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Cold snap leaves one dead, over 4 million without power in Texas

Published 02/15/2021, 10:25 AM
Updated 02/16/2021, 04:56 AM
© Reuters. Wind turbines stand above the plains north of Amarillo, Texas

By Maria Caspani

(Reuters) - At least one person was dead and more than 4 million were without power in Texas after a rare deep freeze forced the state's electric grid operator to impose rotating blackouts because of higher power demand.

The cause of the death of the person was suspected to be exposure to "extreme low temperatures", Houston Police Chief Art Acevedo said on Twitter.

The PowerOutage.us website, which tracks power outages, said 4,113,701 Texas customers were experiencing outages at 2:05 a.m. ET (0705 GMT) on Tuesday.

The cold snap sweeping Texas reached the northern part of neighboring Mexico as well, where authorities said 4.7 million users lost power early on Monday. Around midday, service had been restored to almost 2.6 million of them.

(Graphic: Texas power prices surge after cold snap forces grid operator to impose rolling blackouts - https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/jbyvrdkrbve/TexasPowerPrice.png)

President Joe Biden declared an emergency on Monday, unlocking federal assistance to Texas, where temperatures ranged from 28 to minus 8 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 2 to minus 22 Celsius).

"The Texas power grid has not been compromised. The ability of some companies that generate the power has been frozen," Governor Greg Abbott wrote on Twitter. "They are working to get generation back on line."

Abbott also deployed the National Guard statewide to assist in the restoration of electricity.

Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport said it would remain closed until at least 1 p.m. CST (1900 GMT) on Tuesday, while the city's Hobby Airport ceased operations until at least noon on Tuesday due to the inclement weather.

The freeze also took a toll on the state's energy industry, by far the country's largest crude producer, shutting oil refineries and forcing restrictions from natural gas pipeline operators.

Apart from Texas, much of the United States was in the grip of bone-chilling weather over the three-day Presidents Day holiday weekend.

The National Weather Service (NWS) said an Arctic air mass had spread southward, well beyond areas accustomed to freezing weather, with winter storm warnings posted for most of the Gulf Coast region, Oklahoma and Missouri.

(Graphic: Texas gripped by severe cold snap, arctic temperatures seen stretching for 5 days more - https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/yxmpjxrlzpr/texasTempsandForecast.png)

In Louisiana, where freezing temperatures also prompted power outages and road closures, some parishes imposed curfews to keep residents off the road. Another 110,000 homes and businesses were without power Monday night.

RECORD DEMAND

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) sought to cut power use in response to a winter record of 69,150 megawatts on Sunday evening, more than 3,200 MW higher than the previous winter peak in January 2018.

About 10,500 MW of customer load was shed at the highest point, enough power to serve approximately 2 million homes, it said, adding that extreme weather caused many generating units across fuel types to trip offline and become unavailable.

"Controlled outages will continue through today and into early tomorrow, possibly all of tomorrow," Dan Woodfin, director of systems operations at ERCOT, told a briefing.

The storms knocked out nearly half the state's wind power generation capacity on Sunday. Wind generation ranks as the second-largest source of electricity in Texas, accounting for 23% of state power supplies, ERCOT estimates.

Of the 25,000-plus MW of wind power capacity normally available in Texas, 12,000 MW were out of service on Sunday morning, an ERCOT spokeswoman said.

An emergency notice issued by the regulator urged customers to limit power usage and prevent an uncontrolled system-wide outage.

The spot price of electricity on the Texas power grid spiked more than 10,000% on Monday. [NGA/]

Due to the extreme cold across the region where it operates, Arkansas-based Southwest Power Pool (NASDAQ:POOL) said it had directed member utilities to implement rolling blackouts.

"In our history as a grid operator, this is an unprecedented event and it marks the first time SPP has ever had to call for controlled interruptions of service," Executive Vice President Lanny Nickell said in a statement.

The NWS said the Arctic blast will not subside until later this week. There is another storm on the way on Wednesday, expected to bring more snow, ice and sleet from the Texas panhandle through Kentucky and up through Washington D.C. to New York City, New Jersey and Boston.

© Reuters. Cold front in northern Mexico

"It's not really going to warm up until at least Friday," said David Roth, of the NWS Weather Prediction Center. "We're not getting a break."

Latest comments

Global cooling!! We need to generate more pollution to correct this. Al Gore, please fly your private jet more often.
Let’s call AOC and ask her advice unless she’s still busy with Nancy’s hate fest.
Cold snap? I thought we were all gonna perish from GLOBAL WARMING. Fake Gore. Lockbox.
Texas: Now imagine a whole planet (Earth) where there is no electricity, oil, LNG, or hope. Tic-toc.
Wind Turbines are freezing up.
Oh but but “climate change” initiatives are more effiecient ... says the frozen wind turbine owners. :/
The end result of "Global Warming" ignored will be Global freezing. Do the math.Tic-toc.
So much for Green Energy ⚡
Who would think that wind mills would freeze and solar panels would be covered in snow?
I'm glad You noticed.
in texas 😂😂
Every year texas is hit with a tornado, flood, and now snow storms.
The storms knocked out nearly half the Texas wind power generation capacity on Sunday. Wind generation ranks as the second-largest source of electricity in Texas, accounting for 23% of state power supplies, ERCOT estimates.>> so much for reliable green energy....
surely to be the hottest February on record
Shows how shallow the reporting is - rare ? . It used to be common to get deep freezes 20s ,40s ,60s etc  lasting for weeks in winter. We are seeing these deeper temps  now only spiking low for a few weeks  every few years now. Texas in the 1940s had an average 36 days when it dropped to 0F or lower. In the 2010 it was 24 average days. Now in 2021 its 20 days. So yes the climate crisis is accelerating.
Global warming is fine but dont make us pay double and a fee for ‘climate change’
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