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Wednesday, December 17, 2025

The Great Energy Myth: How Renewables Are Actually Saving Us Money

 


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The narrative claiming wind and solar drive up electricity costs crumbles when confronted with global market data


Picture this: A state powered more than half by wind turbines and solar panels, where electricity prices sit comfortably below the national average. Sound impossible? It's not only possible—it's reality in Iowa, South Dakota, and New Mexico. Yet somehow, the myth persists that renewable energy is an expensive luxury we can't afford.


The debate over renewable energy costs has become one of the most politically charged questions of our time. In September 2025, President Donald Trump stood before the United Nations and declared wind "the most expensive energy ever conceived." In the UK, Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch blamed renewables for "driving up the cost of energy." Think tanks warn ominously of needing "parallel systems" to back up unreliable wind and solar, painting a picture of an unaffordable energy future.


There's just one problem with this narrative: the data tells a completely different story.


When Reality Contradicts the Rhetoric

Across multiple continents and diverse energy markets, a clear pattern emerges that challenges everything critics claim about renewable energy costs. From the plains of Oklahoma to the innovative grids of Denmark, regions embracing wind and solar aren't experiencing the price catastrophes predicted by opponents. Instead, they're often enjoying electricity costs below their regional averages.


The numbers are striking. In 2024, nine out of ten new grid-scale renewable projects generated electricity cheaper than the most affordable new fossil fuel alternative, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency. Onshore wind farms now produce power at an average cost of just 3.4 cents per kilowatt-hour—a full 53% cheaper than the most competitive fossil fuel options. Solar photovoltaic systems aren't far behind at 4.3 cents per kilowatt-hour.


But critics argue these figures don't tell the whole story. What about backup systems? What about the grid upgrades? What about reliability?


The answer, it turns out, lies in examining what's actually happening in electricity markets around the world.


The American Experiment

In the United States, the relationship between renewable energy adoption and electricity prices reveals a pattern that should make policymakers take notice. Of the ten states with the lowest residential electricity rates, seven have above-average wind and solar integration. Oklahoma, a wind energy powerhouse, combines aggressive renewable deployment with some of the nation's cheapest electricity.


The three states where variable renewables exceeded 50% of generation in early 2025—Iowa, South Dakota, and New Mexico—all maintain below-average household power prices. This isn't cherry-picking data; it's a consistent trend across most high-renewable states.


California and Hawaii stand as apparent exceptions, with high renewable shares and high prices. But dig deeper, and the narrative shifts. Hawaii's elevated costs stem largely from its continued reliance on expensive imported petroleum for power generation—a fossil fuel problem, not a renewable one. California's high prices trace back to escalating wildfire-related costs that utilities pass to consumers, alongside aging infrastructure challenges.


Here's what critics miss: even in these outlier states, the renewable energy transition is moderating price growth, not accelerating it. While the national average household price climbed 4.9% year-over-year in early 2025, California's prices remained flat despite wind and solar gaining 5.8 percentage points of market share—the largest increase of any state. Hawaii saw residential prices actually decline by 6.6% as renewables continued expanding.


Research from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory reveals that inflation-adjusted power generation costs in the US actually decreased between 2019 and 2024. The culprit behind rising bills? Investment in transmission and distribution infrastructure, supply chain constraints, and climate-related disasters—not renewable energy deployment.


Europe's Price Revolution

The European Union presents an even more compelling case. Most EU countries with above-average wind and solar penetration enjoy below-average household electricity prices. Denmark, which leads the world in variable renewable adoption, maintains competitive rates despite its pioneering status.


The mechanism driving this phenomenon is elegant in its simplicity. In European electricity markets, the most expensive generator operating at any given time sets the wholesale price. Historically, that's been fossil gas, which set day-ahead prices roughly 60% of the time in 2022 despite generating only 20% of the region's electricity. As cheaper renewables capture a larger share of generation, expensive fossil fuels set prices less frequently because they're simply needed less often.


