
WEIGHT: 50 kg
Breast: Medium
One HOUR:50$
Overnight: +80$
Services: Naturism/Nudism, Role Play & Fantasy, Golden shower (in), Sex lesbian, TOY PLAY
More than three years after Gov. JB Pritzker signed into law a major climate change plan to usher in solar and wind energy and phase out polluting, planet-warming coal and natural gas, fossil fuels are making a comeback. In Illinois and around the Midwest, coal and gas plants are extending their planned retirement dates even after a state law aimed to phase them out. Meanwhile, solar and wind projects are having a hard time getting up and running.
Electricity needed for data centers, particularly those dedicated to artificial intelligence, is creating enormous demand for power โ even sources that are polluting the air and contributing to global warming. In Illinois, renewable energy sources are supposed to fill the gaps as the dirty power from coal and gas would be eliminated once plants are closed. But the clean energy sources are not coming online fast enough because there is a delay in getting them connected to the electric grid.
This spring, Illinois officials will examine their goals for clean power, which may affect ambitious targets to eliminate carbon dioxide emissions, the most common greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change. Bill Cunningham, who represents the Southwest Side of Chicago and nearby suburbs and is a key lawmaker pushing forward climate and energy legislation. The reason for the slow growth is the inability to connect renewable energy sources to the electric grid either because of transmission issues or approval from the multistate electric grid operator.
In Northern Illinois, hundreds of clean energy projects are waiting to be connected to the grid. Illinois lawmakers are going to address the problems in legislation expected to be introduced in the coming months. As renewable power developments struggle to get connected to the electric grid, Wall Street is betting on natural gas.
There were other signals about the comeback of fossil fuels noted before the Constellation deal was announced. In December, Vistra, the owner of three coal plants in Illinois, said it will keep one of those operations running two more years because of surging power demand.