Your Electricity Bill Will Rise This Summer. Guess Why?

A blog by Ayla Frost, CCAN’s DC Organizer

This summer, you may want to keep an eye on your electricity bills. As we know, climate change is making our summers hotter, and more households are cranking up the air conditioning. But that isn’t the main reason your bill is going up. Pepco’s latest rate hike – or bill increase – follows a pattern of rate hikes that it’s been forcing on customers for years. 

Why is Pepco raising rates?

Source: Brattle Economic Analysis of Clean Energy Tax Credits Report

This June, the rates we pay for electricity are rising due to a bias against clean energy by D.C.’s regional power grid operator, PJM. PJM (Pennsylvania – New Jersey – Maryland) serves as “air traffic control” for the electrical grid, coordinating the movement of electricity to meet demand. 

Utilities like Pepco get their electricity through PJM’s regional grid, and currently, the cost for that energy is skyrocketing. This is because fossil fuels are less reliable than solar and wind plants and more prone to fail during extreme weather. As PJM consistently prioritizes unreliable fossil fuels over clean energy, it has to tap into additional resources to keep the grid afloat when fossil fuels fail – creating additional cost that is, of course, passed on to consumers.

This means that Pepco customers can expect to pay up to 18% more on their Pepco bills starting this June. And that’s not all. This rate hike fits into a larger pattern of rate increases by Pepco and other utilities in the DC region. 

Just five months ago, in January, Pepco was responsible for another rate hike which increased electricity rates in DC for the third year in a row. Why so many hikes? Quite honestly, because they can. Pepco practically has a monopoly on our electricity in DC, and is regulated by DC’s Public Service Commission, which is responsible for protecting consumers, regulating monopolies, and conserving natural resources. Unfortunately, right now, the Public Service Commission (PSC) is failing to protect D.C. residents from higher bills. In fact, the PSC has already approved Pepco’s “Climate Ready Pathway DC Multi-Year Plan,” which means D.C. can expect more hikes in the coming years. 

DC residents are already struggling to pay for housing, groceries, health care, education, and so much more. This alarming pattern of rate hikes creates a serious crisis of energy affordability in DC.  Everyday people can’t keep footing the bill for energy monopolies’ corporate greed. The D.C. Council needs to step in to protect ratepayers from this energy affordability crisis. In the meantime, resources are available to help D.C. residents to cope with high utility bills. 

How can I lower my utility bills?

Apply for assistance! The D.C. government offers many services to help residents afford their utility bills. You also may qualify for utility discounts or credits. Starting in October, you may be able to save money through the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). LIHEAP is one of many programs currently targeted by the Trump administration, and its future remains uncertain. 

Electrify your appliances. You’ll save money on your bills if you upgrade your old appliances, including water heaters, clothes dryers, and gas stoves. DC Sustainable Energy Utility (DCSEU) offers programs to help you afford the switch to energy-efficient electric appliances like heat pumps, smart thermostats, and induction stoves. If you’re eligible, swapping out your appliances might be completely free!

Increase your energy efficiency. If you qualify for the Weatherization Assistance Program, you can receive an energy audit and free upgrades to increase the efficiency of your home. These won’t make your home electric, but they can help save you money, and weatherization will also help the environment. 

Get solar panels. DCSEU offers Community Solar and Solar for All programs to install solar panels on your roof for free, if you qualify! DC also offers Solar Renewable Energy Credits (SRECs) for solar energy generation. These can be traded or sold, in effect earning you dividends for providing green energy. 

But these programs rely on funding from our city’s budget, and every year advocates have to defend D.C. residents’ right to affordable energy that doesn’t pollute our planet. Check out our handy guide to home electrification and weatherization and discover how you can make your home cleaner, healthier, and more energy efficient here

How can I stand up for my DC neighbors?

We need you with us – get involved! Join a local organization to help solve this affordability crisis caused by corporate greed and lack of utility regulation. Take the Climate Action Survey to join our team of volunteers pushing back on Washington Gas’s plans to lock DC into fossil fuels – all while profiting as much as possible. Fired up about holding Pepco accountable? Join We Power DC to advocate for publicly owned utilities in DC. 

About the author: Ayla Frost (she/her) joined CCAN in January 2024 as DC Intern, and has worked as a full-time DC Organizer since September 2024. Ayla grew up in Oakland, California, but her childhood was marked by frequent trips to family in Baltimore, Maryland.

Over time, she developed a deep fondness for both of the bays in her life – the San Francisco Bay and the Chesapeake Bay – and became determined to do what she could to protect the natural world. As she learned more about the climate sphere, her real passion in the climate world was listening, connecting with, and uplifting the voices of people. 

