Data Centers

ERCOT’s Proposed Large Load Batch Study Process in Progress — Key for Data Centers

By Scott Deatherage · S Deatherage Law, PLLC · February 4, 2026

ERCOT is in the middle of a major redesign of how large load interconnections are studied in Texas. At a February 3, 2026 workshop, ERCOT presented a draft framework for a new Large Load “Batch Study” process, developed in connection with PUC Project No. 59142, Review of ERCOT’s Interconnection Processes for Large Loads.

This proposal, while still preliminary, signals a significant shift that will directly affect data centers, industrial customers, transmission service providers, and developers planning large load projects in ERCOT.

Why ERCOT Is Proposing a Batch Study Process

Today, large loads are generally studied one-by-one, often leading to:

ERCOT’s proposal would move to an ERCOT-led batch study model, grouping qualifying large loads together to improve:

Key Elements of the Proposed Framework

Based on the workshop presentation, the proposal includes:

Importantly, the Batch Study outcome would be reserved capacity and allocated load, not a guarantee of real-time service — an important distinction for project planning and financing.

Why Stakeholder Feedback Matters Right Now

ERCOT emphasized that this framework is conceptual and subject to change. Stakeholder input will shape:

ERCOT is currently soliciting feedback to prepare for the February 12, 2026 stakeholder workshop, and plans to present a proposed framework at the February 20, 2026 PUC Open Meeting.

How to Submit Feedback

Stakeholders may submit input by close of business February 5, 2026 in two ways:

  1. Company survey (one response per company; results shared only in aggregate), and/or
  2. Written public comments emailed to LLWG_feedback@ercot.com (to be posted publicly for the next workshop).

Practical Takeaway

If you have existing large load requests, are planning future ERCOT projects, or rely on interconnection timing certainty, this process will matter to you.

Questions about this topic?

Contact S Deatherage Law to discuss how this affects your project or business.

Contact Scott   scott@sdeatheragelaw.com