Is the Texas Power Grid Fixed Yet?
Late Sunday — after the Texas Legislature, at the 11th hour, passed monumental electricity grid bills that stitched together a range of energy proposals that many had assumed to be dead — a friend asked on Twitter, “Does this mean the grid is fixed?”
No. Not even close.
Over the past 20 weeks, state leaders have, with frightening consistency, focused on the wrong energy-related issues. They wasted time and energy attacking Texas’ nation-leading clean energy sector — something most states and countries pine for — while ignoring consumer-centric solutions that would reduce bills and increase reliability.
The only good news as the 88th legislative session came to a close was the surprising lack of bad news.
Bad bills that died (or got better)
A remarkable coalition of environmentalists, industry organizations and business groups — including more than 50 chambers of commerce, manufacturers, generators, oil & gas advocates, and others — stopped very real efforts to shut down the renewable energy industry in Texas.
As attack after attack rolled out of the Texas Senate, the state House of Representatives consistently raised red flags about the effects of such legislation on consumers. House State Affairs Committee Chairman Todd Hunter — a pro-business, anti-nonsense Republican from Corpus Christi — often led the questioning on behalf of consumers. And most anti-renewable bills could not stand up to that scrutiny…