Is it bad that I'm involved in THIS many EC's?

I’m 15, a freshman, attending a high school in Northern Kentucky.
Typically people have trouble with being involved in enough EC’s. I, on the other hand, am the complete opposite.
Here is a list of the EC’s I am involved in:
KYA (Mock Kentucky legislation/government assembly by the YMCA)
KUNA (Mock U.N. assembly by the YMCA)
Debate Team
Speech Team
Science Olympiad
Beta Club
Tennis
Democrats club
Sophomore council
Y-Club leadership team
72+ hours volunteer work at a hospital

Now, I am not trying to impress colleges by proving I’m a “well-rounded” person, I genuinely enjoy ALL of these activities. Is it a bad thing? Should I start focusing on a few specific EC’s?
Here are my achievements in the following EC’s:
KYA: Passed legislation approved by the governor of the assembly
KUNA: Passed resolution approved by the Sec. General. of the assembly
Debate Team:
Won 2nd place in a regionals competition
Speech Team:
Won 6th place at a regionals competition
Won 5th place at a state competition
Science Olympiad:
Won 4th in towers at regionals
Won 4th in write it do it at regionals
Won 3rd in write it do it at regionals
Democrats club:
Leader/Started the club
Sophomore council:
Wasted elected the class president of the grade by the student body.

Yes. This is too much. Colleges don’t want so many ECs, and you might not be accepted because of it.

well I mean if you enjoy them, then there’s no problem. Though you might want to focus on some of them and develop a spike…

You just said you’re a 15 year old freshman, and in this case, I say it’s definitely fine. My biggest regret was not trying enough things in my freshman year to find out what I really liked, and that left me to focus on the few that I had been consistently involved in. I don’t think it’s a good idea to “specialize” that early. When you start taking harder classes, you’re going to realize that you love some activities more than others, and you’d be willing to cut them from your list. Remember that you’re in school to learn, not impress colleges. Be your best self, and that involves figuring out who you are and what you truly love. Personally, I’ve found myself steering more into the medicine track, but I really regret not trying speech and debate when I had time in freshman/sophomore year. I’m a junior now and I’ve committed to the activities that I love, but I never got to try all the things that I believed would have made me grow more as a person.