夏季电费料将大涨超过去年:原因揭秘

夏季电费料将大涨超过去年:原因揭秘

2025-07-02Business
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王小二
早上好,我是王小二。欢迎收听我们的<Goose Pod>。今天,我们来聊一个可能让你的钱包有点紧张的话题。
Ema
嗨,大家好,我是 Ema!没错,今天我们要聊的就是电费。有没有感觉,好像夏天开空调的底气,一年比一年弱了?我们将深入探讨为什么今年的电费,预计会比去年更高。
王小二
嗯,Ema 你这个感觉很敏锐。很多预测都表明,今年夏天的电费账单会更“沉重”。实际上,根据美国国家能源援助主任协会,也就是NEADA的报告,情况可能比我们想的还要严峻一点。
Ema
哦?NEADA的报告?我看到了,上面的数字确实让人心里咯噔一下。说是从6月到9月,一个普通美国家庭的电费总支出大概要784美元,比去年的737美元涨了6.2%。这可不是个小数目啊!
王小二
是的,而且这还没算通胀。剔除通胀影响,实际价格也涨了4.3%。但关键在于,这会是12年来的最高电价记录。这说明我们正在经历一个非常显著的电价上涨周期。
Ema
十二年新高!哇,这感觉就像,你每天都喝的那杯咖啡,突然涨到了十二年里的最高价。你肯定会想,背后到底发生了什么不寻常的事?
王小二
你说到点子上了。这背后确实有几股强大的力量在“合谋”。分析师们总结了三大主要原因:天然气价格飙升,AI数据中心带来的电力负荷激增,以及我们老化的电网系统。
Ema
哇,听起来像一场“完美风暴”。天然气我们好理解,是发电主力。但AI数据中心,这可是个新面孔。它怎么会成为推高我们电费的“黑手”呢?这个很有意思。
王小二
这确实是目前最引人关注的变量。AI运算需要巨大的能量。举个例子,全美最大的电力市场PJM,它为13个州和华盛顿特区供电。从这个月开始,用户的账单里就要新增93亿美元的未来容量成本。
Ema
等一下,93亿美元?太惊人了!你得帮我们解释一下,PJM是什么?还有这个“未来容量成本”,听起来特别专业,它到底是什么意思?
王小二
当然。你可以把PJM想象成一个巨大的“电力调度中心”,负责协调一个庞大区域的电力供需。当它预见到未来会有像AI数据中心这样的大“用电户”接入时,就必须确保有足够的发电能力。
Ema
哦,我明白了!PJM就像电力世界的空中交通管制员。他们看到一大批叫“AI”的耗电巨无霸飞机要起飞,就必须提前修更多、更宽的跑道。而这93亿美元,就是我们大家一起为这些新跑道出的钱。这么理解对吗?
王小二
这个比喻非常恰当。PJM的市场监控报告明确指出,数据中心带来的“前所未有”的需求,是这次成本上涨的主要驱动力。而且这股趋势非常迅猛,比如Google的数据中心,短短四年内能源使用量就翻了一番。
Ema
四年翻一番!这增长速度太可怕了。所以,我们现在面临的现象就是:电费账单眼看要创纪录,背后不仅有传统的燃料问题,还有一个对电力极度“饥渴”的AI产业在迅速崛起。
王小二
总结得很到位。这三大因素交织在一起,共同推高了我们所有人的用电成本。那么接下来,我们不妨深入挖一下,为什么我们的电力系统会如此脆弱,以至于一个新产业的出现就能带来这么大的冲击。
Ema
好啊!我很想知道,我们的电力系统是不是有点“先天不足”?感觉这个问题不是一夜之间冒出来的,它肯定有很长的历史背景。
王小二
你说对了。这确实是个历史遗留问题。麻省理工学院的罗伯特·平迪克教授就一针见血地指出:“我们美国的电网系统非常陈旧、效率低下。” 这是电价上涨最根本的原因之一。
