Posts Tagged ‘Pablo Vegas’

Abbott: Build Your Data Centers, But Pay For Your Own Infrastructure

Thursday, June 11th, 2026

A number of states have been trying to enact bans on new data center build-outs due to outsized electricity and water consumption concerns. Texas Governor Greg Abbott doesn’t want to ban data centers, but he does want them to pay for their own infrastructure.

Gov. Greg Abbott is directing state regulators to ensure Texans are not stuck paying for expensive grid upgrades tied to the rapid expansion of data centers.

In a letter to Public Utility Commission of Texas Chairman Thomas Gleeson and ERCOT CEO Pablo Vegas…

“Pablo Vegas” sounds like the name of a Grand Theft Auto mob boss.

…Abbott warns that fast-growing data center development must not burden Texans with infrastructure costs or higher residential bills.

Since Texas’ economic boom has made the state a magnet for data centers, Abbott insisted new oversight is needed to “ensure that as data centers interconnect to the ERCOT grid, residential electric bills are not negatively affected.”

Grid reliability has been a much more scrutinized concern since the 2021 ice storm left millions of residents without power for varying periods of time.

Another contributing factor may be a controversial proposal for extra-high voltage 765‑kilovolt power lines designed to “move large amounts of power from Central, North, and South Texas into West Texas and the energy-rich Permian Basin.” “Critics have said state lawmakers originally authorized it in House Bill 5066 as a limited fix for a specific region, and that PUCT, grid operator ERCOT, and electricity delivery company Oncor expanded it into a broader buildout of these 765-kV transmission lines with minimum public input and without state lawmakers’ authorization.”

Abbott directed PUCT to take action so that data center interconnections “result in reduced residential electrical bills” and to require data centers to pay “all of their electric infrastructure costs,” preventing those costs from being shifted onto residential ratepayers.

While large data centers already pay part of their interconnection and grid costs, Abbott’s order presses regulators to shift as much of that burden as possible off residential ratepayers and onto the facilities themselves.

He also instructed PUCT and ERCOT to review their existing authority and identify additional actions they can take now “to safeguard Texans, their property, and resources.”

Under the directive, PUCT and ERCOT must submit a joint memorandum to the governor’s office by July 17, 2026, summarizing what they can do under current law, spelling out statutory limits, and recommending legislative changes to implement his objectives.

As part of that review, Abbott says regulators should consider ways to prevent data centers from shifting development risks and costs onto Texans, require sustainable resource management, and minimize adverse impacts on local communities.

Abbott separately ordered the PUCT to initiate action to reduce residential transmission costs by July 31, 2026, linking the data center issue to broader concerns about rising transmission charges on power bills.

He framed the move as building on Senate Bill 6, which imposed stronger standards on large loads like data centers but did not fully resolve the risk to consumers.

Abbott also pledged to work with lawmakers to codify PUCT actions that require data centers to cover their own electric infrastructure costs, with the goal of lowering residential ratepayer costs.

The governor added that he would back requirements that all new data centers use water-efficient technologies such as closed-loop cooling systems and that large facilities annually report their electricity and water usage data to the PUCT.

Water use has been a much higher concern since the 2011 drought, the worst on record. And despite a fairly wet spring, much of central Texas is still officially suffering from drought conditions.

My impression is that water usage concerns are probably overblown, and that the data densities required for AI has data centers using closed loop ethylene or propylene glycol based systems for better heat transfer. But I’m hardly an expert.

He further proposed repealing sales tax exemptions and other “outdated or unnecessary” incentives for data centers and requiring operators to reduce local impacts through measures like setbacks and noise-reduction technology.

All that sounds a little vague, but is much preferable to codifying specific technical solutions to demand issues in a industry that moves so fast.

In the past, Texas has bent over backwards with incentives and tax rebates to attract businesses to the state. But when it comes to the electricity and water demands of some 164 planned data centers, power-hungry tech giants are going to have to start paying their own way sooner rather than later.

