The Texas power disaster and the end of energy ideology
The Lone Star State will need to think hard about whether it wants to maintain an independent electricity grid following the devastating failure last week
“The energy system was dressed for summer, and extreme winter showed up” Costa Samaras, Carnegie Mellon University professor, on February’s power failure in Texas. About 20 years ago in 1999 a fellow named George W Bush deregulated the Texas energy market. Governor at the time, Bush touted his accomplishment a year or two later when running for president and highlighted the unleashing of a new energy source: wind power. His successor, Rick Perry, would further pursue the growth of renewables and now Texas is not only the top producer of wind power in the country, but also ranks roughly fifth among wind producers of the world. So it must have been strange for Texans employed in that new indu

Also in this section
18 February 2025
Demand for CCS to abate new gas-fired plants is rising as datacentres seek low-carbon power, Frederik Majkut, SVP of industrial decarbonisation, tells Carbon Economist
11 February 2025
Rising prices have added to concerns over CBAM impact on the competitiveness of EU manufacturing
7 February 2025
Norwegian energy company slashes spending on low-carbon sectors as transition decelerates
30 January 2025
The UAE’s oil and gas company puts its faith in technologies including CCS and AI to deliver its emission-reduction goals