Ema
陈旧、效率低下?这听起来不像是世界第一大经济体该有的基础设施啊。它们到底有多老?是“爷爷辈”的吗?
王小二
可以说是“爷爷辈”了。美国大部分输电和配电系统,都可以追溯到上世纪50到70年代。你想想,那是半个多世纪前了,当时的建设完全没预料到今天会有电动汽车和AI。
Ema
我明白了!这就像我们现在还在用给老爷车设计的乡间小路,却想在上面开F1方程式赛车。路本身就承受不住,不堵车、不出问题才怪呢!
王小二
比喻很贴切。而且,不只是老旧。数据显示,从1920年到2021年,美国所有能源使用量增长了四倍,但电力的终端使用量却增长了超过一百倍。我们对电力的依赖是爆炸式增长。
Ema
一百倍!天哪,我们已经成了名副其实的“电气化社会”,但支撑这一切的“骨架”,也就是电网,却没跟上。这不就是“头重脚轻”嘛。
王小二
正是如此。现在我们再来看第二个因素:天然气。2023年,天然气是美国最主要的发电来源,因为它比煤炭清洁,过去价格也相对低廉。但这种依赖性也埋下了隐患。
Ema
我猜,隐患就是我们把太多鸡蛋放在了天然气这一个篮子里。一旦这个篮子,也就是天然气价格上涨,我们所有人的“早餐”,也就是电费,就得跟着涨。对吗?
王小二
完全正确。全球需求、地缘政治、供应链问题都可能导致天然气价格剧烈波动。发电成本上升,电力公司自然会把这部分成本转嫁给消费者。这是基本的经济规律。
Ema
好吧,老旧的电网,加上不稳定的燃料价格,已经够头疼了。现在又来了AI数据中心这个“大胃王”。我很好奇,普通的数据中心和AI数据中心,用电上差别真的那么大吗?
王小二
差别巨大。这么说吧,传统数据中心更像一个仓库,主要功能是存储和分发数据,相对静态。而AI数据中心,尤其是训练大模型的,则像一个超级大脑,需要持续不断地进行极其复杂的计算。
Ema
哦,我好像有点懂了。这就像一个图书馆和一个大学的区别。图书馆里的书,多数时间只是静静地待着。而大学里呢,成千上万的学生和教授每天都在阅读、思考、辩论,整个校园的“能耗”完全不是一个量级!
王小二
说得太形象了。正是这种从“存储”到“持续计算”的转变,导致了AI数据中心惊人的电力需求。这也引出了一个严峻的现实:我们的基础设施投资,其实是严重不足的。
Ema
投资不足?难道政府没有投入资金来改善吗?我记得新闻里好像有提到过一些基础设施法案。
王小二
有投入,但远远不够。美国土木工程师学会给我们的电力基础设施评级是D+,一个很低的分数。他们计算出,到2033年,电网的投资缺口高达5780亿美元。而2021年的基础设施法案为此拨款了730亿美元。
Ema
等一下,我算算…缺口5780亿,拨款730亿,这连零头都不到啊!感觉就像,我的房子急需6万美元大修,但我手里只有7千块。最多补补屋顶漏洞,地基的问题根本解决不了。
王小二
你的算法和比喻都非常精确。这就是我们面临的困境。所以,总结一下背景:一个为上个世纪设计的、投资严重不足的老旧电网,一个我们高度依赖但价格波动的能源,再加上一个突然出现的、对电力极度饥渴的新兴产业。一场冲突在所难免。
Ema
没错,冲突的核心我猜就是:钱。既然要升级电网来满足AI的需求,那这笔巨款到底该谁来出?这肯定会引发一场大辩论。
王小二
你抓住了要害。这正是当前争论的焦点。最直接的问题是:为什么要让所有消费者,包括那些对AI没什么需求的人,来为科技巨头的电力需求买单?这公平吗?
Ema
对啊!就像塔夫茨大学的吉尔伯特·梅特卡夫教授担心的,这些成本最终会“分摊给所有用户”。这听起来就像,我的邻居办了个通宵派对,却要整栋楼的人来分摊电费!太不合理了。
