or ERCOT, is the entity that operates the Texas power grid. It acts similar to traffic control — ERCOT doesn’t own power plants or power lines, but it does direct where electricity goes.
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas, operator of the state's power grid, ensures the supply of electricity matches demand at all times. ERCOT doesn't own any power plants, nor does it ...
ERCOT officials reassure Texans the grid has enough power to meet demand during the winter storm. See the dashboard for grid ...
After a statewide blackout in 2021 and a massive Austin outage in 2023, cold weather means energy anxiety for many in Central ...
ERCOT says the power grid is holding steady despite freezing temperatures across South Texas. Whatever attracts you to the ...
According to ERCOT's supply and demand, Texas is projected to use more than 60,000 megawatts by the end of Monday.
WHAT IS ERCOT: Texas’s complicated power grid explained, and what to expect this summer There have been no grid-wide outages since then, but ERCOT has periodically struggled during bouts of ...
ERCOT has issued a Weather Watch from January 20-23 due to forecasted extreme cold weather across the ERCOT region, higher ...
That happened early Tuesday, when ERCOT called on about 4,000 megawatts of battery storage to help meet the morning demand ...
Reliability coordinators monitored the state power grid during a tour of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas command center in Taylor in 2012. ERCOT asked Texans to conserve power Tuesday ...
Snow, sleet and freezing rain across Central and South Texas could bring down power lines, causing localized outages ...
Another Arctic blast of freezing temperatures will test the ERCOT grid during this Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend and ...