Episode 40: The Transmission Crisis: Why Electricity Prices Keep Rising Even When Power Exists
Description
Even when new power plants are planned…
Even when projects are approved…
Even when electricity is actually being generated…
The grid often can’t deliver that power where it’s needed.
In this episode of The Clean Energy Edge Podcast, Russ Bates breaks down one of the most overlooked problems in the U.S. electricity system: the transmission bottleneck.
High-voltage transmission lines are the backbone of the grid, yet new lines can take 7–12 years to plan, permit, and build — far too slow for today’s rapidly growing demand. As electricity consumption accelerates due to AI data centers, electrification, extreme weather, and large energy-intensive facilities, transmission has become a major driver of rising prices and declining reliability.
This episode explains:
What transmission is and why it matters
Why electricity demand is growing faster than the grid can adapt
How congestion forces higher-cost power onto the system
Why transmission constraints raise electricity prices even when cheap power exists
How limited transmission weakens grid resilience during heat waves and cold snaps
Why “just building more power plants” doesn’t solve the real problem
Russ also explains why the traditional model of large, centralized power plants is running into hard limits — and why distributed energy, storage, and behind-the-meter generation are becoming essential to grid reliability going forward.
🎧 If electricity prices keep rising and the grid feels less reliable, transmission is a big reason why.
👉 Subscribe to The Clean Energy Edge Podcast for clear, real-world explanations of what’s broken in the energy system — and what actually works.



