texas protects solar energy

While Texas lawmakers tried their hardest to kneecap renewable energy this session, the wind and solar industry lived to fight another day.

The Texas House let three anti-renewable bills die quiet deaths. SB 819, SB 388, and SB 715 all missed vital deadlines. That’s what happens when you try to strangle an industry that’s actually working.

State Senator Lois Kolkhorst from Brenham really went for it. Her bill would’ve slapped new fees on renewable companies and forced them to get special permission from the Public Utility Commission before breaking ground. It also required public hearings for any project within 25 miles of the proposed site. Because apparently, making clean energy requires more red tape than pumping oil. This was her second swing at restricting renewables. She missed again.

Making clean energy apparently requires more red tape than pumping oil.

SB 388 had its own special brand of nonsense. It demanded half of all new energy generation be “dispatchable” – industry speak for “turns on whenever you want.” But here’s the kicker: they excluded battery storage from counting. You know, the technology that literally stores energy for when you need it.

Meanwhile, SB 715 wanted existing renewable installations to add backup energy systems. Because nothing says “free market” like forcing successful businesses to buy equipment they don’t need.

The Senate actually passed SB 819 back in April, dressed up as wildlife protection. Sure, protecting animals by blocking wind farms while oil rigs and pipelines get a pass. Makes perfect sense.

Here’s what these lawmakers seem to forget: Texas ranks second nationally in wind and solar capacity. Renewable energy makes up nearly 90% of new electrical generation here. Those projects will pump over $20 billion in tax revenue into state coffers. But let’s kill them off because… reasons?

At least someone showed sense. The legislature did pass SB 1202, which speeds up permitting for home solar installations. The bill allows licensed engineers to review documents and conduct inspections, cutting through bureaucratic delays that have plagued homeowners trying to go solar. Small victories.

Adrian Shelley from Public Citizen called it a win for ratepayers. He’s right. ERCOT says energy demand will double in ten years. Texas needs every megawatt it can get.

Governor Abbott talks about an “all of the above” energy approach. These dead bills suggest some lawmakers didn’t get the memo. Or maybe they did, and fossil fuel lobbying speaks louder than common sense. Meanwhile, battery storage capacity nearly doubled nationwide in 2024, providing crucial grid stability that Texas desperately needs during extreme weather events.

References

You May Also Like

Rising Costs Doom Yorkshire Offshore Wind Project Set to Power 1 Million Homes

Renewable dreams shattered as billion-dollar Yorkshire wind project collapses under soaring costs. The Hornsea 4 cancellation threatens Britain’s green energy future. Can government intervention save what remains?

Federal Government Freezes Empire Wind 1 Progress: Offshore Energy Dreams Suspended

Is Biden’s green energy revolution crumbling? The federal freeze of NY’s Empire Wind 1 threatens 1,000+ jobs and renewable targets. The real cost might surprise you.

Historic Partnership: First Nations Co-Lead Massive Northern Ontario Hydro Development

Two Indigenous nations flip the script on energy development, leading a 430MW hydroelectric partnership that will power 430,000 homes. Indigenous wisdom meets modern energy needs.

South Dakota’s Bold Move: Kwik Star Alliance Fuels Cleaner Ethanol Revolution

Corn fuels a clean revolution: South Dakota’s Kwik Star alliance slashes emissions by 46% while boosting 30,000 jobs despite pandemic setbacks. The heartland’s energy landscape will never be the same.