We Energies’ $2B Gas Infrastructure Plan Draws Opposition
Trade unions promote construction jobs project would create.

Melody McCurtis, of the Metcalfe Park Community Bridges nonprofit, speaks at a press conference in Oak Creek ahead of a public hearing on We Energies’ planned natural gas plant in Milwaukee County on Tuesday, March 25, 2025. Photo courtesy of Sierra Club Wisconsin
Dozens of people are calling on state utility regulators to block key pieces of a more than $2 billion plan to build new natural gas infrastructure in southeast Wisconsin.
The Public Service Commission of Wisconsin held a pair of public hearings Tuesday, allowing state residents to weigh in on We Energies’ plans to build a roughly $1.2 billion natural gas plant and a more than $456.3 million liquefied natural gas storage facility in Oak Creek.
During Tuesday’s hearing, opponents shared concerns about negative health and climate impacts of burning fossil fuels and the potential impact of the projects on electric bills. Supporters argued the projects are necessary to meet future energy needs and support economic growth.
Jodi Koehler, who testified Tuesday against the plan, said We Energies’ fossil fuel investments would “devastate Wisconsin’s clean air for decades.”
“Our motto is ‘Forward,’ but a fossil fuel plant is a dangerous leap backwards,” she said. “Natural gas is not clean energy.”
We Energies has framed the natural gas plans as necessary to meet rising energy demands from industrial development in the region, including multiple planned power-hungry data centers in southeast Wisconsin. A natural gas plant emits about half of the CO2 of a coal-burning plant, though some studies have shown that when gas leaks are taken into account, the difference is much less pronounced.
The Oak Creek gas plant will produce more than 1.3 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions each year, while the Kenosha County gas plant will produce around 590,000 tons of greenhouse gas emissions, according to environmental reports from the PSC.
The coal-fired Elm Road Generating Station on the company’s Oak Creek campus is expected to be converted to natural gas in a separate project, as We Energies’ parent company works to stop using coal by 2032.
Racine resident Gloria Randall-Hewitt, who testified against the fossil fuel plans Tuesday, said the projects carry a hefty price tag and will harm the environment.
“Not only are these new plants not needed, but they are the opposite of what We Energies should do if they truly are concerned about providing energy to possible new very large energy customers,” Randall-Hewitt said. “The logical move would be for We Energies to build battery storage, not new methane gas plants.”

People hold signs protesting We Energies’ planned natural gas plant in Oak Creek during a press conference hosted by environmental advocates on Tuesday, March 25, 2025. Photo courtesy of Sierra Club Wisconsin
While many comments were against the projects, union members did speak in support of the We Energies’ plan, saying the Oak Creek power plant project would create 800 construction jobs.
Dan Whiteaker, a member of the Carpenters Local 231 union in Pewaukee, told regulators the economic impact would go beyond just construction jobs.
“[When] you work a 12- to 14-hour day, you’re going to find the closest place to grab something to eat and something to drink after work,” he said. “With the infrastructure happening along the I-94 corridor, building this plant will provide the needed energy to sustain its growth.”
“It is critical to have quick-start gas plants available and running when the wind doesn’t blow and the sun doesn’t shine,” said Brendan Conway, a spokesperson for We Energies, in a statement. “It goes beyond keeping the lights on — it means keeping factories, offices, schools, churches and hospitals running and safe during any and all weather conditions.”
But testimony from an outside expert on behalf of the nonprofit Citizens Utility Board of Wisconsin found that We Energies may have correctly identified an increased capacity need in its system but “exaggerated this need beyond what is reasonable.”
“The commission should consider approving only a portion of the proposed generation capacity now, while approving the remainder requested only as certain conditions are met,” said consultant Edward Burgess in his testimony, filed March 18.

People hold signs calling on the Public Service Commission to deny the approval of a new natural gas plant in Oak Creek ahead of a public hearing on the project Tuesday, March 25, 2025. Photo courtesy of Sierra Club Wisconsin
Ahead of Tuesday’s hearing, environmental advocates held a press conference in Oak Creek. They said pollution from gas plants causes negative health effects, citing a study that found the Oak Creek and Kenosha County gas plants could result in billions of dollars in health and economic costs over 30 years.
The deadline to submit comments to the PSC about the Oak Creek gas plant is Thursday. The deadline to submit comments on the natural gas storage facility is April 7.
Editor’s note: The Citizens Utility Board of Wisconsin is a sponsor of WPR.
Natural gas opponents call on PSC to block largest piece of We Energies’ $2B plan was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
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