Independent Analysis Shows How Legislation Prioritizing Gas Will Cost North Carolinians Billions
New data on Senate Bill 266 shows it will cost North Carolinians an additional $23 billion due to reliance on gas
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — An independent analysis of North Carolina Senate Bill 266, conducted by NC State University, shows that the legislation could result in an additional $23 billion in costs passed on to ratepayers due to a heavier reliance on natural gas-powered plants.
“This independent academic analysis confirms that Senate Bill 266 comes with a heavy price tag — $23 billion of additional fuel costs that will be passed on to North Carolinians,” said Will Scott, Southeast Climate & Clean Energy Director at Environmental Defense Fund. “S266 would delay building cleaner, cheaper sources of energy at a time of rapid energy demand and leave customers, not the utility, footing the bill for all that additional gas burned.”
With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
Latest press releases
-
EDF Statement: Methane equivalency agreement-in-principle between Canada and Alberta shows progress pending important details
March 25, 2026 -
EDF, Allies Call on EPA to “Abandon Illegal Proposal” to Roll back Good Neighbor Protections
March 24, 2026 -
EDF Congratulates Susan Mongtomery and Ted Cooke on their appointment to the Arizona Water Infrastructure Finance Authority Board
March 23, 2026 -
offshore wind
March 23, 2026 -
Governor Hochul seeks to weaken New York’s leading climate law
March 20, 2026 -
Groups Take Trump Administration to Court Over Illegal Craig Coal Plant Extension
March 18, 2026