Locator: 48188B.
Tag: ERCOT
WTI: $82.47.
Sunday, July 21, 2024: 36 for the month; 36 for the quarter, 362 for the year
39966, conf, Petroshale, Primus 1MBH,
Saturday, July 20, 2024: 35 for the month; 35 for the quarter, 361 for the year
40256, conf, CLR, Chase 3-18H,
Friday, July 19, 2024: 34 for the month; 34 for the quarter, 360 for the year
40257,
conf, CLR, Chase 4-18H, RBN Energy: Texas Energy Fund seeks to speed development of new gas-fired power plants. Link here.
Power generation is one of the leading consumers of natural gas in
Texas — every month last year, generators in the state used between 4
Bcf/d and 8 Bcf/d, on average, with the volumes peaking (as you would
expect) in August, when air conditioning and a friend with a pool are
must-haves. But as we’ve seen, the Texas power grid is often stressed to
its limit, and the state has been taking steps to significantly
increase the gas-fired generating capacity available for peak-demand
periods in both the hottest and coldest months. In today’s RBN blog, we
discuss one of the state’s boldest steps yet: the creation of a
multibillion-dollar fund to support the development of thousands of
megawatts of new gas-fired generation.
Electric power has been on a lot of Texans’ minds lately, especially
if you live and work in the parts of the state hit hard by Hurricane
Beryl earlier this month. We can’t explain why it took so long for many
of you — and quite a few RBN staffers — to be reconnected to the grid.
But today we can speak to the broader issue of what you might call
“generation-capacity sufficiency” or, to put it in layman’s terms, will
there be enough power plants to keep the lights on?