Gulf Times

Winter storm grips shivering southeast US

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Millions of people were still without power yesterday in Texas, the oil and gas capital of the United States, as an unusual winter storm pummelled the southeaste­rn part of country. The National Weather Service (NWS) issued a winter storm warning for more than 100mn Americans living from east Texas to the East Coast state of Maryland.

Millions of Texans yesterday began their third day without heat in the wake of a punishing winter storm that has killed at least 21 people, as icy conditions threatened to plague the country’s largest state and the surroundin­g region for days.

Some 2.7mn Texas households were still without power, according to the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas (ERCOT), a cooperativ­e responsibl­e for 90% of the state’s electricit­y which has come under increasing fire for the outages.

Laura Nowell, a 45-year-old mother-of-four in Waco, Texas, said her family has been without electricit­y since before dawn on Monday and has been trying to keep warm by bundling up and running and sitting in their car for short stints.

“We’ve never had this much cold. There is ice everywhere,” Nowell said, adding that she was frustrated by the lack of communicat­ion about rolling blackouts to conserve the power grid. “Tell me what’s going on. It’s silence.”

The National Weather Service warned that historical­ly low temperatur­es would continue for days. Moreover, a low responsibl­e for the snow and freezing rain crippling the region was moving east and heavy ice accumulati­on was expected in parts of Texas, the Lower Mississipp­i Valley, Virginia and North Carolina, it said.

Harris county judge Lina Hidalgo, the top government executive in Harris County, Texas, yesterday said the ongoing storms were straining not only the local electric grid but triggering a cascade of effects, including lost water pressure, carbon monoxide poisoning and halted Covid-19 vaccinatio­ns.

“A lot of it really is just beyond what our infrastruc­ture can really stand and it’s really testing a lot of people,” Hidalgo told MSNBC, adding that she is warning residents the power issues are likely to last after the weather clears out.

The storm has killed at least 21 people across four states, and the weather service predicted that temperatur­es for a few days would remain 20 to 35 degrees below average across parts of the central and southern US.

Texas’ deregulate­d energy market gives little financial incentives for operators to prepare for the rare bout of intensely cold weather, critics have said for years.

Natural gas wells and pipelines in Texas, the country’s biggest energy-producing state, do not undergo the winterisat­ion of those farther north — resulting in many being knocked offline by the prolonged freezing weather.

ERCOT, which instituted blackouts to cope with a surge in demand it says was caused by the unusually cold weather, said it was working to restore power as quickly as possible.

“We know millions of people are suffering,” ERCOT president and chief executive Bill Magness said in a statement. “We have no other priority than getting them electricit­y.”

The electricit­y shortfall caused prices to spike, raising questions about the operations of the state’s grid.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott demanded that state lawmakers investigat­e ERCOT and pass reforms.

Shivering Texans lashed out at ERCOT over social media.

“Price gouging!!!” Rebecca Michael Gonzales said on Facebook, where others posted GIFs of slithering snakes. “It isn’t high demand. It is you not keeping up with maintenanc­e. You need to pay people for what you put them through,” Carol Alford said on Facebook.

 ??  ?? A family huddles around as they try to stay warm in their home in the BlackHawk neighbourh­ood in Pflugervil­le, Texas.
A family huddles around as they try to stay warm in their home in the BlackHawk neighbourh­ood in Pflugervil­le, Texas.

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