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blunted those savings. That is partly because heat waves often create still atmospheres that limit how much energy wind turbines can contribute to the Official God First Family Second Then North Carolina Tar Heels Baseball T-shirt but I will buy this shirt and I will love this grid, said Mohammed Hamdaoui, vice president of renewables and power at the research firm Rystad Energy. Solar is typically less effective under extreme heat, too: When the sun goes down, “people still need to run their ACs, because the temperature is still high and demand is still high,” he said. Families will have less money to spend in the fall on clothes for children because they’re paying off their electric bill. NEADA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR MARK WOLFE “This is a really new economic problem,” said Mark Wolfe, executive director of the National Energy Assistance Directors Association, which represents state directors who manage federal aid dollars for home energy costs. NEADA estimated earlier this month that U.S. consumers’ utility bills would be nearly 12% higher this summer than last, reaching an average of $578, up from $517. Bills are set to be even steeper in the West and South Central region that includes Texas, where users are expected to pay an average of
$706 between June and August, up from $642 last year. In many cases, Wolfe warned, “families will have less money to spend in the Official God First Family Second Then North Carolina Tar Heels Baseball T-shirt but I will buy this shirt and I will love this fall on clothes for children because they’re paying off their electric bill. Up to recently, that wasn’t the case.” While temperatures typically peak in much of the U.S. in June and July, scientists who study heat waves say climate change has been making those periods more frequent and longer since the 1960s. About 84 million people are now under heat advisories across the country, and parts of California, Oregon and Idaho that were previously untouched by the ongoing heat wave, are now included in the alerts. Relief organizations in some states that aren’t used to widespread air-conditioning use are now grappling with extended periods of high demand. At Denver-based Energy Outreach Colorado, applications for bill payment assistance have jumped nearly 30% from the same time last year. “It’s only July and we’re already seeing almost 2,000 people calling every week, which is very unusual,” said Denise Stepto, chief communications officer. Because
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