The highest share of renewable energy in 2024 were Iowa, South Dakota, Kansas, New Mexico and California.
These maps are a pretty good representation of how cheap renewable energy is when you have a market based renewable system vs a subsidy/regulatory scheme like California
Specific_Mammoth_169 on
Nuclear all the way until fusion happens
aaapod on
shoutout to the PG&E criminal organization
InternetUser52 on
North Dakota getting cheaper

goharvorgohome on
This map is probably already outdated with the rapid rise in data center construction
ThinConnection8191 on
Everyday I go to work pass PGE office and it ruined my day!
External_Tension_266 on
Kind of crazy how New Mexico hasn’t really changed on price.
Creeping_Death on
North Dakota looks great now but at least one of the major providers in the state (looks like it has coverage in 3 of the 4 biggest metros) announced price hikes that are coming soon.
emtaesealp on
Please include Puerto Rico in maps like this. We have the highest energy prices in the US. The data is available.
davypi on
Genuine curious how the Texas power crisis of 2021 factors into this graph. Are their rates so low for the other five years that it suppresses the outlier, or was the outlier removed, or something else?
lotuskid731 on
r/FuckPGandE is a daily chant in my neck of the woods.
alamohero on
We really need to see 2024-25. Mine stayed pretty steady the past few years but exploded by over 50% from last summer to this summer. And this summer was about the same as last year so it wasn’t _that_ much hotter.
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i hate PG&E
The highest share of renewable energy in 2024 were Iowa, South Dakota, Kansas, New Mexico and California.
These maps are a pretty good representation of how cheap renewable energy is when you have a market based renewable system vs a subsidy/regulatory scheme like California
Nuclear all the way until fusion happens
shoutout to the PG&E criminal organization
North Dakota getting cheaper

This map is probably already outdated with the rapid rise in data center construction
Everyday I go to work pass PGE office and it ruined my day!
Kind of crazy how New Mexico hasn’t really changed on price.
North Dakota looks great now but at least one of the major providers in the state (looks like it has coverage in 3 of the 4 biggest metros) announced price hikes that are coming soon.
Please include Puerto Rico in maps like this. We have the highest energy prices in the US. The data is available.
Genuine curious how the Texas power crisis of 2021 factors into this graph. Are their rates so low for the other five years that it suppresses the outlier, or was the outlier removed, or something else?
r/FuckPGandE is a daily chant in my neck of the woods.
We really need to see 2024-25. Mine stayed pretty steady the past few years but exploded by over 50% from last summer to this summer. And this summer was about the same as last year so it wasn’t _that_ much hotter.