Travis (county) |
|
|---|---|
| Location |
Texas United States North America |
| Total Power Plants | 13 |
| Red Alerts |
|
| Elected Officials |
Rep. Lamar Smith (R) 2409 Rayburn HOB tel: 202-225-4236 | fax: 202-225-8628
Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D) 201 Cannon HOB tel: 202-225-4865 | fax: 202-225-3073 lloyd.doggett@mail.house.gov
Rep. Lamar Smith (R) 2409 Rayburn HOB tel: 202-225-4236 | fax: 202-225-8628 lloyd.doggett@mail.house.gov
Sen. Kay Hutchison (R)
284 Russell Senate Office Building tel: 202-224-5922 | fax: 202-224-0776
Sen. John Cornyn (R)
517 Hart Senate Office Building tel: 202-224-2934 | fax: 202-228-2856 |
Power Trends
For more about the terms or data used here, search the Glossary, learn All About Icons, or check out our FAQs. Information on plant specifics can be found here. If you use the data, please see our citation policy.
| Tons CO2 | MWh Energy | Intensity | % Fossil | % Hydro | % Nuclear | % Other Renewable | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000: | 1,752,684 | 2,633,648 | 1,331 | 95.48 | 4.21 | 0 | 0.1 |
| Present: | 1,936,935 | 3,637,121 | 1,065 | 77.78 | 6.39 | 0 | 15.61 |
| Future: | 2,004,541 | 3,728,869 | 1,075 | 78.38 | 6.23 | 0 | 14.82 |
Top Power Producing Plants in Travis
Highest CO2 Emitting Plants in Travis
| Tons CO2 | MWh Energy | Intensity | |||
|
|
North America
United States
Texas
|
2000:
Present:
Future:
|
0
795,356
824,179
|
0
1,906,016
1,931,702
|
0
835
853
|
|
|
North America
United States
Texas
|
2000:
Present:
Future:
|
1,402,241
685,921
711,473
|
2,226,790
1,110,280
1,154,154
|
1,259
1,236
1,233
|
|
|
North America
United States
Texas
|
2000:
Present:
Future:
|
333,050
414,839
421,124
|
257,484
326,307
331,642
|
2,587
2,543
2,540
|
|
|
North America
United States
Texas
|
2000:
Present:
Future:
|
15,526
18,466
18,922
|
32,099
27,135
27,857
|
967
1,361
1,358
|
|
|
North America
United States
Texas
|
2000:
Present:
Future:
|
0
9,898
11,179
|
0
13,430
15,255
|
0
1,474
1,466
|
Blog
For the time being, there will be no change to the data on the site, which remains unchanged from the CARMA 2.0 release in August, 2008. Our hope is to make the upgraded database public within six months.
Check back with the CARMA blog for updates as the new database comes together.

The airwaves have recently been filled with advertisements heralding a plethora of clean energy technologies. GE promoted its smart grid technologies in a Wizard of Oz-themed Super Bowl ad. Vestas, the largest wind turbine manufacturer in the world, has branded itself No. 1 in Modern Energy. Various groups have designed commercials touting the potential of "clean coal," including a GE ad featuring models-turned-miners (tagline: "Harnessing the power of coal is looking more beautiful every day."). And environmental groups have struck back against the branding of coal as "clean" with satirical advertisements (tagline: "Clean coal harnesses the awesome power of the word ‘clean!’". In this maelstrom of marketing, who can say which clean energy technology is best?
Nearly two years after the U.S. Supreme Court ordered the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to determine whether greenhouse gases (GHGs) pose a threat to peoples’ health or welfare – the first step toward regulation -- the EPA this week issued a draft rule on a national GHG registry:
On March 2, thousands of people are expected to engage in mass civil disobedience at the coal-fired Capitol Power Plant in Washington, DC. The protest, which is expected to include NASA climate scientist Jim Hanson, author Wendell Barry, and environmentalist Bill McKibben is timed to coincide with the final day of PowerShift09, a four-day "National Youth Summit" that aims to bring 10,000 students to Washington to lobby for action on climate change.Go to carma.org/blog/earth/ to learn more, or check out the screenshots below to get a taste of CARMA's latest incarnation.
Reactions
Live nearby? Work here? Just have a reaction about this? Share your thoughts with us!
Need help translating? Check out Google Translate.
Add a Reaction
Fields marked with a * are required.
| Name * | |
| E-mail * | |
| Website | |
| Your Reaction * | |
| Subscribe to CARMA Newsletter | |





