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The Top Restaurants In Texas, According To The Michelin Guide

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The Top Restaurants In Texas, According To The Michelin Guide


The Michelin Guide came to Texas for the first time on Monday night to award Michelin stars to 15 restaurants in four Texas cities at an invitation-only ceremony at 713 Music Hall in Houston. In addition, two Texas restaurants earned Michelin Green Stars (for leadership in sustainable dining), with 45 Bib Gourmands (offering excellent quality for good value), 57 Recommended Restaurants (exemplars of the high Michelin standard) and four Michelin Special Awards, for a total of 117 outstanding Texas eateries honored by Michelin this year. It’s been a long time coming.

The Lone Star State–renowned for its stellar BBQ, Tex-Mex and tacos–has now officially been recognized as an international culinary hub and incubator for talented chefs. After the Michelin Awards ceremony last night, there is certainly no shortage of Michelin-level BBQ in Texas, but the awards also represent a total of 26 diverse cuisines. The newly minted Michelin chefs celebrated the honor—and each other’s accomplishments—with a Texas-sized explosion of enthusiasm and joy onstage in a spirit of true community and camraderie.

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“We monitor the evolution of the culinary landscape closely, and Texas has been on our radar for a few years,” says Gwendal Poullennec, International Director, Michelin Guide. “A Michelin Star is a worldwide benchmark awarded to restaurants offering the highest quality food. From a culinary perspective, Texas deserves to be put on the international travel map. The food culture and authenticity makes it worth traveling here because it’s really unique and deserves worldwide recognition,” he continues.

According to the Michelin Guide, each restaurant is visited several times per year and there are five criteria for awarding stars: quality products; the harmony of flavors; the mastery of cooking techniques; the voice and personality of the chef as reflected in the cuisine; consistency between each visit.

“Each of you set a new bar for Texas,” says Poullennec, addressing the new Michelin Star recipients at the Awards ceremony, “and tonight we celebrate the quality, creativity and passion of these chefs. It’s not only an award,” he continues. “It’s an encouragement to raise the bar, become even more daring and dream even bigger.”

Here is a full list of the winners, with remarks from the Michelin Inspectors.

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Restaurants Awarded One MICHELIN Star

Austin

Barley Swine (Contemporary cuisine) “The room is decidedly casual, and diners are welcome to come as they are, but there’s no mistaking the passion of this kitchen. Chef/owner Bryce Gilmore makes deft use of local ingredients with a distinctly Southwestern palette of flavors that draws from Mexican and Southern traditions, while maintaining a contemporary, global sophistication. The tasting menu is carefully attuned to the seasons, and refinement is balanced with a sense of whimsy.”

Craft Omakase (Japanese cuisine) Discreetly tucked away in Rosedale, Craft Omakase has a lounge up front with a dining room and counter in back. It is here where guests wisely place their faith in the hands of Chefs Charlie Wang and Nguyen Nguyen who dole out an impressive procession of nigiri and other bites. Their creative omakase doesn’t shy away from embellishment, yet it’s done with restraint and allows the fish to shine.”

Hestia (American cuisine) “Push past the glass door of this restaurant in the heart of downtown and you’ll immediately get the drift—quite literally, as wood smoke perfumes the air. This hot spot is all about live fire cooking, as evidenced by the 20-foot hearth in the open kitchen. Contemporary cooking is on display in both the à la carte and chef’s tasting menu, and Texas produce and proteins take center stage. From savory to sweet, nearly everything is kissed by the flames or scented with smoke.”

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InterStellar BBQ (Barbecue) “The mark of a good place is when a line starts forming before they’ve even opened, and at InterStellar BBQ, it’s long before they’ve swung open the door. Everyone is here for a taste of pitmaster John Bates’s barbecue, done low and slow over post oak.”

la Barbecue (Barbecue) “Founded by the late LeAnn Mueller and now run by her wife, Ali Clem, la Barbecue’s massive, custom-built pit in the backyard is the rarified workshop in which meaty miracles are realized. Inside, it’s a simple space enlivened with bright colors and a disarming playlist with Tammy Wynette and Dolly Parton.”

Leroy and Lewis Barbecue (Barbecue) “What started as a food truck in 2017 can now be enjoyed in a spacious brick and mortar location in Garrison Park. The moniker refers to the duo of married couples who run this enticing operation where the spacious setting gives off mid-century vibes with its glazed brick exterior and peak-roofed dining area. The excellent barbecue menu isn’t built around brisket, although that beloved item is available as a daily special at the end of the week.”

