
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.
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T&D Spending, Not Renewables, Drove Prices
- Transmission and distribution costs, not renewables or data centers, drove recent retail price increases.
- Generation costs fell 35% since 2005 while transmission tripled and distribution more than doubled due to grid hardening and weather response.
Grid Modernization Fueled By Incentives
- Utilities began a decade-long wave of grid modernization driven by aging assets and fear of lost returns.
- Regulators approved large T&D investments without rigorous cost-benefit pushes from intervenors.
Utilities Underutilize Proven Tech
- Utilities often ignore mature operational tech that could cut maintenance costs and deployment time.
- Jigar says innovation 'goes to die' in many utilities, stalling scalable solutions like dynamic line ratings.
