CenterPoint Energy reaches settlement agreement on landmark Systemwide Resiliency Plan to strengthen Houston electric system against extreme weather threats and future hazards
- Largest single resiliency investment in CenterPoint history will build on Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative and help address impacts of wide range of extreme weather and other threats
- 100% of lines serving the most customers will have automation devices capable of self-healing
- 130,000 stronger, more storm-resilient poles and braces to be installed or replaced
- This historic investment will reduce storm-related outages by nearly 1 billion minutes
- Spreading investments over four years vs. three years will minimize bill impacts and help keep customer bills more affordable
CenterPoint's 2026-2028 SRP will build on the progress made during the first two phases of the company's Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative (GHRI) and is designed to further address the impacts of a wide range of extreme weather threats, including more powerful storms, hurricanes, wind events like derechos, flooding, extreme temperatures, tornadoes, wildfires and winter storms.
"We are committed to continuing critical system resiliency work to help provide an electric system for the
"Our plan is cost-effective and will build on the progress we've made to date through the Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative. Taken together, we believe that these resiliency actions will help create a future with fewer outages that impact smaller clusters of customers, coupled with faster restoration times for our
Key improvements in CenterPoint's Systemwide Resiliency Plan
This settlement agreement reflects discussions with intervening parties following the filing of CenterPoint's enhanced SRP with the PUCT in
Separate from the 2026-2028 SRP which is focused on the electric distribution system, CenterPoint will continue its nearly
Customer bill impacts
Pending approval from the PUCT, CenterPoint's historic SRP investment in the electric distribution system would add approximately
The impacts of these investment in
- Costs associated with the large temporary emergency generation units will start coming out of rates for
Houston Electric customers this summer, and by 2027, bills will bereduced by an estimated$2 per month for the average customer. - As a result of the recently settled, four-year
Houston Electric rate case, CenterPoint will receive approximately$50 million less revenue annually which means a reduction in electric customer bills by about$1 a month for most customers from 2025 through 2028 while also continuing to deliver support for significant local economic growth and upgrades acrossGreater Houston area.
Building the stronger, more resilient, self-healing electric system of the future
The investments outlined in CenterPoint's SRP are designed to benefit customers across the entire 12-county service area, with a specific focus on customers in higher-risk areas. When complete, this array of resiliency actions, combined with CenterPoint's normal operations, will achieve the following:
- Automation Devices: 100% of lines serving the most customers will include automation devices capable of self-healing to reduce the impact of outages;
- Stronger Distribution Poles: 130,000 stronger, more storm-resilient poles (rated to 110 mph and 132 mph) will be either installed new or replaced or braced to withstand stronger storms;
- Vegetation Management: CenterPoint will deploy an industry-leading, three-year vegetation management cycle for transmission and distribution lines, with 100% of power lines cleared of hazardous vegetation every three years;
- Undergrounding: More than 50% of CenterPoint's system will be undergrounded to improve resiliency; and
- Modernized Cables: 20,150 spans of underground cables will be modernized to reduce the frequency and impact of outages.
Addressing growing energy needs and weather challenges
The resiliency actions outlined by the SRP will also help meet the energy needs of the growing population across CenterPoint's
A Systemwide Resiliency Plan shaped by experts, stakeholders and customer feedback
The SRP incorporates important feedback from customers, elected leaders, emergency management agencies and independent experts. In preparation for filing the SRP, CenterPoint conducted 30 community meetings and listening sessions and solicited feedback on the plan during the draft stages. As part of CenterPoint's commitment to long-term affordability, the SRP is designed to provide the greatest dollar value to customers now and in the future by prioritizing proven, cost-effective resiliency actions that will ultimately prove vital to reducing future storm-related costs for the communities CenterPoint serves.
CenterPoint GHRI Phase One and Phase Two resiliency actions
Since launching GHRI in response to Hurricane Beryl last summer, CenterPoint has made progress on the historic series of critical resiliency improvements across both Phase One and Phase Two. When combined, the company has completed the following actions:
- Installed or replaced more than 26,000 stronger, more storm-resilient poles built to withstand extreme winds;
- Undergrounded more than 400 miles of power lines to improve overall resiliency;
- Installed more than 5,150 more automated reliability devices and intelligent grid switching devices to reduce the impact of outages and improve restoration times;
- Cleared more than 6,000 miles of higher-risk vegetation near power lines to reduce storm-related outages; and
- Installed 100 weather monitoring stations to improve situational awareness and storm preparation.
About
CenterPoint
Forward-looking Statements
This news release, as well as the website pages related to the GHRI, includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. When used in this news release, the words "anticipate," "believe," "continue," "could," "estimate," "expect," "forecast," "goal," "intend," "may," "objective," "plan," "potential," "predict," "projection," "should," "target," "will," "would" or other similar words are intended to identify forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements, which include statements regarding the Systemwide Resiliency Plan and the Greater Houston Resiliency Initiative, including their respective benefits, are based upon assumptions of management which are believed to be reasonable at the time made and are subject to significant risks and uncertainties. Actual events and results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. Any statements in this news release or the website pages related to the GHRI regarding future events that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements. Each forward-looking statement contained in this news release or the website pages related to the GHRI speaks only as of the date of this release. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated by the provided forward-looking information include risks and uncertainties relating to: (1) business strategies and strategic initiatives, restructurings, joint ventures, acquisitions or dispositions of assets or businesses involving
For more information, contact:
Communications
Media.Relations@CenterPointEnergy.com
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/centerpoint-energy-reaches-settlement-agreement-on-landmark-systemwide-resiliency-plan-to-strengthen-houston-electric-system-against-extreme-weather-threats-and-future-hazards-302481612.html
SOURCE