I am not 100% on this but I did see the claim that the Spain grid collapse would have taken down all of Europe if Spain could not be quickly disconnected from Germany as it is.
Would be something if NY takes down all of America except for Texas....the only part not connected I have been told.
I am not 100% on this but I did see the claim that the Spain grid collapse would have taken down all of Europe if Spain could not be quickly disconnected from Germany as it is.
Would be something if NY takes down all of America except for Texas....the only part not connected I have been told.
Civilization runs on energy, I'll agree with. What you need are energy sources that are reliable, run predictably, and are economical in cost. Solar and wind meet none of those requirements, particularly solar.
solar and wind play a massive part in supplementing the grid.
It takes a really stupid person to not understand two things can be true at one time. You can still build out fossil, nuclear and other means while ALSO adding renewables.
Seeding this area to Chinese dominance in the age of electric cars and AI and Crypto demands on the grid is simply foolish.
It takes a really stupid person to not understand two things can be true at one time. You can still build out fossil, nuclear and other means while ALSO adding renewables.
In doing so, you duplicate the generation process and add capacity that sits idle much of the time. At other times, solar and wind (they aren't "renewable" either) generate too much capacity. California, for example, in spring and fall has to sell off excess solar generation to neighboring states. To do that California pays those states to take their excess generation. Those adjoining states get California's electricity essentially for free while Californians get fucked with the highest per kwh rates in the lower 48.
But what does Texas say? A place where more traditional energy is generated and harvested than anywhere else? They CHOOSE VOLUNTARILY to ALSO add as much green energy as they can leading the US and most of the world in green energy production.
What does China say? A place where not one forces the gov't to do anything they do not want? They are leading the world in green energy production.
Terry sees that and says 'i know better them and they do not need it' and Terry is so incredibly stupid he cannot see the hubris in his comments and thinks others should take him seriously as if his words mean something.
In doing so, you duplicate the generation process and add capacity that sits idle much of the time. At other times, solar and wind (they aren't "renewable" either) generate too much capacity. California, for example, in spring and fall has to sell off excess solar generation to neighboring states. To do that California pays those states to take their excess generation. Those adjoining states get California's electricity essentially for free while Californians get fucked with the highest per kwh rates in the lower 48.
...
And you are "duplicating" you are 'diversifying' the grid which means a catastrophic failure such as happened in Texas becomes less likely as you cannot have a single point of failure (fossil fuels) take down the grid.
Duplicating is doing the SAME THING twice. If you had twice the natural gas in Texas it would be meaningless as it froze up and could not be delivered.
The path taken all over the world is to build a more robust via diversifying and again Terry says 'you are all wrong'.
As the winter storm that hit Texas last February showed, our energy system is fragile, and when it fails lots of people suffer. But transitioning to renewable energy sources, strengthening the electric grid and enabling local generation and storage can all improve resilience....
All electric buildings... and where does the electricity come from? ... Natural Gas.
When you factor in Transmission Line losses, stabilization loads, redundant backup generation for peak... it would you less overall gas, to just allow people to heat their homes directly with the Natural Gas.
It is about control, manipulation, and profit for the wealthy elites. It is NOT about the environment.
But freedom, cost, and environmental impact, just isn't important to NY Dem Dupes. They have been... Indoctrinated.
But what does Texas say? A place where more traditional energy is generated and harvested than anywhere else? They CHOOSE VOLUNTARILY to ALSO add as much green energy as they can leading the US and most of the world in green energy production.
What does China say? A place where not one forces the gov't to do anything they do not want? They are leading the world in green energy production.
Terry sees that and says 'i know better them and they do not need it' and Terry is so incredibly stupid he cannot see the hubris in his comments and thinks others should take him seriously as if his words mean something.
Texas got snookered by T. Boone Pickens, a billionaire that went in big on wind only to find it's a total loser. So he bailed and the state got stuck with his problem.
Texas is not only continuing its renewable energy momentum but is actually accelerating its adoption of wind, solar, and battery storage, cementing its role as a national leader — even amid federal policy shifts.
