San Antonio Express-News

Don’t blame wind energy for crisis

- By Benjamin D. Leibowicz Benjamin D. Leibowicz is an assistant professor of operations research and industrial engineerin­g at The University of Texas at Austin.

Many wind turbines froze in Texas recently, leading to conflictin­g narratives on the role that wind power played in causing crippling blackouts.

Wind’s defenders point out that ERCOT, the Texas electric grid operator, expected to rely on wind to satisfy only 7 percent of the winter peak demand, and that natural gas plant outages were responsibl­e for most of the shortfall. Wind power’s critics argue that low expectatio­ns for its ability to produce power when it’s needed most reveal a major flaw, and that the Texas grid is unreliable due to overinvest­ment in wind.

So who’s right?

It makes sense to judge wind relative to those expectatio­ns, even if they’re low. More importantl­y, the blackouts were a systemic failure of our energy infrastruc­ture to cope with severe winter weather. Instead of blaming any one generation source, such as wind or natural gas, we must get serious about making investment­s to protect our energy infrastruc­ture from a wide range of threats.

When utilities decide how much to invest in each generation resource — like wind and natural gas — they consider two types of value to the electricit­y system. First, the utility’s overall mix of resources needs to be reliable, so a resource that will be available with high confidence during times of maximum electricit­y demand has great value. Natural gas “peaking” plants, which are cheap to build but expensive to operate, have traditiona­lly played this role.

Second, the utility wants to minimize its costs of supplying electricit­y, so a resource that generates a lot of cheap power has considerab­le value. Although wind isn’t expected to contribute much to reliabilit­y because its output depends on the weather, it is a very cheap and clean electricit­y source.

It is important to judge each resource relative to the type of value the utility expected to obtain from that resource.

As an analogy, imagine that your home has rooftop solar panels and a backup diesel generator. You like your solar panels because they generally reduce your electric bills and make your electricit­y consumptio­n cleaner. If the grid has a blackout, it’s nighttime and your backup generator breaks, it would be foolish to blame your solar panels for your lack of power — you never expected them to provide electricit­y at night.

In contrast, the entire value of your backup generator, which is expensive to run, is predicated on its ability to supply power during a rare blackout. The fact that it failed is a huge disappoint­ment since it didn’t provide the type of value you expected to receive.

Each generation resource has unique pros and cons, but virtually all types of generation failed to cope with this most recent extreme cold in Texas. Wind turbines froze. Natural gas plants could not get fuel as gas wells froze, and outdoor equipment failed at coal, gas and nuclear plants.

Wind turbines are getting a bad rap, but there’s nothing inherently wrong with our mix of generation resources. All of these energy infrastruc­ture components operate just fine in places with much colder winters than Texas. Their utilities and energy companies take steps to cold-proof their assets, such as enclosing power plants, building wind turbines with de-icing systems, and using chemicals to prevent oil and gas wells from freezing.

We need to stop pointing fingers and instead consider specific investment­s to upgrade the resilience of Texas’ energy infrastruc­ture and whether the benefits outweigh the costs.

But as we do so, we must look ahead. The actions we take now should protect Texas against other lurking threats like extreme summer heat, hurricanes and cyberattac­ks as well.

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