[Episode #206] – Regulatory Capture in Texas




The Energy Transition Show with Chris Nelder show

Summary: As we have discussed in previous episodes of the show (like Episodes <a href="https://xenetwork.org/ets/episodes/episode-73-regulatory-capture/">#73</a>, <a href="https://xenetwork.org/ets/episodes/episode-177-utility-corruption/">#177</a>, and <a href="https://xenetwork.org/ets/episodes/episode-198-the-coal-trap/">#198</a>), state regulators and legislators can be ‘captured’ by the industries they are supposed to regulate and wind up serving those industries instead of the public interest.<br> <br> Usually, regulatory capture is a form of corruption: The system isn’t supposed to work that way, but certain interests can manage to corrupt it. In Texas, however, that kind of capture isn’t a bug—it’s a feature.<br> <br> In this episode, investigative journalist Russell Gold of <a class="notion-link-token notion-focusable-token notion-enable-hover" tabindex="0" href="https://www.texasmonthly.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" data-token-index="1">Texas Monthly</a> shares what he found after tracking down hundreds of documents scattered across dozens of offices around the state. Not only does the chair of the Texas commission that regulates the oil and gas business personally earn royalties from some of the very oil and gas leases she regulates, so does her family.<br> <br> We also check in on the progress that Texas is making—and not making—to prevent the kind of grid blackout that happened during the February 2021 big freeze. And we ask where the limits to corruption in Texas actually are, and how rank and file voters in the state feel about it. It’s a sordid story, but an important one to understand, because it reveals a lot about the power of the oil and gas industry in the US.