This post is part of a series examining where 2024 candidates running for public offices in the Southeast stand on key energy and climate issues.
Note: The Southern Alliance for Clean Energy does not support or oppose candidates or political parties. Links to reports, candidate websites, and outside sources are provided as citizen education tools.

In this blog post, we examine the policies and positions of Rick Scott, the Republican Party candidate running for reelection to represent Florida in the United States Senate. Also in this series, we profile Democratic candidate Debbie Mucarsel-Powell. Election Day is November 5, 2024.
Scott was elected in 2018 to represent the state of Florida in the United States Senate as a member of the Republican Party. Prior to his election to the Senate, he served two terms as the Governor of Florida from 2011-2019. After serving in the United States Navy, he co-founded Columbia Hospital Corporation, which merged with Hospital Corporation of America and eventually became the nation’s largest for-profit healthcare company. Scott was raised in the Midwest, earned a degree from the University of Missouri, Kansas City, and a law degree from Southern Methodist University.
Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency
Scott voted against the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which has provided funding to projects in Florida that will lower energy use, improve energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Scott also voted against the Inflation Reduction Act, which is investing billions of dollars to spur U.S. manufacturing and deployment of renewable energy including: solar panels, wind turbines, batteries and critical minerals processing.
Climate Change
Scott rejects the scientific consensus on climate change, famously replying when asked about it as Governor in 2014, “I’m not a scientist.” Subsequently, climate scientists met with him to discuss causes of climate change and solutions, and while they were detailing solutions, including energy-efficient cars and buildings and the elimination of coal fired power plants, an aide for Scott ended the conversation.
While governor, accusations were made that Scott’s administration had instructed Florida Department of Environmental Protection officials to avoid the terms “climate change” or “global warming” in official communications, a claim Scott denies.
Recently, when interviewed in the deadly aftermath of Hurricane Helene, Scott acknowledged that the climate is “clearly changing” and when asked about the cause replied “Who knows what the reason is, but something is changing. Massive storms. Massive storm surge. So we’ve got to figure this out.” Sen. Scott’s website addresses climate change by stating, “the weather is always changing. We take climate change seriously, but not hysterically. We will not adopt nutty policies that harm our economy or our jobs.”
Electric Transportation
Senator Scott introduced the Directing Independent Research to Yield Carbon Assessment Regarding Electric Vehicles Act to require the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection Agency to study the carbon and environmental impacts of electric vehicles, despite the fact that the Department of Energy publishes vehicle emissions data on their website demonstrating the significantly lower emissions from electric vehicles. Senator Scott said, “The Biden administration continues to push the use of electric vehicles by forcing the automotive industry to shift away from the use of fossil fuels. We need clear data on what impacts this will have on American families and our environment. There is ample evidence to suggest that EVs are not as clean as people are being led to believe and folks deserve to know the truth. Knowing the carbon footprint of each electric vehicle and the impact on our electrical grids are key to making informed decisions and preventing widespread government regulations and gross overreach.”
Energy Equity and Energy Burden
During an interview with Americans for Prosperity in 2022, Scott discussed how energy policy is tied to the economy saying, “when the Biden administration, the Democrats say, they have a war on fossil fuel– it’s actually a war on the poor families. Energy is a driver to the world economy. It’s a driver to getting people out of poverty,” he continued “it puts our companies at risk because we can’t compete in a global economy,” he explained. “Why is it that energy produced in Venezuela is okay, but energy produced in Texas is bad? I mean, this doesn’t make any sense.” The United States is in fact the world’s biggest producer of crude oil and natural gas. Additionally, the levelized cost of renewable energy is cheaper than fossil fuels.
High-Risk Energy: Coal, Nuclear, Oil, Gas
In 2023, Rick Scott introduced a bill which would have required Federal agencies to expedite permitting for energy infrastructure including oil and gas pipelines and lease sales, rescinded Executive Order 13990 (designed to protect public health, the environment and address the climate crisis) thereby approving a key permit for the Keystone XL oil pipeline, turned oil and gas regulation on federal lands over to state governments, and terminated the federal tax credit for electric vehicles.
Scott has benefited from the fossil fuel industry and has invested in companies with ownership interests in Florida’s three natural gas pipelines, permitted and regulated by the state.
Scott has received more than $486,000 from oil and gas since he first ran for the U.S. Senate in 2018.
Voter Information
Election Day is November 5. Here are important dates and deadlines to consider, from the Florida Division of Elections:
- Deadline for county election offices to send vote-by-mail ballots to UOCAVA voters: September 21, 2024
- Deadline for county election offices to send vote-by-mail ballots to domestic voters: September 26, 2024 – October 3, 2024
- Deadline to register to vote: October 7, 2024 (no deadline to change party affiliation)
- Deadline to request that ballot be mailed: October 24, 2024
- Early voting period (mandatory period): October 26 – November 2, 2024. [In addition, county supervisors of elections have the option to offer more early voting on the 5 days before the mandatory start, and/or 1 day after the mandatory end (i.e. potentially opening Oct. 21-Nov. 3 for early voting)]
- Election Day: November 5, 2024
*Visit Vote-by-Mail and Military and Overseas Citizens Voting for information about deadlines to send a vote-by-mail ballot, to request a vote-by-mail ballot and to return vote by a mail ballot.