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Fifty Years Later: The Moon Landing and Our Overheating Earth Back Home

For all I know, the old yellow mailbox was there on the porch on July 20th, 1969. The Takoma Park homeowners must have gotten letters from relatives and friends afterwards, everyone explaining where they were when astronauts first walked on the moon in black-and-white TV glory.

When I moved into the house in 1991, the aged, free-standing mailbox was still there, at the top of the porch stairs. For nearly two decades it remained. Then, about ten years ago, something odd happened. Bigger and bigger storms – including the 2011 Derecho — kept blowing the unattached mailbox (and lawn chairs) right off the porch. I put a stone in the back of the mailbox but the winds got stronger still. Last year I finally gave up and screwed in a new mailbox directly into the porch wall. 

As extreme weather stories go, I’m lucky. I don’t have the surprise cascades of water flooding my basement or trees pancaking whole rooms like many Washingtonians. But here’s the truth: We all have climate stories now. 

And so this week, as we mark the 50th anniversary of the first moonwalk, many people are thinking much more about the planet Earth than the faraway moon. So much has changed here at home since those first “Earthrise” photos appeared from Apollo. The massive, white polar ice caps, seen in the late 1960s through wispy clouds on an otherwise blue planet, have substantially disappeared. “It’s like looking at your ‘60s high school yearbook photo compared to who you are now,” says author and activist Bill McKibben. “That old Earth is long gone.”

What a leap of sci-fi imagination it would have taken for those 1969 Americans, so full of optimism and technological hope, to see us now: Washingtonians in July 2019 scrambling to the roofs of their cars to avoid drowning after six inches of rain fell in some places in one hour. The same city experiencing a heat index approaching 115 degrees by the end of July. Shopkeepers, meanwhile, in Annapolis and Norfolk and worldwide, boarding up waterside shops because those same blue oceans – so serene from space – are now massively swelling and crashing into continents.  And across the DC area, beginning about ten years ago, varieties of the heat-loving Palmetto tree are now able to grow year round.

The same scientific method that got us to the moon has, for the past 50 years, been telling us the planet will warm and unravel if we keep using fossil fuels. Yet here we are today, still with no inspired national strategy – no 10-year moonshot plan — to solve the problem in the few years scientists say we have left to try. 

Core blame, of course, rests with the oil companies like ExxonMobil who have funded climate-denying politicians and think thanks to confuse and lie to the public. But one day soon, to the sound of investigative gavels pounding on Capitol Hill, those same companies will wish they were the tobacco industry based on the staggering health implications and legal liabilities of their deception.

More immediately and locally, I worry about the media coverage of this crisis. Climate-enhanced Lyme disease is skyrocketing (I’ve suffered for ten years). Local vinyards are shutting down due to devastating early blooms. And, god, the flash flood warnings – beeping and flashing — blow up our phones almost daily. And yet the coverage in the Washington Post and elsewhere – while growing – is patently insufficient in volume and in connect-the-dots context. Yes, Post cartoonist Tom Toles’ keeps it real with his near-weekly focus on the irony and urgency of climate disruption. But shouldn’t every reporter and nearly every columnist be covering the issue with Tolesian frequency and urgency? Baltimore Sun columnist Dan Rodricks, a lifelong fisherman who has seen his favorite rivers and bays physically changed by global warming, recently pledged that one-third of all his columns will henceforth relate to climate change in some way. “What story is bigger than this?” Rodricks asks.

Finally and sadly on this moon walk anniversary, here’s a message for Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos: stop investing in space travel. Bezos’ quixotic company Blue Origin won’t be colonizing space anytime soon if that fragile, original experiment with organized life shuts down on the only blue planet we know. Better to put those billions of dollars into expanded Post coverage of the climate crisis and into direct financial investments in a moon-shot plan to electrify the Earthly economy with wind and solar power within the decade. 

Finally, finally: If I could write a hopeful letter to the 2069 inhabitants of my home – both the Takoma Park ones and the planetary occupants – what would I say? Here’s what: “Happy 100th anniversary of the moon walk. Thank god we learned the right lesson – in time.” 

Mike Tidwell is director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network

Activists who laugh together, stay together. Join us Thursday for climate comedy in DC!

