For a few weeks this summer, Houston welcomed the world.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 showcased our city's ability to host one of the largest international events on the planet. Millions watched from around the globe while hundreds of thousands of visitors experienced firsthand what Houston has become: a world-class destination for business, culture and global events.
But once the final match is played and the visitors return home, a more important question remains: Can Texas build the energy infrastructure needed to power what comes next?
The World Cup wasn't the finish line. It was a glimpse into the future.
That future is being shaped not only by population growth, but also by artificial intelligence, hyperscale data centers, advanced manufacturing, electrification, LNG expansion and continued industrial investment. Together, these forces are creating an unprecedented demand for electricity and placing new expectations on the infrastructure that supports it.
Energy Has Become Economic Infrastructure
For decades, economic development centered around highways, ports, airports and workforce.
Today, another asset has moved to the top of that list: energy infrastructure.
Reliable electricity is no longer simply a utility service. It has become a competitive advantage.
Companies evaluating where to build the next AI campus, manufacturing facility or industrial complex are increasingly asking different questions. How quickly can power be delivered? Is there enough transmission capacity? Can substations support future expansion? Is water infrastructure available? What is the long-term reliability of the local grid?
These questions are becoming just as important as tax incentives and available real estate.
Recent comments from Governor Greg Abbott that future AI developments should provide their own power generation and water illustrate just how dramatically the conversation has evolved. The challenge is no longer limited to meeting today's demand. It is preparing for a future where entirely new industries require unprecedented amounts of electricity while ensuring existing homes and businesses continue to receive reliable, affordable service.
The Next Energy Race Has Already Begun
Texas remains the nation's energy leader, producing more electricity than any other state while continuing to expand natural gas, wind, solar and emerging technologies.
But leadership in the next decade will be measured differently.
Success will depend on how quickly we can expand transmission infrastructure, modernize distribution systems, accelerate interconnection, strengthen grid resilience and support new generation where economic growth is occurring.
The conversation has shifted from producing more electricity to delivering it smarter.
That requires planning years before demand arrives.
Houston Is the Proving Ground
Houston sits at the center of this transformation.
Already recognized as the Energy Capital of the World, the region continues attracting major employers, global headquarters, industrial expansion and technology investment. The Port of Houston continues to grow. Advanced manufacturing is expanding. AI companies are evaluating Texas alongside other national markets.
Every one of these investments depends on reliable infrastructure.
While the World Cup demonstrated Houston's ability to manage a temporary surge of visitors, the more significant challenge lies ahead. Permanent economic growth creates sustained electricity demand that cannot be addressed with temporary solutions.
Meeting that demand will require coordinated investment across generation, transmission, distribution, storage and increasingly, digital technologies capable of forecasting and managing electricity in real time.
Smarter Infrastructure for a Smarter Grid
The future electric grid will look very different from the one that built modern Texas.
Artificial intelligence, predictive analytics, advanced sensors and distributed energy resources will allow operators to anticipate demand, identify equipment failures before they occur and optimize energy delivery across increasingly complex networks.
Infrastructure is no longer simply about building more. It is about building smarter.
At the same time, resilience must remain central to every investment. Texans understand better than most that hurricanes, flooding, winter storms and prolonged heat waves are no longer rare events. Modern infrastructure must not only support growth but also withstand increasingly volatile weather.
Building Beyond the Headlines
The World Cup generated headlines because of what happened on the field.
Its lasting legacy may be what it revealed about the city beyond the stadium.
Houston demonstrated that it can host the world. The next challenge is ensuring it can continue to power one of the fastest-growing economies in North America.
That will require continued investment, thoughtful policy and long-term planning that recognizes energy infrastructure as essential economic infrastructure.
Texas has spent decades leading the world in energy production.
The next opportunity is even greater.
To become the global leader in how energy systems are planned, built and operated for a future defined by artificial intelligence, industrial growth and rapidly evolving consumer demand.
Because the cities that lead tomorrow won't simply generate the most energy.
They'll be the ones best prepared to deliver it where opportunity is growing.
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Sam Luna is director at BKV Energy, where he oversees brand and go-to-market strategy, customer experience, marketing execution, and more.