Olamaie (American cuisine) “With its white clapboard and black shutters, Olamaie, named for the chef’s grandmother, mother, and daughter, is a charming spot north of downtown Austin, Expect southern cuisine that’s been given a contemporary polish… the chicken pressé is a novel take on chicken and dumplings and rounds out a bill of fare that also includes blackened dayboat fish, gumbo, and red rice with Gulf shrimp.

Dallas

Tatsu Dallas (Japanese cuisine) “With just 10 counter seats, the greatest challenge is securing a reservation at this sushi restaurant within the renovated Continental Gin Building – but perseverance will be rewarded because this is the genuine article. The omakase contains around 14 pieces and follows the Edomae tradition, so expect fish that gets steadily stronger in flavor as dinner progresses.”

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Houston

BCN Taste & Tradition (Spanish cuisine) “Tucked away off Richmond Avenue, this restaurant, housed in a 1920s white stucco bungalow and managed by some of the most personable staff in the city, cooks with both flair and familiarity. Seafood is a highlight, as in brilliantly tender slivers of sea cucumber set on lobster rice, or thinly sliced octopus paired with potato purée and a striking smoked paprika. Chef Luis Roger knows his way around land, too, and his Iberian suckling pig arrives with a crackling crust, meltingly tender meat and a rich red wine sauce.”

CorkScrew BBQ (Spring; Barbecue) “You have a choice: Arrive before doors open at 11 or go eat somewhere else. In the tiny town of Spring just north of Houston, this barbecue sensation has drawn long lines ever since it opened in 2015. The kitchen is known to sell out fast, and it’s easy to see why: Will and Nichole Buckman smoke some of the finest brisket and beef ribs in the state.”

Le Jardinier Houston (French cuisine) With locations in Manhattan and Miami, Chef Alain Verzeroli also shares his verdant, stylish cooking with Houston. The location couldn’t be more apt: The Museum of Fine Arts matches his colorful dishes that are both beautiful and satisfying. Accomplished sauces, seasonal vegetables, and thoughtful cocktails tell a story in line with the restaurant’s name and design.”

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March (Creative/Mediterranean cuisine) “This ambitious atelier sets its sights on a culinary exploration of the Mediterranean, studiously delving into individual regions one by one, from the Maghreb in Northwest Africa to Murcia and Andalusia in Southern Spain, to Greece, with a tasting menu and beverage program inspired by each cuisine in turn. But if all that sounds a bit precious, rest assured that the experience itself is utterly disarming, with a winning sense of hospitality that makes for a meal that is both engaging and luxe.”

Musaafer (Indian cuisine) “Dinner in a shopping mall doesn’t sound promising, unless you’re headed to Musaafer. The sheer scale of this grand hall, with its arches, towering windows, labyrinth-like layout, and elaborate patterns, feels like a palace of its own. The setting is as thrilling as the cooking.”

Tatemó (Mexican cuisine) The famous idiom about not judging a book by its cover couldn’t be more applicable than to this tortilleria-turned-tasting menu. In an empty strip mall with little around except for a brewery and a doughnut shop, Chef Emmanuel Chavez delivers a beautifully pitched and portioned experience that celebrates heirloom corn from across Mexico.”

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San Antonio

Mixtli (Mexican cuisine) “This trailblazing restaurant is from the visionary minds of Chefs Diego Galicia and Rico Torres. The acclaimed duo has fine dining chops but it’s a shared reverence for Mexican cuisine that is the real driving force behind this endeavor. Tasting menus shift often, focusing on a different part of Mexico and may offer up cutting-edge interpretations of Oaxacan specialties or a meal focused on the cuisine of “Tierra Caliente.”

MICHELIN Green Star Award Winners

The Green Star Award honors restaurants at the forefront of practices committed to a more sustainable gastronomy.

Austin

Dai Due (American cuisine) “A focus on locally sourced produce; seed oil-free cooking; recycling and composting program; locally sourced wine and beer from Texas; ethical harvesting of meat products; minimize food waste through reuse; fermentation program.”

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Emmer & Rye (American cuisine) “Sustainability initiatives include sourcing menu ingredients from local Texas farms and the restaurant’s partner farm that is no-till and organically fertilized; exclusive use of whole animals and fish; wide use of vegetable scraps and composting food waste for farm soil; bar program features cocktails containing house-made vinegars, preserved local bar cherries and bitters made from local Texas ingredients.

