New Braunfels Utilities (NBU) issued a boil water notice this morning after water pressure fell below 20 pounds-per-square-inch (psi) due to an electrical outage. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) rules require the utility to notify all customers to boil their water prior to consumption. NBU opened a water station this afternoon
Read More →Local News
Comal ISD schools will be closed Thursday due to continued power outages caused by
Read More →Residents who live in unincorporated areas of Comal County are no longer under a
Read More →Thursday is signing day at the lake. Six Canyon Lake High School students will sign letters of intent
Read More →Oak trees are down and bushes are covered in ice after a night of ‘snap, crackle and popping’
Read More →More Local News
Nashville-based Americana music star and guitarist Dana Cooper, a poetic songwriter and insightful storyteller, will ‘Rock the
Read More →Drivers are asked to exercise caution on FM 306 between FM 3424 and River Chase Parkway. Comal
Read More →Comal County today reopened the brush yard at its Recyling and Chipping Center, 281 Resource Dr., New
Read More →Beloved Canyon Lake resident Joe Ed Lyles, 76, who transformed a scrappy piece of land in front
Read More →Lake & Rivers
Outdoors
Community
New Braunfels
Community
outdoors
Schools
Events
all →Events
all →Date
Title
November
Event Details
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) predicts that the demand for power in Texas will double by 2030. Before Winter Storm Uri in 2021, few people knew about or had
Event Details
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) predicts that the demand for power in Texas will double by 2030.
Before Winter Storm Uri in 2021, few people knew about or had heard of ERCOT. But since then, there have been frequent news reports about how the council continues to navigate the precarious balance between supply and demand.
In June 2024, ERCOT president and CEO Pablo Vegas told state lawmakers that power demand in Texas is growing even faster than expected. ERCOT had previously estimated overall capacity would need to grow from 85,000 to 110,000 Megawatts (MW) by 2030, but now nearly doubled that estimate to 150,000 MW.
Nov. 20, 2024, the League of Women Voters Comal Area will host Beth Garza, former ERCOT Deputy Director 2008-2014 and Director of the ERCOT Independent Market Monitor 2014-2019 to discuss solutions to Texas’ increasing energy demands. Garza is a renowned industry leader in electricity market design and is known for her ability to convey the most complicated nuances of electricity markets. The meeting at the Tye Preston Memorial Public Library, 16311 S. Access Rd., Canyon Lake, from 6 to 7:30 p.m. is free and open to the public.
Included in the discussion will be the intricacies of Texas’s power grid, its structure, challenges, and its role in ensuring a stable energy supply for the state. Texas market design and ideas for improvement, understanding and managing the supply mix combined with increasing demand. Do we need a new entity to be a distribution system operator, or could other utilities or ERCOT play that role? Why does Texas keep experiencing mass power outages, and are outages likely to continue?
Time
November 20, 2024 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm(GMT-06:00)