Here’s the breakdown:
Renewables Growth in Texas
Solar
In mid-2025, the US solar sector grew ~10% year-over-year. Texas led with a 14% increase, while growth stalled in states like California and Florida. Reuters
In early 2025, Texas added over 6 GW of utility-scale solar, making it the fastest-growing solar market in the nation. Future Core
As of Q2 2025, Texas surpassed California in utility-scale solar capacity—21.9 GW vs. 21.1 GW—and has over 12 GW under construction. Reddit
By 2024, solar and wind accounted for 34% of the state's electricity, up from just 12% in 2015. Environment America
Wind
Texas remains the nation’s top wind producer with over 30 GW installed. New projects like the 5 GW “Lone Star Wind Complex” are underway, enough to power 500,000 homes. WikipediaTexas Recap
Battery Storage
The state leads the U.S. with nearly 10 GW of battery storage as of 2024. ERCOT has plans to add ~13 GW more by 2025 to support grid resilience. The Texas TribuneTexas EDC
A recent 2.4 GW storage project by ENGIE and CBRE further bolsters grid reliability. Chron
Notable Investments
CPS Energy is seeking bids to increase its wind capacity from 1,067 MW to 1,467 MW and has already added 480 MW of solar, with 254 MW more under contract. San Antonio Express-News
Meta is investing $900 million in Texas renewable infrastructure, securing 600 MW from a new solar plant near San Antonio and an additional 595 MW from other solar sites, aiming for 100% clean energy for its Texas operations. Chron
Policy Landscape & Challenges
Several Texas legislative proposals aimed at regulating or curbing wind and solar — including new permitting, buffer zones, and reliability requirements — were introduced but mostly died in the House. The Business JournalsCleanTechnicatechxplore.com
Lawmakers, including some Republicans, recognize the necessity of renewables to meet growing power demand. A bipartisan stance has emerged, as reliance on traditional gas infrastructure alone can’t keep pace with growth. Dallas NewsThe Guardian
Meanwhile, the EPA canceled over $400 million in Biden-era rooftop solar and microgrid funding for Texas — a significant setback for community-scale projects. Houston Chronicle
Summary
Is Texas still pushing forward with renewables?
Absolutely. Despite federal rollbacks and political headwinds, Texas continues to lead in expanding solar, wind, and storage infrastructure. Major utilities, data-center investors, and ambitious projects are all betting on clean energy’s future in the Lone Star State.
He quotes Chat GPT as if that somehow gives the opinion validity. Its a freak'n moron robot program that just repeats the language of the training set it was fed. GIGO!
Only an idiot would claim Chat GPT is an expert on anything but blabbing.
Texas is not only continuing its renewable energy momentum but is actually accelerating its adoption of wind, solar, and battery storage, cementing its role as a national leader — even amid federal policy shifts.
Here’s the breakdown:
Renewables Growth in Texas
Solar
In mid-2025, the US solar sector grew ~10% year-over-year. Texas led with a 14% increase, while growth stalled in states like California and Florida. Reuters
In early 2025, Texas added over 6 GW of utility-scale solar, making it the fastest-growing solar market in the nation. Future Core
As of Q2 2025, Texas surpassed California in utility-scale solar capacity—21.9 GW vs. 21.1 GW—and has over 12 GW under construction. Reddit
By 2024, solar and wind accounted for 34% of the state's electricity, up from just 12% in 2015. Environment America
Wind
Texas remains the nation’s top wind producer with over 30 GW installed. New projects like the 5 GW “Lone Star Wind Complex” are underway, enough to power 500,000 homes. WikipediaTexas Recap
Battery Storage
The state leads the U.S. with nearly 10 GW of battery storage as of 2024. ERCOT has plans to add ~13 GW more by 2025 to support grid resilience. The Texas TribuneTexas EDC
A recent 2.4 GW storage project by ENGIE and CBRE further bolsters grid reliability. Chron
Notable Investments
CPS Energy is seeking bids to increase its wind capacity from 1,067 MW to 1,467 MW and has already added 480 MW of solar, with 254 MW more under contract. San Antonio Express-News
Meta is investing $900 million in Texas renewable infrastructure, securing 600 MW from a new solar plant near San Antonio and an additional 595 MW from other solar sites, aiming for 100% clean energy for its Texas operations. Chron
Policy Landscape & Challenges
Several Texas legislative proposals aimed at regulating or curbing wind and solar — including new permitting, buffer zones, and reliability requirements — were introduced but mostly died in the House. The Business JournalsCleanTechnicatechxplore.com
Lawmakers, including some Republicans, recognize the necessity of renewables to meet growing power demand. A bipartisan stance has emerged, as reliance on traditional gas infrastructure alone can’t keep pace with growth. Dallas NewsThe Guardian
Meanwhile, the EPA canceled over $400 million in Biden-era rooftop solar and microgrid funding for Texas — a significant setback for community-scale projects. Houston Chronicle
Summary
Is Texas still pushing forward with renewables?
