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Node

West Texas

United States · North America · ERCOT

9.42 · Early Operator

Scale first. Reliability via power strategy.

West Texas combines large-scale gas, wind, and solar resources with land availability and a growing behind-the-meter logic.

Thesis

A scale node where compute expansion increasingly depends on pairing infrastructure with dedicated power.

ercotgaswindsolarbehind-the-meter

Why this node ranks here

West Texas ranks well under Early Operator because of its electricity, permitting, and connectivity.

What helps

  • Strong electricity (8.0)
  • Strong permitting (9.0)
  • Strong connectivity (8.0)

What holds it back

  • Limiting cooling (6.0)

Factor breakdown

Siting fit

Moderate territorial sensitivity

6.00

Land availability helps, but heat and resource intensity still create siting tradeoffs.

Electricity

Large-scale power availability

8.00

West Texas combines gas, wind, and solar at real scale, though grid pressure is rising alongside demand.

Permitting

Fast build posture

9.00

Relative to many competing regions, the path to build remains faster and more commercially responsive.

Cooling

Usable but not naturally advantaged

6.00

The climate is workable, but not a structural cooling advantage case.

Connectivity

Strong digital adjacency

8.00

It sits inside a large U.S. compute and infrastructure ecosystem with strong network relevance.

Execution stability

Strong market logic, rising system stress

7.00

The commercial case is strong, though the pace of demand growth introduces medium-term stress.

Why it matters

It is one of the clearest examples of power abundance meeting hyperscale ambition under grid pressure.