Michelin Special Awards

Michelin Exceptional Cocktails Award, Julian Schaffer, Rye, Austin, TX

Michelin Sommelier Award, Stephen MacDonald, Pappa Bros. Steakhouse, Houston, TX

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Michelin Outstanding Service Award, Hailey Pruitt & Lauren Beckman, Mixtli, San Antonio, TX

Michelin Young Chef / Culinary Professional Award, Edgar Rico, Nixta Taqueria

Michelin Bib Gourmand

The Bib Gourmand is a designation given to restaurants that offer exceptionally good food at great value and are often personal favorites among Michelin inspectors when dining on their own time.

Austin

Briscuits

Cuantos Tacos

Dai Due

Distant Relatives

Emmer & Rye

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Franklin BBQ

Kemuri Tat-suya

KG BBQ

La Santa Barbacha

Micklethwait Craft Meats

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Nixta Taqueria

Odd Duck

Ramen del Barrio

Veracruz Fonda & Bar

Bellaire

Blood Bros BBQ

Dallas

Cattleack

Gemma

Lucia

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Một Hai Ba

Ngon Vietnamese Kitchen

Nonna

Fort Worth, TX

Goldee’s

Houston, TX

Ema

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Kau Ba

Killen’s

Mala Sichuan Bistro

Nam Giao

Nancy’s Hustle

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Nobie’s

Pinkerton’s BBQ

The Pit Room

Street to Kitchen

Theodore Rex

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Truth BBQ

Rosie Cannonball

Lockhart

Barbs BQ

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Pearland, TX

Killen’s BBQ

San Antonio, TX

Cullum’s Atta Boy

The Jerk Shack

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Ladino

Southerleigh Fine Food & Brewery

Seguin

Burnt Bean Co

Spring

Belly of the Beast

Rosemeyer Bar-B-Q

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Tomball, TX

Tejas Chocolate

Michelin Recommended Restaurants

These are restaurants that meet the high standards of the Michelin Guide, embodying Texas’ food culture with a worldwide standard.

Arlington

Smoke’N Ash BBQ

Austin

Apt 115

Birdie’s

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Comedor

Con Todo

Dipdipdip Tatsu-&a

Discada

Este

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Ezov

Garrison

Jeffrey’s

Joe’s Bakery & Coffee Shop

La Condesa

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Launderette

Lenoir

Ling Kitchen

Lutie’s

Maie Day

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Mexta

Mum Foods Smokehouse & Delicatessen

Suerte

Tare

Terry Black’s BBQ

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Toshokan

Dallas, TX

Barsotti’s

The Charles

Crown Block

El Carlos Elegante

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Fearing’s

Georgie

Knox Bistro

Mercat Bistro

Monarch

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Quarter Acre

Rye

Sachet

Stillwell’s

Stock & Barrel

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Tei-an

Written By the Seasons

Fort Worth, TX

Birrieria y Taqueria Cortez

Panther City BBQ

Houston, TX

Baso

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Bludorn

Brisket and Rice

Candente

Hidden Omakase

Late August

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Pappas Bros. Steakhouse

McKinney, TX

Harvest

San Antonio, TX

2M Smokehouse

Barbecue Station

Garcia’s Mexican Food

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Leche de Tigre

Little Em’s Oyster Bar

Nicosi

Signature



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Best social media reactions from Texas A&M’s 18-11 loss to MSU

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Best social media reactions from Texas A&M’s 18-11 loss to MSU


The pitching woes continued for Texas A&M in its 18-11 series-opening loss to Mississippi State at Blue Bell Park on Thursday night.

Typically, scoring 11 runs in an SEC contest equates to a win, but not for the Aggies. Jason Kelly’s pitching staff gave up the most runs in a single inning since Texas A&M joined the conference in 2012. To make matters worse, the loss was tied for the most runs allowed this season, which came in an 18-5 run-rule loss to Auburn on May 2.

Needless to say, the bullpen has much work to do moving forward. With postseason play right around the corner, it is make-or-break for the pitchers on the roster to step up and provide consistency on the mound for the Aggies. If Texas A&M drops the series to the Bulldogs on Friday, it will be the end of the team’s hopes of being a national seed.

The Aggies will aim to avoid dropping their third straight SEC series, as they face Mississippi State in Game 2 at Blue Bell Park on Friday. First pitch against the Bulldogs is scheduled for 4 p.m. CT and will be broadcast live on SEC Network+.

