
Open Circuit The real reason electricity prices are rising
114 snips
Oct 31, 2025 Caroline Golin, CEO of Envision Energy Advisors and former Google energy market chief, joins to explore why electricity prices are rising. Surprisingly, industrial growth in states like North Dakota and Texas has sometimes helped lower prices. The real culprits are soaring transmission and distribution costs, largely due to grid upgrades for extreme weather. They also discuss innovative proposals to streamline connections for large data centers and the ongoing tug-of-war between federal and state regulations that could shape the future of energy costs.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Mandates Can Raise Network Costs
- Market-based renewables lowered prices while some RPS-driven projects raised costs via added network upgrades.
- Mandates sometimes forced projects that required expensive transmission investments.
Use Large Loads To Spread Grid Costs
- Use new large loads to spread fixed T&D costs across more customers and lower per-kWh bills.
- Place and plan large loads deliberately so they reduce, not increase, average rates.
Homeowner Told Rates Rose Due To Efficiency
- Jigar recalled a Connecticut homeowner told utilities they raised rates because customers used less electricity.
- That moment revealed how utilities view load growth as a remedy for high rates.
