April 24 — The Railroad Commission of Texas assessed $2,456,002 in fines involving 711 enforcement dockets against operators and businesses at the Commissioners’ Conference on Wednesday. The Commission has primary oversight and enforcement of the state’s oil and gas industry and intrastate pipeline safety.
April 24 — The growth is being fueled by a range of sectors, including artificial intelligence, data centers, industrial electrification, hydrogen and electric vehicles, said ERCOT President and CEO Pablo Vegas.
April 25 — The Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) on April 25 adopted a new rule to implement the Texas Energy Fund Completion Bonus Grant Program. The program will provide grants for new dispatchable electric generation facilities or expansions of existing facilities that meet certain planning requirements after June 1, 2023, and interconnect to the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) grid before June 1, 2029. The new rule establishes procedures for applying for a completion bonus grant, terms for annual grant payments, and performance requirements.
April 25: ERCOT, the power grid operator for Texas, has warned of flaws in some solar, wind and battery storage resources that could disconnect the grid if there are frequency disturbances such as lightning strikes or equipment failures.
April 25 — It isn’t often we see any company in the oil and gas business actively seeking enhanced regulatory oversight by the federal government, but it’s happening in a pipeline-related case in Louisiana and Texas.
April 16 — The great irony for the energy capital of the world is that the low price of natural gas drove down electricity prices everywhere but Texas, the nation’s largest natural gas producer. Texas also has more utility scale renewable electricity generation than any other state. The low and zero fuel prices cannot overcome the flawed market design used by ERCOT, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas. The market design handicaps the capital investment required to produce inexpensive and reliable electricity supplies.
April 16 — The projects come as battery storage capacity in ERCOT could grow to 17,700 MW by mid-2025 from 6,300 MW in March, according to data from the grid operator.
April 5 — Houston City Council is poised to reject a request from CenterPoint to raise natural gas bills by $5 per month as part of a statewide consolidation that would lower rates elsewhere.
April 6 — The renewable energy juggernaut keeps rolling on in Texas, even though public officials in the state have bent over backwards to protect fossil energy interests. In the latest twist, Texas has set itself up as potential market for new concentrating solar power technology that can pump out electricity or industrial process heat on a 24/7 basis, no matter what the sun is doing.
April 5 — For all of 2017, solar generated just 0.6% of ERCOT’s demand, or 2.26 million MWh. In March 2024 alone, solar generation reached 3.26 million MWh, according to the Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) hourly grid monitor. The increase pushed solar’s share of ERCOT generation to more than 10% for the month, also a first.
April 9 — The electric grid in Texas has gained the reputation of being held together with duct tape after blackouts in the past decade. But on Monday from around noon to 3 p.m. CDT, when the moon briefly blocks the sunlight in a solar eclipse, the Lone Star State will do just fine. That’s despite massive growth in solar power. Fast-growing access to battery technology is helping, and less-predictable natural events, like 2021, opens new tab’s cold snap, will provide a bigger test. But for now, the Lone Star State’s solar strength can overshadow the eclipse.
April 3 — Negligence lawsuits are moving forward against Oncor and other power companies, tied to the misery that many endured during the deep freeze of February 2021. If you were in North Texas for the winter storm blackouts in February of 2021, you remember how helpless so many felt.
TCCFUI is comprehensively focused on utility issues for Texas cities! With its volunteer board of city representatives, we work with other state and local organizations to fill unserved city needs.