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USEA's Virtual Press Briefings

USEA's Virtual Press Briefings

By: U.S. Energy Association
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USEA's Virtual Press Briefing series features a panel of industry experts answering questions from energy journalists about the leading issues and cutting-edge energy topics of the day. The general audience can also submit questions. USEA President and CEO Mark W. Menezes delivers opening remarks for each briefing. The briefings are organized and moderated by Llewellyn King, producer and co-host of White House Chronicle on PBS. The Virtual Press Briefing series was launched in October 2020. It is a virtual reboot of the original Press Briefing series, which was conducted several years ago inU.S. Energy Association
Episodes
  • July Virtual Press Briefing: Natural Gas Is King Now, But Can It Rule?
    Jul 9 2025

    Natural gas, always a favorite with electric utilities, has been lifted to dominance in the energy mix by the Trump administration. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright has roundly attacked the economics and viability of wind and solar energy, most recently in an op-ed in the New York Post.


    Wright will get pushback from utilities and the renewable energy industry, but for practical purposes going forward the United States is committed to reliance on oil, coal and natural gas: the fossil fuel triumvirate. Nuclear power also gets DOE’s nod. Oil is unlikely to be a primary fuel for utilities, except in rare emergencies. Coal has prescribed limits. They include the disinclination of utilities to build new coal plants or to encourage the opening of new mines. They fear new coal is a liability and could become a stranded asset under a different administration. Natural gas is the favored fuel of utilities on cost, ease of installation, maintenance and reliability. But it has some problems. Natural gas produces greenhouse gases, has pipeline leakage problems, and is opposed by states and localities seeking a zero-emissions future.


    Potential legal battles are forming over the use of natural gas in some locations where state law has mandated only renewables going forward. Building new pipelines — desperately needed to get natural gas from the shale fields where it is abundant to the markets where it is needed — is as hard as it is to build new transmission lines, harder in most cases. Environmentalists, heavily committed to renewables, are opposed to natural gas but like it more than coal. However, Louisiana has declared natural gas a green fuel and this is a growing trend. There have been similar suggestions of reclassification in Europe.


    Carbon capture — in the early stage at some utilities — may give natural gas recognition as a green fuel. Meanwhile natural gas is the new king in electricity generation, usurping its cousin, coal. The supply is plentiful. The need is palpable. The electric utility acceptance is near-universal. Trump administration support is overwhelming. Beyond gas delivery, turbines and other supply chain items are in short supply and subject to delivery times of up to five years; siting is still a local matter; and concern over global warming grows exponentially.

    The United States Energy Association, which is fuel-neutral, will examine natural gas and its future here and abroad at its next virtual press briefing on Wednesday, July 9, at 11 a.m. EDT.
    As usual, a panel of senior journalists who cover energy will interview a panel of industry experts on the subject before the house.


    Llewellyn King, syndicated columnist and broadcaster, has organized and will moderate the briefing. USEA President and CEO Mark Menezes, a former Deputy Secretary of Energy, will be on hand to contribute his deep knowledge of energy.


    The Experts:

    • Rudy Garza, President and CEO, CPS Energy, San Antonio
    • Branko Milicevic, Secretary, Group of Experts on Gas, UN Economic Commission for Europe
    • Austin Hastings, Vice President, Gas Engineering, PG&E
    • Michael Caravaggio, Vice President, Energy Supply, EPRI
    • Dustin Meyer, Senior Vice President, Policy, Economics & Regulatory Affairs, API
    • Diana Furchtgott-Roth, director, Center for Energy, Climate and Environment, The Heritage Foundation


    The Reporters:

    • Rod Kuckro, Freelance
    • Tim Gardner, Reuters
    • Ken Silverstein, Forbes
    • Matt Chester, Energy Central
    • Peter Behr, Politico’s E&E News
    • Alex Procyk, Oil & Gas Journal
    • Adam Clayton Powell III, PBS
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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • June Virtual Press Briefing: Is a New Golden Age for Nuclear Power Dawning?
    Jun 11 2025

