About 20 years ago, Texas invested heavily in transmission lines to lower energy costs, and it worked. Despite rapid growth, however, we have not kept up the grid investment. It’s past time to start building again.
Author: Waleed Tech
Texas needs to invest big in energy transmission to be competitive | Opinion
The industries of the future are here, and they want to be in Texas. Artificial intelligence, advanced manufacturing and other energy-hungry industries represent our state’s greatest economic opportunity in a generation.
Texas eyes 765-kV transmission lines in regional ‘transmission race’
Construction of a new 765-kV transmission “backbone” in Texas will cost only 4% more than expanding the existing 345-kV system to enable anticipated load growth, according to a January analysis by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas. The higher voltage system would lower congestion costs and energy losses, boost transfer capabilities and improve electric reliability, the grid […]
Report on Existing and Potential Electric System Constraints and Needs
ERCOT developed the Permian Basin Reliability Plan Study and filed it with the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) in July 2024. The plan identified both local transmission needs and imports needs, which included 345-kV, 500-kV, and 765-kV import path options. PUCT issued an order approving the plan in October 2024. The PUCT will make […]
Congested Transmission Lines Wasting Texas’ Renewable Power
Transmission system congestion is an issue that is plaguing our nation’s electric grid, and Texas/ERCOT is no exception. The Lonestar State is known for consuming the most energy of any state in the U.S., but it has also integrated the most renewable resources.
Transmission Congestion Analysis – Critical to a More Resilient Energy Future
The U.S. electric grid and transmission infrastructure are both aging and challenged in their ability to meet future loads. Yet demand continues to grow, driven by the electrification and decarbonization efforts needed to achieve a net-zero emission economy by 2050.
ERCOT can’t move energy where it needs to go, and it’s putting the grid at risk
When power reserves dropped steeply Wednesday evening, pushing the Texas power grid into emergency mode, people had a lot of theories about what happened. Did a large power plant suddenly break down? Did the shorter fall days cut solar power just when we needed it? Was it something else entirely?