Texas regulators shelve an electricity market reform proposal they say does too little to shore up grid
Sign up for The Brief, The Texas Tribune’s daily newsletter that keeps readers up to speed on the most essential Texas news. The Public Utility Commission on Thursday shelved the performance credit mechanism, a controversial idea that was designed to bring more power onto the state grid and increase its reliability. “I don’t believe that the PCM, as currently designed, will provide the reliability benefits needed in the ERCOT market,” PUC Chair Thomas Gleeson wrote in a Dec. 18 memo that the rest of the commission endorsed on Thursday.
Recent Posts

San Antonio Animal Care Service offering zero-cost pet adoptions this weekend

New San Antonio ICE detention site to open in September, letter says

King William home for sale that once belonged to famous composer gets major price cut

San Antonio’s most amazing pieces of public art and where to find them

Caravan from San Antonio heading to Dilley detention site to protest conditions there

Chapel of the Incarnate Word presenting organ-guitar concert this Sunday

Bad Takes: San Antonio needs more police oversight, not more police on the streets

Ted Cruz says he told Trump 3 separate times he doesn’t want Supreme Court appointment

West Texas residents sue Trump administration over Big Bend border wall plans

Chris Sauter and Rick Frederick take us behind the scenes of Cornyation

"My job is to find and attract mastery-based agents to the office, protect the culture, and make sure everyone is happy! "