Spain offers a textbook example of this dynamic in action. Wind and solar comprised 44% of Spain's electricity generation in the first half of 2025, well above the EU average of 31.4%. The result? Fossil fuels set Spanish electricity prices just 19% of the time, down dramatically from 75% in 2019. Spain's wholesale electricity price came in 32% lower than the EU average, and pre-tax household rates ran 13.1% below the continental benchmark.


The International Energy Agency estimates that EU consumers saved approximately €100 billion between 2021 and 2023 as new solar and wind replaced expensive fossil fuel generation. Remarkably, the agency suggests these savings could have been 15% higher with more aggressive renewable deployment.


Looking forward, the IEA's modeling shows Europe's shift from gas and other fossil fuels will lead to a slight decrease in household electricity bills by 2035. The UK's National Energy System Operator projects even more dramatic results: the country's total annual energy spending could fall from around 10% of GDP in 2025 to roughly 5% by 2050 under a high renewable pathway.


The Developing World Takes Notice

In India, where coal still accounts for nearly three-quarters of power generation, the renewable revolution is just beginning. The relationship between renewables and prices remains less clear in this emerging market, though early indicators suggest familiar patterns developing.


Rajasthan, where renewable deployment is more mature, sees distribution utilities paying below the national median for electricity. A peer-reviewed study in Energy Policy found that rising renewable integration in Madhya Pradesh could lower utility power purchase costs by up to 11%, with savings growing as demand increases and renewable costs continue falling.


The Australian Paradox

Australia presents perhaps the most complex case study. South Australia, the nation's renewable energy leader with wind and solar providing 76% of power output, paradoxically shows the highest wholesale prices. Yet this apparent contradiction reveals more about market structure than renewable energy costs.


South Australia's pricing challenges predate its energy transition by years. A 2022 state productivity commission report identified the core issue: an illiquid and highly concentrated market for on-demand electricity that makes hedging expensive. These structural problems existed long before wind turbines and solar panels proliferated—renewable integration rates stood at just 34% as recently as 2014.


More tellingly, daily energy statistics reveal that when wind and solar's share of South Australia's electricity mix rises, prices tend to fall. When renewables exceed 85% of the mix, wholesale prices sometimes drop into negative territory for the entire day. The Australian Energy Market Commission expects national residential electricity prices to decrease by around 5% by 2030 as the rest of the country catches up with South Australia's renewable deployment—but warns prices could climb if the build-out slows.


Breaking the Fossil Fuel-Price Link

What emerges from this global survey is evidence of a fundamental shift in electricity markets. Renewable energy isn't just competing with fossil fuels—it's breaking the historic relationship between fossil fuel costs and electricity prices.


For decades, electricity prices moved in lockstep with fossil fuel costs. When gas prices spiked, electricity bills followed. When coal became cheaper, consumers saw relief. Renewable energy is severing this connection, creating a new paradigm where regions with high renewable penetration become increasingly insulated from fossil fuel price volatility.


This insulation proved its value during recent global energy crises. The IEA's analysis suggests EU consumers would have paid €115 billion more between 2021 and 2023 without the renewable capacity already deployed—a windfall that arrived precisely when fossil fuel prices spiraled upward.


The Cost of Delay

Perhaps the most important finding in the data isn't what's happening in high-renewable regions—it's what's projected for regions that delay their transitions. The Australian Energy Market Commission warns that prices could climb if renewable build-out slows. The IEA suggests European consumers missed out on 15% more savings by not deploying renewables faster. These aren't hypothetical scenarios; they're quantified opportunity costs.


The economics driving this aren't standing still. Wind, solar, and battery storage costs continue declining rapidly. Every year of delayed deployment is a year of locking in higher-cost fossil fuel generation, a year of missing potential savings, a year of increased exposure to fuel price volatility.


The Myth Meets the Market

Electricity pricing is admittedly complex, influenced by supply-demand dynamics, location-specific fuel costs, taxes, market rules, emissions regulations, import dependency, investment timing, and transmission costs. No single factor explains everything.


But the claim that renewables systematically drive up electricity prices? The global data simply doesn't support it. Region after region with above-average renewable deployment shows below-average prices. Market after market demonstrates that increasing wind and solar penetration correlates with stable or declining costs, not the price explosions critics predict.


