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Tuesday, August 30, 2022

20,000,000 Million Americans Are Facing A Potential Bleak Winter Without Electricity, Natural Gas, Or Heating Oil

      When electric power and heating are cut off in bad winter weather people literally die. It is not just the elderly and vulnerable. In February of 2021, the State of Texas experienced blizzard-like conditions rarely seen in its history. The electric power grid was not designed for such temperature extremes. It failed. Natural gas delivery also failed. Official State of Texas statistics indicate that 246 people died. CNN recently stated that over 800 people died during this ordeal.

    Over the last few weeks, I have talked about the cold and bleak winter that people in Europe will face this winter. They are facing cutoffs of Russian natural gas and coal deliveries. Droughts have depleted bodies of water that normally provide hydroelectric power. Aside from Norway, England, and some gas fields with Holland with seismic problems, Europe is not blessed with the natural resources that the US and Russia have. The US and China have stepped up natural gas deliveries to Europe. Governments will provide subsidies to help consumers with crushing utility bills. I suspect that Russian energy consumers will get subsidies from their government.

     I got a huge surprise yesterday with respect to the United States. We have natural gas reserves to last until 2060. I suspect that we have similar reserves of oil. There are large coal deposits. We should be facing no serious problems this winter. I got a shocking report that 20 million people in the US are very close to electric power and heating cutoffs. Here is a fascinating article:

 

 

Over 20 million households risk losing utilities

 

By Taylor Delandro, Mitch Carr, Nexstar Media Wire, Dray Clark

 

The Hill

 

 15 hours ago

 

https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=08hdAo_0hZqe5t300

 

NEW YORK (NewsNation) — The rising cost of living and the impact of inflation have left millions of households across the U.S. with outstanding utility bills — an issue that could get worse with power shutoffs on the horizon and cooler weather looming.

 

 

 

The National Energy Assistance Directors Association, which collects national data on energy assistance programs, says 1 in 6, or more than 20 million households, are behind on their power bills.

 

 

 

A primary source behind the utility debt is a surge in energy prices. Natural gas prices have jumped since Russia invaded Ukraine in February. The cost of natural gas was up 30.5% year-over-year in July, according to the U.S. Labor Department. The average rate for electricity was up about 15% in July — the largest increase since 2006.

 

 

 

Across the country, millions more are over 60 days behind and in danger of losing their service as the bill is coming due.

 

 

 

In March, the Office of the New York Comptroller said 1 in 8 New Yorkers hadn’t paid their utility bills. That’s 1.2 million people owing a combined $1.8 billion to utilities, and since then, not much has improved.

 

 

 

In New Orleans, some residents carry four-figure utility bills. On Saturday, Entergy New Orleans hosted its first energy fair to learn more about payment options, energy-efficient education, electric vehicles and hurricane preparedness.

 

 

 

“This is a great opportunity, providing that we have the money to go ahead and assist our residents.”

 

 

 

In Indiana, Duke Energy, the state’s largest power provider, is considering a 7% price hike or $11 more on each bill starting in October.

 

 

 

Utility companies blame inflation and the high cost of natural gas for inflated prices.

 

 

 

“This is a temporary rate increase. again, fuel cost fluctuates,” said Angeline Protogere, a Duke Energy spokesperson.

 

 

 

With “pandemic” utility moratoriums expiring, power companies are preparing for shutoffs, meaning it could be a long cold winter for many families.

 

 

 

“We are continuing that moratorium until September 1st,” said Patrick Stella of National Grid, a power company providing service in New York, Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

 

 

 

For those drowning in utility debt, all 50 states received nearly $5 billion in federal funding for home energy assistance programs to help low-income families pay their high utility bills.

 

 

 

It’s usually first come, first served, and with millions of people in the same predicament, waiting to ask for help could leave people in the dark.

 

 

 

This has been a very hot summer for many parts of the country, which left people running their air conditioners longer, only adding to their outstanding unpaid balances.

 

 

 

Without the federal protections in place to prevent shutoffs like those that existed early in the pandemic, utility companies are seeing customers rack up debt at an unprecedented pace.

 

 

 

While late and unpaid bills for utilities are common and have always been, it’s the amount of utility debt that Americans have racked up that’s leading to calls for more federal assistance to pay down these balances.

 

 

 

Before the pandemic, the National Energy Assistance Directors Association reported that overall, Americans had about $8 billion in utility debt.

 

 

 

As payment moratoriums kicked in, the number began to grow to more than 13 billion. Then, in the first six months of this year, utility companies hiked rates and more Americans fell behind on their bills, adding $3 billion in utility debt in 180 days. I went to work on the notebook.

 

     We need to start looking at electricity and natural gas utility bill subsidies to save lives this winter.

 

 

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