Coal The
Fayette Power Project is a three-unit coal-fired power plant in
Fayette County that provides 1,625
megawatts (MW). (
Austin Energy co-owns two of the units and the power they produce.)
Lake Fayette is the cooling pond for the project. LCRA uses
coal from the
Powder River Basin in
Wyoming as fuel.
Natural gas The
Sim Gideon Power Plant is a three-unit
natural gas-fired plant in
Bastrop County that provides 608
megawatts. The Lost Pines 1 Power Project (owned and operated by GenTex Power Corporation, an LCRA affiliate) is a
natural gas-fired
combined-cycle plant adjacent to the Sim Gideon plant, and the two form the Lost Pines Power Park. The Lost Pines 1 Power Project can generate up to 511 megawatts.
Lake Bastrop is the cooling pond for the Lost Pines Power Park. LCRA broke ground on a new
Thomas C. Ferguson Power Plant in April 2012, about 100 yards from the site of the original Ferguson plant on Lake LBJ. The plant began operating in 2014. The old plant was decommissioned. The Ferguson facility is a natural gas-fired, combined cycle plant in Horseshoe Bay capable of producing 540 megawatts. Ferguson is among the most environmentally responsible power plants in Texas, producing 30 to 40 percent fewer emissions per unit of power than the unit it replaced. It uses about 35 percent less fuel per megawatt-hour and about one-third of the water used at a typical steam plant per unit of power. The Winchester Power Park in
Fayette County provides about 176 megawatts for use primarily during peak-demand periods. The LCRA buys natural gas on the open market and stores it at the Hilbig Gas Storage Facility, an underground reservoir near
Rockne, Texas. The facility can hold up to 4 billion cubic feet of natural gas. In 2025, LCRA commissioned Timmerman Power Plant Unit 1, a 10-unit 186-megawatt gas-fired peaker plant located in
Maxwell, Texas, near
San Marcos, Texas, utilizing
reciprocating internal combustion engine technology. Unit 2, which is identical to Unit 1, is set to be commissioned in 2026.
Hydroelectric , the dam completed in 1941 that forms
Lake Travis (the beginning of
Lake Austin and an early low-water crossing is seen below the dam) LCRA operates six
hydroelectric dams along the Colorado River in Central Texas that provide a source of renewable energy and form six lakes collectively known as the
Texas Highland Lakes: •
Buchanan Dam (54.9 MW) - forms
Lake Buchanan •
Inks Dam (13.8 MW) - forms
Inks Lake •
Wirtz Dam (60 MW) - forms
Lake LBJ, which also serves as a cooling pond for the Thomas C. Ferguson Power Plant •
Max Starcke Dam (41.4 MW) - forms
Lake Marble Falls •
Mansfield Dam (108 MW) - forms
Lake Travis •
Tom Miller Dam (17 MW) - forms
Lake Austin In keeping with its state-approved Water Management Plan, LCRA generates electricity from the dams only as it releases water for other reasons, or when ordered to do so by the
Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT).
Wind LCRA purchases 51 megawatts of wind power capacity from the
Indian Mesa Wind Energy Center in West Texas and 200 megawatts from the Papalote Creek II Wind Farm near the Texas Gulf Coast.
Transmission LCRA distributes electricity to its wholesale electric customers - mostly municipal utilities and electric cooperatives - and supports the statewide electric transmission network through more than 5,100 miles of
transmission lines and more than 380 substations, which are owned by LCRA Transmission Services Corporation, a nonprofit corporation owned by LCRA. == Water ==