Skip to main content

Greater Houston Partnership Launches Regional Energy Transition Strategy

Published Jun 29, 2021 by A.J. Mistretta

solar energy

HOUSTON (June 29, 2021) — Today, the Greater Houston Partnership announced a strategic regional blueprint for leading the global energy transition to a low-carbon world.  The Partnership developed the comprehensive plan to guide the Houston Energy Transition Initiative (HETI), in conjunction with the Center for Houston’s Future and McKinsey with input from more than 60 leaders of industry, investment, government, and academia.  

HETI aims to drive sustainable and equitable economic growth in the Greater Houston region through a portfolio of technology, policy, and market initiatives that scale and export solutions for realizing a low-carbon energy world.  It builds on a foundation of groundbreaking plans and reports including the City of Houston’s Climate Action Plan, Center for Houston’s Future and University of Houston’s report on “The Houston Region as a Global Hydrogen Hub,” and Rice University’s Baker Institute report “The Future of Houston as Energy Transitions.”

“The energy transition presents tremendous opportunities for Houston to leverage our energy leadership to accelerate global solutions for a low-carbon future,” said Bobby Tudor, chair of the initiative and chairman at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. “Houstonians have a long history of solving the world’s greatest challenges. Today, Houston is poised to lead the effort to meet growing global demand for energy while simultaneously dramatically lowering climate-changing greenhouse gas emissions. I believe Houston has the expertise and drive to lead the global energy transition.”

The HETI strategic plan highlights actions across value chains in three domains: 

  • Jumpstart and scale up emerging carbon-reduction sectors where Houston has a distinct advantage. These include carbon capture, use and storage (CCUS); hydrogen production and application; the circular economy (specifically plastics recycling); and energy storage solutions including battery technology. ExxonMobil’s proposal for a $100 billion carbon capture innovation zone centered along the Houston Ship Channel is an example of the kind of major investment envisioned in this part of the strategy.
  • Focus on attracting and supporting companies in New Energy industries including wind energy, solar power and biofuels, along with advancing the renewable natural gas and low-carbon liquified natural gas (LNG) value chains.  
  • Deploy cross-cutting initiatives to attract and grow companies in additional energy value-chains, ranging from electric vehicle systems to the decarbonization of natural gas and oil, from petrochemicals to nature-based solutions, and from energy efficiency technologies to geothermal energy production.

Tackling a Dual Challenge

In a report accompanying the announcement, the Partnership underscored the importance of the global energy transition to Houston’s economic future.  It includes McKinsey analysis suggesting that as many as 560,000 jobs could be created by 2050 in the region by supporting low-carbon technologies, industrial investments, innovation eco-systems, government policies and reskilling of talent.  

Noting the city’s historically central role in energy production, use, export and innovation, the report points to the enormous advantage the region enjoys in capturing value from the low-carbon transition – including large-scale infrastructure, attractive business environment, an innovative culture and deep experience in all aspects – technical and commercial – of the global energy economy. The ongoing success of the incumbent oil and gas industry is important to Houston and the world as it will play a critical role in the transition and meeting the dual challenge. The report further highlighted the global context and urgency of Houston’s new strategy, noting that the world is facing a dual challenge. By 2050, humankind will consume 50 percent more energy than we do today.  This growing energy demand is driven by an ever-increasing global population along with an improving, and more energy-intensive, quality of life around the world. At the same time, we will need to meet that growing demand in a way that stops, and even reverses, the global warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions.

“I am pleased to see the concerted and collaborative momentum that now exists in Houston around energy transition,” said Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner. “In leading the transition, our city will build upon its long history in the energy and chemical industries, provide new opportunities for our workforce, and leverage our assets and existing expertise. I believe this strategy dovetails well with the City’s Climate Action Plan and I look forward to all of us—business, government, academia and beyond—working together to help solve one of the most pressing problems of our generation.” 

Advancing the Houston Energy Transition Initiative

The Partnership will work to advance the strategy under the leadership of the Houston Energy Transition Advisory Group, composed of Partnership board members and other industry and community leaders. 

The Partnership will establish sector-specific working groups to align with the three value-chain domains. These groups will develop cross-cutting relationships to further explore opportunities and will facilitate the launch of “concept design” studies detailing opportunities and actions for each value-chain to define both demonstration  and full-scale project scope, financing needs, incentives, and policy requirements.

The Center for Houston’s Future will also be supporting the initiative by leading efforts to develop a H2Houston Low-Carbon Energy Hub, creating coalitions of industry, academia and government to advance projects in areas such as heavy-duty transportation, exports and/or storage.

In addition to these working groups, the Partnership will support ecosystem-building efforts related to: 1) developing talent to ensure Houstonians are trained for in-demand new energy skills, 2) elevating the perception of Houston as playing a leading role in the energy transition, 3) actively participating in shaping policy that will boost new energy industries, 4) attracting Energy 2.0 companies and supporting cleantech innovation, and 5) convening cross-sector thought leadership.

