Fwd: Texas’ record-setting summer

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Kirk Rensmeyer

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Sep 19, 2025, 7:04:19 PM (13 days ago) Sep 19
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From: Canary Media <nor...@canarymedia.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 19, 2025 at 11:42 AM
Subject: Texas’ record-setting summer
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Plus: EPA targets greenhouse gas reporting, and two more offshore wind blows

19 September 2025

Happy Friday, and welcome back to Canary Media Weekly! The Lone Star that supplies Texas’ nickname may as well be the sun. After all, the state’s grid has set record after record for solar power generated and battery power discharged, showing that renewables can do the job even as a promised wave of gas-fueled power plants fails to materialize.

Kathryn Krawczyk

Solar generated more power than it ever has before on Texas’ grid earlier this month.

 

That’s impressive, but even more so when you consider that it was the 17th record the power source set in the state this year, according to a new report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.

 

The record setting started bright and early on Jan. 24, when solar generated 22.1 gigawatts of power. That figure has since steadily risen, and on Sept. 9, solar produced a huge 29.9 GW. Also that day, solar provided more than 40% of the state’s power from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., per data from the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the state’s grid operator.

 

That early September day capped a groundbreaking summer for solar in Texas. From June 1 through Aug. 31, solar met 15.2% of all demand in the ERCOT system. Coal provided for 12.5% of demand during that time.

 

And solar wasn’t the only top performer this year. Battery storage has already set four discharge records in Texas this month, often charging up on solar power that floods the grid in the mornings and putting it back into the system when the sun sets, per the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis. 

 

Texas’ extreme summer temperatures have frequently driven ERCOT to ask people to conserve power, warning that increased air-conditioning use could overwhelm the grid’s energy supplies. But this year, ERCOT didn’t ask customers to conserve power at all, and credited its summertime stability to Texas’ nation-leading deployment of solar and batteries.

 

This all reveals solar’s growing ability to replace fossil fuels and meet power demand in Texas, especially when the clean energy source is paired with batteries. And it couldn’t be more necessary: The U.S. Energy Information Administration anticipates demand in ERCOT will surge as much as 23% from 2024 to 2026.

 

Meanwhile, natural gas is failing to meet the moment. Texas developers have proposed building more than 100 new gas power plants in the next few years to meet rising demand from data centers and other heavy industry. The state created a $7.2 billion loan program to incentivize gas plant construction, but more than two years after that fund was launched, just two facilities have been approved for only $321 million in loans. Developers pulled another seven projects from consideration, citing high costs and supply chain challenges.

 

Solar and batteries, meanwhile, remain among the cheapest and quickest ways to add power generation to the grid — though the Trump administration isn’t making it any easier for communities to yield the benefits of these technologies as it rolls back federal clean energy tax credits and solar-boosting programs.

TWO MORE THINGS

Even polluters are wary of EPA’s rollback of greenhouse gas reporting

The U.S. EPA proposed late last week to kill its Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program, which has required top polluters to disclose their planet-warming emissions for around 15 years. The rule change would end the collection of data from 46 sources, including power plants, and pause data collection from several petroleum and natural gas industry sources until 2034.

 

The EPA, as well as states and cities, have used Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program data to create emissions-reduction targets and regulations. Still, one oil and gas lobbyist told E&E News that the industry actually pushed for modifications to the program rather than a full repeal, which could complicate trade with the European Union. 

 

A carbon-capture industry coalition is also opposing the program’s end, saying the reporting rules are “inextricably” tied to federal carbon-capture incentives and the repeal would hurt the industry’s growth. 

Trump admin targets two more offshore wind projects

A new wave of federal attacks on offshore wind started last Friday as the U.S. Department of the Interior asked a judge to cancel approval of the Maryland Offshore Wind Project, Canary Media’s Clare Fieseler reports. Republicans in Congress had already saddled the project with potentially insurmountable financial challenges by mandating an early end to federal tax credits, and this potential permit dismissal leaves it in even more trouble.

 

Just yesterday, Interior asked another court to revoke the same approval for SouthCoast Wind, a 141-turbine project off the coast of Massachusetts. The planned project had similarly been facing financial difficulties.

 

Meanwhile, the fight to continue building the Revolution Wind project carries on. The Democratic attorneys general of Connecticut and Rhode Island, which would receive power from the nearly complete offshore array halted by the Trump administration, are now seeking a court order to let construction resume.

WHAT TO KNOW THIS WEEK

Surprise, surprise: The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine reaffirms that burning fossil fuels is warming the planet, despite the Trump administration’s moves to downplay and even disavow that finding. (E&E News)

 

DOE’s new energy philosophy: An Energy Department official touts a “best of the above” approach to power generation in a congressional hearing, as an alternative to the “all of the above” energy philosophy. (E&E News

 

States’ new climate fight: Four states team up to battle the Trump administration’s attacks on the endangerment finding, which determined that greenhouse gases are a hazard to public health and underpins many federal climate regulations. (CT Mirror)

 

Rivian presses on: Rivian broke ground on its $5 billion factory in Georgia this week after long delays, and even though federal EV tax credits are set to expire at the end of this month. (Associated Press)

 

Affordability in focus: California legislators pass a slate of legislation to lower energy bills, including measures to curb utility profits from grid upkeep and to accelerate transmission development via public financing. (Canary Media)

 

Electrifying your seafood tower: In the coastal waters of rural Maine, some early adopters of electric boats are proving they’re a quieter, cleaner alternative to petroleum-powered vessels that dominate oyster farming and other aquaculture industries. (Canary Media)

 

Art Deco decarbonization: A former terminal at Newark Liberty International Airport that’s now an administrative building got an all-electric renovation, and could be a blueprint for other historic buildings looking to decarbonize. (Canary Media

 

Cooking up contradiction: Top appliance companies have quietly removed comparisons of gas and induction stoves’ air quality impacts from their websites as the industry fights a Colorado law mandating warning labels on gas stoves. (Grist)

 

That used-car smell: Used EV sales have risen 40% over the last year as buyers find they’re often cheaper than comparable gas-powered cars. (New York Times)

Canary Media is an independent, nonprofit newsroom covering the transition to clean energy and solutions to the climate crisis. Donate to support us.

Canary Media, Inc., 67 Broadway St., Suite 200, Asheville, NC 28801

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