Since we began compiling this digest of local and statewide climate news in Georgia, we’ve both weathered storms and basked in the glow of progress. Cleantech has given us high hopes through high-paying jobs and economic growth across our state. At the same time, we’ve been deeply concerned about how climate change is affecting our ability to stay safe and thrive.
We all agree that we need reliable, affordable energy, but our economic future also depends on a stable climate. We need to be clear-eyed about the risks if we want our wonderful Peach State to thrive. As a group of citizens concerned about the economic, health, and national security impacts of climate change, we hope to build consensus across the political spectrum about the urgent need to address it. We welcome your support and ideas. Please reach out to us!
Sincerely, The C-Change Conversations Athens Team
Georgia News of Hope
Georgia’s clean-energy economy is booming – and our citizens are benefiting. The Georgia Chamber of Commerce and Chambers for Innovation & Clean Energy sharedhighlights from a new report, including the fact that 82,163 Georgians were employed in clean-energy jobs in 2024. In addition, clean-energy projects have generated $36.7 million in tax revenues and $23.6 million in income to farmers, ranchers, and private landowners.
Georgia News of Concern
A spending bill supported by President Trump seeks toroll back federal clean-energy incentivesfrom the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). The bill, which is currently being debated in the Senate, could increase costs for consumers and harm Georgia’s electric vehicle and battery industries.
Sea level rise isthreatening one of the last surviving Gullah Geechee communities.Sunny day floodinghas become increasingly common on Sapelo Island, where UGA researchers are exploring nature-based strategies to protect historic Hogg Hummock. Climate change is driving sea level rise everywhere, but a study using NOAA and NASA data found that sea levels along Georgia’s coast are rising atsome of the fastest rates on Earthdue to ocean circulation patterns and land subsidence.
Coastal Georgia is bracing for another hurricane season, which began on June 1 – and NOAA just predicted anabove-average season with at least three to five major hurricanes.Research has shown that human-caused climate change is heating the water in the tropical region of the Atlantic where hurricanes form. Higher temperatures also produce wetter storms, as we observed with Hurricane Helene last fall. UGA estimates that Helene caused $5.5 billion in damage to Georgia’s agriculture and forestry industries.
Ways to Act
Georgians will finally have the opportunity to vote for two Public Service Commissioners after a three-year delay caused by legal battles over the fairness of statewide voting. This is the only statewide race in Georgia this year. The Public Service Commission (PSC) is the state’s top utilities regulator. Its five commissioners set the rates for our electricity, gas, and internet. The PSC is also responsible for long-term energy infrastructure planning in Georgia, so it determines whether the state moves toward cleaner energy sources or remains reliant on fossil fuels.
For PSC District 2 (East and Southeast Georgia), Republican incumbent Tim Echols is facing a primary challenge from Lee Muns. In the Democratic primary, Alicia Johnson is running unopposed.
For District 3 (DeKalb, Clayton, and Fulton counties) Democrats Peter Hubbard, Robert Jones, Keisha Sean Waites, and David Blackman will face off in their primary. (David Blackman’s eligibility has been challenged. The ruling of a pending hearing on this matter may affect if votes cast for him will be counted.) If needed, a primary runoff will be held July 15. The winner will face Republican incumbent Fitz Johnson on Nov. 4.
Most of these candidates recently participated in a non-partisan forum, where they discussed their backgrounds and answered policy questions from constituents.
All registered Georgia voters are eligible to vote for both Public Service Commission races on the ballot. Early voting began on May 27 and will continue until June 13. Primary election day is on June 17. More information on when and where you can vote can be found on theGeorgia Secretary of State’s website.
The Big Picture: U.S. and Global Climate News
When you drive near a cliff’s edge at night, do you turn off your lights and hit the accelerator?
Sounds reckless and frightening, but that’s what we are about to do.
This cliff is climate change, a descent to an increasingly inhospitable world that will bring pain and financial damage. Just at the time when we should be most cautious, the administration is “turning off the lights” by shutting down the science that illuminates the dangers and gives us critical information to prepare for or avoid the damages ahead. At the same time, federal departments and agencies are increasing our speed toward danger by deregulating greenhouse gas emissions and by rolling back clean energy.
It doesn’t make sense – economically or politically. It’s one thing to deny climate change when it is in the far-off future; it’s another thing when it is impacting constituents’ pocketbooks and safety right now. Especially when, in contrast, the clean-energy transition holds so much promise for economic gain.
Let’s get away from hyperbole and focus on the key facts:
Climate change is inflationary. It is driving up the costs of food, insurance, infrastructure, health care, and energy.
Climate change is disruptive. Human productivity declines as heat increases, and more frequent natural disasters endanger supply chains, manufacturing centers, and markets.
Climate change policy, now threatened by the administration, benefited red and blue states alike across the nation and was successfully reshoring manufacturing and creating jobs and economic opportunity – with most of the investment in red-leaning districts.
Electricity demand is exploding due to AI, data centers, and electrification. Fossil fuels cannot meet the moment – natural gas plants have tripled in cost since 2022 and face severe supply chain shortages, limiting significant expansion until 2030. They are predicted to handle only 16% of the increased load. Disinvesting from renewables, which are now cheaper, more stable, and quicker to build, will make it more difficult to meet that demand.
