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Jump to: Introduction | Overview | Solar | Wind | Biomass | Geothermal | Water Resource Transportation Texas clearly possesses abundant renewable energy resources. The presence of a good resource area alone, however, does not guarantee that it will be exploited to provide useful energy services. Issues such as potential environmental and social impacts, public acceptance, and a host of technical and financial matters will dictate whether a site is acceptable for development. One significant technical issue relates to the ability to economically move energy from a good resource area to a location where it can be used. Distributed Resources Distributed generation serving end-use loads incurs neither the losses associated with the delivery of electricity (losses of about 10%) nor the transportation energy required for the delivery of solid and gaseous fuels. Additionally, distributed generation frees up capacity of conventional energy delivering systems, thereby reducing the need for additional investment in transportation infrastructure. Electric Transmission Studies A second study that examined the Texas electric grid was performed by Electric Power Engineers (EPE) in conjunction with this resource assessment project. Their goal was to evaluate limits of the Texas transmission network in distributing electric power generated from renewable resources. Twenty-nine prospective renewable energy generation sites distributed throughout the state were considered. Even with no new power lines, the EPE load flow analysis suggests that many large renewable energy power plants could be added to the grid (Figure 15). The small numbers in the Panhandle and Trans-Pecos suggest that new transmission lines will be required to build sizable power plants in these good resource areas. ![]() Figure 15. Capacity Limits Each value is an estimate of the maximum generation potential (MW) at that site assuming no new power lines are built. For reference, in 1993, total installed generation capacity in Texas was 68,163 MW.
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