Article | 06.23.2026
“Solar in the Southeast” Ninth Edition Report: Solar Boom Meets Solar Resistance
The Southeast is on track to nearly double its solar capacity by 2030, but utility pushbacks, federal tax credit terminations, and political upheaval may slow the expected solar boom.
Article | 06.05.2026
Time to Draw the Line in North Carolina
With twelve big gas infrastructure projects approved or on the horizon, most of which have not yet hit our bills, it's time for North Carolina to hit pause.
Article | 06.01.2026
Speaking Truth And Common Sense To Power And Greed
While TVA, the EPA, and utilities betray public trust through fossil fuel agendas, farmers and manufacturers lead a cleaner, cheaper energy transformation across the Southeast.
Article | 05.26.2026
NC House-Appointed Commissioner Attempts to Halt Solar in North and South Carolina
North Carolina regulators paused Duke Energy's solar and battery storage procurement, risking higher bills and energy shortfalls. Learn how this decision affects Carolinas electricity customers and...
Article | 05.12.2026
“Know the Facts”? The Coal Industry Doesn’t Want You To.
TVA and the coal industry are misleading the public about coal ash — and abandoning the plant retirements that would protect public health.
Article | 05.05.2026
The EPA Under Lee Zeldin: What a New Investigation Reveals and Why It Matters for the Southeast
A major new investigation by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Elizabeth Kolbert exposes the systematic dismantling of America's environmental protections, and the fossil fuel interests driving it.
Article | 05.04.2026
Duke Energy’s ELNG Concept: First = Expensive and Risky
Duke is asking the NCUC to approve a first-of-a kind liquefied natural gas facility as “fuel security” for additional combined cycle gas plants. What exactly is ELNG, and why are both SACE and...
04.30.2026
Skyrocketing Bills Aren’t “Cool.” Fight Back.
Rising electric bills in the Southeast aren't accidental — utility executives, data centers, and weak regulators are driving costs up. Here's what you can do.
Article | 04.29.2026
A Five-Person Commission Controls Most Georgians’ Electric Bills. Two Seats Are Up for Election This Year.
A group of five elected officials on the Georgia Public Service Commission has the final say over most Georgians’ power bills, and Georgians statewide get to vote for two of them this year.
04.21.2026
Duke’s Transmission Planning Too Short-sighted for Carolinas’ Needs
SACE-sponsored testimony in Duke Energy's latest Integrated Resource Plan highlights the disconnect between Duke’s transmission planning and opportunities to cost-effectively expand the grid in the...