• Advertise
  • Contact
Friday, March 27, 2026
  • Login
EcoBusinessNews
  • Home
  • About
  • News
    The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.

    The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.

    Why Many High-Energy Manufacturers Are Still Sitting on the Sidelines of the Energy Transition

    Energy Capacity Assessment

    green and black rope

    The Green Energy Lie CEOs Still Believe (And Why It’s Costing Them Millions)

    woman in black shirt sitting on chair

    Investing in the Quick-Service Restaurant Industry: A Sector Built on Franchises and Scalable Cash Flow

    Modern library with expansive bookshelves and seating areas.

    The Industrial Power Shift: Why Large Manufacturers Are Turning to Onsite Generation

    City skyline at night seen from a ferry deck.

    AI’s Power Problem: Why Energy Infrastructure Is Becoming the Bottleneck for Data Center Growth

    The Energy Infrastructure Race Behind AI, Data Centers, and the New Industrial Economy

    The Energy Infrastructure Race Behind AI, Data Centers, and the New Industrial Economy

    When a College Kid Points You Toward the Future

    When a College Kid Points You Toward the Future

    The New Race for Electricity

    The New Race for Electricity

  • Impact Investing
  • Eco-Innovators
  • Renewable Energy
  • Partner w/ Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • News
    The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.

    The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.

    Why Many High-Energy Manufacturers Are Still Sitting on the Sidelines of the Energy Transition

    Energy Capacity Assessment

    green and black rope

    The Green Energy Lie CEOs Still Believe (And Why It’s Costing Them Millions)

    woman in black shirt sitting on chair

    Investing in the Quick-Service Restaurant Industry: A Sector Built on Franchises and Scalable Cash Flow

    Modern library with expansive bookshelves and seating areas.

    The Industrial Power Shift: Why Large Manufacturers Are Turning to Onsite Generation

    City skyline at night seen from a ferry deck.

    AI’s Power Problem: Why Energy Infrastructure Is Becoming the Bottleneck for Data Center Growth

    The Energy Infrastructure Race Behind AI, Data Centers, and the New Industrial Economy

    The Energy Infrastructure Race Behind AI, Data Centers, and the New Industrial Economy

    When a College Kid Points You Toward the Future

    When a College Kid Points You Toward the Future

    The New Race for Electricity

    The New Race for Electricity

  • Impact Investing
  • Eco-Innovators
  • Renewable Energy
  • Partner w/ Us
EcoBusinessNews
No Result
View All Result
EcoBusinessNews

Pacifico Energy Receives Largest U.S. Air Pollution Permit for 7.65 GW GW Ranch in West Texas: Implications for Energy, Data Centers, and Emissions

Eco Business News by Eco Business News
February 9, 2026
in News
393 30
0
Modern library with expansive bookshelves and seating areas.
586
SHARES
3.3k
VIEWS
Summarize with ChatGPTShare to Facebook

In a significant development for the energy sector, Pacifico Energy, a global investor-owned infrastructure firm, has secured what is described as the largest air pollution permit ever issued in the United States. The permit, granted by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) last month, authorizes the construction of the 7.65-gigawatt (GW) GW Ranch complex in Pecos County, near the prolific Permian Basin oilfields. This massive project integrates natural gas-fired power plants with data center operations, positioning Texas as a hub for high-energy-demand industries like artificial intelligence (AI) and cloud computing.

The announcement came via a press release from Pacifico Energy earlier this week, hailing the GW Ranch as “the largest power project in the United States.” This venture is part of a broader surge in gas power infrastructure in Texas, driven largely by the explosive growth in data center needs. According to a recent report from Global Energy Monitor (GEM), Texas added nearly 58 GW of gas power projects to its development pipeline in 2025 alone—surpassing the peak power demand of California, a state with comparable population but far less land area. Globally, only China, with its vastly larger scale (50 times the population and 15 times the landmass), has more gas power projects in development.

The Scale and Environmental Footprint

The GW Ranch’s permit allows for substantial emissions, underscoring the environmental trade-offs of this energy boom. Key details from the TCEQ documents include:

  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Up to 33 million tons per year of carbon dioxide equivalents, an amount equivalent to nearly 5% of Canada’s total annual greenhouse gas emissions. This positions the facility as one of the world’s largest single-point emitters if fully operational.
  • Criteria Pollutants: Over 12,000 tons annually of regulated air pollutants, including particulate matter (soot), ammonia, carbon monoxide, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). These pollutants can contribute to respiratory issues, smog formation, and other public health concerns in the surrounding areas.

Gabriel Collins, a researcher at Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy and a Permian Basin native, provided context on the project’s gas consumption. At full capacity, the GW Ranch could require 1 to 2 billion cubic feet of natural gas daily—representing 4% to 7% of the Permian Basin’s 2025 production. “Even for something like the Permian, that’s a very material chunk,” Collins noted, emphasizing that while not all announced projects will materialize, even partial builds would create “tremendous facilities.”

Griffin Bird, a research analyst at the Environmental Integrity Project, echoed this sentiment, stating that hyperscale facilities like GW Ranch could rank among the largest emissions sources globally. “I’d be hard-pressed to think of a bigger emitter,” Bird said, highlighting the challenge of tracking the rapid proliferation of such projects.