王小二
经济学上称之为“成本社会化”。即少数公司享受AI带来的巨大利润,而整个社会来承担其背后的基础设施成本。哈佛大学的一项研究也支持这个观点,消费者最终会为科技公司的新发电厂和电网升级买单。
Ema
那有什么解决办法吗?梅特卡夫教授有没有提出什么建议?总不能就这么让大家“被动买单”吧。
王小二
他提出了一些可能的方案。比如,可以强制要求数据中心自己支付相关的电网升级费用。或者,在用电高峰期,要求它们削减需求,暂时降低运营负荷。
Ema
哦,这个我懂!就像晚高峰时段,城市会要求某些大型车辆错峰出行一样。让数据中心在大家下班回家开空调的时候,自己“歇一会儿”,给电网减减压。听起来是个不错的主意。
王小二
但科技公司自然会抵制这种做法。他们的理由是,AI驱动着技术创新和经济增长,限制它们就是限制未来。于是,消费者权益组织、科技公司和监管机构就陷入了一场三方博弈。
Ema
监管机构的角色肯定很尴尬。一边是代表未来的高科技产业和巨大的税收,另一边是千家万户的账单和选票。真是左右为难啊。
王小二
这还不是唯一的冲突。另一个尖锐的矛盾在于:如何快速满足这部分新增的电力需求?这与清洁能源转型之间存在着紧张关系。新建发电设施需要时间,尤其是核电站,审批和建设周期非常长。
Ema
那最快的解决方案是什么呢?我记得资料里提到了。啊,是太阳能和风能,再配上电池储能。据说这是在2030年之前唯一能大规模应用的电源。那我们就该大力发展可再生能源啊!
王小二
理论上是这样,但这里又出现了政治层面的冲突。新闻提到,有一项正在国会推进的税收法案,可能会大幅削减对风能和太阳能的联邦支持。这无疑是给清洁能源转型泼了一盆冷水。
Ema
什么?一边是电力需求火烧眉毛,另一边却要给最快的解决方案“断奶”?这太矛盾了!专家怎么评论这件事?
王小二
专家警告说,这会推高美国的能源价格,削弱美国在AI和清洁能源制造业领域的全球竞争力。一位分析师甚至说,这简直是“送给中国的大礼”,他们“肯定会垂涎于那些本可能设在美国的数据中心”。
Ema
哇塞,这下冲突升级了!从家庭账单的内部矛盾,上升到了国家之间竞争的外部矛盾。这盘棋可真够复杂的。消费者对大公司,传统能源对新能源,美国对中国。太精彩了。
王小二
别忘了还有最后一个实际的冲突,平迪克教授提到的“邻避效应”,也就是“别建在我家后院”。每个人都想要稳定、便宜的电力,但没有人希望新的高压电线、变电站建在自己家附近。
Ema
这个我太理解了。说一句“我们必须升级电网”很容易,但真要把图纸变成现实,要跨越多少州的法律,面对多少当地居民的反对啊。这让我想起平迪克教授还提到德州,它甚至有自己独立的电网,让全国性的协调更困难。
王小二
总结一下,我们看到的冲突是多层面的:核心是关于成本和责任的经济冲突,交织着关于能源未来的政治冲突,以及在现实世界中建设基础设施的社会冲突。每一个环节都困难重重。
Ema
好吧,既然冲突这么激烈,我们来谈谈它造成的具体影响吧。除了我们的钱包要缩水,还有哪些我们可能没注意到的连锁反应呢?
王小二
最直接的影响,就是对家庭预算的挤压。NEADA的执行董事马克·沃尔夫强调,这并不是一次性的上涨,而是在本已持续上涨的账单上的“雪上加霜”。对于很多家庭来说,这是一种累积的负担。
Ema
没错,特别是对低收入家庭。对一些人来说,每个月多付几十美元可能只是少看一场电影。但对另一些人来说,这可能意味着要在开空调、买食物和买药之间做艰难的选择。这会加剧社会的不平等。
王小二
对企业的影响也同样显著。特别是中小型企业,他们不像大公司那样有能力去对冲能源成本的上涨。PJM容量价格的上涨会直接增加他们的运营成本,这最终可能会抑制投资、减少雇佣,甚至转嫁为更高的商品价格。