Absolutely. Despite federal rollbacks and political headwinds, Texas continues to lead in expanding solar, wind, and storage infrastructure. Major utilities, data-center investors, and ambitious projects are all betting on clean energy’s future in the Lone Star State.
Texas and other Republican-led states are advancing legislation that could slow or block new renewable energy projects, as political momentum shifts back toward fossil fuels.David Montgomery reports for Stateline.In short:Despite Texas leading the nation in wind and solar electricity generation...
Spain and Portugal’s blackout should be a warning to U.S. lawmakers, who decide the future of the massive renewable tax…
www.instituteforenergyresearch.org
Basically, Texas would like to ditch wind and solar because they are expensive losers in energy production. This is becoming more and more apparent to the state as their percentage in the mix increases. Note, this is true EVERYWHERE wind and solar have been pushed heavily. The cost of energy goes way up, often triple or more, and the reliability of the grid plummets.
Throughout the Biden administration, investors in the energy market were more than willing to build wind and solar plants to gobble up the huge subsidies offered. But those subsidies are never ending if wind and solar are to compete. Wind and solar absolutely suck as energy generation systems.
Texas and other Republican-led states are advancing legislation that could slow or block new renewable energy projects, as political momentum shifts back toward fossil fuels.David Montgomery reports for Stateline.In short:Despite Texas leading the nation in wind and solar electricity generation...
Spain and Portugal’s blackout should be a warning to U.S. lawmakers, who decide the future of the massive renewable tax…
www.instituteforenergyresearch.org
Basically, Texas would like to ditch wind and solar because they are expensive losers in energy production. This is becoming more and more apparent to the state as their percentage in the mix increases. Note, this is true EVERYWHERE wind and solar have been pushed heavily. The cost of energy goes way up, often triple or more, and the reliability of the grid plummets.
Throughout the Biden administration, investors in the energy market were more than willing to build wind and solar plants to gobble up the huge subsidies offered. But those subsidies are never ending if wind and solar are to compete. Wind and solar absolutely suck as energy generation systems.
Texas and other Republican-led states are advancing legislation that could slow or block new renewable energy projects, as political momentum shifts back toward fossil fuels.David Montgomery reports for Stateline.In short:Despite Texas leading the nation in wind and solar electricity generation...
Spain and Portugal’s blackout should be a warning to U.S. lawmakers, who decide the future of the massive renewable tax…
www.instituteforenergyresearch.org
Basically, Texas would like to ditch wind and solar because they are expensive losers in energy production. This is becoming more and more apparent to the state as their percentage in the mix increases. Note, this is true EVERYWHERE wind and solar have been pushed heavily. The cost of energy goes way up, often triple or more, and the reliability of the grid plummets.
Throughout the Biden administration, investors in the energy market were more than willing to build wind and solar plants to gobble up the huge subsidies offered. But those subsidies are never ending if wind and solar are to compete. Wind and solar absolutely suck as energy generation systems.
I am curious as to what heating system you know of for high rise buildings that doesn't require electricity to work. Could you enlighten us since you are so knowledgeable about this heating system that requires no fans or pumps.
The One Big Beautiful Bill drastically shortens the timeline for wind and solar projects to qualify for tax credits. This will impact even Texas, where wind and solar power have boomed and power demand is rising.
www.texastribune.org
New Research Shows Texas Has the Highest Electricity Costs in the Nation
Texas leads the nation in high electricity prices, a trend amplified by the growth of renewable energy and recent policy shifts under the Biden administration. With wholesale prices spiking 208% in the past three years, Texans face unique challenges in balancing the benefits of renewables with...
Many Texans have been led to believe that adding more wind and solar to the electric grid is the cheapest way to meet the state’s rising energy demand. However, this belief overlooks a crucial reality: the hidden costs of managing the variability of these resources. While wind and solar have low...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.