I was lying in bed. The ceiling fan was turning. The TV was on. My internet was working. The house was powered — running on my solar and battery system — while the utility was sending me outage notifications.
That moment changed how I think about grid reliability forever. Not as an abstract concern. As a lived experience, right here in Porter, Texas, 40 miles north of Houston.
This post is about ERCOT, Texas grid reliability, and what that moment means for every Texas homeowner who hasn’t yet made the move to backup power.
ERCOT grid reliability in 2026 — the honest picture
ERCOT — the Electric Reliability Council of Texas — operates the power grid serving most of Texas. It’s an isolated grid, meaning it cannot import power from neighboring states when Texas demand exceeds Texas supply. That structural limitation is the foundation of every reliability concern Texas homeowners face.
Here’s what ERCOT grid reliability actually looks like for a homeowner in the greater Houston area, based on years of living it:
The specific risks Texas homeowners face
Every other state in the continental US can import power from neighboring states during emergencies. Texas cannot. ERCOT operates as an island grid by design — originally to avoid federal regulation — and that design decision means that when Texas supply falls short of Texas demand, there is nowhere else to get power from.
This is not a problem that gets fixed with new power plants or better weatherization. It’s a structural limitation of how the Texas grid was built. Knowing this, the question isn’t whether future reliability events will occur in Texas. It’s how prepared you are when they do.
Let me come back to where I started — because I think it’s the most important thing in this post.
I’ve experienced multiple outages in the Porter/Conroe area. Freezes. Severe storms. Tornadoes. Each one used to mean the same thing: scrambling for flashlights, worrying about the refrigerator, wondering how long it would last.
After my EG4 inverter and battery system were installed, those events became something completely different. I’d get the text from the power company — “Your service is out” — and I’d be lying in bed with the ceiling fan still turning, the TV still on, the internet still working. The house was powered. My system had seamlessly switched over without me doing anything at all.
That’s not a feature on a spec sheet. That’s what energy independence actually feels like. And once you’ve experienced it, going back to being completely dependent on a grid you have no control over feels like a choice you made — not a situation you’re stuck in.
“The power company texted me that my service was out. The ceiling fan was still turning. The TV was still on. The internet was still working. That’s what energy independence feels like.”
What to do about ERCOT grid reliability as a Texas homeowner
The good news is that the solution to grid reliability concerns and the solution to rising electric bills are the same thing: a solar and battery system sized for your home’s needs.
The equipment I trust for Texas grid independence
I’ve been running EG4 equipment from Signature Solar since 2024. Two inverter systems — the EG4 6000XP on our off-grid shed conversion and the EG4 12000XP on the main house — both powering through every grid event, every weather outage, every conservation notice ERCOT has issued since I installed them.
The seamless switchover when the grid goes down is not something I had to configure or manage. It just happens. The system detects the outage and takes over. That’s the experience you want — not scrambling to start a generator, not losing power for a few seconds while something switches over. Just seamless continuation.
Bottom line on ERCOT grid reliability
The Texas grid has real, structural vulnerabilities that are not being fully addressed. Data center demand is accelerating the strain. Weather events in the Gulf Coast region are not going away. And the isolation of the ERCOT grid means when things go wrong in Texas, the solution has to come from within Texas — or from within your own home.
Getting that text from the power company while your ceiling fan keeps spinning isn’t luck. It’s preparation. It’s a decision you make before the next storm hits — not during it.
The grid may not be reliable. Your home can be.