Clear skies, blooming trees, warm breezes; spring has sprung in Washington DC — 22 days too early. If you’re like me, this warm weather is making you freak out about global warming.
Which is why LAUGHTER has never been more important. Seriously, hear me out. With Donald Trump’s presidency, we environmentally minded citizens have never needed to stick together more. So why not enjoy some laughs, and help advance climate action along the way?
That’s why our friends at Grassroots Comedy DC are hosting a stand-up comedy benefit for climate action this Thursday!
Come join us at the Super Spectacular Comedy Showcase For The Climate, 7:30pm on Thursday, March 2nd, at The Bier Baron Tavern (1523 22nd St NW, D.C.). Invite everyone you know!
The evening’s headliner is award-winning stand-up comedian Robert Mac. He’s been a finalist on Billy Crystal’s Mr. Saturday Night Contest, the San Francisco International Comedy Competition and the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon Talent Search. He’s also appeared on Montreal’s Just For Laughs, Gilda’s LaughFest and took the grand prize at Comedy Central’s Laugh Riots. There will be plenty of other hilarious comics as well; and, you will get a chance to connect with like-minded climate allies from our region.
By coming out for laughs, you will also be helping the climate movement here in DC. All proceeds will go to CCAN’s campaign  to put a price on carbon in DC, with the country’s first progressive and equitable carbon fee and rebate policy.
We know that putting a price on carbon is one of the most straightforward and cost-effective ways to fight climate change. By making fossil fuel polluters pay for the real and damaging costs of their emissions, we can unleash the clean energy solutions we need, and make DC families better off in the process.
The coalition to put a price on carbon in DC is starting to take off. Our diverse, multi-sector, city-wide coalition is now more than 20 organizations strong, and we have begun positive conversations with City Council members and key agency leads. Read more about that here.
So help CCAN work to give clean energy a chance to compete and keep the dirty stuff where it belongs: underground.
Join the climate movement in DC, and come to the Super Spectacular Comedy Showcase For The Climate, 7:30pm on Thursday, March 2nd, at The Bier Baron Tavern (1523 22nd St NW, D.C.). RSVP on Facebook, or buy tickets directly here.
Hope to see you there!


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Commentary: Burying Power Lines Won't Stop Severe Weather

WAMU 88.5

By Mike Tidwell

Electricity poles first went up in D.C. in the 1890s, and the city was mostly electrified by the 1920s. So why now, after all these years, does the power seem to keep going out? Why talk of new underground lines? The region’s utilities — Pepco and Dominion Power — constantly remind us that big storms bring power outages: Isabel, Irene, Snomageddon, the derecho, and Sandy.

And scientists say storms are only getting more severe. With the indisputable rise in temperatures worldwide has come an utterly measurable rise in extreme weather. In 2011, the U.S. had a record 14 extreme-weather events, each causing a billion dollars in losses or more, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Continue reading

How CCAN Got to Work on 10/10/10 [PHOTOS]

If anyone has any doubt that the climate movement is forging ahead after the rocky road we’ve traveled from Copenhagen to the Senate dead-end, they should just consider what happened on October 10th, 2010. The sheer mind-blowing scale of 350.org’s 10/10/10 Global Work Party shows that far from losing momentum, the global climate movement has only picked up steam in countries across the world. Indeed, despite all the political blows we’ve been dealt this past year, people rallied behind climate action like never before

Hands Across the Sand DC Video

Check out this video put together by the Energy Action Coalition! It was taken at the Hands Across the Sand event in front of the White House- one of hundreds of events throughout the world.

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Take me out to a Green Ballgame …

This Saturday, going out to a local ball park could be a fun evening with a “green” theme. Bethesda Green, a non-profit working to help Bethesda, Maryland, green itself is having a fundraising event with the semi-pro Bethesda Big Train. The Big Train is truly that ‘family friendly park’, small, low cost, and almost always with things going on.

This will be quite a busy night at that ballpark. Putting aside watching a game, Bethesda Green will be joined by The Big Green Bus, which is a Dartmouth College student project taking a vegetable oil powered bus around the country for climate change awareness (and action) and The Honest Tea company.

Putting aside that Green element, this will be a busy evening with “Carnival Night”, Teacher Appreciation Night, Great Book night with a number of authors …

Much more pleasant then going to the Nationals’ “green” stadium.

Sigh … if the stadium were only at a Metro stop …

DC residents: save some green on local eco-products!

Want to save some $ while supporting sweet local businesses like Sticky Fingers (mmm, vegan treats!), Clean Currents (yay! wind cheaper than coal!), and Zipcar? (ok, so Zipcar’s not local. They’re still pretty awesome.)

Now you can with LiveGreen, a new organization where, for a membership of only $13, you get special deals and discounts from local eco-friendly businesses, from energy auditors to yoga studios to clean energy businesses. Check it out!

Now that’s what I call going green.