Energy secretary calls for more emphasis on fossil fuels to keep power on in winter storms
Snow and ice boulders at the Forest Glen Metro stop in Silver Spring, Maryland, on Jan. 29, 2026, days after Winter Storm Fern hit the region. (Photo by Jane Norman/States Newsroom)
A focus on addressing climate change, including by producing wind and solar energy, has not helped Americans keep their electricity and heat on during winter storms, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said Friday.
Ahead of another major cold snap on the East Coast, Wright briefed reporters at the agency headquarters in Washington, D.C., on the importance of maintaining electricity and heat supply during winter storms and advocated for a national energy strategy that focuses more on grid resilience and less on reducing carbon emissions.Β
His statements continued a Trump administration stress on fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas that contribute to global climate change.
Americans elected President Donald Trump to move away from a focus on climate, Wright said.
βToday, the policies that get in the way of reasonable energy development and mess up the math are things focused around climate change,β he said. βWeβve done almost nothing to change global greenhouse gas emissions β as close to nothing as you can get β from endless regulations on electricity that have just driven up prices and driven down reliability in the name of climate change.β
Electricity grids and peak demandΒ
Electricity grids must be designed for peak demand, such as during winter storms or summer heat waves, Wright said. Efforts to increase generation capacity with renewable sources are misguided, as the United States electricity grid produces hundreds of excess gigawatts of power during normal conditions, he said.
During President Joe Bidenβs administration, Democrats enacted a law providing massive tax credits for wind and solar production. Without naming that law or specific officials, Wright said those efforts were not useful.
βWhen I hear politicians say, βWe just need more electrons on the grid,β no, we donβt,β he said. βWhen the sun shines or the wind blows, (it) doesnβt add anything to the capacity of our electricity grid. It just means we send subsidy checks to those generators, and we tell the other generators, turn down.β
During the winter storm that gripped much of the country last month, wind energy provided 40% less electricity than it had on the same days in 2025, Wright said. Solar provided only 2% of energy to affected areas, according to a pie chart shown at the briefing.
By contrast, coal provided 25% more power than usual and natural gas produced 47% more, he said. Nuclear energy was about the same.
Renewables strengthen grid, climate group says
The clean energy group Climate Power said in a Tuesday statement that renewable sources helped fortify energy supply during peak demand times. Solar energy produced 300% more in a 2024 Texas storm than it had in a storm three years earlier. And during last monthβs cold streak, areas that relied on wind saw lower prices, according to the group.
Climate Power also said natural gas infrastructure was βprone to freezes and mechanical failure.β
βAs back-to-back winter storms pummeled communities across the country in January, the facts about Donald Trumpβs reckless energy policies have come into focus: fossil fuels have proved less reliable and more expensive as families struggle to keep the power on,β the statement read.
Wright favors natural gas
But while Democrats and climate activists have said the U.S. should move away from oil, coal and gas because of the climate-warming emissions they release and toward renewables, Wright suggested natural gas should be emphasized instead to substitute for oil, which is more expensive and produces more air pollution.
The proposed Constitution Pipeline, which would carry natural gas from New York state to Pennsylvania, should have been approved years ago, Wright said, but was held up by a βbad political decision.β
Planners abandoned the controversial project in 2020 in the face of regulatory difficulties in New York, but revived it last year. Its federal reviews are pending.
Wright said producing more energy would also be needed for another Trump administration priority: leading in artificial intelligence development. The industry needs massive energy sources to run the data centers AI relies on.Β