Powering Through Extremes: How Clean Energy Lowers Costs and Improves Reliability

Extreme weather is notÌýa rareÌýdisruption butÌý¾±²õÌý²Ô´Ç·ÉÌýan annual expectation.

Heat waves and winter storms are more frequent, more intense, and last longer. The western U.S. broke the record for the hottest March temperature in history at 108 degrees earlier this year. The eastern U.S. is expected to shatter records this July 4th weekend with temperatures reaching 115 degrees. And in January, Winter Storm FernÌýbrought freezing rain, sleet, snow, and bitter cold across two-thirds of the country. Each of these events puts enormous strain on the power grid, and the way we generate electricityÌýdeterminesÌýwhether that strain becomes a crisis or a manageable challenge.Ìý

When temperatures surge past 100°FÌýin VirginiaÌýor plunge below zeroÌýin Texas, electricity demand spikes dramatically. During a heat wave,Ìýnearly everyÌýhome and business runs air conditioning and keeps it running around the clock.ÌýWhereas inÌýwinter storms electric heating demand surges at the exact same time that natural gas, which fuels most of our power plants, is being diverted to heat homes and buildings. Power plants end up competing for the same fuel that millions of families need to stay warm. To make up the difference, grid operators turn to older, less efficient plants burning expensiveÌýfossil fuels, driving wholesale electricity prices from as low as $30/MWhÌýon a normal day to thousands of dollars during a grid emergency. When local generation still falls short,ÌýgridÌýoperatorsÌýwillÌýimport power from neighboringÌýgrids, but those neighborsÌýcan beÌýstruggling with the sameÌýevent, limiting how much help they canÌýactually provide.Ìý

The evidence from recent extreme weather events is clear: gridsÌýthatÌýincludeÌýmeaningful amounts ofÌýclean energy resources perform better, cost less, and protect consumers more effectively.ÌýDuring aÌýthree-day heat wave in late July 2025Ìýthat tied and broke records across the Central and Eastern U.S., clean energy saved the grid more thanÌý$114 million. In Texas, a 34% share of renewables saved consumers $47 million. In the Great Plains,Ìýwind’sÌý28% shareÌýof generationÌýsaved over $26 million. DuringÌýWinter Storm FernÌýin January 2026, clean energy saved the grid overÌý$2 billionÌýin operating costs and generated enough power for 43 million homes. Wind and solar in the Midwest alone, at just a 16% share, saved overÌý$1 billion.Ìý

Why does clean power make suchÌýan economicÌýdifference? Because wind and solar have no fuel cost and no fuel supply chain to disrupt.ÌýWhen a gas pipeline freezes or fuel prices spike, solar panels and wind turbines keep generatingÌýas planned.ÌýA well-sited solar fleet naturally produces the most power during the hottest hours of a heat wave, directly offsetting the surge in air conditioning demand. Wind resources spread across multiple regions provide steady output day and night. Their role is to consistently meet energy needs such that electricity prices can stay stable and affordable.Ìý

Reliability and backup capacity is where battery storage comes in. Storage systemsÌýchargeÌýupÌýduring times of cheap surplusÌýpower andÌýdischarge precisely when demand peaks, replacing the costly fossil fuel peaker plants that drive up prices during emergencies. Together, wind, solar, and storage reduce dependence on gas-fired generation at the moments when gas is most constrained,ÌýlessenÌýthe price spikes that hit consumers hardest, and give grid operators the tools to keep the lights on without resorting to rolling blackouts.Ìý

As extreme weather grows more frequent and more severe, the stakes for getting our energy mix right keep rising. Clean powerÌý¾±²õÌýa provenÌýpart of a lower-cost,Ìýresilient grid solution, and the data proves it.Ìý

 

ACP’s research team provides quantitative analysis to help better understand how the grid works and how clean power projects deliver the affordable, reliable energy America needs. A new ACP analysis uses July 2025 as a case study for how clean energy saves money during a heatwaves.

Download the Analysis Now

 

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