|  | |  |  | As Texas power demand surges, solar, wind and storage carry the load 
 
   
 Michelle Lewis | Oct 24 2025 - 3:25 pm PT
 
 20 Comments
 
 
   Photo: Avangrid			 			 	  Electricity demand is surging in Texas, and solar, wind, and battery storage are meeting it.
 
 According to new data from the US Energy Information Administration   (EIA), electricity demand across the Texas grid managed by the Electric   Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) hit record highs in the first  nine  months of 2025. ERCOT, which supplies power to about 90% of the  state,  saw demand jump 5% year-over-year to 372 terawatt hours (TWh) – a  23%  increase since 2021. No other major US grid has grown faster over  the  past year.
 
 Solar and wind keep ERCOT’s grid steady
 
 The biggest growth story in Texas power generation is solar.   Utility-scale solar plants produced 45 TWh from January through   September, up 50% from 2024 and nearly four times what they generated in   2021 (11 TWh). Wind power also continued to climb, producing 87 TWh   through September – a 4% increase from last year and 36% more than in   2021.
 
 Together, wind and solar supplied 36% of ERCOT’s total  electricity  over those nine months. Solar, in particular, has  transformed Texas’s  daytime energy mix. From June to September, ERCOT  solar farms generated  an average of 24 gigawatts (GW) between noon and 1  pm – double the  midday output from 2023. That growth has pushed down  natural gas use at  midday from 50% of the mix in 2023 to 37% this year.
 
 Battery storage is filling in the gaps
 
 Batteries charge during the day when wind and solar generation are  the  highest, and they produce electricity when generation from wind and   solar slows down. ERCOT began reporting battery output separately in   October 2024 in its hourly grid data, and it’s clear that batteries are   now helping to smooth out evening peaks. This past summer, batteries   supplied an average of 4 GW of power around 8 pm, right as solar   production dropped off.
 
 Natural gas is flatlining
 
 Natural gas is still Texas’s dominant power source, but it isn’t   growing like it used to. Between January and September, gas-fired plants   generated 158 TWh of electricity, compared to 161 TWh in 2023. Gas   comprised 43% of ERCOT’s generation mix during the first nine months of   2025, down from 47% in the first nine months of 2023 and 2024.
 
 More demand growth ahead
 
 Top comment by   john
 
 Liked by 8 people
 
 That  extra 12GW versus a year ago is equivalent to building 6  nuclear power  stations ( 12 reactors)  in a year    Rather than the  usual 20.  In  addition to being inexpensive, solar is also very fast to  deploy
 
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 The  EIA expects Texas electricity demand to keep rising faster than  any  other grid in the US. In its latest Short-Term Energy Outlook, the  EIA    projects   ERCOT’s demand will climb another 14% in the first nine months of  2026,  reaching 425 TWh. That means Texas will need even more solar,  wind, and  battery storage to keep up with its breakneck growth.
 
 Read more:   This $900 million solar farm in Texas is going 100% to data centers
 
 electrek.co
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