Ema
这是一个典型的连锁反应!夏天你家开空调的电费涨了,你去买冰淇淋,发现冰淇淋也涨价了,因为冰淇淋店的电费也涨了。成本的波浪会一圈圈扩散开来,影响到经济的方方面面。
王小二
还有一个更深层次的影响,那就是电网的可靠性。能源部长克里斯·赖特警告说,电网正在“达到其极限”。这已经不仅仅是价格问题了,而是关系到供电安全。尤其是在酷暑天气,当所有人都把空调开到最大时,停电的风险会显著增加。
Ema
这个听起来有点吓人。我们总是想当然地认为,只要按下开关,电就来了。但如果AI这个“用电大户”持续扩张,而电网的升级跟不上,我们可能真的要面临更频繁的电力中断。那我们的生活会变得一团糟。
王小二
最后,还有一个宏观层面的影响,即国家竞争力。如果美国的能源成本过高,或者电网不稳定,那些需要海量电力的AI数据中心就可能会选择建在别的国家。我们前面提到专家说中国会“垂涎三尺”,这正是体现。
Ema
所以,这从某种意义上说,已经成了一个国家安全问题?如果支撑下一个技术时代的大脑——也就是AI计算中心——因为我们无法提供足够的电力而建在了其他国家,那对我们来说将是一个巨大的长期损失。
王小二
完全正确。所以你看,电费上涨这件事,其影响从最微观的家庭预算,一直延伸到最宏观的地缘政治和科技未来。它完美地展示了现代社会中,所有事物是如何紧密相连的。
Ema
听了这么多挑战和困境,感觉有点压抑。那未来呢?我们就只能眼睁睁地看着电费一直涨下去吗?有没有什么解决之道?
王小二
情况也并非完全悲观。专家们确实提供了一些前进的方向。首先,从我们个人做起,NEADA的马克·沃尔夫就建议,我们应该为长期的极端天气做准备,提高家庭的能源效率。
Ema
这个我赞成!比如安装更好的隔热材料,使用节能家电,甚至只是简单地封堵门窗的缝隙,都能在不知不觉中节省不少电费。积少成多嘛。这算是从需求侧着手。
王小二
是的。在供给和基础设施方面,能源部长赖特的呼吁很明确:“我们需要迅速做出改变。我们需要建设新的发电能力,实施更智能的监管,更明智地使用我们的电网。” 这需要政府和行业的共同努力。
Ema
“更智能的监管”具体指什么呢?我猜,可能包括简化新建输电线路的审批流程,让它不再需要十年那么久。同时,也要明确我们之前讨论的“谁来买单”的问题,制定出更公平的成本分摊机制。
王小二
没错。此外,相关分析也指出,虽然AI带来的需求增长是个巨大挑战,但通过“积极主动的规划”是可以管理的。比如,一些地方可能会暂时停止批准新的数据中心项目,给电网升级争取时间。这是一种务实的做法。
Ema
而且,技术本身也在进步!比如“边缘计算”或者分布式计算的概念。也就是说,我们不一定非要建那么多巨型的、集中的数据中心,而是可以把计算能力分散到更靠近用户的地方,这也能减轻主干电网的压力。
王小二
是的,未来的关键在于多管齐下:个人的节能行动、政府的战略投资、监管法规的改革以及持续的技术创新。没有一劳永逸的“银弹”,但组合拳是有希望的。
王小二
好了,总结一下今天的内容。今年夏天我们可能面临更高的电费,这是天然气价格高企、老旧电网不堪重负,以及AI数据中心电力需求激增这三大因素共同作用的结果。
Ema
我们探讨了这背后关于成本分摊的激烈冲突,以及它如何从影响家庭预算,一直波及到国家未来的竞争力。但好消息是,通过个人节能、政府规划和技术创新,我们有希望应对这一挑战。
王小二
今天的讨论就到这里。感谢您收听 <Goose Pod>。我是王小二。
Ema
我是 Ema。我们明天再见!