** Due to Hurricane Helene, Governor DeSantis has issued Executive Order 24-212 making changes to election rules for some residents of the counties most affected by Helene. Hurricane Milton may affect voting as well. Check here for the latest information.
Find additional important election information here.
#CandidatesOnEnergy2024
The post Candidate Rick Scott On Climate & Energy appeared first on SACE | Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
Renewable Energy
“Poverty is the Mother of Crime” – Marcus Aurelius
It’s almost inconceivable that there was a time in history that the most powerful person on the planet, in this case the emperor of ancient Rome, was a supremely good person.
Nowadays the precise opposite is trending: vicious criminal dictators.
Renewable Energy
Empire Wind Resumes, Ørsted Eyes Chinese Turbines
Weather Guard Lightning Tech

Empire Wind Resumes, Ørsted Eyes Chinese Turbines
Allen covers court victories allowing Empire Wind and Revolution Wind construction to resume, while Vineyard Wind joins the legal fight. In the UK, EnBW walks away from Mona and Morgan with a $1.4B write-off, even as KKR and RWE announce a $15B partnership for Norfolk Vanguard. Plus Ørsted’s leaked “Project Dragon” reveals the offshore giant is considering Chinese turbines, and Fortescue breaks ground on Australia’s Nullagine Wind Project using Nabrawind’s self-erecting tower technology.
Sign up now for Uptime Tech News, our weekly newsletter on all things wind technology. This episode is sponsored by Weather Guard Lightning Tech. Learn more about Weather Guard’s StrikeTape Wind Turbine LPS retrofit. Follow the show on YouTube, Linkedin and visit Weather Guard on the web. And subscribe to Rosemary’s “Engineering with Rosie” YouTube channel here. Have a question we can answer on the show? Email us!
Last week I told you about Equinor’s ultimatum. Resume construction by January sixteenth… or cancel Empire Wind forever. Well… the courts have spoken.
Last Thursday, Judge Carl Nichols issued his ruling. Empire Wind can resume construction. The harm from stopping, he said, outweighs the government’s concerns. One day earlier, Ørsted won the same relief for Revolution Wind. And now Vineyard Wind has joined the fight in Massachusetts. Three projects. Three courtrooms. Two victories and one victory yet to come.
Meanwhile in Britain… a different kind of drama. German utility EnBW announced Thursday it is walking away from two major UK projects. Mona and Morgan. Three gigawatts of potential capacity. The cost of leaving? One point four billion dollars in write-offs. Eight hundred forty million pounds already paid… gone. Rising costs. Lower electricity prices. Higher interest rates. Their partner, Jera Nex BP, says they still see good pathways forward. But EnBW has had enough.
Yet in the very same week… Investment giant KKR and German utility RWE announced a fifteen billion dollar partnership. Norfolk Vanguard East and West. Three gigawatts. One hundred eighty-four turbines. Power for three million British homes. Big winners and losers. In the same market. In the same week.
Danish media outlet Berlingske obtained a confidential report from Ørsted’s procurement department. The world’s largest offshore wind developer… is exploring whether to buy turbines from China. They call it Project Dragon. The plan covers twenty-twenty-six through twenty-twenty-eight. CEO Rasmus Errboe told reporters they continuously evaluate all technologies and suppliers. Quality. Technical capabilities. Commercial conditions. He did not deny the report. For years, European developers have resisted Chinese turbines. Fear of losing their industry to China… just like they lost solar manufacturing a decade ago. But Ørsted is under pressure.
In Australia, Fortescue has broken ground on its first wind project in the Pilbara. The Nullagine Wind Project. One hundred thirty-three megawatts. Seventeen turbines. But here is what makes it special. Nabrawind’s self-erecting tower technology. Hub height of one hundred eighty-eight meters. A new global benchmark for onshore wind. No giant cranes required. Fortescue plans two to three gigawatts of renewable energy across the Pilbara by twenty-thirty. Wind. Solar. Batteries. To power their mining trucks. Their drills. Their processing plants.
Last week we talked about Equinor’s deadline. About Ørsted losing one and a half million euros every single day. About billions in limbo. This week… the courts stepped in. Empire Wind resumes. Revolution Wind continues. Vineyard Wind fights on. All while the North Sea quietly crossed a milestone. One hundred one operational wind farms. Thirty gigawatts of clean power. More than any body of water on Earth. Some companies are walking away. Others are doubling down with fifteen billion dollar bets. The wind industry is evolving very quickly.
And that’s the state of the wind industry for the 19th of January 2026. Join us tomorrow for the Uptime Wind Energy Podcast.
Renewable Energy
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It wasn’t too long ago that crackpots spewing nonsense like this with no supporting evidence were ostracized by society. Now, our Republicans elect them to the U.S. senate.
You’d have to believe that “the elites” a) conspired with the top people in the other 200+ countries on Earth, b) had a motive to kill over 7 million people worldwide, c) wanted of cripple the world economy, and d) didn’t mind watching their loved one die agonizing deaths.
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