Coming To Texas This Summer: Demand > Supply

Thursday, May 11th, 2023

You know how the much of the Texas interconnect grid went black back in 2021 due to over-reliance on trendy renewable energy rather than natural gas and nuclear baseload?

Well guess what?

Public Utility Commission (PUC) Chairman Peter Lake and Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) CEO Pablo Vegas sent a clear message to the Texas Legislature on Wednesday: tweak the electricity market so that natural gas generation can be supplemented, or continue to face problems in the summer heat.

I just have to pause here to note that “Pablo Vegas” sounds like an Anthony Weiner pseudonym.

“Operationally, the ERCOT grid is ready for this summer,” Lake said, unveiling the 2023 Seasonal Assessment of Resource Adequacy (SARA) report. “The reliability reforms that were put in place have been tested and continue to work. We’ve made the grid we’ve got as strong as possible using every tool available.”

The SARA report, as Lake stated, is an estimate of electricity demand and supply for certain scenarios based on past data, not a forecast of what is to come this summer.

It estimates peak demand to reach 82,739 megawatts (MW); for comparison, 1 MW can power about 200 homes during the peak demand hours of the late summer afternoon through evening. To cope with that demand, the state expects to have 97,000 MW of capacity available — two-thirds of which is thermal generation, combined with 13 percent from solar and 11 percent from wind.

However, Lake tinged the grid’s readiness with an omen.

“Data shows for the first time that peak demand this summer will exceed the amount we can generate from on-demand dispatchable power,” Lake warned. “There is no longer enough dispatchable generation to meet the demand of the ERCOT system. So, we will be relying on renewables to keep the lights on.”

The State of Texas is adding about 300,000 people per year, which means a larger and larger demand for electricity on the state’s largest power grid.

“In this new reality, our risk goes up as the sun goes down,” Lake added.

Vegas likened the situation to a car: the metaphorical vehicle — the physical grid itself — is up to par on maintenance, but it lacks the necessary fuel — the electricity supply — to power its full trip ahead.

Lake said that ERCOT’s dispatchable supply fleet only grew 1.5 percent from 2008 to 2022. During that time, its renewable footprint grew substantially with now more than 30,000 MW of wind power installed and more than 10,000 MW of solar.

The influx of renewables is driven primarily by the Production Tax Credit — a federal subsidy that pays renewable generators 2.6 cents per kilowatt-hour produced — which has given wind and now solar an advantage over thermal generation sources. ERCOT has 31,000 MW of solar generation in the queue along with 5,000 MW of wind.

In contrast, only 800 MW of dispatchable power has been added in the last year, according to Lake.

So thanks to renewables, blackouts may be in the future of Texans this summer.

But don’t worry! The federal government has a solution: making sure no one has reliable power.

The Biden administration is announcing a climate rule that would require most fossil fuel power plants to slash their greenhouse gas pollution 90 percent between 2035 and 2040 — or shut down.

The highly anticipated regulation being unveiled Thursday morning is just the latest step in President Joe Biden’s campaign to green the U.S. economy, an effort that has brought a counterattack from Republicans and coal-state Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin. That’s on top of efforts by Biden’s agencies to promote the use of electric cars, subsidize green energy sources like solar and wind and tighten regulations on products including gas stoves and dishwashers.

The draft power plant rule from the Environmental Protection Agency would break new ground by requiring steep pollution cuts from plants burning coal or natural gas, which together provide the lion’s share of the nation’s electricity. To justify the size of those cuts, the agency says fossil fuel plants could capture their greenhouse gas emissions before they hit the atmosphere — a long-debated technology that no power plant in the U.S. uses now.

As an alternative, utilities could hasten their decisions to shut down their aging coal plants, a trend that has already gathered speed in the past two decades. The rule allows plants that agree to close in the first half of the 2030s to avoid most or all of the pollution-reduction mandates.

Safe, reliable nuclear and fossil fuel powered energy is anathema to the Democratic Party because they can’t rake off enough graft from it. Unless you’re willing to let them shove their disasterous green energy programs down your throat, they want you deplorables sitting in the dark.