19 years advocating for affordable, reliable, cleaner energy solutions for all Americans

Consumer Energy Alliance

THE VOICE FOR THE ENERGY CONSUMER

PfA Mid-Atlantic

Onshore fracking well pad

Consumer Energy Alliance’s Pennsylvania Energy and Manufacturing Forum in Pittsburgh featured Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke discussing the role American energy production in Pennsylvania has had on geopolitics, making.

Construction worker welding pipe

CEA’s Pennsylvania Energy and Manufacturing Forum explored the benefits energy development has delivered to Pennsylvanians and workers across the region. You don’t have to tell the Operating Engineers Local 66.

EMP-Zinke-1

PITTSBURGH, PA – Domestic energy production and development in the Marcellus and Utica formations continues to be a driving force of American energy dominance, benefitting the wallets of all Americans,.

Construction Workers Cutting Plywood

Mike Butler, CEA’s Mid-Atlantic Executive Director talks about the importance of sound permitting policies, based on science and not political hyperbole, when reviewing critical infrastructure projects. Permitting regimes like FERC.

Grocery shopping

According to the US Census Bureau Population clock, the population of the United States on July 4 was more than 328 million – which is up more than 2.3 million.

Anti-Pipeline activist violence

CEA President David Holt recently opined on the lack of civility and increasing lawlessness of anti-energy protesters (as we’ve documented multiple times – see for example here and here) which.

High power electricity grid powering the city

After a long day, it’s nice to come home, flip on the lights and turn on the TV while you change clothes and get ready to start dinner or head.

A hundred years ago, international travel was either for the wealthy or for migrants who wanted a new life so bad that they were willing to pack up anything they.

Aerial view of traffic on a highway in LA

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) asserts that suburbanites consume more energy than the higher populated inner cities. Suburbanites must use their automobiles to commute to work or into the city.

Parents and child building blocks

CEA Mid-Atlantic’s Mike Butler discusses how New York’s bad policy decisions have led to unnecessarily high energy costs, and how Pennsylvania can avoid making the same mistake. Pennsylvania leaders, many.

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