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Energy and Environment Reporting for Texas

Monthly Archives: March 2012

Texas Hits New Record For Wind Power Generation

Getty Images

Texas hit a new record for wind power this week.

Did it seem windy to you last night? Because at 8:41 p.m. Wednesday, the Texas grid set a new record for wind power generation, reaching 7,599 megawatts.

The previous record was set the day before, with 7,403 megawatts. Before that, the biggest day of wind power generation in Texas was Oct. 7, 2011, with 7,400 megawatts of power.

When the record was reached, wind was supplying 22 percent of the grid’s power. That’s not actually a record, it got up to 26 percent last December.

The wind power was partly from the coast, but most of it came from West and North Texas.
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Your Weekly Drought Update: Slight Turn For the Worse

Maps by National Drought Center

The progress of the drought: Beginning, Peak and Now

It’s time for another update on the Texas drought from the U.S. Drought Monitor, published every Thursday morning. And sadly, the pattern of regression we’ve seen over the past few months has taken a slight step back. The numbers:

  • Nearly 21 percent of the state is in the worst level of drought, “exceptional.” That’s 6 percent more of the state since last week. Much of that increase has taken place in Southwest Texas, in Brewster, Jeff Davis and Presidio Counties.
  • While more of the state is in “exceptional” drought, it’s important to remember that at the peak of the drought in October, 86 percent of the state was at this level. “Exceptional” drought, according to the monitor, means “exceptional and widespread crop [and] pasture losses; shortages of water in reservoirs, streams, and wells creating water emergencies.” Continue Reading

Solar Storm Headed For Earth, But Texas Grid Should Be Fine

Image by NASA/Solar Dynamics Observatory via Getty Images

A solar storm is headed towards earth, but Texas grid operators aren't worried.

One of the biggest solar storms in five years is headed toward Earth. The Space Weather Prediction Center says it could affect power grids, GPS signals and even some airplane flights.

But power grid operators in Texas aren’t expecting much effect. Dottie Roark, spokesperson for the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which manages the electric grid for much of the state, says not to worry.

“Solar storms are mainly a factor in the upper latitudes because the Earth’s magnetic field acts as a shield against this type of solar weather,” she told StateImpact Texas collaborator KUT News. “So that shield is weakest at the north pole and the south pole, so that’s why it may affect some of the high latitudes more than here in our region.” Continue Reading

Meet the New Head of the TCEQ

Photo courtesy of TCEQ

Zak Covar will be the new executive director of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

Zak Covar was approved as the new executive director today of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ), the state’s environmental agency. Covar is 36 and has only been with the agency since November 2007; he has been deputy executive director since August 2009. You can read more about him in this Austin American-Statesman profile. Covar will officially become executive director on May 1.

Covar is taking the place of Mark Vickery, who announced his retirement from the TCEQ on February 23.

More from the TCEQ’s press release:

Covar began his career in state government when he clerked for Chairman Dennis Bonnen (State Representative District 25) on the House Environmental Regulation Committee. From 2005 to 2007, Covar also worked as the environmental and natural resource adviser to Governor Rick Perry. In this role, Covar was responsible for advising the governor and senior staff on all major budget and policy issues pertaining to the TCEQ, the Texas Railroad Commission, and Texas Parks and Wildlife. Continue Reading

Powering the Buzz of SXSW

Photo by KUT Austin

Vampire Weekend catches a big break at SXSW in 2008

Hordes of techies, musicians and film buffs are packing their bags for the SXSW Interactive, Film and Music conferences that get rolling this week. 286,000 people attended SXSW events last year, and even more are expected this year.

So what kind of effect does that have on the city’s energy use and grid? Austin’s population is around 800,000, so you’re looking at an additional 35 percent of population that needs power, at least temporarily. And you could argue that this  is a particularly power-hungry bunch, with Interactive attendees charging phones and powering laptops, Film folks running projectors and Music venues staying open longer and later than usual.

But if you ask Austin Energy, the city-owned utility that powers Austin, the 10-day festival doesn’t make a big dent in the city’s overall energy use. “It’s no more than any other event,” Larry Weis, General Manager for Austin Energy, says. “I don’t think we’re going to see anything unusual.”

Weis points out that in many instances, portable generators are used to set up power at temporary venues, since that’s easier than setting up a temporary utility pole that hooks into the downtown grid. Continue Reading

Rule Changes at TCEQ May Be in the Works

Photo courtesy of Public Citizen Texas

Director of Public Citizen Texas Tom "Smitty" Smith.

Yana Skorobogatov of StateImpact Texas researched and reported this article.

At a public hearing today in Austin, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality heard from groups worried about proposed changes to the way the state agency tracks emissions and pollution by companies. A proposal before the Commission as part of the state’s sunset review process would change the criteria for businesses to qualify for environmental permits.

Tom “Smitty” Smith, director of Public Citizen Texas, says the new rules could move businesses with poor histories of environmental compliance into the same category as businesses with average or high compliance. “It’s kind of like grading on the curve, and changing the curve to make sure that more people pass the exams and are given privileges that they perhaps don’t deserve,” he told StateImpact Texas.

