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Texas will get more electricity from solar and wind power than natural gas next year, EIA projects

https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/steo/pdf/steo_full.pdf

Texas will get the largest share of its electricity next year from solar and wind power, the U.S. Energy Information Administration projected it a short-term energy outlook report released Tuesday. Yes, Texas.

Overall, the U.S. is forecast to generate 16 percent of its electricity from wind and solar power in 2023, up from 14 percent in 2022, while natural gas generation will fall to 37 percent, from 39 percent this year, the EIA said.

Texas, meanwhile, "is likely to experience the largest shift in generation mix in 2023," the EIA said, with natural gas falling to 36 percent, from 42 percent this year — and solar and wind power rising to 37 percent, from 30 percent in 2022. EIA administrator Joe DeCarolis shared the chart.

Texas, in fact, led the U.S. in renewable energy projects in 2021, the American Clean Power Association reported earlier this year, bringing 7,325 megawatts of new wind, solar, and energy storage projects online — versus 2,697 megawatt in the next highest state, California. "But what got my attention wasn't Texas' dominance in 2021," Dan Gearino wrote in Inside Climate News. "It was that Texas also is the leader when ranking the states on how much wind, solar, and storage they have under construction or in advanced development."

"Texas can claim, with ample evidence, to be the renewable energy capital of the United States," Gearino wrote. "This is despite also being the fossil fuel capital of the United States, and having political leaders who go out of their way to defer to oil and gas."

Texas leaders, lawmakers, and regulators are "putting their thumbs on the scale to reward fossil fuels at the expense of renewable energy," which "is hardly surprising given the chummy relationship state officials have with oil and gas," the Houston Chronicle says in an editorial. But it's "bad news for residential consumers, particularly since wind and solar are often the most reliable energy sources during times of peak demand" — and much cheaper, too.

Texas is mostly "doing this because it makes financial sense," not for environmental reasons, Joshua Rhodes, an energy expert at the University of Texas at Austin, told Inside Climate News.

Texas, after all, has ample strong winds and bright sunlight. "There's some d-mb luck there," Rhodes conceded, but the state's unique market incentives help, too.

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| 1592 views | | 5 replies (last December 13, 2022) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k6n1nde

5 replies (most recent on top)

@2die

Even if all of the nat gas plants continued to work, the demand was so high that even then we would have had rolling blackouts. You can easily verify this with google. Does it make you feel better that we knew the night before the freeze the wind and solar plants weren’t going to help at all by design? Lmao

It turns out that building nothing but intermittent power generation in Texas for years has consequences. Just saying - you really ought to read that book and get educated. Vaclav Smil’s The Way the Worls Really Works is also a fantastic primer for those who want to guzzle the feel good media about the energy transition being easy.

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Post ID: @4wyk+1k6n1nde

And yet due to their unreliable nature we will all have to pay for the reliable backup to sit idle ready and waiting. Renewables just double the cost.

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Post ID: @3fzk+1k6n1nde

@2ahx It was cogen/nat gas power plants that failed during the 2021 TX freeze. Wellheads froze, winter lubricants weren’t available or weren’t being used,…the list goes on and on. This is all easily verified by a Google search.

You’re barking up the wrong branch of the wrong tree in the wrong forest here.

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Post ID: @2die+1k6n1nde

Read Shorting the Grid by Meredith Angwin. The transition to more intermittents in TX only guarantees we will have more freeze-like events any time we have some form of extreme weather.

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Post ID: @2ahx+1k6n1nde

Why are people downvoting this post? Is there some kind of manhood thing where you guys despise renewable energy on principle? The internet wants to know.

Don’t worry, you can still idle in traffic in your gas-guzzling F-10,000 pick up truck while committing to/from a job you hate with an employer you hate even more. Call it “freedom” if you like.

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Post ID: @1dhb+1k6n1nde

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