
CenterPoint Energy is proposing a plan to send 15 of its mobile generators to San Antonio this summer, allegedly reducing Houston customers' bills in the process.
CenterPoint Energy is proposing a plan to send 15 of its mobile generators to San Antonio this summer, allegedly reducing Houston customers' bills in the process.
Lawmakers and regulators are trying to ensure that the lessons learned from Hurricane Beryl are not forgotten when it comes to the failures of utility companies like CenterPoint Energy.
In an ongoing effort to empty out animal shelters across the U.S., BARC— the City of Houston's animal shelter and adoption center— will reduce adoption fees in December.
Around a hundred volunteers gathered to help plant the trees by hand as a part of Trees for Houston’s initiative.
ARC, an environmental group, has received a $5 million grant to revitalize the endangered Houston Toad's habitat. The toad hasn't been seen in Houston for about 50 years.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency can meet immediate needs but does not have enough funding to make it through the hurricane season, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas told reporters Wednesday.
CenterPoint aims to push cost of repairing Hurricane Beryl’s damage onto Houston-area ratepayers
Some Houston area residents may begin losing power for hours at a time while temperatures are projected to rise over the next month, according to CenterPoint Energy.
CenterPoint faces Wednesday deadline to respond to Governor Abbott’s demand for information on post-Beryl improvements
Harris County Public Health Officials report seven positive human cases of the West Nile Virus
Rosharon area residents fight proposed rock-crushing facility
Nearly 350,000 customers were still in the dark Sunday morning days after a deadly storm pummeled the area, leaving seven people dead, damage sprawled across the city and power lines down.
Texas' power grid operator is asking people to conserve electricity on Monday between 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. as it forecasts record-high demand.
The gradual sinking of coastal land areas has been a “silent problem” that figures to exacerbate flooding risks and livelihoods in locales experiencing sea-level rise, such as Houston-area communities along the Gulf Coast, according to a new study.