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PUC of Texas Approves Entergy Texas' Plans to Build Over 1,200 MW of Gas-Fired Capacity

LCG, September 12, 2025--Entergy announced yesterday that the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) approved Entergy Texas’ proposal to build two efficient natural gas-fired power plants to support the region’s rapid growth. The combined electric generating capacity of the two facilities, the Legend Power Station and the Lone Star Power Station, will add over 1,200 MW to the Southeast Texas power grid to support new customer demand, increase reliability and lower costs for all customers. Both facilities are scheduled to commence operations by mid-2028.

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Puget Sound Energy Starts Construction on 142-MW Appaloosa Solar Project in Washington

LCG, September 4, 2025--Puget Sound Energy (PSE) announced yesterday that phased construction has commenced on its 142-MW Appaloosa Solar Project, a utility-scale solar facility underway in southeastern Washington. The project is being built by Qcells EPC, who will serve as the module manufacturer and the engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) solution provider. Construction is scheduled through 2026, and commercial operation is expected at the end of next year.

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Industry News

Ohio Regulators: We're Not California

LCG, Jan. 22, 2001With Ohioans beginning to ponder selection of an electricity supplier other than their good old local utility, many are casting nervous glances westward, where deregulation of the California electric utility industry is being blamed for soaring bills and rolling outages.

Not to worry, says the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, as it presents a long list of differences between the Buckeye State and the Golden State when it comes to electricity.

  • Ohio designed its wholesale electricity market better. According to PUCO, California requires utilities to buy electricity on the spot market through a power exchange, where prices are set hourly. Not so in Ohio, where utilities can enter into long-term contracts for power to serve their native loads. Ohio doesn't even have a power exchange.

  • Ohio has approved building new power plants and continues to approve development of additional generating sources. California, where a spotted owl is considered more important than the livelihoods of thousands of lumberjacks, approved no new power plants for about ten years. California's problem is essentially one of demand outstripping supply, yet it still takes about three years to get approval for a new power plant.

  • Growth in states from which California has customarily imported power has shut off that source of electricity. Indiana, and other states bordering Ohio, are also approving new power plant development, and that will increase the amount of electricity available throughout the Midwest.

  • California's grid is north-south oriented, limiting its ability to import power from states to the east, even if it were available. Ohio and other Midwest states are interconnected with greater flexibility.

  • It's just as hard to build new transmission lines in California as it is to build new power plants.

But it all comes down to supply and demand, and PUCO notes that Ohio has added 1,230 megawatts of new generation since 1998, nearly double the 676 megawatts added by California since 1996. Looked at a different way, Ohio has added about 110 watts of generation for each of its citizens in the past three years. California has added about 20 watts per person.

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