Trump ENDS Blackout Nightmare

A yellow triangular warning sign with a lightning bolt on a black background
BLACKOUT NIGHTMARE ENDED

The Trump administration is bringing Three Mile Island’s nuclear plant back online by 2027, signaling a decisive shift away from unreliable renewable energy toward baseload power that can actually keep the lights on during peak demand.

Story Snapshot

  • Energy Secretary Christopher Wright confirms grids must be designed for peak demand to prevent deadly blackouts, not the average output of intermittent renewables
  • Constellation Energy’s Three Mile Island Unit 1 restart receives full federal backing through Trump’s Energy Dominance Financing Office to meet surging electricity needs
  • Data centers and AI-driven electricity demand are projected to spike over 20 percent by 2035, exposing fatal flaws in renewable-dependent grid planning
  • DOE emergency orders during January-February 2026 winter storms prevented widespread blackouts across ERCOT, MISO, and SPP regions

Peak Demand Reality Check Exposes Grid Weaknesses

Energy Secretary Christopher Wright delivered a message that flies in the face of leftist renewable fantasies: America’s electrical grid must be built for peak demand, not wishful thinking about wind and solar.

Speaking on Fox Business, Wright emphasized that grid reliability depends on meeting demand during peak periods, when extreme weather or simultaneous usage stress the system.

His comments came as Constellation Energy advances plans to restart Pennsylvania’s Three Mile Island Unit 1 by 2027, directly challenging the previous administration’s obsession with intermittent energy that left Americans vulnerable to blackouts.

Wright’s position cuts through years of Obama-Biden-era propaganda claiming that renewables could replace reliable baseload power. The Energy Information Administration projects record electricity consumption in 2026-2027, driven by data centers supporting America’s digital economy and manufacturing reshoring under Trump’s economic policies.

This demand surge exposes the grid’s “full-stack” crisis: generation shortages, transmission bottlenecks, and interconnection queues clogged by unreliable renewable projects that can’t deliver when Americans need power most.

The secretary’s focus on peak demand acknowledges that building infrastructure for average output, when solar panels go dark and wind turbines sit idle, invites catastrophic failures.

Nuclear Renaissance Restores American Energy Dominance

Three Mile Island’s revival represents more than restarting a shuttered reactor; it marks a philosophical rejection of green energy mandates that prioritize climate ideology over grid security.

Dan Eggers, Constellation Energy’s Senior Vice President for Finance and the Data Economy, praised the Trump administration’s support for the 2027 restart, highlighting how the Energy Dominance Financing Office provides critical federal loan backing.

This approach contrasts sharply with the Biden administration’s favoritism toward wind and solar projects that received billions in subsidies while delivering inconsistent power.

Unit 1’s return adds firm, dispatchable capacity to Pennsylvania’s grid, addressing the 20-plus percent peak demand increase projected through 2035.

The nuclear comeback reflects lessons learned from past grid failures and the practical demands of 21st-century electricity consumption. Three Mile Island Unit 1 operated safely until economic pressures from subsidized renewables forced its 2019 closure, despite Unit 2’s 1979 partial meltdown, which sparked public fear.

Now, with data centers, reshored manufacturing, and electrification driving unprecedented load growth, the Trump administration recognizes nuclear’s irreplaceable role as a baseload power source.

The Energy Dominance Financing Office’s transformation from the Biden-era DOE Loan Programs Office signals policy alignment with reliability over decarbonization targets, enabling tens of gigawatts of new nuclear capacity that can actually operate during peak-demand crises.

Winter Storms Prove Wright’s Peak Demand Warning Justified

Secretary Wright’s grid philosophy moved from theory to lifesaving reality during January-February 2026 winter storms, when DOE emergency orders prevented blackouts across multiple grid operators.

Storm Fern on January 25 threatened widespread outages in ERCOT, MISO, and SPP regions, echoing the deadly 2021 Texas freeze that exposed renewable energy’s failure during extreme cold.

Wright’s DOE issued orders allowing utilities to temporarily exceed environmental limits, prioritizing human life over regulatory constraints—a common-sense approach that the climate-obsessed left consistently opposes.

Similar emergency actions stabilized Florida’s grid during a prolonged February cold snap, demonstrating how fossil fuel and nuclear backup save lives when wind turbines freeze and solar panels are snow-covered.

These emergency interventions vindicate Wright’s assertion that renewables prove “not helpful” during peak demand events, contradicting renewable advocates who cite overall contribution percentages while ignoring critical reliability gaps.

The FERC and DOE are advancing permitting reforms through Order 1920 and interconnection rulemaking to accelerate transmission buildout, recognizing that even an “all-of-the-above” energy strategy requires infrastructure designed for worst-case scenarios.

Pennsylvania communities stand to regain jobs and economic activity from Three Mile Island’s restart, while ratepayers nationwide benefit from avoiding the astronomical costs of blackout-related deaths, property damage, and economic disruption that result from grids designed around average renewable output rather than peak demand realities.

Sources:

Energy secretary says grid must be built for ‘peak demand’ as Three Mile Island plans return

2026 Energy Outlook: How Affordability, Data Centers, and Grid

What Energy Secretary Wright Gets Wrong About the US Grid

Congressional Testimony on Grid Reliability and Peak Demand

Energy Secretary Secures Florida’s Grid During Prolonged Cold Snap

Energy Secretary Calls for More Emphasis on Fossil Fuels to Keep Power During Winter Storms

Energy Department Prevented Blackouts, Saved American Lives During Winter Storms