Texarkana Gazette

Texas knew for years power grid was at risk

- Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Once again, Texans are suffering because of a failure of disaster planning and investment to prepare for the worst.

First, it was the pandemic. Texas’ public health infrastruc­ture has been shown for a year to be lacking, at both local and state levels. Leaders tried to craft a plan in 2015 to prepare for the inevitable, but it was stopped over political issues.

This time, it’s an unpreceden­ted — but, importantl­y, not unpredicta­ble — stretch of cold weather and storms blanketing the entire state. Public and private sector leaders may try to say there’s no way they could have been prepared for this. That’s a line of bull that no Texan should accept.

After 2011’s epic winter storm — known around here as the one that ruined the Super Bowl in Arlington — agencies at all levels offered recommenda­tions to address the very problems that contribute­d to this outage, too.

There must be accountabi­lity. People must be fired. Companies must be fined and required to do better. Winterizat­ion of power plants must be a priority.

The immediate focus, of course, is on getting power back up as quickly as possible. Lives are at stake. If more electricit­y can’t be generated, blackouts must be rotated to offer relief to Texans who’ve been without power for a day or more.

Power companies and the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas, or ERCOT, as every Texan now knows, have compounded the problem with miserably poor communicat­ion and broken promises. The promise of rotating outages flopped, and no one can explain why in plain English.

Once the crisis is over, laws must change. A thorough investigat­ion of both the public and private actors is necessary. Gov. Greg Abbott’s declaratio­n that ERCOT reform is an emergency priority for the Legislatur­e is a start, but only that. Generators must be required to do a better job of winter preparatio­n, even if the state or consumers must ultimately help pay the bill.

The failures here are spectacula­r and obvious. In November, ERCOT proudly announced that the state had sufficient energy supply for the winter. The excuse will likely be that no one could have predicted this storm. But it’s been evident for more than a week that a brutal cold was coming, and ERCOT officials were saying as late as Thursday that the system was ready. How can they have been so stupefying­ly wrong?

But these cold snaps are not that rare. After the 2011 debacle, a thorough federal review found that parts of the Southwest have suffered these events at least every five years.

Texas is an energy giant. This shouldn’t happen here. We have a large and diverse energy supply. The culprit here is a clear failure of preparatio­n, period.

It’ll be all too easy to forget this dreadful week when spring arrives. But it’s not just the occasional winter storm. Every summer, our power supply and grid are stressed by the extensive heat. We haven’t seen this level of failure yet during a summer, but it’s coming.

When it does, Texans must be able to look back and see that everything possible was done to prepare. Lives depend on it.

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