Let it never be said that I am such a blind partisan that I fail to recognize the good things that politicians of the “other party” have accomplished.
Republican Texas Gov. Rick Perry is about to leave office and the Texas Tribune is doing a great job of looking back at the governor’s huge legacy.
All those wind turbines one sees turning along the High Plains or along the South PlainsĀ and theĀ Rolling Plains down yonder? They’re a big part of the Perry legacy, to which IĀ will provideĀ high praise.
http://apps.texastribune.org/perry-legacy/energy/
The Tribune notes thatĀ most of theĀ turbines didn’t exist when Perry took his initial oath of office in December 2000. They do now, in a big way.
As the Tribune notes: “In 2000, wind farms composed just 116 megawatts of capacity on the stateās main electric grid. That number has since soared to more than 11,000 megawatts, while wind fuels about 10 percent of all generation. (On average, one megawatt-hour of wind energy can power 260 typical Texas homes for an hour.)
ā’His legacy on the fossil side of things is very sound, but on the wind side, heās done tremendous things to move the state forward,’ said Jeff Clark, executive director of the Austin-based Wind Coalition, an advocacy group. ‘Under Rick Perry, wind in Texas has moved from alternative energy to being a mainstream component of our power supply.’ā
Think of how vast this supply of energy is in Texas, particularly along the Caprock, where the wind blows incessantly — and where it will blow for as long as Planet Earth exists. I reckon that’ll be a good while, agreed?
Texas has become the nation’s No. 1 wind-energy-producing state, supplanting California at the top of the heap.
Perry’s predecessor as governor, George W. Bush, signed a bill in 1999 that deregulated the electric sector, opening the door for the development of wind energy. Perry would later sign legislation mandating an increase in wind energy production. The state has delivered in a big way.
Here’s the Tribune: ā’That we were able to build thousands of miles of high-capacity transmission from West Texas to the Panhandle without landowners marching on the Capitol with pitchforks, itās pretty remarkable,’ said Railroad Commissioner Barry Smitherman, whom Perry appointed to the Public Utility Commission in 2004 and reappointed in 2007. ‘And the governor had our back on that.’ā
Rick Perry isn’t known as an environmentalist, but the wind energy that has developed on his watch has gone a long way toward conserving fossil fuels. It’s also producing arguably the cleanest energy possible.
Well done, governor.