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Here are some of the best social media reactions from Texas A&M’s loss to Mississippi State in Game 1:

Final score from Blue Bell Park

18 runs… yes, you read that correctly

Statistics from the series-opening loss

Mississippi State takes down No. 10 in Game 1

Texas A&M drops in the league standings

That one stings a little

Poor night for A&M on the mound

Kellner’s mask was a sight to see

A closer look at Kellner’s mask guarding his eye

Grahovac’s lead-off solo home run

Hacopian’s solo home run in the first

RPI update

Weston Moss slated to start in Game 2

The formula for success wasn’t there for the Aggies in the series opener

Frustrating night on the bump for Texas A&M

The Aggies must find an answer to the lack of consistent performances on the mound

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Dylan on X: @dylanmflippo.





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‘We have great support’: Coach Bucky speaks at Dallas A&M Club event

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‘We have great support’: Coach Bucky speaks at Dallas A&M Club event


Texas A&M football and basketball may be in the quiet stretch of their calendars, but the offseason doesn’t mean the work slows down. This is the time for coaches to hit the road, meet with Aggie clubs, and lay out the vision for the months ahead. One of the first stops each summer is the Dallas Aggies Coaches Night.

Hosted annually by the Dallas A&M Club, the event brings together several Texas A&M head coaches. This year, first‑year basketball coach Bucky McMillan joined football coach Mike Elko. Before the program began, both coaches met with the media and offered updates on their teams. And while football naturally draws the biggest spotlight, McMillan delivered plenty of insight into his first year in Aggieland and the foundation he’s building.

Below are some of the most notable quotes from Coach Bucky’s appearance at Coaches Night.

Texas A&M head basketball coach Bucky McMillan speaks on attending his first Dallas A&M Club event

“We didn’t have a roster. We didn’t have any coaches… It was wild, but since then I have gotten to meet so many great people and so many I have made friends with.”

Coach Bucky McMillan on the support they team received

“We have great support, and you did it with a coach you didn’t know very well. We broke a lot of records last year… We broke 15 A&M records. We are going to break all those again next year. I was proud of our defense, as small as we were.”

Coach Bucky McMillan discusses what being in Aggieland has meant to him

“Aggies love Aggies and A&M. I am from SEC country in the middle of Alabama. I tell my friends, the honor and tradition of being an Aggie is something I don’t take lightly. The honor of the people, it’s truly awesome. It makes me proud to wear this on my shirt.”

Coach Bucky McMillan on Mike Elko

“The football coach has to deal with a lot more things than I do… We lose a game, and most of y’all know about it, but everybody knows if he loses a game.” “The one thing I know is there could not better coach for Texas A&M than Mike Elko.”

Coach Bucky McMillan on the 2026-27 basketball season

“We are going to take that next step. We were a game away from the Sweet 16 this year, and we are going to be in that second weekend next year, trying to get the Final Four.”

Here’s a look at the impact the Dallas A&M Club has had since its founding.

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Established in 1902, the Dallas A&M Club has awarded hundreds of thousands of dollars in scholarships to Dallas-area students attending Texas A&M – with 29 Aggie fish and sophomores currently benefiting from our $6,000 scholarship awards.

As the chartered A&M Club for all of Dallas County, the DAMC has also generously given back to The Association of Former Students by contributing to the following: Aggie Park, Endowed Aggie Ring Scholarship (4), Endowed Diamond Century Club, Endowed Scholarship Fund, Corregidor Muster Memorial Fund, Building Enhancement Campaign, and The Association’s Annual Fund.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.





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ERCOT Warns Texas AI Power Boom May Not Materialize

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ERCOT Warns Texas AI Power Boom May Not Materialize


Texas is planning its grid around an unprecedented wave of AI-driven power demand that the state’s energy regulator says may not fully materialize on projected timelines.

In a recent filing to the Public Utility Commission of Texas, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) projected statewide power demand could surge to nearly 368 GW by 2032 – more than four times the state’s current peak demand record of 85.5 GW. But the filing also contains an unusual warning from the grid operator itself.

“ERCOT has concerns with using the preliminary load forecast values for the Reliability Assessment and any other transmission and resource adequacy analysis,” the organization wrote in its April 2026 long-term load forecast filing

The organization added that it may seek adjustments to the forecast based on “actual historical realization rates or other objective, credible, independent information.” 

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Interconnection Delays Push Texas Data Center Behind the Meter

ERCOT has already begun adjusting for realization risk internally. In its 2025 long-term load forecast report, the grid operator said the “average peak consumption per site was 49.8% of the requested MW” and applied that factor to projected non-crypto data center load additions in some planning models.

