U.S. Energy Department finalizes $3.3B loan to Texas utility
The U.S. Department of Energy Wednesday announced it has finalized a $3.26 billion loan to utility AEP Texas, a subsidiary of American Electric Power, or AEP, to fund the deployment of 2,800 miles of high-capacity transmission lines across the Lone Star State as part of a broader effort to fuel domestic industrial growth and assure national energy security.
The loan, awarded by the Office of Energy Dominance Financing, will finance the addition of the transmission lines in key industrial corridors in south central and west Texas, where data centers, advanced manufacturing industries, and the electrification of oil and gas operations are driving rapid increases in power demand.
“President Trump’s Working Families Tax Cuts Act is driving investments that strengthen America’s energy infrastructure while lowering costs for hardworking families,” said U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright in a release. “This investment will modernize Texas’ electric grid, support the energy needed for AI, advanced manufacturing, the Permian Basin, and help keep electricity costs down for Texans.”
According to the Energy Department, the nearly 100 projects funded by the loan will lower electricity costs for AEP Texas ratepayers by an estimated $685 million over the next 30 years. The utility’s 100,000-square-mile service area anchors many of the Lone Star State’s most critical industrial hubs—stretching from the oil fields of West Texas to the Rio Grande Valley and the rapidly growing ports of Corpus Christi and Brownsville.
AEP Texas has signed agreements to service 41 gigawatts of new industrial load by 2030—a backlog that represents nearly half of the Lone Star State’s all-time record demand of 85.5 gigawatts. State grid operator the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) recently forecasted that extreme weather and industrial expansion could push the state’s near-term summer peak demand as high as 92.2 gigawatts.
“Texas is poised for incredible growth over the next five years,” said Adrian Rodriguez, president and chief operating officer of AEP Texas. “This loan supports critical updates to our transmission infrastructure to strengthen reliability, connect new load and generation resources and manage affordability,” Rodriguez said.
Created by the Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, the Energy Dominance Financing Program eliminated emissions-reduction mandates established during the Biden presidency and rescinded unspent funding allocated under the Inflation Reduction Act. By law, the lending program must now prioritize grid reliability, heavy industrial upgrades and firm baseload power capacity.
The AEP Texas loan is the Trump Administration’s third utility financing agreement completed through the Energy Dominance Financing Program. In February, $26.5 billion was allocated to the Southern Company to finance 5 gigawatts of new natural gas generation, large-scale hydro facilities, and nuclear asset modernization in Georgia and Alabama.
In late 2025, the Department of Energy finalized a separate $1.6 billion loan guarantee with AEP’s parent company to fund upgrades to approximately 5,000 miles of electricity transmission infrastructure in Ohio, Oklahoma, West Virginia, Indiana and Michigan.
Latest News Stories
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Fire Protection District Board of Trustees for July 15, 2025
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Square Park District for July 17, 2025
Frankfort Fire District Faces Tighter Budget, Rising Overtime in FY 2025 Outlook
Your Ultimate Guide to the 2025 Frankfort Fall Fest: Everything to Know for the Nationally-Ranked Event
Frankfort Library Tables Reading Room Project Over Higher-Than-Expected Engineering Costs
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Frankfort Township Board for July 14, 2025
Frankfort Park District Board Approves Pay Raise for Executive Director Gina Hassett
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Summit Hill School District 161 for July 9, 2025
Park District’s BDC Dance Program Earns National Recognition
Frankfort Fire District and Firefighters Union to Discuss Possible Referendum
After Initial Rejection and Tense Debate, Board Reconsiders and Approves Contested DuPage Township Business
Frankfort Fire Board Approves $460,000 Purchase of New Cardiac Monitors