We can put up natural gas plants in about 2 years so any potential power shortage will be quickly addressed. I'm not much of a conspiracy fan but the "unintended consequences" of our push for renewable energy has primarily been a huge increase in natural gas use and windfall (pun intended) profits for wind farm developers. Reduction in CO2? Not so much.
The US has built a huge amount of wind generation but because of the poor capacity factor and the loss of hydro capacity, the % of US electricity from renewable sources is essentially the same as it was 20 years ago (US Energy Information Administration, if you are interested). Because of the nature of subsidized wind power, it hits high capital cost, low fuel cost sources hardest. This is nuclear and elimination of that low CO2 source is considered a good thing by environmentalists. Next, the EPA rules go after coal to essentially outlaw them based on CO2 while keeping the ban limited enough to allow natural gas plants.
In the magic unicorn future, renewables and massive, yet to be invented, batteries supply essentially all our electricity. In a more practical future, subsidized renewables struggle to get up to 20% or 30% of supply before their intermittent performance destabilizes the grid, nuclear hangs on to keep contributing 10% or so, and we end up getting 60 to 70% of our electricity from gas. When gas supplies tighten back up, electricity prices double and gas producers only have to worry about being nationalized by President "Hugo" Sanders.
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