The answer is not blowing in the wind

April 18, 2026

OPINION by SARO RIZZO

California is gripped by an electricity crisis. A “perfect storm” of structural and policy failures has saddled citizens with the highest residential rates in the contiguous United States—reaching up to 36 cents per kWh as of April 2026. This burden will only grow as EV adoption, high-speed charging, and AI data centers drive peak demand up an estimated 15% by 2030 and 50% by 2045.

The state’s aggressive retirement of fossil fuel and nuclear plants has exacerbated the problem. New green energy hasn’t arrived fast enough to buffer an aging grid that requires a multi-billion-dollar facelift just to handle intermittent solar and wind. While California often enjoys a solar surplus during the day, it faces “duck curve” scarcity from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., when production vanishes just as demand peaks.

This fear of blackouts forced Sacramento to reverse the planned 2025 closure of the Diablo Canyon Power Plant. As the state’s last nuclear facility, it remains a vital anchor, providing 8% of California’s total electricity and nearly 20% of its carbon-free power. While Sacramento officially targets a 2030 retirement, the state’s dire predicament will likely force another extension until at least 2035.

Unfortunately, California leaders remain convinced they can solve this crisis through a “moonshot” of massive floating offshore wind farms. By focusing myopically on this path, they are ignoring a fiscal and environmental collision course.

The dream of 25 gigawatts (GW) of deep-water energy carries a $248 billion price tag that will tether Californians to exorbitant bills for decades. With initial generation not expected until 2036, and final buildout until 2045, this project offers zero relief for the energy shortfalls of the next ten years.

The math is staggering. According to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), installing floating wind on the Pacific Coast will cost roughly $7,349 per kilowatt. Factor in $12 billion for port upgrades and $36.5 billion for new transmission lines, and the price tag will balloon to nearly $10 billion per gigawatt. This will result in a wholesale financing cost of $0.21 per kilowatt-hour—over four times the cost of modern natural gas plants.

Retail markups will eventually crush working families and energy-reliant industries which are already leaving the state due to high energy costs.

Beyond financial ruin lies the gargantuan industrialization of our coastline. Idyllic communities like Avila Beach face destruction from the massive port infrastructure needed to service farms off Morro Bay.

Reaching the state’s goal will require over 2,000 ‘monstrosities,’ each rising 800 feet above the waterline across more than 373,000 acres of federal ocean lease areas. Tethered to the floor 4,000 feet below by thousands of miles of massive steel chains, these turbines will create a vast web of high-voltage cables across hundreds of miles of the ocean floor.

The environmental hypocrisy is “stomach-churning.” While the California Coastal Commission historically restricts minor developments, it has remained silent on the “abominable” impact of the largest ocean construction project in its history. How will migrating whales navigate an obstacle course of cables and nonstop acoustic pollution?

Furthermore, transmitting this power will require roughly 30 offshore converter stations—industrial platforms the size of Navy destroyers. These substations represent a glaring policy contradiction. California spent decades forcing coastal power plants to abandon “once-through cooling” due to its lethal impact on marine larvae.

Yet, these new offshore stations will be designed to suck in a combined 240 million gallons of seawater daily—acting as a biological vacuum that will destroy billions of fish larvae—before discharging it as thermal pollution.

With the current federal administration actively opposing offshore wind—even implementing a nationwide freeze on permitting and leasing—the essential approvals from Washington will not be forthcoming. This federal blockade makes California’s current planning efforts largely futile.

California leadership must abandon this lose-lose approach before we commit to this quarter-trillion-dollar mistake and pivot toward a more pragmatic, diversified energy strategy.

This might include supporting a new generation of Small Modular Reactors (SMRs), which are safer, factory-built, and use liquid-metal cooling that requires zero water intake. Crucially, these advanced designs which experts believe will be ready for buildout as soon as 2030 can be fueled by recycling existing spent nuclear fuel, transforming what is currently viewed as waste into a century of clean energy.

We could pair this with next-generation solid-state battery storage to bridge our solar gaps safely. Combined with increased solar production and a strategic transition to cleaner natural gas plants that offer immediate reliability at a fraction of the cost, we can secure our grid without destroying our coastline. We must prioritize energy that is affordable, immediate, and truly protective of the marine ecosystems we claim to cherish.

Saro Rizzo is a public interest attorney in San Luis Obispo and the Vice-President of REACT Alliance. He was the lead attorney in the successful 1996 litigation against UNOCAL for the Avila Beach oil spill cleanup and currently resides in Avila Beach.

 


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Vote in a Republican Governor in 2026 to start fixing California!


#NEVERVoteDemoNcratAgain


#VoteRepublican2026


Well stated, Saro. It’s like the high-speed rail project; it’s designed to never actually function. It’s a gigantic grift, a pass-through or laundering mechanism for politicians, consultants, environmental groups, and selected contractors. It will never work because the intent is that it never work. We’re screwed.


