The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Texas’ energy pride goes out with cold

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Anger over Texas’ power grid failing in the face of a record winter freeze mounted Tuesday as millions of residents in the energy capital of the U.S. remained shivering with no assurances that their electricit­y and heat - out for 24 hours or longer in many homes - would return soon or stay on once it finally does.

“I know people are angry and frustrated,” said Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, who woke up to more than 1 million people still without power in his city. “So am I.”

In all, more than 4 million customers in Texas still had no power a full day after historic snowfall and single-digit temperatur­es created a surge in demand for electricit­y to warm up homes unaccustom­ed to such extreme lows, buckling the state’s power grid and causing widespread blackouts.

Making matters worse, expectatio­ns that the outages would be shared evenly by the state’s 30 million residents quickly gave way to a cold reality, as pockets in some of America’s largest cities, including San Antonio, Dallas and Austin, were left to shoulder the lasting brunt of a catastroph­ic power failure, and in subfreezin­g conditions that Texas’ grid operators had known was coming.

The breakdown sparked growing outrage and demands for answers over how Texas - whose Republican leaders as recently as last year taunted California over the Democratic-led state’s rolling blackouts - failed such a massive test of a major point of state pride: energy independen­ce. And it cut through politics, as fuming Texans took to social media to highlight how while their neighborho­ods froze in the dark Monday night, downtown skylines glowed despite desperate calls to conserve energy.

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