### **Comprehensive Summary of News Report on Summer Electricity Bills** **News Metadata** * **Title:** Summer electricity bills set to jump higher than last year—Here’s why * **Source:** Newsweek * **Author:** Joe Edwards * **Publication Date:** June 28, 2025 * **Topic:** Business / Economy --- ### **Executive Summary** Households across the United States are facing a significant increase in electricity bills this summer, driven by a convergence of three primary factors: a spike in natural gas prices, surging electricity demand from AI-driven data centers, and the high costs associated with an aging and congested national power grid. Multiple forecasts predict a rise in costs, with one report suggesting average household electricity expenses could reach a 12-year high. Experts warn that these issues are systemic, requiring substantial investment and regulatory changes to address the grid's limitations and manage the impact of new, large-scale power consumers. --- ### **Key Drivers of Increased Costs** The report identifies three converging forces responsible for the anticipated price hikes: 1. **Rising Natural Gas Prices:** Natural gas was the leading source for electricity generation in 2023. A recent spike in its cost is a primary driver of higher utility bills. 2. **Surge in Demand from Data Centers:** The rapid growth of artificial intelligence (AI) is fueling "unprecedented" demand for power from data centers. This is forcing grid operators to secure more future power capacity, the multi-billion-dollar costs of which are being passed on to consumers. 3. **Aging and Congested Grid:** The U.S. power grid is described as "antiquated" and "inefficient." Its inability to easily transmit power from where it's generated to where it's needed, combined with the high cost of necessary upgrades, results in ever-rising transmission costs for customers. --- ### **Forecasts and Financial Impact** Different agencies have provided forecasts for the summer, with varying degrees of severity. **Forecast Comparison:** * **Energy Information Administration (EIA):** * Projects a roughly **4% rise** in average electric bills for June, July, and August compared to 2024. * A separate forecast including September suggests a slightly lower increase of just under **3%**, as cooler weather in September reduces demand. * **NEADA/CEPC (National Energy Assistance Directors Association / Center for Energy Poverty and Climate):** * Paints a "grimmer picture," forecasting that the average U.S. household will pay **$784** for electricity from June through September. * This represents a **6.2% increase** from last year's **$737**. * When adjusted for inflation, the increase is approximately **4.3%**, marking a **12-year high** for electricity prices. **Material Financial Data:** * **PJM Interconnection Costs:** In the nation's largest electricity market (serving 13 states and Washington, D.C.), an additional **$9.3 billion** in costs tied to future capacity needs will begin appearing on customer bills this month, driven primarily by data center demand. * **Grid Investment Gap:** The American Society of Civil Engineers gives the U.S. power infrastructure a **D+ grade**. The report calculates a **$578 billion investment gap** for transmission and distribution through 2033, even after accounting for the **$73 billion** allocated under the 2021 infrastructure law. --- ### **Expert Analysis and Key Concerns** Several experts weighed in on the causes and implications of the rising costs. * **Mark Wolfe (Executive Director, NEADA):** Emphasized the cumulative impact of rising costs and temperatures. > "while 4.3 percent doesn't seem like a large increase, this comes on top of bills that have been steadily increasing... Not only that, but families need to use more electricity to cool their homes each year as summer temperatures keep increasing." * **Robert Pindyck (Professor, MIT Sloan):** Identified the grid as the central problem. > "We have a very antiquated, inefficient grid here in the United States, and the result is that if there's any increase in demand—even if the electricity can be generated cheaply—it's very hard to move it from A to B." He noted that regulatory hurdles and local opposition make building new transmission lines extremely difficult. * **Gilbert Metcalf (Professor, Tufts University):** Highlighted the risk of socializing the costs of data centers. He suggested that unless regulators intervene, the costs of grid upgrades needed for new data centers "will be spread to all users." Potential interventions include mandating that data centers curtail demand during peak periods or pay directly for infrastructure improvements. * **Chris Wright (Secretary of Energy):** Warned that the grid is "reaching its limit" and called for urgent action. > "We need to make changes rapidly. We need to see new capacity built, smarter regulation, we need to use our grid wiser." --- ### **Recommendations and Outlook** * **For Households:** Mark Wolfe advises consumers to prepare for long-term extreme weather by improving home energy efficiency. Measures like installing insulation can help manage and reduce cooling expenses. * **For Policymakers:** The report underscores the urgent need for massive investment in grid modernization, streamlined regulations to facilitate the construction of new transmission capacity, and policies to manage how large new loads like data centers connect to the grid without overburdening existing consumers.

