Shockwaves on the East Side as El Paso Electric Eyes 345 kV Super Line

El Paso Electric is studying a new high-voltage transmission line that could cut across far East El Paso, a 345-kilovolt project that might stretch roughly 10 to 19 miles and cost up to $57 million. The line would be among the highest-voltage facilities on the utility’s system and is pitched as a major reliability boost for the East Side as industrial projects and data centers line up for power. Early company materials show the line would run between the Pine and Caliente substations, with routing and environmental work kicking off this spring.

What EPE Is Proposing

According to the El Paso Times, El Paso Electric officials say the 345-kilovolt corridor is designed to ease heavy loads on the East Side grid and make room for future growth. The paper reports that David Meza, the utility’s manager of grid strategy, described 345 kV as the largest voltage used on El Paso Electric’s system and said initial routing work points to a 10 to 19-mile span with an estimated price tag of up to $57 million.

The utility has not yet filed a formal Certificate of Convenience and Necessity application, or CCN, with the Public Utility Commission of Texas, and it notes that both the ultimate route and the final cost could shift as technical studies and public input continue.

Pine to Caliente Route and Schedule

On a dedicated project microsite, El Paso Electric labels the effort the Pine to Caliente 345 kV Transmission Line and shows potential corridors between a Pine Substation near La Pine Avenue and Appleton Street and a Caliente Substation located north of US 62/180. The site outlines a routing and environmental assessment process running through July, followed by a plan to file the CCN with the Public Utility Commission of Texas in July 2026.

Construction would depend on PUCT approval. Until then, the project is in the homework stage, with maps, draft routes, and environmental reviews still in flux. The project webpage also invites public comment and sets a March 13 deadline for residents to submit feedback through an online questionnaire.

Why Now: Demand and Data Center Growth

The transmission proposal arrives as El Paso Electric is already pursuing new generation and grid upgrades to keep up with rising usage, including a separate filing for a natural gas plant that would serve Meta’s planned data center campus. In January, KVIA reported that the utility is seeking approval for a $473 million McCloud gas facility that would initially be dedicated to Meta’s load, a move El Paso Electric points to as evidence that additional transmission capacity will be needed…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS