The Commercial Appeal

Experts: Deadly storms to endure

Cracks in preparedne­ss exposed by winter’s fury

- Matthew Daly and Ellen Knickmeyer

WASHINGTON – Deadly weather will be hitting the U.S. more often, and America needs to get better at dealing with it, experts said as Texas and other states battled winter storms that blew past the worst-case planning of utilities, government­s and millions of shivering people.

This week’s storms, with more still heading east, fit a pattern of worsening extremes under climate change and demonstrat­e anew that local, state and federal officials have failed to do nearly enough to prepare for greater and more dangerous weather, experts say.

At least two dozen people died this week, including from fire or carbon monoxide poisoning while struggling to find warmth in their homes. In Oklahoma City, an Arctic blast plunged temperatur­es to as low as 14 degrees below zero.

“This is a different kind of storm,” said Kendra Clements, one of several businesspe­ople in Oklahoma City who opened buildings to shelter homeless people, some with frostbite, hypothermi­a and icicles in their hair. It was also a harbinger of what social service providers and government­s say will be a surge of increased needs for society’s most vulnerable as climate and natural disasters worsen.

Other Americans also are at risk. Power supplies of all sorts failed in the extreme cold, including natural gasfired power plants that were knocked offline amid icy conditions and, to a smaller extent, wind turbines that froze and stopped working. More than 100 million people live in areas under winter weather warnings, watches or advisories, and blackouts are expected to continue in some parts of the country for days.

The crisis sounded an alarm for power systems throughout the country: As climate change worsens, severe conditions that go beyond historical norms are becoming ever more common. Texas expects power demand to peak in the heat of summer, not the depths of winter.

The dire storms come as President Joe Biden aims to spend up to $2 trillion on infrastruc­ture and clean energy investment over four years. Biden pledged to update the U.S. power grid to be carbon-pollution free by 2035 as well as weatherize buildings, repair roads and build electric vehicle charging stations.

“Building resilient and sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture that can withstand extreme weather and a changing climate will play an integral role” in creating jobs and meeting Biden’s goal of “a netzero emissions future,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

The storms are big news this week, especially in light of their effect on COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns, but that doesn’t mean they won’t become more common, experts say.

“This definitely was an anomaly,” but one that is likely to occur more frequently as a result of climate change, said Sara Eftekharne­jad, assistant professor of electrical engineerin­g and computer science at Syracuse University.

“There probably needs to be better planning, because we’re starting to see more extreme weather events across the country,” she said, whether it’s severe cold in Texas or the intense heat wave in California last year that fueled deadly wildfires.

Better forecastin­g, short-term and long-term, would help avoid catastroph­ic failures such as the current outages in Texas and other states, as would large-scale storage systems that can supply electricit­y when demand spikes and a greater diversity of power sources, Eftekharne­jad and other experts said.

Climate change also is hurting military readiness. Damage from a 2018 hurricane at Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida and 2019 flooding at Nebraska’s Offutt Air Force Base led the Pentagon to send service members as far away as Britain to train.

Another 2018 hurricane that hit North Carolina’s Camp Lejeune, home to one-third of the U.S. Marine Corps’ capability, caused enough damage to degrade training overall, senior U.S. military authoritie­s said.

Hardening military installati­ons against worsening natural disasters will cost trillions. But it has to be done, said Joan Vandervort, a former longtime Defense Department climate expert now with the Center for Climate and Security think tank. “We have eyes overseas that are looking at our vulnerabil­ity and seeing how we respond. … There are enemies out there that will certainly take advantage of it.”

Michael Craig, an assistant professor of energy systems at the University of Michigan, said the events in California and Texas show that “what we have now is not going to do it in the face of climate change. It’s only going to get worse from here.”

The disaster in Texas and other states “is a reminder that our nation’s critical infrastruc­ture is vulnerable to extreme weather events and we can no longer turn a blind eye to the resiliency investment­s needed to protect it,” said Sen. Tom Carper, D-del., chairman of the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee.

“The cost associated with addressing climate change and improving our infrastruc­ture’s resilience is always going to be less than the cost of rebuilding or failing to act,” Carper said.

Federal regulators are examining the operations of the bulk-power system during the severe winter storm that affected states from Louisiana to Minnesota.

In Texas, where wind power is a growing source of electricit­y, the wind turbines generally are not equipped to withstand extended low temperatur­es, as they are in Iowa and other coldweathe­r states. Modifying the turbines slightly to withstand freezing temperatur­es is one step needed to confront climate change, said Roy Mccann, professor of electrical engineerin­g at the University of Arkansas.

While some Republican politician­s, including Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, have tried to pin blame on wind and solar power for the outages, traditiona­l thermal power plants, which rely mostly on natural gas, provide the bulk of power in the state and were the larger problem.

“The entire system was overwhelme­d,” said Joshua Rhodes, a research associate on energy issues at the University of Texas.

 ?? SUE OGROCKI/AP ?? Billy Madden and his dogs Underdog (on lap) and Leroy Brown find refuge this week at Tribe Gym, turned into a temporary homeless shelter in Oklahoma City, Okla.
SUE OGROCKI/AP Billy Madden and his dogs Underdog (on lap) and Leroy Brown find refuge this week at Tribe Gym, turned into a temporary homeless shelter in Oklahoma City, Okla.

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