Business Standard

Power outages, water shortages as Texas shivers

Misery deepens as a new storm threatens the US east coast

- AGENCIES

The lack of power and safe water for millions of people in Texas may be compounded on Thursday by a band of foul weather stretching from the Rio Grande to New York.

The National Weather Service said a major winter storm would bring freezing rain, snow and temperatur­es that were “much below average,” a gut punch for Texans who have resorted to stoves, barbecue grills, gasoline generators and their vehicles to keep themselves warm.

Days of glacial weather have left at least 38 people dead nationwide, made many roads impassable, disrupted vaccine distributi­on and blanketed nearly three-quarters of the continenta­l United States in snow. As temperatur­es dropped and record snow fell on areas not accustomed to the cold, power generation tumbled with fuel starved plants shutting even as electricit­y demand surged. A projected call for 75,000 megawatts on Tuesday was met with up to 55,500 megawatts, leading to widespread outages.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott called for the top executives of its grid operator to resign, while other officials prepared to haul regulators and others to a hearing next

Thursday to explain what went wrong. Abbott used the outage to slam calls for greater use of renewable energy across the US.

Texas Agricultur­e Commission­er Sid Miller, though, placed the blame on

Abbott, noting that the governor appoints the Public

Utility Commission, which in turn appoints the state's grid operator.

"Gov Abbott is responsibl­e He's the man at the top," Miller said. He added that several of the grid board members live out of state,

"One of them lives in

Germany. How can you manage the grid in Texas if you're not even here? The extreme cold has left some residents to choose between staying in dark and cold homes, some with frozen or broken water pipes, or face Covid-19 exposure at local relief centers. Many homes are not insulated for the sub-zero temperatur­es in metro areas where February lows average 48 degrees Fahrenheit (9C). Meanwhile, Abbott is banning sales of the state’s natural gas beyond its borders in the latest sign the crisis roiling energy markets and leaving millions in the dark is far from abating. Top US liquefied natural gas exporter Cheniere Energy said it’s temporaril­y cutting natural gas and electricit­y consumptio­n to help the Texas power grid, and that its decision was made ahead of Abbott’s order.

Power demand on the Ercot grid (see chart) is starting to pick up signalling that fewer blackouts are needed to keep the system stable. While Ercot earlier said the increase in generation was able to bring power back to about 1.6 million households, there still remain more than 1 million outages in the state.

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