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Dive right in and go straight to all affordability resources
Energy affordability is a top concern for households across the United States, with a recent survey finding that over one-third of households reduced or went without basic necessities like food or medicine to pay an energy bill during the last year. The costs of electricity, heating fuels, and transportation fuels — along with the volatile and unpredictable nature of many of these costs — are straining budgets, especially for low- and moderate-income households that already spend a disproportionate share of their income on energy.
Fortunately, a variety of solutions can improve energy affordability. This hub brings together resources from RMI and other organizations that can help decision-makers understand the drivers of the affordability challenge and the tools available to address it across the electricity, buildings, and transportation sectors.
For the average American household, a little over half of energy expenditures go to gasoline, about a third to electricity, and the remainder to home heating fuels. Energy costs within those categories are shaped by multiple factors, including utility investments, fuel price volatility, inflation, housing and transportation patterns that lock in energy use, and the availability of cost-saving incentives and financing options. Understanding these drivers helps identify where interventions can be most effective.
RMI's Affordability Hub can be filtered by characteristics like sector, solution, and decision-maker to help users quickly find insights relevant to them.
A framework for solutions
Addressing residential energy affordability requires a portfolio of solutions that promote cost control, cost distribution, and customer agency:
Across these three solution sets, safeguards protect low- to moderate-income households from undue energy burden.
The hub allows users to develop effective strategies by organizing resources according to this solution framework.
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Discover key resources that offer valuable insights and practical guidance for energy decision-makers.
Improving affordability requires coordinated action across state and local governments, regulators, utilities, and businesses. Legislatures and public utility commissions develop and implement policies and rate structures; utilities manage investments and customer programs; and businesses provide and pursue solutions. This section allows users to filter resources by decision-maker type to make it easy to find the affordability resources most appropriate for them.
Explore foundational data resources and tools below that help advance energy affordability solutions.
A report outlining four regulatory strategies to manage the risks that cost trackers pose to electricity affordability.
The race is on to power the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution. As AI becomes increasingly central to national security and US economic competitiveness, demand for electricity is surging. Yet companies seeking to build data centers…
As US utilities unleash a wave of spending on new power plants and grid enhancements, past eras of grid growth offer a proven path to streamline today’s upgrades — and deliver more power, more affordably.
Regulators can design fair, forward-looking cost allocation to fund proactive grid upgrades and accelerate equitable electrification.
With growing demand, faster adaptive planning can prevent costly overbuilds, missed investments, and delays that slow the clean energy transition.
Designing large load tariffs with strong safeguards can reduce the risk of cost shifting, but adoption of them varies.
Unlocking the capacity of virtual power plants can help big tech power data centers, fast.
As LIHEAP funding stalls, millions face energy insecurity; PUCs act to prevent shutoffs and protect struggling families.
This report by RMI and Synapse Energy Economics helps utility stakeholders design multiyear rate plans to ensure they support cost containment.
With state legislators passing new advanced transmission technologies laws, the ball is now in the hands of regulators.
With DERs growing by 170 GW in the next 5 years, improved metering and telemetry rules are vital to scale VPPs to enable a reliable, affordable grid.
Protecting vulnerable utility customers through proven programs reduces energy bill debt and reduces system-wide costs.
As Florida’s largest municipal utility plans to build a new gas plant, changes over the past two years warrant a new look at options to meet residents’ energy needs.
Every western state relies on and supports its neighbors, making regional transmission the backbone of a reliable and affordable grid.
Batteries can support grid affordability and reliability — if only grid planners would let them.
RMI’s latest report provides policy options to reduce the risks and impacts of electricity shutoffs.
A report detailing US utility disconnections and outlining reform options for public utility commissions to protect households and reduce shutoffs.
A range of clean, resilient solutions can help us meet the electrical needs of our growing digital economy while saving Americans money.
Performance incentive mechanisms are evaluated differently across the United States. Part 1 of this two-part series looks at how it's handled in the Northeast.
The second part of a two-part series, we offer recommendations for regulators from our research on performance incentive mechanism evaluation.
A handbook for US state regulators on how to advance proactive transmission buildout to reduce costs for ratepayers.
Economic dispatch and clean repowering can help transition away from coal, maximizing reliability while continuing to support energy communities.
Tariff design principles to bring consistency to tariff design and development, supporting the application of best practices across jurisdictions.
As electricity prices rise, we offer recommendations for governors seeking to provide near-term relief for customers and lower system costs in the long run.
With long waitlists for gas plant turbines, electricity demand growth will require faster, cost-efficient solutions for a more flexible grid.
RMI's Energy Poverty Policy Simulator can help lawmakers, regulators, and energy sector stakeholders chart a path to end energy poverty.
To keep up with grid innovation and investments, regulators can be more agile by updating stakeholder engagement, docket processes, and operations.
Regional transmission pays off big-time. So, why aren’t utilities building it?…
The Virtual Power Plant Partnership (VP3) has made significant progress in state houses and public utility commissions across the United States.
Near-term actions Michigan decision makers can take to enable virtual power plants to support Michigan’s electric grid.