I am not a fan of nuclear projects, but I am even less of a fan of permanent destruction of one of the most beautiful and biodiverse coastlines in the world for the sake of yet another boondoggle project to enrich developers, set precedents that should not exist and rip off us ratepayers for the enrichment of oil companies and other power and utility companies that see us as the “little people” they can steamroll right over for their w#t dream project.


The “science” people claim to be supporting this project does not even exist. Such a scale of this kind has never been even close to attempted. The damage that is a given is staggering. All on our dime. Why do we not just take that money, or a fraction of it, and put solar on everyone’s home and vertical wind installations wherever possible? That is proven to work. The vertical units work much better in close proximity, have a much wider operational range, and are infinitely more affordable and less dangerous. On shore. They are also much more attractive.


The difference being they cannot get staggering amounts of money unless they pull off the proposed nightmare for tens of billions of money we do not even have. And they cannot continue to bilk our helpless selves unless they fully control whatever power we do use. This setup is corruption at its finest. And do not be fooled. None of those involved in possible profit are proceeding as if they will not resume the process immediately upon regime/policy change.


^—— Finally, a semi-cogent post from this one.


It’s like the State “Leaders” led us out deep into a desert and then said “ Surprise! We’re out of water!”

We’re screwed , no matter what.

ANY new energy source will take years, or probably more like decades to get online from here, today. Even supplementing with SMRs will take years!!’ In the meantime we’re cooked.

I love the dopey crowd that helped make this happen… they are supposed to stand for the little guy. But gas and electricity are sky high and effect them most.

Either by design or massive incompetence , this is what we face.

My only hope is that when this gets as bad as I fear it might, the fools who pass for governance here in Cali are swept from office in a landslide

– never to return. Please , put the grown ups back in charge.


Again, I must repeat…


“The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they’re ignorant; it’s just that they know so much that isn’t so.” -Ronald Reagan, 1964


Saro, You pretty well covered it. It’s so obvious to any normal thinking person that wind farm’s especially offshore wind farms are the worst way of producing electricity. As Warren Buffett says, If it wasn’t for the subsidies no one would be building them. No these projects are bad all around. They are bad for San Luis County and they are bad for the country.


Yet we have “elected officials” statewide and here in Slo county that continue to push this OSW project on us. Dawn Legg is one. At a Port San Luis Board of Commissioners meeting the majority of people present were speaking out against the proposed PSL Offshore Wind Operation and Maintenance project. Dawn shows up and says that those opposed to this project are just afraid of change. I was there and had to contain myself from slapping her!


DOL needs to get b slapped off of our SLOC BOS.


Loser, anchor baby of an ILLEGAL INVADER (her own admission at a BOS meeting)


Very well written, thank you! Unfortunately, impossible to reason with eco terrorist marxists who run the state and creep this board


Meanwhile, China has nearly 40 GW of offshore wind production and more than 30 more in the works. The U.S. has less than 1 GW total. In addition, putting all our eggs in the SMR basket is risky considering that it too is expensive and unproven. Now, I am not anti-nuclear but rather, I believe we should be doing both snd should be rapidly weaning ourselves off fossil fuels.


https://blog.ucs.org/edwin-lyman/five-things-the-nuclear-bros-dont-want-you-to-know-about-small-modular-reactors/


We don’t GAF about your dopey thoughts.


At least not to your face Mr. Trask.


Anything I post, I will say to anyone’s face as I absolutely adhere to:


1A OVER everything

2A assures the former (most assuredly)


China builds a coal powered generator every two weeks. Did you factor that into your screed?


France gets nearly all her energy from SMR’s, and the monthly bill is cheap. England gets nearly all her energy from wind and solar, and pay the highest price for electricity in Europe.


Surprisingly, I would like to be a little more French with the lights on, than English in the rolling dark.


Well said, Saro. Well said. Hopefully the pain is becoming too great to bear for productive Californias (us, the taxpayers) who will have to pay for, and suffer with this cockamamie “feel-good” crap. Pray we get some common sense with Steve Hilton. And God help us if Tom (hypocrite) Steyer spends and cheats his way to the gov. seat. Just research Farollon Capital to see how that creepy dude made his billions. Wake up California.


#SaveSLOCounty

#SaveCalifornia


#NEVERVoteDemoNcratAgain


#VoteRepublican2026


Well done. The staggering incompetence of our government officials has resulted in the energy quagmire you’re describing. “Political people” are completely unqualified to be making decisions as critical as how our current and future energy needs will be met. It’s obvious “they” have no idea what to do. They’re easily suckered, tricked and completely subservient to the word “green”.