The Pak Banker

Texas power plants back online, households still in dark

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Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on Thursday that all power generating plants in the state were back online but hundreds of thousands of homes remain without energy because of downed lines and other issues after a ferocious winter storm and cold snap. While welcoming the progress, other leaders in Texas warned that the state's energy grid would remain extremely "fragile" for a few days and that the cold weather that created the problems would stick around through the weekend.

Some 325,000 households still do not have power, down from 2.7 million on Wednesday, and more than 13 million Texans are seeing interrupti­ons in their water services. Energy operators and state leaders including Abbott are facing withering criticism for the prolonged outages due to freezing temperatur­es that began four days ago.

Abbott said he has asked state legislator­s to push through laws mandating that all energy generation plants in Texas "winterize" their facilities like those in colder states do in the hope that future cold snaps don't result in electrical grid failures. "What happened this week to our fellow Texans is absolutely unacceptab­le and can never be replicated again," Abbott told an afternoon news conference.

The governor lashed out at the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas (ERCOT), a cooperativ­e responsibl­e for 90% of the state's electricit­y, which he said had told officials before the storm that the grid was prepared for the cold weather.

Judge Lina Hidalgo, the top elected official in Harris County, which encompasse­s Houston, said during an afternoon press conference that the number of homes without power in her county had fallen to 20,000 from 1.4 million a few nights ago. "The lights may be on, but we're not quite yet out of the dark, we're not quite yet out of all the challenges," Hidalgo said. "We're not through this yet." She warned Houston residents to prepare for the worst.

"The grid is still fragile. There is more cold weather coming tonight. So that's going to put pressure on these power plants that have just come back on," Hidalgo said. Hidalgo encouraged donations to food banks, with some residents struggling to secure food and water. She noted reports of senior centers and other vulnerable communitie­s lacking basic supplies.

Angry residents have trained much of their ire on ERCOT, which critics say did not heed warnings after a cold weather meltdown in 2011 to ensure that Texas' energy infrastruc­ture, which relies primarily on natural gas, was winterized. Critics have also raised questions about Abbott's leadership. U.S. Senator Ted Cruz came under fire for flying to the Mexican resort city of Cancun with his family in the middle of the crisis. The Republican lawmaker cut his trip short after his travels were reported, saying he would return to Texas and "get to the bottom of what happened."

Gary Southern, a 68-year-old real estate broker from Mineral Wells, Texas, said his power was restored on Wednesday afternoon, enabling him to have his first solid night of sleep since he lost electricit­y in the early hours of Monday. "It was one of the worst things we've ever had to go through," the lifelong Texan said, adding that he was frustrated at being told there would be rolling blackouts, only to go days without power at all. "I know a lot of people in our community still don't have it (power) and are frustrated."

The lack of power has cut off water supplies for millions, further strained hospitals' ability to treat patients amid a pandemic, and isolated vulnerable communitie­s with frozen roads still impassable in parts of the state.

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A woman leaves a shoe store as Israel reopens swathes of its economy, while it continues to lift restrictio­ns of a national lockdown to fight the coronaviru­s disease. -AFP
JERUSALEM A woman leaves a shoe store as Israel reopens swathes of its economy, while it continues to lift restrictio­ns of a national lockdown to fight the coronaviru­s disease. -AFP

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