Pretending dangers don’t exist won’t make us safer. Thwarting new technology that can provide cleaner, cheaper, safer energy won’t make us richer.
It’s up to us – conservatives and liberals alike – to demand that the headlights get turned back on, that we slow our trajectory toward the edge, and that our government is working to ensure our economic future, not venerating our economic past.
Notable Quote
“The [administration’s] decision [to say the costs to the economy from climate change is zero] is like Alice in Wonderland’s Humpty Dumpty, who said ‘Words can mean whatever I choose them to mean.’ So, yes, it is possible to have policies that assume climate change will have no impacts, but that does not make it so.”
— Michael Greenstone, an economist at the University of Chicago
Stepped upscrutiny of projectsin cleantech that would modernize our power grid, make batteries, and create other energy technology, putting crucial financial support at risk.
These moves are happening at a fraught time, when the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) warns that the looming summer heat and our increased power demand will causesignificant strain on our grid, a network that is rickety at best. We have plenty of energy waiting in the queue to get on the grid (more than double our current generation capacity) if we could speed up permitting and expand transmission. That said,almost all of it– 95% – is in renewables and batteries, energy forms the administration does not favor.
It’s not only blackouts we have to worry about. Our electricity costs are rising because utilities are spending billions to harden their energy networks from more ferocious and frequent natural disasters. In a one-two punch, demand is also rising rapidly, fueled primarily by the insatiablehunger of AI and data centers– and ratepayers will be on the hook for much of the cost. One of the best ways to mitigate these increases? You guessed it: the faster we move toward renewables, the faster and more we will save, according to the venerable International Energy Agency (IEA).
It’s important to realize that we have to upgrade our grid no matter what type of energy we support. As we saw from the recentwidespread outage in the New Orleans area(which uses renewables for just 2% of its power generation) and the colossalblackouts in Spain and Portugal(which were using clean energy for 69% for their power generation), traditional grid-management techniques are not up to the task. We have developed new tools to balance and optimize our grids – if we prioritize and invest in them.
There’s one more concern we’d like to share before moving on to the greener pastures. Despite pledges by dozens of countries to end deforestation, the worldlost a Panama-sized swath of tropical forestlast year. Tropical forests absorb a lot of carbon: losing them will make it harder to stay at safe temperature levels. Experts call it a wake-up call – but are we listening?
News of Hope
In a world of unintended consequences and irony, the president’s actions on tariffs – coupled by OPEC’s response – are creating headwinds for domestic oil and gas production, despite his avowed goal to boost fossil fuels. It’s a reminder that oil and gas are impacted by global markets and that they are much more volatile than homegrown renewable energy. In fact, oil prices are so low that producers are hesitating to explore and drill, and drillers are warning we may have reached “peak shale” domestically. More good news? For the first time in modern history, China’s annual CO2 emissions appear to be trending downward, even as its economy and energy usage is growing. This decline is driven by its huge pivot toward clean energy. As the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter (China still depends on coal for much of its energy), this is critically important, and has happened much more quickly than experts expected. Back home, we have only to look at Texas to see how effective renewables are in powering the grid. The Lone Star State is a prime example of how solar and wind not only can keep the power on during extended heat waves, it is a model of how rural areas can benefit economically from a “crop” that is easy to raise. Texas businesses are investing in renewables not because they are anti-carbon or green, but because they are good for the bottom line. And ratepayers seem to agree as legislation that would have restricted renewables (and raised electricity rates) appears to be dead in the GOP-led state House of Representatives – and legislation supporting rooftop solar appears to have passed. The administration has cherry-picked one form of clean energy – and it’s one that the Biden White House also favored. President Trump has declared that nuclear power will play an important role in our energy future. While we fervently hope that safety isn’t sacrificed as projects are fast-tracked, new nuclear designs do hold a great deal of promise. It’s particularly timely as China races toward becoming the world leader in nuclear energy, with 55 reactors built and 23 more in the works. The U.S., by comparison, has 94 reactors – but it took us 40 years to build what China has done in 10 years. In another positive turn, the administration has lifted its ban on the major New York offshore wind project that is a critical part of the state meeting its clean-energy standards. It’s too soon to say if this about-face signifies a softening of Trump’s resistance to wind, but 17 states and the District of Columbia filed lawsuits in May against the administration to try to move forward with a multitude of wind projects around the country. In another clean-energy win, schools from Utah and Kentucky to Massachusetts have been able to use IRA tax credits to switch to geothermal energy to heat and cool their facilities. Geothermal is more expensive upfront, but once built provides cooling and heating three to four times more cheaply than using fossil fuels. Geothermal energy can power schools safely and for much less money, freeing up funds for salaries and facility upgrades. And we were bolstered to learn that voices against clean energy in the United States are being met with some resistance internationally. Despite U.S. pressure, the heads of the central banks and regulators that make up the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision rejected a proposal to dissolve a task force overseeing climate work, stressing the importance of addressing the financial dangers we face as temperatures rise. Finally, this series on clean-energy jobs in rural America just warms our hearts. These tales of how real people are benefiting from the energy transition show the power of clean technology – not just in keeping our lights on, but in helping our neighbors and communities grow and thrive. Pour a cup of tea and enjoy.