In recent weeks, more than 35 companies operating in Houston, including a number of notable energy firms, have signed on to a letter of support for the Houston Energy Transition Initiative. The letter communicates the Partnership and Houston’s shared vision and commitment to leading the global transition. The Partnership invites other Houston companies and organizations to join in the commitment. See the letter and the signatories to date

The Path to Progress

The Greater Houston Partnership has been working on energy transition-related work since 2017 when the organization formed a New Energy Task Force designed to bring together various players in the ecosystem.  By bringing the parties together in one room, the Partnership facilitated collaborative discussions across multiple sectors.  

This effort accelerated in January 2020 at the Partnership’s Annual Meeting, where then board chair Bobby Tudor spelled out the challenge – and the opportunity – arising for Houston from the energy transition.  

Tudor’s speech – and the launch not long after of the City of Houston’s Climate Action Plan – inspired a regional conversation that embraced both the urgency of the climate challenge and the importance to Houston of leading the energy transition.
As part of that conversation, the Greater Houston Partnership led an intensive study starting at the beginning of 2021 to understand how the region should best tackle the challenge.  

For more information including the Houston: Leading the Transition to a Low-Carbon World report, visit www.houston.org/energy-transition

###
Greater Houston Partnership
The Greater Houston Partnership is the principle business organization serving the greater Houston region. The Partnership champions growth across 12 counties by bringing together business and civic-minded leaders who are dedicated to the area’s long-term success. Representing approximately 900 member organizations and one-fifth of the region’s workforce, the Partnership is the place business leaders come together to make an impact. Learn more at Houston.org.
 

CONTACT:    
A.J. Mistretta 
Vice President, Communications         
(c) 504-450-3516 | [email protected]

Maggie Martin 
Senior Manager, Communications 
[email protected] 

Related News

Economic Development

Geothermal Startup Sage Geosystems Highlights Potential for New Energy in Houston

11/12/24
Long known as the energy capital of the world, Houston is proving its merit as the industry embraces an all-inclusive approach to energy sources. Beyond the wealth of oil and gas capital, Houston has become a landing spot for numerous solar, wind and battery storage investments. Companies like Fluence Energy, Renewable Parts and Solar Plus have chosen Houston for its manufacturing of innovative energy products. Geothermal Energy: An Untapped Resource Geothermal energy, often unsung in the new energy landscape, can be found beneath our feet, harnessing the power of heat lying underground. In conventional geothermal power plants, wells are drilled into geothermal reservoirs to access hot water or steam, which is then brought to the surface. This steam is used to drive turbines that generate electricity. Sage Geosystems is changing that by pursuing geothermal potential in rock that is hot but doesn't have the large volumes of water to bring the heat to the surface. Hot, dry rock enables geothermal power generation in many more places as the geology is more prevalent which enables geothermal to now be deployable almost anywhere in the world. Sage Geosystems: Leading Geothermal Innovation Houston is seeing its chance to make a mark with geothermal thanks to companies like Sage Geosystems, founded in 2020 with its headquarters near Bush Intercontinental Airport. Sage works to build the technology that makes this renewable energy a greater force in the worldwide energy transition, engaged in contracts and partnerships with local energy providers, major government agencies like the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) and hyper-scalers like Meta Platforms. On the public utility side, the company recently partnered with the San Miguel Electric Cooperative to build the first geopressured geothermal system. The technology used can be paired with solar and/or wind to convert these intermittent clean energy sources to 24-hour power generation, or it can be used to move these clean energy sources from a time of day when the demand is low to a time of day when the demand is high, stabilizing the utility grid and helping mitigate the issue of blackouts and brownouts. The facility will be commissioned in December. Sage has three ongoing projects with the DOD. The U.S. Air Force recently provided Sage with $1.9 million in Tactical Funding Increase (TACFI) funding to perform a geothermal demonstration with electricity generation, which will take place in Sage's test well in Starr County, Texas with a targeted completion date of Q3/Q4 2025.  The Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) has funded two geothermal feasibility studies for the U.S. Army installation of Fort Bliss in El Paso and the Naval Air Station CC in Corpus Christi. Sage is performing these feasibility studies with the University of Texas Bureau of Economic Geology. The intent of these studies is to evaluate the technical and economic feasibility of geothermal system installations using Sage's Geopressured Geothermal System (GGS) technology at these two DOD installations. Collaboration Powers Innovation in Houston As evidenced by the above, collaboration plays a central role in the growth of Sage Geosystems. The company has not only partnered with utility companies and major governmental institutions, but also collaborated with the Rice Alliance for Technology and the Greater Houston Partnership to facilitate work with institutions of higher learning like the University of Houston and Rice, venture capital firms, and established energy corporations such as ABB, Chesapeake (now Expand Energy), Nabors, and Geolog. This sense of collaboration is one of the many reasons Sage Geosystems has thrived in Houston, along with the infrastructure, talent and innovative spirit that propels local companies to success. The Houston Advantage for Energy Startups “While Texas is the top energy state in the U.S., Houston is the heart. Houston provides not only access to the O&G industry, but also many utilities and others interested and/or working in energy...The Houston energy ecosystem and the benefits described above will continue to be critical in this scale-up plan." - Sage Geosystems CEO Cindy Taff Looking ahead, Sage is building its first commercial energy storage facility and will be performing a geothermal power generation demonstration with the U.S. Air Force in 2025.  Sage sees Houston as the best place to scale in Texas and throughout the world. "Geothermal energy represents a transformative opportunity for Houston as it further strengthens our position as the global energy capital. Sage Geosystems' innovative approach to harnessing geothermal resources exemplifies the spirit of collaboration, innovation, and commitment to sustainability that defines our region’s energy leadership.” - Partnership Senior Vice President of Economic Development Craig Rhodes  For any new energy startups looking to establish themselves, Taff recommends leveraging Houston’s many assets for future success. “Tap into existing knowledge that can be transferred to clean tech and partner with companies that know where to find the skills needed to give your startup a leg up,” Taff said. “Join local incubators like Rice Alliance for Technology and the Houston Technology Center and others, leverage Greater Houston Partnership and Greentown Labs for networking, collaborate with Rice University and University of Houston, and take advantage of Texas' business-friendly regulatory environment.” Sage Geosystems is a prime example of how energy startups use Houston’s assets as a springboard to meet their potential, along with renowned innovators such as Syzygy Plasmonics, Cemvita Factory, and Fervo Energy. Learn more about the business opportunities within Houston's energy industry and its all-inclusive energy ecosystem.   
Read More
Economic Development

