
How One State Delivers More Power, More Renewables—and at Half the Price
California likes to see itself as a climate crusader 🌎, boldly leading the nation into a green future powered by sunbeams and good intentions. The problem is, none of that leadership seems to be delivering real results—unless you count sky-high energy bills and rolling blackouts as victories.
Meanwhile, here in Texas—often written off by coastal elites as backward and “anti-green”—we’re not only generating more electricity overall than California, but we’re also producing more renewable energy 🌬️☀️. And we’re doing it with far less bureaucracy, far fewer mandates, and at a much lower cost to the people actually footing the bill: consumers.
It’s time to separate facts from fantasy and look at how two of America’s largest states—both rich in resources and ambition—ended up on such divergent energy paths.
📊 Power by the Numbers
- Texas generated over 525,000 GWh of electricity in 2023—nearly triple California’s output.
- In 2024, Texas wind and solar produced 169,000 GWh.
- California? Just 92,000 GWh.
- Texas leads in wind capacity (~41,000 MW) and is closing the solar gap fast.
So much for being a renewable powerhouse. Texas is now the national leader in wind, growing fast in solar, and adding massive battery storage to secure the future 🔋.
💸 Price of Power: Texas Delivers More for Less
- California residential rates: 31.8¢/kWh (2025)
- Texas residential rates: 15.3¢/kWh
- Commercial power in Texas: ~9¢/kWh — in California, over 24¢/kWh
Let that sink in: Texans pay less than half what Californians do for electricity—and they get more of it.
Why? Because Texas encourages production through a deregulated market. California, on the other hand, layers on mandates, wildfire surcharges, rooftop solar subsidies, and carbon compliance schemes that drive prices up 🔺—all while asking people to shut off their appliances at 4 p.m.
⚙️ The Texas Model: Pragmatic, Not Political
Texas operates under ERCOT, a market-driven grid that rewards output and innovation. This has attracted billions in energy investment, especially from wind and solar developers who love Texas’s scale, flat terrain, and pro-business environment.
It’s not that Texas is anti-environment. We just understand that you don’t help the planet by bankrupting the people living on it.
🔋 Green Hype vs. Grid Reality
Energy isn’t just about being clean—it’s about being consistent. Wind and solar are only helpful if paired with storage and dispatchable backup.
California shut down its last nuclear plant. Texas kept its online. California penalizes natural gas backup. Texas uses it to stabilize the grid when renewables dip. The result? More reliability, less volatility, lower costs.
📍 Quick Comparison
| Feature | Texas | California |
|---|---|---|
| Total Generation (2023) | ~525,000 GWh | ~193,000 GWh |
| Wind + Solar Output (2024) | 169,000 GWh | 92,000 GWh |
| Residential Rate (2025) | 15.3¢/kWh | 31.8¢/kWh |
| Market Structure | Deregulated (ERCOT) | Regulated + Mandates |
| Battery Storage (2025 est.) | 16,000 MW | ~4,000 MW |
📣 Final Thought: Leadership Is Measured in Results, Not Rhetoric
California may love to preach, but Texas delivers.
We don’t need slogans or virtue signaling to prove we care about the future. We’re building it—one kilowatt-hour at a time—through competition, innovation, and a refusal to let bureaucrats micromanage the grid ⚡.
“California talks about going green. Texas actually delivers—and charges you half as much for it.”

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