A TCEQspokesman said the rule change is meant to create incentives to encourage voluntary compliance with environmental regulations. In a statement to StateImpact Texas, the spokesperson said that “the proposed rulemaking modifies the components and formula of compliance history in order to provide a more accurate measure of regulated entities’ performance and make compliance history a more effective regulatory tool.”

The three-person governing commission will close comment on the proposal on March 12, and it will go before the commission for a vote this summer, according to the TCEQ.

How to Get Eminent Domain in Texas (Just Check This Box)

Teresa Vieira/KUT News

How do you get eminent domain in Texas? Just check a box.

Texas is a state that prides itself on its independent spirit and rugged individualism, particularly the rights of landowners to use their land as they please. But it’s also a state that has a long history of drilling for oil and gas and a tradition of cooperation with the industry. Where the two traditions intersect, and at times collide, is when the oil and gas industry needs private land for their projects. That’s been the case in two instances recently, both involving pipelines and farmers.

One involves a rice farmer that didn’t want a carbon dioxide pipeline on his land, which went all the way to the Supreme Court of Texas. They sided with the landowner in that case. In the other, a farmer in northeast Texas is fighting an eminent domain claim by the company behind the Keystone XL pipeline. That pipeline would go through her farm, and today the head of the company behind it, TransCanada, announced that they intended to start construction as early as this spring on the section from Cushing, Oklahoma to Port Arthur, Texas.

In both cases, the companies claimed they had eminent domain to build their pipelines on the respective properties because they were “common carrier” pipelines, which would be used to transport oil and gas from other companies in addition to their own.

But who decides if the pipeline deserves that status? In essence, the companies do. Continue Reading

Finding Oil, But Not the Skilled Workers

Dave Fehling/StateImpact Texas

Stacy Martin hopes community college course will lead to a better job

If you want to see where the best job prospects are, look who’s putting in the overtime. In Houston, the world’s energy capital where new finds in oil and gas are boosting the economy, it’s workers in manufacturing.

“Right now, the way we’re growing is we’re working people longer hours, the people who have the skills,” said Patrick Jankowski, an economist with the Greater Houston Partnership, a group that promotes the city’s businesses.

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Now Read This: StateImpact Texas Top 5

Photo by Jeff Heimsath/StateImpact Texas

Billy Mann says he can survive one year without a crop, but worries about the effect it will have on the many businesses that rely on rice farming

There was a lot of action on the state level in the last week, with the Supreme Court of Texas reinforcing an earlier opinion that sides with landowners fighting claims of eminent domain by pipeline companies on their land. We also analyzed another recent decision by the Court on groundwater, and looked at the past and future of the current Texas drought. In case you missed them, here are the top five stories from StateImpact Texas in the last week:

  1. Farmer’s Restraining Order Against Keystone XL Pipeline Reinstated: Just a week ago, a temporary restraining order taken out by a farmer in northeast Texas against the company building the Keystone XL pipeline was dissolved. But late on Friday this week, that restraining order was reinstated by an appellate court.
  2. Taking a Deeper Look at the Texas Supreme Court’s Ruling on Water: Timing is everything, and the Texas Supreme Court’s recent decision on groundwater rights is no exception. After two years of nail-biting and speculation by land owners, conservationists, policy experts and a small army of lawyers, the ruling came down on a Friday afternoon.
  3. After Water is Cut Off, Texas Rice Farmers Say They Still Have a Future: Many rice farmers across southeast Texas have to face a sobering reality: for the first time in history, they will not have water for their crops. What happens next?
  4. The Texas Drought: How We Got Here, and Where We’re Going:  A new report gives us the opportunity to look at some of the science behind the drought that affected every Texan, and what may lie ahead in the future.
  5. Texas Supreme Court Reinforces Denbury Decision, Favors Landowners:  The Court released an updated opinion in the Texas Rice Land Partners v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas case that could have big implications for the oil and gas industry and private landowners in Texas.

You Could be Hunting with a Silencer Soon in Texas

Photo Courtesy of boboroshi via flickr creative commons. www.flickr.com/photos/boboroshi/4379040397/

Silencers make hunting easier on the ears, but some control control groups worry about safety.

StateImpact Texas intern Dave Barer contributed research and reporting to this article.
UPDATE: On March 30, the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department approved the use of silencers while hunting in Texas. Read about the new rule here.

Without making much noise, a new proposal is headed to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission. If it passes, hunters in the state will be able to use a silencer when hunting deer, birds, and even alligators.

The Parks and Wildlife Department says the rule change is primarily about protecting hunters’ hearing and maintaining the tranquility of the outdoors.

“Some neighbors don’t want to hear gunshots, and they’re less likely to hear or be disturbed by gunshots through a firearm with a suppressor or silencer attached,” Scott Vaca, TPWD Assistant Chief of Wildlife Enforcement, told StateImpact Texas.

Just how quiet is a firearm with a silencer or suppressor attached?  Well, if you don’t happen to have the equipment at home, you can watch this video to hear the difference a silencer can make. Continue Reading

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