Life: Powered
03/04/2026
On February 12, the EPA rescinded the 2009 Greenhouse Gas Endangerment Finding — what the agency called the single largest deregulatory action in U.S. history. And Life:Powered helped make it happen.
The original finding was the legal foundation for a wave of sweeping regulations that touched nearly every sector of the economy — from vehicle mandates pushing automakers toward forced electrification, to power plant rules, to methane regulations on oil and gas. The cost to Americans was staggering, and the benefits? Virtually nonexistent.
Life:Powered's research demonstrated that even eliminating ALL U.S. CO₂ emissions would reduce global temperatures by only about 0.05°C — a change too small to even reliably measure. The EPA's final rule adopted that same reasoning, and specifically credited climate modeling consistent with the analysis we submitted.
This is a major win for sound science, affordable energy, and every American family and business burdened by regulations built on a flawed foundation. And it's just the beginning — this decision sets the stage for the Supreme Court to revisit the ruling that classified greenhouse gases as pollutants under the Clean Air Act.
Read the full breakdown from our team below in the comments 👇
12/10/2025
Five years after Winter Storm Uri, is Texas ready for the next big freeze?
New research from the Texas Public Policy Foundation reveals a troubling pattern: Despite improvements in weatherization and emergency operations, the Texas grid's winter vulnerability is actually getting worse.
Here's what the data shows:
📊 Since 2021, nearly $50 billion has flowed into solar and battery storage—adding 31 GW and 17 GW respectively. But only 2.3 GW of net natural gas capacity was added (source: ERCOT capacity data).
📉 The winter reserve margin has dropped from 17.5% to 10.1%—well below the 15% target most utilities maintain (source: ERCOT MORA reports for January 2025 and 2026).
⚠️ The problem: Solar generates little during winter peak hours (before sunrise and after sunset), and batteries deplete within hours during multi-day cold snaps.
The recent cold snap from November 30-December 2 was a warning shot. If temperatures had been in the teens and twenties instead of the 40s, widespread outages would likely have occurred.
Texas fixed the operational problems from Uri but missed the root cause: a market that continues investing in resources that don't show up when winter storms hit.
The full analysis breaks down the numbers and what needs to change. This is Part 1 of a three-part series on Texas grid reliability.
Read the full report linked in the comments.
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