The myth persists in part because it's intuitive—if something needs backup, surely that makes it more expensive? Yet this logic ignores the fundamental economics. Yes, integrating high levels of variable generation requires grid flexibility. But that flexibility increasingly comes from battery storage that's plummeting in cost, demand response programs, and grid interconnections—not expensive duplicate fossil fuel plants running on standby.


More importantly, the backup argument ignores what's actually happening: cheaper renewable generation is displacing more expensive fossil fuel generation in market after market. The net effect isn't higher costs—it's lower ones.


A Path Forward

With renewable energy costs continuing their remarkable decline, nations face a clear choice. They can embrace this transition with appropriate policy frameworks, building more resilient and affordable electricity systems. Or they can cling to outdated narratives about renewable costs, passing up opportunities to shield consumers from fossil fuel price volatility while missing emissions reduction targets.


The myth that renewables push up power prices has proven remarkably durable, surviving despite mounting evidence to the contrary. It persists in political speeches, think tank reports, and energy debates worldwide. But myths, however persistent, eventually crumble when confronted with reality.


That reality is visible in Iowa's wind farms and low electricity rates, in Spain's declining wholesale prices as solar expands, in Oklahoma's combination of renewable leadership and cheap power. It's quantified in peer-reviewed studies, energy agency reports, and market data across continents.


The great energy myth isn't about what renewable energy costs—it's about the cost of believing that myth in the first place. Every year we delay the transition based on discredited price concerns is a year of higher electricity bills, greater price volatility, and missed opportunities to build the affordable, resilient energy system the data shows is possible.


The numbers don't lie. The question is whether we'll listen to them.


Tuesday, December 16, 2025

A New Blueprint for Philippine Cinema

 



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The Film Development Council of the Philippines recently launched a comprehensive, long-term plan, dubbed “The Big Picture: Roadmap for the Future of the Film Industry of the Philippines.”


The Philippine Film Industry Roadmap, developed in partnership with international consultancy Olsberg SPI, is a monumental step toward building a more structured, globally competitive, and culturally significant industry.


This follows the two organizations’ partnership agreement signed in November last year. The roadmap supports the FDCP’s main priorities of strengthening the country’s domestic film industry and expanding the potential to attract more international productions. 


FDCP Chairperson and CEO Jose Javier “Direk Joey” Reyes kicked off the program at Seda Manila Bay.


Olsberg SPI Consultant Joshua Dedman then presented the key findings and recommendations, which stemmed from SWOT analysis, industry surveys, stakeholder interviews, and site visits. The roadmap lays out a strategic vision for the next five to ten years.


Outlined in the roadmap are several core strategies to further strengthen Philippine cinema, such as enhancing local talent through training and programs, improving skills and creating better industry standards, bringing Filipino films and stories to the international stage, pushing for stronger incentives and the development of world-class studios, and fostering coproduction ecosystems.


“The results were overwhelming, confirming speculations and assumptions as to why local cinema is where it is right now but more important identifying areas from which improvement, innovation and redirection can be achieved in a well-planned, calculated and graduated fashion,” Reyes said.


The plan aims for a more structured, globally competitive, and culturally significant future for the industry, moving beyond familiar narratives to explore new stories and opportunities.


The launch was not just a presentation but it was also a powerful demonstration of unity and commitment from key stakeholders. A ceremonial signing of the Commitment Wall solidified support.


Among those who backed the initiative was Negros Occidental Third District Rep. Javier Miguel “Javi” Benitez, Chair of the House Special Committee on Creative Industries, who delivered a keynote address on rebuilding the industry.



Benitez stressed their commitment to pushing for “stronger incentives, deeper global collaboration, world-class training, co-productions, and the development of an international-standard film studio.”


Further support was shown by influential industry leaders like Roselle Monteverde of the Entertainment Producers of the Philippines and Madonna Tarrayo of the Philippine Independent Producers Group. The event officially closed with the remarks from Department of Trade and Industry Asec. Nylah Bautista.


The FDCP reaffirms its commitment to strengthening Philippine cinema through progressive policies, targeted programs, and sustained collaborations, working hand in hand with stakeholders to elevate Filipino stories on both local and international stages.


