Who are the top “stakeholders” when it comes to getting electricity in North Carolina? This isn’t a trick question, no matter how baffling it may seem to the Cooper administration. It’s the people of North Carolina. It’s always been the people.

North Carolina law regarding electric utilities expressly seeks “adequate, reliable and economical utility service to all of the citizens and residents of the State” and “the least cost mix of generation and demand-reduction measures which is achievable.”

Why is least-cost, reliable electricity at the flip of the switch so important to people? Because electricity isn’t a luxury purchase, it’s a basic human need. What that means is that anything that raises electricity rates higher than necessary raises costs on everything and everyone in North Carolina. It also represents a painfully regressive price increase on the poor, as can be seen in this graph:

Poor & energy costs

But when politicians speak of “stakeholders,” they’re not talking about the people with the most at stake. They’re talking about groups so insulated from having to decide “Do I stay warm or eat?” that they can’t even conceive of electricity bills muscling out other basic needs. They’re talking about special interests trying to get a piece of the action:

The term “stakeholders” is used in policy debates frequently. It sounds good and steeped in important involvement. It seems less detached and predatory than “interested parties.” It’s an accepted convention of speech.

By conventional use, it rarely denotes those who best qualify for the term. Politically speaking, the citizens themselves — though they have the most at stake — aren’t thought of as stakeholders.

In Lincoln’s memorable description, the American system is “Government of the people, by the people, for the people.” On the other hand, stakeholders tend to be of the lobbies, by the politicians, for the special interests.

Gov. Roy Cooper’s unserious “Clean Energy Plan” (CEP) identified 164 stakeholders, organizations that “participated in the CEP development stakeholder process.” Here’s how Cooper’s Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) engaged with these lesser stakeholders:

Method 1 was a series of facilitated stakeholder workshops, which were day-long events attended by 60-80 experts and key stakeholders with a vested interest in clean energy. Method 2 involved more general public outreach, achieved through regional listening sessions. These events were half-day sessions intended to educate members of the public about the CEP development process and to receive feedback and comments. Method 3 involved combining with existing venues or events to collect feedback. Method 4 was the online comment portal, where members of the public who were unable to attend any of the in-person events could respond to specific questions and submit general comments.

Basically, DEQ started with a dedicated rent-seeking fest of “experts and key stakeholders” — key! — “with a vested interest in clean energy.” Then they proceeded to lecture what few people had the free time to attend a session what they should think about a state policy to force the special interests’ energy choices on them.

DEQ’s list of 164 stakeholders to develop a “Clean Energy Plan.” Note: the report identifies “key stakeholders” as those “with a vested interest in clean energy.” Source: DEQ, “North Carolina Clean Energy Plan” draft report.

After all that, what did they learn? Only 7 percent of our state’s lesser stakeholders in electricity cared about Affordability, only 7 percent cared about Reliability, and just 5 percent cared about Efficiency. Their top interest by far was the broad category of “Environment & Carbon Reduction.”

Source: DEQ, “North Carolina Clean Energy Plan” draft report.

So who cares for affordable, reliable, efficient electricity?

Just you, me, and the N.C. General Statutes, my friend.

Oh, wait — and the top stakeholders in electricity in North Carolina. Let’s not forget them.