Texas is in the middle of a years-long conversation about how to generate energy to
meet the need for speed: how will the state’s power grid serve fast-growing new loads
and the economic benefits they bring?
The question of how we move electricity around our great state is just as important.
The Austin American Statesman on Sunday published an op-ed by Bryn Baker, the
Texas Energy Buyers Alliance’s (TEBA’s) senior director of policy, that highlights the
state’s profound opportunity to plan and invest in a transmission system that will meet
the state’s 21 st century needs. She also notes the very real economic danger Texas will
face if leaders don’t rise to this challenge.
And she outlines the steps Texas should take — including comprehensive long-range
transmission planning and interim technological improvements that enhance the grid at
a much lower cost — to affordably strengthen the transmission system in ways that
create a foundation for future economic and electricity load growth.
Here’s an excerpt:
To plug new industries into the state’s power grid, Texas must plan for and create
the most cost-efficient transmission system for Texans’ long-term needs.
Access to electricity is one of the first things employers look at when deciding
where to build and hire. Keeping pace in the artificial intelligence arms race and
growing the state’s manufacturing workforce requires the most reliable,
affordable, and cost-efficient energy system possible.
A bigger, better grid will save money and make the grid more reliable for all
Texas consumers.
To be sure, Texas needs an all-of-the-above energy strategy — building on the
state’s leadership in oil and gas, solar and wind power, and technologies such as
battery storage and modular nuclear power — to meet the energy needs of
existing and future employers.
But legislators also must get electricity where it needs to go. That’s where
transmission comes in.
The full piece is published here. Take a look.