Summer electricity bills set to jump higher than last year—Here’s why

Read original at Newsweek

Electricity bills are set to climb across the United States, with households bracing for higher costs this summer.Analysts say three forces are converging: a spike in natural-gas prices, surging load from artificial intelligence (AI)-driven data centers that is triggering multi-billion-dollar capacity charges, and an aging, congested grid that is passing ever-rising transmission costs on to consumers.

Natural Gas PricesThe Energy Information Administration (EIA) projects a roughly 4 percent rise in average electric bills in June, July, and August compared with last year, which it attributed to a spike in the cost of natural gas—the top source of utility-scale electricity generation in 2023.Another forecast from the EIA earlier this week, which included September, suggested an increase of just under 3 percent.

That month generally sees cooler weather, lighter air conditioning use, and marginally lower fuel-driven rates. However, data from the National Energy Assistance Directors Association (NEADA) and the Center for Energy Poverty and Climate (CEPC) painted a grimmer picture.According to this report, from June through September, the average U.

S. household is expected to pay $784 for electricity over this four-month period, a 6.2 percent increase from $737 last year. When adjusted for inflation, the rise amounts to approximately 4.3 percent compared to last year's prices, NEADA and CEPC said, who also noted this would represent a 12-year high for electricity prices."

We predict that prices will be this high for two reasons: first, the cost of electricity is rising faster than [the] average rate of inflation, and second, temperatures are continuing to increase, reflecting the continuing impact of climate change and requiring additional energy to cool indoor spaces," the NEADA/CEPC report said.

Mark Wolfe, executive director of NEADA, told Newsweek that"while 4.3 percent doesn't seem like a large increase, this comes on top of bills that have been steadily increasing."He added: "Not only that, but families need to use more electricity to cool their homes each year as summer temperatures keep increasing."

The Rise of Data CentersPower demand is also set to grow alongside the proliferation of data centers—centralized facilities housing equipment used to store, process, and distribute data.In the PJM Interconnection—the nation's largest electricity market, serving 13 states and Washington, D.C.—an additional $9.

3 billion in costs tied to future capacity needs will begin appearing in customer bills this month, The Wall Street Journal reported.A report by Monitoring Analytics, PJM's independent market monitor, cited "unprecedented" demand, both current and future, from data centers as the primary driver."The report of PJM's Independent Market Monitor, Monitoring Analytics, does affirm what PJM has been saying, which is that supply/demand conditions drove higher prices in the 2025/2026 capacity auction," PJM told Newsweek.

According to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), capacity-market auctions are a reliability backstop: generators compete to promise enough future capacity, and the competition keeps costs down for consumers."Last summer, PJM ran its most recent capacity auction, which saw prices increase significantly from the prior auction.

The result of the increase was primarily based on a continued trajectory of supply decreasing and demand increasing on the system. Higher capacity prices help to send a clear signal that generation investment is needed," PJM told Newsweek.PJM says that demand is increasing primarily due to the power requirements of AI and data centers, but also from electrification—replacing technologies or processes that use fossil fuels with electrically-powered equivalents—and a resurgence in U.

S. manufacturing."Data centers and AI will certainly drive demand up and that could lead to higher electricity prices as more costly generation needs to be brought online to meet demand," Gilbert Metcalf, professor of economics at Tufts University, told Newsweek.He added: "Much depends on how state regulators approve new massive demand loads to connect to the grid.

They could, for example, mandate that data centers curtail demand during peak periods or pay for improved infrastructure to ease congestion. Big data centers will resist this, but new, large demand loads added to the grid do bring increased costs that, unless regulators intervene, will be spread to all users."

Photo-illustration by Newsweek/Getty/Canva America's Aging Grid SystemRobert Pindyck, a finance and economics professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, told Newsweek there was "just one reason" behind rising electricity bills, "and that's the grid.""We have a very antiquated, inefficient grid here in the United States, and the result is that if there's any increase in demand—even if the electricity can be generated cheaply—it's very hard to move it from A to B," he said.

The numbers back up Pindyck's warning. The 2025 American Society of Civil Engineers "Report Card" gives the nation's power infrastructure a D+ and calculates a $578 billion investment gap in transmission and distribution through 2033—even after factoring in the $73 billion already set aside for grid upgrades under the 2021 infrastructure law.

Modernizing the grid to meet demand would be "very hard to do," according to Pindyck.This is in part because different states have different rules. Texas, for example, has its own grid that isn't connected to the rest of the country. It operates like a separate country in that sense, and it's very inefficient, Pindyck added.

Even outside of Texas, building new power lines is extremely hard as there are strict rules about what can be built and where, and people generally don't want new lines in their area. As a result, nothing gets built, Pindyck said.On Thursday, during an appearance on Fox Business' Mornings with Maria, Secretary of Energy Chris Wright warned that the grid was reaching its limit."

We need to make changes rapidly. We need to see new capacity built, smarter regulation, we need to use our grid wiser. There's so many things we need to do to improve it. We can't do it all overnight," Wright said.Wolfe, meanwhile, told CBS MoneyWatch in May that taking efforts to modernize your home can lead to cost savings for households as they try and keep cool during the warmer months.

For instance, installing insulation can help manage and reduce energy expenses."Families should start preparing for long-term extreme weather and think about the energy efficiency of their cooling systems," Wolfe said.

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