State Simulator

Adjust the affordability levers and compare the state-level path.

The first chart traces a zoomed, non-zero retail-rate axis from the official 2025 starting point to a stressed 2035 status quo and then down through the selected affordability strategies. The second chart links 2024 state CO2, a 2035 status quo, and the 2035 clean-share strategy case.

Outputs

State affordability path

2025 average rate 0.0c/kWh
2035 status quo 0.0c/kWh
2035 strategy 0.0c/kWh
Annual system savings $0.0B/yr
Household bill relief $0/yr
2035 clean share 0%

Cost reduction wedges, 2025 to 2035

The dashed line is a stressed high-load-growth BAU path, the black line is the strategy path, and the colored wedges expand over time to show each strategy's 2035 rate impact.

Power-sector emissions and clean share

Bars show state CO2 and the line shows clean share against the 80% benchmark.

From Output To Action

What states should do if they want these savings.

The point of the simulator is not just to show a cheaper path. It is to show that the cheaper path requires a visible policy program: more competition, faster permitting and interconnection, and tighter scrutiny of monopoly grid spending.

Open Markets

Let low-cost clean power compete.

Open procurement and market access to solar plus storage, third-party aggregators, community-scale projects, and direct customer participation so the cheapest resources can actually reach households and industry.

Utilization Before Capex

Make utilities prove the existing grid is being used well.

Require grid-utilization metrics, non-wires review, and transparent deferral analysis before approving new wires spending that will stay in rates for decades.

Permitting and Interconnection

Collapse the soft-cost delay stack.

Use automated permitting, shot clocks, standardized interconnection, and faster permission to operate so clean resources can be deployed on the timeline affordability requires.

Customer Protection

Keep large-load and peak costs off household bills.

Use flexible large-load tariffs, BYOC structures, and curtailment-ready connections so data center and industrial growth does not automatically become a household rate shock.