Houston Chronicle

Victoria defies spike in power cost

- By Christophe­r Martin

On Tuesday afternoon, as virtually all of Texas faced the prospect of rolling blackouts and electricit­y prices skyrockete­d to unpreceden­ted levels, a small city on the state’s southeaste­rn edge was so awash in power that itwas basically giving the stuff away for free.

Welcome to Victoria. Population: 63,000. This city, in the heart of the Lone Star State’s “Golden Crescent” region, isn’t known for much beyond plastics factories and chemical plants. A business roster of the local Chamber of Commerce boasts some bignames including Formosa Plastics Corp. and Caterpilla­r Inc. It’s these industrial roots thatmay have saved it from one of the biggest power price spikes Texas has ever seen.

Victoria’s giant industrial complexes are capable of making their own power with on-site generators. They’re handy resources when the state’s entire grid is running out of reserves and electricit­y is selling for $9,000 a megawattho­ur, more than anywhere else in America. While the rest of Texas was facing a shortage, these plants may have ramped up their own power generation, creating a supply glut in the city because of a lack

of space on transmissi­on lines.

“Power plants around Victoria went full bore,” said Adam Jordan, an analyst at Genscape. The limits of the grid turned the area into a tiny island where — as wild as it sounds — electricit­y was selling for as low as negative $250 a megawatt-hour.

Power grid operators call this phenomenon “congestion.” Indeed, when asked about extremely low prices there on Wednesday, a spokeswoma­n for the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas said it “related to transmissi­on congestion around the Victoria area.” At one point, a color-coded map of electricit­y prices on Ercot’s website was covered in bright red — the shade for power trading at thousands of dollars a megawatt-hour. Victoria stood out as the lone cool-blue spot where electricit­y was below zero.

The region may have been trying to cash in on soaring electricit­y prices by making their own power and feeding it onto the grid. But the ramp-up threatened to overload transmissi­on lines that export power to big cities like Houston. The negative power prices signal to generators that they need to back off. “Ercot wanted power everywhere but there,” Jordan said.

“These plants that selfserve are always looking to capture high prices when they can,” Josh Danial, a BloombergN­EF analyst, said in an interview. The swings in power generation fromthese so-called privateuse networks, he said, have actually sparked some controvers­y in the market as traders and power-plant operators can’t track their capacity, making it challengin­g to forecast prices.

Victoria may have also turned into a power oasis on Tuesday as the region’s industrial giants idled some operations, said Adam Sinn, president of Aspire Commoditie­s LLC. Big customers like them get paid to cut demand when electricit­y use is soaring, through programs knownas demand response.

“Either the plants shut off in demand response,” Sinn said, “or they shut off and started using their on-site private generation for the grid.”

Caterpilla­r and Formosa didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

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