Greater Houston Partnership & Center for Houston’s Future Lead Mission to Japan & Korea to Strengthen Global Clean Hydrogen Partnerships

11/8/24
The Greater Houston Partnership and the Center for Houston’s Future (CHF) recently led a delegation of clean hydrogen sector leaders to Japan and South Korea. This mission aimed to advance collaboration and strengthen ties within the rapidly expanding global clean hydrogen ecosystem, marking a significant step in Houston's leadership in the energy transition.  During the visit, Brett Perlman, Managing Director of CHF, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the leader of the Japanese Hydrogen Association, setting the stage for strategic collaborations that will boost clean hydrogen production both in East Asia and along the U.S. Gulf Coast.  Key moments of the mission included the Japan – U.S. Gulf Coast Clean Hydrogen Roundtable, where Perlman and Partnership Vice President of International Investment and Trade John Cypher shared insights into Houston’s hydrogen leadership.  Delegation members had the opportunity to tour cutting-edge hydrogen facilities across Japan and South Korea, including Chiyoda’s Liquid Organic Hydrogen Carrier (LOHC) production plant, Hanwha Daesan’s green energy fuel cell facility, Hyundai HyNet’s steel hydrogen shipment center, the SK Hydrogen Liquefaction Plant, and Bloom Energy’s fuel cell production facility. The group also met with high-level government officials from Yokohama, Kawasaki City, and Tokyo to discuss future collaborations.  The delegation also participated in H2 Week 2024 in Seoul, Korea, one of the world’s premier hydrogen conferences, where they connected with South Korean government officials, energy leaders and industry innovators.   “Strategic partnerships with key international allies are amplified by these missions and crucial for unlocking the full potential of emerging industries like clean hydrogen. At a time where energy and energy security are paramount, these missions not only reinforce Houston’s position as the global energy capital but also foster prosperity in the region. Together, we’re forging innovative solutions the world urgently needs in today’s energy landscape,” said John Cypher, Partnership Vice President of International Investment and Trade.  Houston’s Gulf Coast region was recently designated as one of the nation’s seven hydrogen hubs by the U.S. Department of Energy and is poised to play a pivotal role in this emerging sector. The Gulf Coast already accounts for more than a third of U.S. hydrogen production and is equipped with over 1,000 miles of hydrogen pipelines spanning 48 production facilities. In addition, the HyVelocity Hydrogen Hub, led by a coalition of seven core industry partners with support from academic and other organizations like CHF, is set to receive up to $1.2 billion in funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.  The growth of the clean hydrogen sector in the Houston region is expected to create up to 45,000 direct jobs, 35,000 construction jobs, and 10,000 permanent positions. International collaborations with partners like Japan and Korea, Houston’s fourth and seventh largest trading partners, will be essential for sustaining and accelerating this growth.  Learn more about Houston's hydrogen ecosystem.
Read More

Related Events

Executive Partners