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    HomeGreen InfrastructureRenewable EnergyThese downballot elections may slow the shift to clean energy

    These downballot elections may slow the shift to clean energy

    Some of the votes Americans cast on Tuesday that may have mattered most for the climate were quite a bit downballot from the presidential ticket: A handful of states held elections for the commissions that regulate utilities, and thereby exercise direct control over what sort of energy mix will fuel the coming years’ expected growth in electricity demand. In three closely watched races around the country — the utility commissions in Arizona, Montana, and Louisiana — Republican candidates either won or are in the lead. While they generally pitched themselves to voters as market-friendly, favoring an all-of-the-above approach to energy, clean energy advocates interviewed by Grist cast these candidates as deferential to the power companies they aspired to regulate.

    Arizona is, in a word, sunny. Its geography makes it “the famously obvious place to…

    Read full article originally published on grist.org

    Grist
    Gristhttps://grist.org
    A nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
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