From Policies for Action <[email protected]>
Subject Addressing energy burdens to improve health outcomes
Date February 2, 2026 6:03 PM
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special Update


Energy, Affordability, and Health: Evidence That Can Offer Solutions
As the nation&rsquo;s energy and climate thought leaders plan to convene in the coming months to discuss energy affordability, reliability, and the transition to cleaner systems, these topics are again front and center in policy debates. These conversations are unfolding alongside rising utility costs, more-frequent climate-driven power disruptions, and renewed scrutiny of how energy systems intersect with public health, housing affordability, and household financial security.


Over the past several years, Policies for Action researchers have produced a growing body of evidence to clarify these challenges. Rather than treating energy as a standalone issue, this research examines how utility pricing, rate design, outage management, and decarbonization policies shape real-world conditions for households and communities. Together, these studies help policymakers understand where current systems fall short and which policy levers hold the greatest promise for improving well-being.

Featured research

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Race, Rates, and Energy Insecurity: Exploring Racial Disparities in Electricity Costs and Consumption in US Utility Service Areas


This study finds that customers in predominately Black, Indigenous, and Latino utility service areas, in states such as Alabama, California, and New York, consistently face higher electricity rates than majority-white areas. In California and New York, these higher rates coincide with lower electricity consumption, suggesting constrained energy use rather than efficiency gains.

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Community Insights on Weather-Induced Energy Insecurity: Extreme Heat and Power Outages in North Lawndale, Chicago


This case study documents how inadequate outage preparedness, slower power restoration, and limited access to renewable energy programs compound heat-related risks in a historically disinvested neighborhood.

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Utilities&rsquo; Low-Income Discount Programs Help Address Energy Insecurity, but Some US States Lag Behind


The analysis shows that low-income discount programs can significantly reduce household energy burdens, yet availability varies widely by state, deepening disparities.

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Utility Policies and Practices to Alleviate US Energy Insecurity


This research examines how pricing structures, utility debt, and disconnection practices intensify energy insecurity, particularly for households of color, and recommends policies that could reduce these disparities.

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Addressing Energy Insecurity Upstream: Electric Utility Ratemaking and Rate Design as Levers for Change


This study explores how alternative rate designs and greater transparency can reduce household energy burdens.

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Energy Transition and Equity: Quantifying Pathways to Building Decarbonization Based on Notions of Fairness


Using building-level data, this study shows how targeted incentives can reduce emissions while improving affordability and housing quality.

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Energy Insecurity and Mental Health: Exploring the Links Between Energy Hardships and Anxiety and Depression


Using nationally representative data from the US Census Bureau&rsquo;s Household Pulse Survey (2022&ndash;2023), this study shows that households facing energy insecurity have substantially higher probabilities of anxiety and depression, even after accounting for income and food insecurity. Behavioral coping responses such as keeping homes at unsafe temperatures or sacrificing essentials to pay energy bills are strongly linked to poor mental health outcomes.

Researcher insights

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Opinion: 30 Years After Chicago&rsquo;s Deadly Heatwave, Cooling Should Be Recognized as a Right


This piece highlights how extreme energy burdens, widespread poverty, and elevated chronic disease rates contributed to disproportionately high heat-related deaths during Chicago&rsquo;s 1995 heatwave.

Upcoming energy event at Urban
Policies for Action and the Urban Institute will soon convene researchers, policymakers, and community-based organizations to discuss these and related topics. Stay tuned for registration details.


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