Matthew Johnson is the deputy director of the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club. Last week on Valentine's Day, the Austin American-Statesman published in its opinion section Mr. Johnson's thoughts about the state of the Texas energy situation. If his piece was a valentine to the state's energy interests, it was one that had a lot more thorns than roses.
As the disastrous power-grid failure during the February 2021 freeze demonstrated, all was not well with the Texas energy infrastructure, and Mr. Johnson notes that in 2023, Texas voters approved spending $5 billion on grid improvements. But in his view, the trusting voters of Texas, who simply wanted more reliable electricity at lower costs, were betrayed by "greedy industrial corporations," who directed the money into "risky, polluting, and unnecessary gas-fired power plants." According to Mr. Johnson, this was a betrayal of public trust. Instead, during the current session the legislature is once more considering funding both fossil-fuel and nuclear plants. Mr. Johnson thinks nuclear plants are a bad idea, because they have suffered delays and severe cost overruns in the past.
What should have been done, and what he hopes the legislature will do instead, is to put our money into energy-efficiency measures and renewable energy such as more wind and solar power. He favors a regulation that would require electric utilities, "while they don't generate electricity," to "produce energy efficiency savings that offset 1% of the energy they sell." And he mentions practical consumer measures such as improved insulation, smart thermostats, and retrofitted water heaters. He concludes with this rhetorical flourish: "Together we have the power to forge a sustainable path forward that benefits all Texans—not just a select few."
I agree with Mr. Johnson on some of his points. Energy conservation is a good thing. In fact, without any special regulatory incentives such as the one he promotes, the energy consumption per capita in Texas actually went down by more than 6% from 2019 to 2022. This is part of a long-term national trend that results from a number of factors, including more efficient industrial processes, the changing nature of energy-intensive industries, and replacement of old housing units by newer and better-insulated ones. Unfortunately for Mr. Johnson's hopes that even more energy savings will occur, the fastest way to make people and corporations save energy is to make it cost more. And that directly conflicts with one of Mr. Johnson's other hopes: that energy would cost less.
If Mr. Johnson wants our Texas grid to be more reliable, let's consider the one thing that those desperate power dispatchers wished they had on that cold February night in 2021: rapidly dispatchable emergency generators, robustly insulated for cold weather. The type of generator that starts up the fastest—in a matter of minutes—is exactly the kind that Mr. Johnson deplores: gas-fired turbine plants. Why Mr. Johnson calls them "risky," I'm not sure. While any process involving flammable gas can go awry, I'm not aware of any special hazards associated with them. The only significant pollution they produce is carbon dioxide, but they make less CO2 per kilowatt than coal or oil-fired plants. In fact, a big reason that CO2 emissions are not higher than they are is the replacement of coal and oil by natural gas.
Reading between the lines, I think Mr. Johnson's vision for our energy future would be as close to a 100% renewable grid as we can get, and the shuttering of all fossil-fuel plants, and no new nuclear plants. If we could wave a magic wand and turn his vision into reality today, I would currently be typing in the dark until my laptop battery ran down. It is nighttime in Texas, and the wind is not blowing much, at least in San Marcos. While for brief moments, the abundant wind generation capacity of Texas has supplied a third or more of total Texas electricity consumption, the average is much less, and the same is true of solar power. An all-renewable grid would require storage of power that could keep us running for days with little or no wind and long, cold nights.
A surprising amount of battery-based energy storage has already been connected to the Texas grid. As of 2024, there was almost 10 GW of storage available. That's nice, until you realize that Texas' electricity consumption has peaked historically in the range of 80 GW. And those batteries could supply 10 GW for only a short time—a few hours, perhaps. So even if we had enough renewables to theoretically supply all our needs, we would need about an equal amount of battery storage to keep us going, at an expense that would lead to a lot of energy conservation, no doubt—but there goes Mr. Johnson's hopes of low electric bills again.
And that's the fault of those "greedy industrial corporations," no doubt. But by its nature, a modern energy grid is a large-scale industrial project, and the best institution we have found so far for organizing and developing such things is the corporation. As for "greedy," I doubt that energy companies, or solar-power and wind-turbine companies, for that matter, are any greedier than other industrial sectors. They have to make a profit of some kind to stay in business. And while I'm sure that the details of how the Texas legislature interacts with energy companies might not bear public scrutiny too well, in my view spending $5 billion on gas-fired turbine generators was about the best way it could be spent.
By the way, some electric utilities do generate their own electricity, contrary to what Mr. Johnson says. Some buy power from companies that only generate, some both generate and sell, and about the only part of the grid that nobody wants is the most essential one: the transmission lines themselves. But even that problem is being addressed with so-called "smart grid" developments, which promise to deliver some of the energy conservation that Mr. Johnson wants.
Opinion pages are for expressing opinions, and we are all now more enlightened than we were concerning the opinion of a Sierra Club spokesperson about the Texas energy grid. All I can say is, I'm glad Mr. Johnson isn't in charge of it.
Sources: The opinion piece "Texas needs more renewables—not fossil fuels" ran in the Friday, Feb. 14, 2025 edition of the Austin American-Statesman. The statistic on Texas energy consumption is from https://www.statista.com/statistics/1496997/energy-consumption-per-capita-texas-united-states, and on Texas energy storage capacity I used https://www.statista.com/statistics/1496997/energy-consumption-per-capita-texas-united-states.