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Remember when you were promised lower energy costs from renewables? You were lied to again. Capturing unicorn farts is massively expensive

Higher Electricity Rates In Blue States Linked To Renewable Energy Policies


WEDNESDAY, JUL 08, 2026 - 05:45 AM

Authored by AG News Staff via American Greatness,

A new analysis by Always On Energy Research and the Institute for Energy Research concludes that renewable energy mandates and net-zero policies have contributed to higher electricity prices in states that adopted them, while states with fewer climate-related mandates generally have lower electricity costs.

The analysis examined electricity pricing data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration and found that most states with electricity rates above the national average voted for the Democratic presidential nominee in the 2020 and 2024 elections.

According to the report, 86 percent of states with above-average electricity prices supported the Democratic nominee in both elections. By comparison, 80 percent of the 10 states with the lowest electricity prices voted for the Republican nominee.

Researchers said the study focused on identifying policy differences between states with higher and lower electricity rates.

Last year, the organizations highlighted California, New York, Florida, Kentucky and Louisiana as examples of how renewable portfolio standards, net-zero targets, net-metering programs and other climate-related policies may affect electricity prices.

The groups have now expanded the project, releasing detailed profiles of the original 13 colonies on the Fourth of July. Additional state profiles are expected to be published in phases.

"We wanted to have a one-stop shop where people could kind of get a feel for what's the energy mix in their state, what policies are being implemented, and what's the impact of those policies on what they're paying at the plug," Isaac Orr, vice president of research for Always On Energy Research, told Just the News.

The report evaluates whether states require utilities to obtain a minimum share of electricity from renewable sources, have utility net-zero commitments, offer net-metering programs for rooftop solar customers, impose carbon-pricing or cap-and-trade systems, restrict natural gas infrastructure or have policies related to electricity demand from data centers.

"The map shows these kinds of subtle distinctions in the price of electricity for each of these states, and we wanted to be able to demonstrate why that is from a policy perspective," Orr said.

The researchers noted that political affiliation alone does not explain electricity prices. Oregon and Washington, both Democratic-leaning states, have relatively low electricity costs because of their extensive hydroelectric generation.

According to the report, utilities may benefit financially from net-zero commitments because they can earn greater returns by investing in new infrastructure.

The organizations said they hope the project will serve as a resource for voters and policymakers evaluating the impact of state energy policies.

Alex Stevens, manager of policy and communications for the Institute for Energy Research, said the report has generated significant interest, including discussions with state officials and testimony before the Maryland Legislature on the relationship between energy policies and electricity prices.

Tom Pyle, president of the Institute for Energy Research, cited federal data showing electricity prices increased 27 percent between January 2021 and January 2025, followed by an additional 11 percent increase from January through September 2025.

Under the Federal Power Act, states have primary authority over electricity generation portfolios, retail pricing and resource planning.

"Americans deserve transparent information on how state decisions directly affect their wallet," Pyle said. "The bottom line is that the decisions that states make, good or bad, have consequences for American families and businesses when it comes to electricity affordability."

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There is no such thing as settled science

13,000-year-old bones found near SoCal coast could rewrite human history

Findings from a mysterious remote chain of islands off the coast of California are rattling bones in the science community as bone-pickers find traces of a “vanished world.”

The Golden State’s Channel Islands, located several miles off the SoCal coast, are home to the remnants of revelational lost civilizations intriguing enough to make Indiana Jones blush.

A banner finding in the area has been the 13,000-year-old remains of the “Arlington Springs Man,” the earliest dated adult found on the continent.

Findings from the remote chain of islands off the coast of California are rattling bones in the science community. NPS photo by Justin Tweet

A new documentary highlighted the extraordinary discovery, which has changed science’s thinking around where and when humans first migrated to North America. Because of the finding of the “Arlington Springs Man,” scientists believe humans could have been on the continent earlier than the Clovis culturerecognized as landing in the area first.

The “Arlington Springs Man” was found on Santa Rosa Island among the four northern Channel Islands, which also include San Miguel, Santa Cruz and Anacapa. Other major islands in the archipelago include the Southern Channel Islands of Santa Catalina, Santa Barbara, San Clemente and San Nicolas.

The “Arlington Springs Man” was found on Santa Rosa Island among the four northern Channel Islands. NPS
Evidence found on the islands suggests humans could have arrived via boat instead of crossing an inland ice corridor.  Getty Images

Bones of the man were discovered 37 feet below sand, mud and gravel in 1959.

Evidence found on the Channel Islands suggests humans could have arrived via boat instead of crossing an inland ice corridor. If true, it would overturn the conventional thinking that Americans crossed a land bridge from modern-day Siberia and traveled south.

Instead, ancient humans could have used “kelp highways” to assist them in traveling by boat along the Pacific shoreline to settle in the Channel Islands.

“This connects with the whole idea of a coastal migration, an ancient coastal migration where people would have been using watercraft and going around glaciers when they encountered them and working their way down until they came to California,” UC Santa Barbara anthropology professor John Johnson said.

Johnson believes the people who arrived on the Channel Islands evolved into the Chumash tribe, native to California’s central and southern coast.

“People showed up on this island 13,000 years ago or thereabouts and evolved through time into the group we know as the Chumash,” he said.

Johnson believes the people who arrived on the Channel Islands evolved into California’s Chumash tribe. NPS photo by Justin Tweet

What do you think? Post a comment.

Bones of the man were discovered 37 feet below sand, mud, and gravel in 1959. NPS photo by Justin Tweet

Other findings from the Channel Islands include the bones of pygmy mammoths, a type of dwarf mammoth native to the northern Channel Islands. The tiny mammoths were much smaller than the popular woolly mammoth, coming in at around 4.5 to 7 feet high at the shoulders and weighing about 2,000 pounds.

Wooly mammoths were several times bigger, coming in at 14 feet tall and weighing about 20,000 pounds.

The mini mammoths are thought to have gone extinct around the time that humans arrived on the Channel Islands and when worldwide climates began changing. No exact cause has been determined for their disappearance.

Europeans arrived on the islands in 1542, with Portuguese explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo making landfall. Cabrillo chose to winter on the islands after storms forced his ships to turn back before sighting the San Francisco Bay.

“This was the furthest projection of Europe into a world that they knew nothing about,” one historian said.

Cabrillo would die there after shattering a limb during a skirmish with indigenous tribes and dying from the complications of the injury in January 1543.