Video recording of the session at the bottom of this post, along with open Q&A discussion from the session taking place actively on the Energy Central Community:
The tumult produced by President Trump’s global tariffs has added a new urgency to the United States Energy Association’s next virtual press briefing.
The briefing, which took place on April 16, examined the utility industry under the rubric of “New Challenges, Old Trajectories.”Â
This briefing, part of a monthly series, will be especially critical because of the impact on the electrical supply chain of the Trump tariffs. This could outweigh the administration’s easing of environmental regulations and its coolness to the trajectory of carbon reduction that utilities have been following.
There is also the question of electricity imports which are so important to New England and other states along the northern border.
At least one Canadian province, Ontario, has talked about cutting off electricity imports even if electricity is exempted from the tariffs.
Particularly at stake is bulk electrical equipment, including transformers and turbines which are imported. Supply chains were already stressed as the industry looks to build new generation, improve and upgrade transmission, and meet rapidly increasing demand.
Aluminum from Canada is of concern because it is vital in transmission expansion and upgrading.
Some utilities are wondering if they will get the government funds they obtained through the Inflation Reduction Act and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
Rural electric cooperatives are concerned about whether they will get their approved low-interest loans and grants from the Agriculture Department under its rural electrification program.
The tumult produced by the tariff war has serious consequences for the utilities as well as their customers.
There will be a banquet of subjects about which senior journalists will be questioning an expert at the briefing. At times of uncertainty, every bite of knowledge is vital.
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On the expert panel:
- Markham Hislop, CEO, Energi Media, Canada
- David Naylor, President, Rayburn Electric Cooperative
- Jan Vrins, Partner, Clarum Advisors
- Kevin Brancato, Senior Vice President of Product Strategy, TechnoMile
- Jason Rodriguez, CEO and Co-Founder, Zpryme and Froliq
- Karl Moor, Chief Executive Officer, Powerscape Global
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On the reporters panel:
- Jennifer Hiller, The Wall Street Journal
- Herman Trabish, Utility Dive
- Ken Silverstein, Forbes,
- Peter Behr, Politico’s E&E News
- Matt Chester, Energy Central
- Adam Clayton Powell III, PBS
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Ongoing Q&As Taking Place Post Session on EnergyCentral.com:
- Given that solar and wind have made up more than 50% of new capacity in the US, with the Administration all but gutting new wind development, where do you view new capacity coming from and how quickly can the market react?
- How will forecast demand be met given the retirements of coal & nuclear and the intermittent nature of wind and solar and the continued ramp up of LNG? How will natural gas storage fit into that need?
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