Texas as the Epicenter of Gas Power Expansion

The GW Ranch is not an isolated case. Texas has become the global focal point for gas-powered data center developments, with nearly half of its upcoming 40 GW of gas projects dedicated to AI and data needs. Other notable announcements in 2025 include:

  • Fermi America’s Project Matador: A 6 GW complex near Amarillo, with permit applications submitted in August. If approved, it could emit up to 24 million tons of greenhouse gases annually.
  • Chevron’s AI-Focused Plant: In November, the oil giant revealed plans for its first power plant, aiming for up to 5 GW in West Texas to support AI operations.
  • Smaller but Swift Projects: Entities like Misae Gas Power received TCEQ approval in just three weeks for a 519 MW facility outside San Antonio, authorizing emissions of 133 tons of toxic particulate matter and 10 tons of formaldehyde yearly.

GEM’s Jenny Martos attributed this boom to “massive fossil fuel infrastructure being developed, often directly at the source of gas supply, to feed speculative AI demand.” Currently, Texas has 11 gas plants under construction, 102 in preconstruction (securing land, permits, and contracts), and 28 announced. If all proceed, this could more than double the state’s existing gas power capacity.

Community and Regulatory Concerns

The rapid permitting process has raised eyebrows among local communities and environmental advocates. In Blue, Texas—a rural area east of Austin—the TCEQ issued a permit in October for the 1.2 GW Sandow Lakes Power Plant, adjacent to North America’s largest Bitcoin mining facility. The permit allows 460 tons of ammonia, 153 tons of soot, 76 tons of sulfuric acid, and 18 tons of hazardous air pollutants annually.

Local residents formed the group “Move the Gas Plant” and requested a public hearing, citing health risks from substances linked to cancer, birth defects, and reproductive issues. However, TCEQ denied the request in a brief 45-second discussion at a public meeting. Spokesperson Travis Brown, a retired Texas Department of Agriculture employee, described the process: “There was essentially zero discussion.” Construction has since begun, with site clearing, worker housing, and power lines already in place.

Bird from the Environmental Integrity Project noted that many data center-linked projects, even those up to 500 MW (enough to power over 200,000 homes), receive permits within a month, often without extensive public input.

Broader Implications for Sustainability and Business

This wave of developments highlights the tension between economic growth and environmental sustainability in the green business landscape. While these projects promise jobs, infrastructure investment, and support for tech innovation, they also lock in long-term fossil fuel dependency at a time when global efforts aim to reduce emissions under frameworks like the Paris Agreement.

Collins cautioned that not all projects will reach full scale, with some potentially overhyping capabilities through PR. Builds may occur incrementally, 100 MW at a time, over years, and full capacity might never be achieved. Nonetheless, the sheer volume discussed—”quantities of energy that were seldom discussed just a few years ago”—demands careful scrutiny.

For eco-business stakeholders, this underscores opportunities in renewable alternatives, carbon capture technologies, and efficient data center designs to mitigate impacts. As AI demand surges, balancing energy needs with emission reductions will be key to sustainable progress.

Originally published by Inside Climate News

SummarizeShare234
Eco Business News

Eco Business News

...a dedicated storyteller shining a light on sustainable business. With 10 years covering clean tech and circular economies for outlets like Eco-Business News and The Guardian, she holds an MSc in Sustainability from Stanford. Jane’s knack for decoding green policies makes her a go-to source for eco-entrepreneurs. Off the clock, she’s composting like a pro or biking through her local forest. Dive into her articles for sharp, planet-friendly insights.

Related Stories

The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.

The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.

by Eco Business News
March 25, 2026
0

#EnergyIndependence #MissionCritical #Industrial #DataCenters #Manufacturing #BehindTheMeter #IPP #EnergyStrategy #Infrastructure #AI #LifeSciences #Semiconductors #PacificoEnergy

Why Many High-Energy Manufacturers Are Still Sitting on the Sidelines of the Energy Transition

Energy Capacity Assessment

by Eco Business News
March 23, 2026
0

Most teams still treat energy like a procurement line item.It’s not. It’s a growth constraint.If you operate large-scale facilities, you’re already seeing it:• Utility timelines stretching• Interconnection delays...

green and black rope

The Green Energy Lie CEOs Still Believe (And Why It’s Costing Them Millions)

by Eco Business News
March 19, 2026
0

Sustainability isn’t failing because it’s too expensive—it’s failing because most companies are solving the wrong problem. For the past decade, corporate sustainability has been sold as a moral...

woman in black shirt sitting on chair

Investing in the Quick-Service Restaurant Industry: A Sector Built on Franchises and Scalable Cash Flow

by Eco Business News
March 11, 2026
0

The quick-service restaurant (QSR) industry has quietly become one of the most powerful business models in the American economy. While many people experience the sector simply as fast...

📬 Sign up Now

...for exclusive insights from EcoBusinessNews.com — it's free.

Thank you!

You have successfully joined our subscriber list.

Recent Posts

  • The Grid Can’t Keep Up. Here’s What Smart Organizations Are Doing Instead.
  • Energy Capacity Assessment
  • The Green Energy Lie CEOs Still Believe (And Why It’s Costing Them Millions)
  • Investing in the Quick-Service Restaurant Industry: A Sector Built on Franchises and Scalable Cash Flow

Categories

  • Circular Economy
  • Eco-City
  • Eco-Innovators
  • Green Market Pulse
  • Impact Investing
  • News
  • Policy Pulse
  • Profit & Planet
  • Renewable Energy
  • Eco Business News – Latest Green Business Updates
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • About Us

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
  • News
  • Advertise
  • Partner
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.