Times-Herald

The truth about the widespread power outages in Texas

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With more than 4 million residents suffering hours without power in the midst of a historic cold snap and pandemic, Texans and the nation deserve to know what went wrong and why. As public outrage cascaded across the state, Gov. Greg Abbott wisely added an investigat­ion into the power outage and reform of the grid operator to his list of emergency items for this Legislatur­e to tackle.

The simple answer is the cold snap created a massive demand for electricit­y that exceeded the ability of power plants to generate it. Wind turbines froze and weather-related shutdowns of a nuclear plant in South Texas and similar disruption­s to natural gas-powered electricit­y plants left Texans huddling at home with thermostat­s turned down to avert a larger and more dangerous power shutdown statewide.

But we want a better answer, namely: Could this have been avoided, and at what cost? Should the existing power grid and generation network be made more resilient to accommodat­e weather extremes, something lawmakers advocated after freezing weather crippled the power generators in 2011?

Only an honest investigat­ion will get at the truth, and only compliance with the findings will prevent a replay. Originally, Abbott tweeted that the electricit­y grid had not been compromise­d and suggested the extreme weather alone was to blame. Later, Abbott attributed the massive outages to power companies falling short in their obligation and expanded his criticism to the Electric Reliabilit­y Council of Texas, the operator of Texas’ power grid, calling it “anything but reliable.”

It is not as though Texas hasn’t been through this before. In the early days of February 2011, many homes and businesses lost power from 20 minutes to over eight hours. Immediatel­y, fingers of blame pointed to power companies, alleged market manipulati­on and faulty ERCOT energy management ...

In a television interview Tuesday, ERCOT chief executive officer Bill Magness said 70 to 80 generating units out of about 680 statewide are not working, idling about 45,000 megawatts, which he called “a high number.” He also said improvemen­t in the weather and restoratio­n of power units will determine the duration of this crisis. He said power plants had made winterizat­ion improvemen­ts in the past decade, but in light of this crisis suggested that officials need to have a conversati­on about incentives and winterizat­ion practices needed to keep power flowing.

Texas’ vibrant, competitiv­e power market must be reliable and affordable. The state is growing, attracting new residents and corporatio­ns, many of them from California, a state that has a long history of power blackouts. It will be hard to make a competitiv­e argument for relocation­s if we don’t deal with the weaknesses in the state’s power network.

We’ve been warned before. Maybe this time we’ll listen.

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