability or affordability. Without reform, weÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™re gambling with our energy future, inviting blackouts, and skyrocketing rates.
The data is clear: grids need dispatchable power to function. In 2023, the U.S. Energy Information Administration noted that natural gas and coal provided 60% of our electricity, stepping in when renewables couldnÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t and when electricity is needed most, when it is very hot or very cold. On-demand generators also provide blackout-preventing inertia. We canÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™t afford to let these plants disappear.
Wind and solar provide zero grid inertia. Millions in Spain and Portugal learned this expensive lesson. The blackout shaved $1.8 billion from their economy and disrupted everyoneÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s life.
Legislatures must act now. Pass legislation to fix RTO bidding rules, prioritize reliability, and protect consumers from inflated costs.
LetÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s deliver by restoring free-market principles to our electricity markets. No more subsidizing unreliability. No more risking blackouts.
ItÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s time to rebuild electricity grids that work for Americans, not bureaucrats, big profitable utilities, and foreign suppliers. The lights are on now ÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥” letÃÛÁÄÖ±²¥™s keep them that way.
Frank Lasee is the president of Truth in Energy and Climate. He wrote this column for .
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