San Angelo Chamber is Advancing a New Energy Economy in Texas
Michael Looney, vice president of economic development at the San Angelo Chamber of Commerce, and his leadership team recruited multiple 200-400 MW energy projects to the region surrounding the West Texas city of approximately 100,000 residents.
“The chamber wanted to explore ways we could encourage and directly support the development of renewable energy production facilities that would bolster our economy, create new kinds of technical career opportunities, and allow our county to participate in the provision of electrical energy to the Texas power grid,” said Looney.
In 2015, Looney and his chamber team embarked on achieving two priority goals:
To diversify the San Angelo economy into clean energy development and position the San Angelo Chamber as a national leader in that sector.
Equally important: To lead this new initiative with transparency and open communication, provide the community with reliable information.
Looney and his team successfully recruited 1.2 GW of electric generation within the San Angelo and Tom Green County borders, accomplishing the chamber’s economic and job creation goals. These projects include four utility-scale solar power plants and one 200-MW battery energy storage system.
“We believe the San Angelo Chamber of Commerce has become one of the strongest proponents of clean energy development in the United States. The chamber is now a catalyst and headquarters for renewable energy development, not just in our county, but across a five-county region known geographically as the Concho Valley,” Looney said. “We have led by example. We have attracted renewable energy developments in wind, solar, and battery energy storage from Canada, the United States, Israel and South Korea. Our clean energy initiatives have successfully complemented our thriving oil and natural gas development services sectors as well. At all levels, our renewable and O&G companies work well together in the area, and in one instance, a national O&G company directly invested in 50% of one of our solar power plants.”
San Angelo’s energy economy continues to diversify beyond new clean energy generation. The Chamber helped land a solar panel recycler for its community and developed a new, privately-owned 184-acre rail port, designed in part to accept wind turbine nacelles and blades for transloading to final regional destinations.
Looney joined CICE for its April 2026 D.C. Fly-In with other chamber and economic development leaders, taking full advantage of the opportunity to share with lawmakers how clean energy powers the San Angelo area’s economy. Whether working with the business community, local, state or federal elected officials, educational leaders or residents, Looney is building bridges to advance a strong clean energy economy and future for his community.
“Clean energy is not a political stance. It is an innovative, cost-effective, efficient and durable method of power generation, which in turn reduces the pressure on other industries that are solely reliant on fossil fuels. We’re excited about our success in the clean energy sector, and to continue our mission to lead the way,” said Looney.