Utilities, state officials, and other experts warn Trump’s trade war will affect fuel and electricity costs, as well as power plant and transmission construction.

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Midwest

6 March 2025 • Supported by

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Good morning! State officials and utility companies are still assessing the impact of President Trump’s trade war, but experts say drivers in Minnesota and Michigan can expect to see prices increase in a couple of weeks if the tariffs continue. Meanwhile, Ohio utilities are warning investors about the tariffs’ potential disruptions to grid and power plant construction. More below. Andy Balaskovitz is back tomorrow.

Dan Haugen

Editor’s note: Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker has not raised concerns about a bill that would make data centers produce all of their own power from renewables, and clean energy advocates and state Democrats are supportive of the bill. An item in yesterday’s digest mischaracterized Pritzker’s stance.

TODAY'S TOP NEWS

TARIFFS

  • Minnesota and Michigan can expect to pay more for gas, electricity, propane and other heating fuels within a couple of weeks as a result of President Trump’s trade war with Canada, according to state officials and other experts. (MPR News, MLive)
  • Ohio utilities FirstEnergy and American Electric Power warn investors that Trump’s tariffs could delay or increase the cost of building power plants and transmission infrastructure, and decrease electricity sales if they trigger an economic slowdown. (Utility Dive)

UTILITIES

  • Michigan regulators set financial incentives and penalties for DTE Energy and Consumers Energy on reliability, but a ratepayer advocate says the consequences for poor service remain too small relative to the companies’ profits. (Planet Detroit)
  • Decorah, Iowa, voters again reject a referendum that would have authorized the city to establish a municipal electric utility. (Decorah Leader)

GRID

  • Wisconsin legislators discuss a proposal to reinstate utilities’ control over transmission projects after a 2015 federal order required states to use competitive bidding with third-party developers for interstate projects. (Daily Energy Insider)

GEOTHERMAL:

  • An environmental justice nonprofit wants to tap underground heat in alleys for a multi-building geothermal network in a South Side Chicago neighborhood. (Chicago Tribune)

SOLAR

  • Ypsilanti, Michigan, leaders put their support behind a planned solar project that aims to power more than 100 homes in a low-income neighborhood. (MLive)
  • A new study by University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign researchers nudges the field of organic solar cells one step closer to commercial viability. (news release)

EFFICIENCY

  • Ameren Illinois proposes its latest four-year energy efficiency plan, which includes money for home energy assessments and rebates for upgrades. (WSIU)

PIPELINES:

  • In a pipeline company’s defamation trial against Greenpeace, a former executive testifies that political pressure from protesters led to federal permitting delays eight years ago for the Dakota Access Pipeline. (North Dakota Monitor) 

BIOFUELS

  • Uncertainty over federal biofuel incentives under President Trump has forced Iowa biodiesel producers to idle plants or operate at minimum levels. (Transport Topics)

COMMENTARY:

  • We Energies’ push to build new gas plants is an unnecessary gamble that threatens to lock in high energy costs and emissions and burden Wisconsin ratepayers for decades, an environmental advocate writes. (Wisconsin Examiner)
  • A union worker in Michigan writes that Congress needs to defend federal clean energy tax credits to help American manufacturers compete with China. (Macomb Daily)

ATTENTION CHICAGO: UPCOMING EVENT

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On stage: Conversations with clean energy experts, including Rep. Sean Casten of the U.S. Congress, Naomi Davis of Blacks in Green, Kara Demirjian Huss of TCCI Manufacturing, A.J. Patton of 548 Enterprises, David Roberts of Volts, Angela Tovar of the city of Chicago and Lisa Clemmons Stott of the Illinois Department of Commerce.

 

Off stage: Drink, eat, and socialize with clean energy leaders, investors, inventors, public leaders, and advocates.

🗓️  March 27, 2025, 2:00 - 7:00p.m. CDT

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