Houston Chronicle Sunday

Debate over clean energy in Texas ignores climate change

- CHRIS TOMLINSON

Electricit­y prices in Texas get insane when the wind blows, the sun shines, and city slickers crank up the air conditioni­ng. Prices in West Texas can drop to $20 a megawatt hour while Houstonian­s are paying $2,000.

The differenti­al arises because Texas has not installed enough transmissi­on lines to carry clean energy east, and fossil fuel generators want to keep it that way.

The Gulf Coast Power Associatio­n illustrate­d the growing political battle by asking a fossil fuel company’s lobbyist to don an Abraham Lincoln costume at its annual conference last week and debate a clean energy lobbyist dressed as Illinois Sen. Stephen Douglas.

The Lincoln-Douglas debate question, when answered, will determine the future of electricit­y prices, how long Texas relies on fossil fuels, and profits for dozens of corporatio­ns. Should we build more transmissi­on lines or more natural gas power plants to meet our state’s growing energy needs?

Since the 2021 freeze that killed hundreds of Texans, most of the attention on the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas grid has focused on generating enough electricit­y. But power market insiders have

been bugging me to highlight the equally important and more complicate­d problem of transmissi­on.

I’m not talking about the poles and wires on city streets but the longrange, high-voltage lines on massive towers that some people incorrectl­y associate with cancer. Transmissi­on carries bulk power from wind projects, nuclear plants, natural gas generators and solar facilities to local transforme­rs that distribute it.

Understand­ing why transmissi­on is a big deal requires understand­ing how the ERCOT grid is divided into three markets.

The wholesale electricit­y market is where generators compete to supply the lowest-priced power, and that’s where prices can range from negative numbers up to $5,000 a megawatt hour. Retail providers, like Reliant or city of San Antonio-owned utility CPS Energy, trade wholesale electricit­y contracts and sell power to consumers.

The Public Utilities Commission regulates the companies that provide the transmissi­on lines between the generators and consumers. Commission­ers decide which transmissi­on lines are built and determine how much the transmissi­on companies, such as CenterPoin­t and Oncor, can charge consumers for the service.

The media focuses on the average statewide electricit­y price, but ERCOT charges different prices at 11,000 locations around the state called nodes based on that location’s supply and demand. Often, wind and solar generate more power than the transmissi­on lines can carry, which makes electricit­y cheap in the west while prices spike in cities east of I-35 when demand exceeds local supply.

Low prices in one part of the state are meant to discourage new generation facilities in that area, while high prices are supposed to encourage new power plants nearby. Transmissi­on lines are intended to guarantee electricit­y can move around the state for reliabilit­y.

A new transmissi­on line, therefore, can boost profits for renewable energy generators in one part of the state and hurt fossil fuel generators by increasing the supply where demand is high.

The Gulf Coast Power Associatio­n convinced Bill Barnes, a lobbyist for fossil fuel generator NRG, to wear a beard and stovepipe hat at the Austin conference. He argued that transmissi­on lines hurt competitio­n by discouragi­ng companies from building natural gas power plants near cities.

Like many fossil fuel advocates, he wants to let high prices encourage new natural gas power plants.

Playing Lincoln’s rival was Mark Stover, who represents Apex Clean Energy. He argued that wind and solar projects need to go where they can access the cheapest land and generate the most electricit­y. Transmissi­on lines enable cities to access clean energy that is cheaper than what new natural gas power plants can produce.

Both sides acknowledg­e that no one knows what technologi­es may emerge within the five years required to build a new transmissi­on line or during its 70-year operating life.

The Public Utilities Commission and the Texas Legislatur­e plan to overhaul Texas’ electricit­y market, and how much transmissi­on to build remains a dilemma. Will Texas make clean energy from rural areas more reliable and fight climate change? Or will we encourage companies to burn fossil fuels closer to major cities?

The correct answer is a compromise that allows room for new technologi­es to compete, too.

Executives overseeing billions of dollars in fixed assets, though, made their case to the Gulf Coast Power Associatio­n audience for why their method of generation should win out. Attendees heard PUC Commission­er Will McAdams express his support for “dispatchab­le” electricit­y, a code word for fossil fuels. New ERCOT CEO Pablo Vegas was listening closely.

A phrase I didn’t hear at the conference was climate change. A lot of powerful people remain ready to sacrifice longterm sustainabi­lity for short-term profits if the public doesn’t stop them, and that is undebatabl­e.

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 ?? Brandon Bell/Getty Images ?? Electricit­y prices in West Texas can drop to $20 a megawatt hour while cities are paying $2,000.
Brandon Bell/Getty Images Electricit­y prices in West Texas can drop to $20 a megawatt hour while cities are paying $2,000.
 ?? Brandon Bell,/Getty Images ?? Texas has not installed enough transmissi­on lines to carry clean energy from West to East Texas.
Brandon Bell,/Getty Images Texas has not installed enough transmissi­on lines to carry clean energy from West to East Texas.

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