    There was already a feeling in the nuclear power industry that a great leap in the fortunes of the industry was at hand. But President Donald Trump has escalated those hopes with four executive orders.Trump seeks to cut the time it takes to get a reactor license to a short 18 months. He is calling for the construction of 10 large reactors of the type now in use. And he is endorsing everything along the nuclear power chain, from uranium mining to waste disposal to the deployment of small modular reactors.In all, the president wants to quadruple nuclear power production by 2050.It is exciting. It is breathtaking. It is dramatic. It is needed.But is it feasible?Definitely some new reactors are likely to be built, driven by the big tech companies that are desperate for the power for their data centers and prepared to use some of their wealth to that end. Witness Microsoft’s commitment to restarting the undamaged reactor at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania, and Meta’s commitment to extend the life of the Clinton Plant in Illinois by 20 years.The question is whether the big techs go all the way and change the landscape by commissioning new-build nuclear plants. Also, will the administration provide “backstop” guarantees for first-of-a-kind new plants, especially SMRs?The United States Energy Association’s virtual press briefing, set for Wednesday, June 11, at 11 a.m. EDT, will examine the new golden age of nuclear power when senior reporters who cover energy will question nuclear power experts in a collegial atmosphere.These briefings, which are broadcast live on Zoom, are open to the press and the public. They are free, but registration is required.Following the briefings, a recording is available on the USEA website usea.org and the Energy Central website energycentral.com. Also, recordings can be found on Apple and Spotify.The briefings are organized and moderated by Llewellyn King in collaboration with USEA President and CEO Mark Menezes.On the June 11 expert panel:James Schaefer, Guggenheim PartnersScott Hunnewell, VP of New Nuclear, TVACyril Draffin, Senior Fellow for Advanced Nuclear, U.S. Nuclear Industry CouncilShanthi Muthiah, Managing Director and Senior VP, ICFJames Walker, CEO, NANO NuclearSteve Chengelis, VP, Energy Supply and Nuclear Development, EPRIBenton Arnett, Senior Director of Markets and Policy, NEIThe reporter panel:Matthew Daly, The Associated PressJennifer Hiller, The Wall Street JournalTim Gardner, ReutersMatt Chester, Energy CentralWilliam Freebairn, S&P GlobalMarkham Hislop, Energi (Canada)

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    1 hr
  • May Virtual Press Briefing: New, Transformative Technologies Entering the Electric Utility Space
    May 7 2025

    The United States Energy Association will examine new, transformative technologies which are entering the electric utility space at its next virtual press briefing, set for Wednesday, May 7, at 11 a.m. EDT.

    The format for these briefings is well-established: A panel of experts is interviewed by a panel of senior reporters who cover energy. Ideally, reporters get information for a story they can write that day or bank for future stories.

    The May 7 briefing will look at a panoply of new technologies coming down the pike for utilities, including the incorporation of AI agents in many aspects of their operations, small modular reactors, fusion, new conductors, new low-head hydro, solutions to inertia problems, storage in all forms, and distributed energy applications and tools.

    These new technologies are being developed at a time when electricity is rising in importance and demand is increasing with AI data centers and new uses.

    As usual for this briefing series, Mark Menezes, USEA President and CEO, and a Deputy Secretary of Energy in the first Trump Administration, will be on hand to contribute his experience and deep knowledge of energy and electric utilities. Journalist and broadcaster Llewellyn King, who is well known in the energy and electric utility sectors, organizes and moderates the briefings.

    “This time round, we have an extraordinary lineup of experts and senior energy writers,” King said.

    On the experts panel:

    • Ted Ko, Founder and Executive Director, EPDI
    • Ron Schoff, Director of R&D, EPRI
    • Jason Huang, CEO and Co-founder, TS Conductor
    • Chris Ritter, Division Director, Scientific Computing and AI, Idaho National Laboratory
    • Key Han, President and Chief Scientist, DD Motion
    • Ravindra Vora, CEO, Transventure Energy LLC
    • Kevin Wolf, CEO and Co-founder, Windharvest.com
    • Bryan Spear, CEO, Technosylva
    • Whit Irvin Jr., President and CEO, Q Hydrogen

    On the reporters panel:

    • Peter Behr, Politico’s E&E News
    • Vijay Vaitheeswaram, The Economist
    • Matt Chester, Energy Central
    • Adam Clayton Powell III, PBS
    • Ken Silverstein, Forbes
    • Evan Halper, The Washington Post
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    1 hr and 7 mins
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