ERCOT President and CEO Pablo Vegas said the forecast reflects “higher-than-expected future load growth” tied to changing large-load planning dynamics.

Texas Developers Race Ahead of Grid Capacity

Texas has emerged as a key data center market, driven by its abundant land, competitive energy prices, and favorable regulatory environment. This combination has positioned the state as a magnet for hyperscale operators and AI infrastructure investments. The state is estimated to account for around 15% of all data center connectivity in the US.

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Recent and proposed AI data center campuses tied to OpenAI, Oracle, Meta, Crusoe, CoreWeave, Soluna, and other hyperscale operators are reshaping Texas grid planning. Developers have proposed large campuses across North Texas, Abilene, West Texas, and the Houston corridor, many requiring hundreds of megawatts of capacity and, in some cases, dedicated onsite generation to bypass interconnection delays. That buildout pushed ERCOT’s non-crypto data center forecast above 228 GW by 2032.

Developers are continuing to pursue Texas aggressively because ERCOT still offers faster timelines and more flexible market structures than many competing regions. Several proposed campuses pair AI infrastructure with onsite gas generation, colocated power assets, or flexible-load arrangements to navigate mounting transmission constraints.

Texas Gets Tough on Data Center Power – Who’s Next?

Utilities across the US are grappling with AI-driven electricity growth, but ERCOT’s projections stand apart for both scale and uncertainty. PJM Interconnection, the nation’s largest grid operator, expects summer peak demand to climb above 241 GW over the next 15 years as data centers and electrification expand. ERCOT, by contrast, projects demand potentially reaching nearly 368 GW by 2032, driven largely by proposed non-crypto data center loads. At the same time, the grid operator openly questions how much of that demand will materialize on schedule.

Bigger Than Texas

Similar pressures are emerging elsewhere. In California, CAISO’s latest transmission plan cited “data center load growth” as a driver of major grid upgrades and described interconnection volumes as “unmanageable” before recent queue reforms. 

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A recent Grid Strategies report reached a similar conclusion nationally, warning that the “data center portion of utility load forecasts is likely overstated by roughly 25 GW” compared with market-based deployment estimates. 

Ihab Osman, an independent strategist specializing in data center and other mission-critical infrastructure, said the distinction is less about “real” versus “fake” AI demand and more about “announced versus deliverable demand.”

Soluna Expands Texas Campus With 100 MW AI-Ready Data Center

“A large share of the current AI/data center planned load should be treated as paper megawatts until it is validated through physical gates,” Osman said, citing factors including site control, transmission deliverability, generation availability, turbine and transformer supply, permitting, financing, and credible energization schedules.

Osman said ERCOT’s forecast is best understood as “a stress-test map, not as a fait accompli build map.”

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Separating ’Paper Megawatts’ From Real Demand

The filing shows Texas regulators and grid planners struggling to distinguish operating AI infrastructure from a rapidly expanding pipeline of proposed projects.

“The vast majority” of ERCOT’s projected load growth comes from submissions provided by transmission and distribution utilities, according to the filing. Those requests include hyperscale AI campuses, GPU clusters, and other large industrial loads seeking future grid capacity reservations.

Alison Silverstein, a former senior adviser to the chairman of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, said “a large proportion” of projects in ERCOT’s large-load interconnection queue have already been canceled, particularly among smaller developers facing long interconnection delays and high turbine and transformer costs.

Forecasts Collide With Physical Infrastructure Limits

ERCOT has also signaled that many projects may not materialize on the timelines shaping transmission planning.

The grid operator said summer 2026 peak demand is likely to land between roughly 90.5 GW and 98 GW – far below the preliminary 112 GW figure embedded in the long-term forecast. ERCOT said it appears “unlikely” that new large-load projects and existing site expansions will ramp quickly enough to push demand that high this year. 

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The filing suggests uncertainty around AI-related load growth is beginning to influence broader infrastructure planning assumptions. By 2032, ERCOT projects non-crypto data centers reaching 228 GW of demand, compared with just 9 GW from cryptocurrency mining and roughly 3 GW each from hydrogen/e-fuels and oil-and-gas-related industrial growth. 

The move also suggests the regulator is no longer simply forecasting AI-driven growth, but also working to determine how much of the proposed boom can actually be financed, supplied, interconnected, and energized before utilities commit billions to long-lived infrastructure.





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