Why Using AI Is Not an Insult to Human Intelligence: A Psychological Perspective on Adaptation and Growth


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As artificial intelligence becomes increasingly integrated into everyday tasks—writing, graphic design, image creation, research, and decision-making—it has also become a source of tension. Some people view the use of AI as an insult to human effort, a shortcut that diminishes creativity, or even a “slap in the face” to professionals who honed their skills without it. From a psychological standpoint, this reaction is understandable—but it is also rooted more in fear and misperception than in fact.


This article aims to educate, not persuade through confrontation. Understanding the psychology behind resistance to AI helps individuals and communities move forward with clarity, dignity, and responsibility.


The Psychology Behind Resistance to AI


Strong opposition to AI is rarely about the technology itself. Psychologically, it is often a response to perceived threat.


For many, skills such as writing, design, or illustration are not just tasks—they are deeply tied to identity, self-worth, and professional legitimacy. When a new tool appears capable of assisting or accelerating those skills, it can trigger fear of replacement or irrelevance. The brain interprets this as a threat, activating defensive reactions rather than rational evaluation.


There is also a tendency toward moral framing. New technologies are often labeled as “cheating” or “lazy” before society has time to adapt. Historically, this pattern has repeated itself with calculators, cameras, word processors, and digital editing tools. What begins as moral outrage often ends as widespread acceptance.


Another factor is zero-sum thinking—the belief that if AI helps one person, it must diminish the value of another. In reality, progress rarely works this way. Tools expand capacity; they do not erase human contribution.


AI as a Tool, Not a Replacement


A psychologically healthy understanding of AI begins with accurate framing.


Artificial intelligence does not possess intention, values, ethics, or accountability. Humans still define goals, make judgments, choose direction, and bear responsibility for outcomes. AI functions as a cognitive extension—similar to spellcheck, search engines, or digital cameras—enhancing efficiency and expanding creative possibilities.


Using AI does not mean a person “did not do the work.” It means they selected a more effective process. The core elements of creativity—insight, taste, context, and meaning—remain human-driven.


The Harm of Shaming and Why It Persists


Shaming people for using AI often reflects anxiety rather than principle. Psychologically, shaming is a form of social control, used to enforce old norms during periods of rapid change. However, shame is a poor guide for progress.


Competence is not defined by how much difficulty one endures, but by the quality, integrity, and impact of the outcome. Throughout history, those who embraced new tools were often criticized—until their methods became standard practice.


Internalizing shame for using AI can hinder growth, creativity, and innovation. A healthier response is grounded confidence: understanding that using available tools wisely is a sign of adaptability, not inadequacy.


Communication Over Confrontation


When discussions about AI become emotionally charged, defensiveness rarely leads to understanding. Psychologically, calm and clear framing is more effective than argument.


Statements that emphasize responsibility and intentionality—rather than justification—help de-escalate conflict. AI does not replace thinking; it supports it. Humans remain accountable for accuracy, ethics, and meaning.


Resistance as a Transitional Phase


History offers perspective. Writers once feared typewriters. Artists rejected photography. Designers resisted digital tools. Educators banned calculators. Each innovation initially sparked resistance, followed by gradual normalization.


Resistance to AI is not a permanent judgment on its value—it is a transitional phase in societal adaptation. Those who learn to use new tools thoughtfully tend to shape the future rather than struggle against it.


A Healthy Psychological Stance on AI


A balanced approach to AI use includes:


Intentional and ethical application


Continued development of critical thinking and judgment


Using AI to reduce repetitive labor, freeing human effort for creativity, strategy, and meaning


AI should not replace human responsibility—it should elevate human potential.


Conclusion


From a psychological perspective, adapting to artificial intelligence is not a betrayal of human intelligence. It is an expression of it. Humans have always evolved by creating tools that extend their capabilities.


The greater risk is not in using AI—but in refusing to grow, learn, and adapt out of fear. Progress does not erase human value; rigidity does.


Education, empathy, and thoughtful use—not shame or resistance—are what will allow society to integrate AI in a way that strengthens, rather than diminishes, human creativity and purpose.

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