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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTen years ago, 241 Texas power plants couldn't take the cold. Dozens of them failed again this year.
By Neena Satija and Aaron Gregg
March 6, 2021 at 9:55 a.m. EST
The corporate and municipal owners of more than 30 power-generation plants in Texas appear to have failed to adequately heed a decade of warnings to better prepare for deadly winter weather, contributing to their malfunctions or shutdowns during last months historic winter freeze that led to statewide power outages and a humanitarian crisis.
Facilities owned by Fortune 500 energy giants NRG, Calpine Corporation and Vistra Corporation, all headquartered in Texas, and the Chicago-based Exelon, experienced shutdowns during last months winter storm as well as during the states last historic cold snap a decade ago, according to a review by The Washington Post. In testimony to state lawmakers, documents for shareholders and statements to The Post, the companies have said that last months problems occurred at least in part due to a failure to properly winterize equipment in other words, to implement certain upgrades designed to protect power infrastructure from the cold. The same issue contributed to their shutdowns back in 2011.
The entire energy sector failed Texas. We know we can do better and we must do better to make sure that this never happens again, said Mauricio Gutierrez, chief executive of NRG, while testifying before Texas lawmakers last week. We did suffer our share of unit problems ... for that reason, we own it. We did not perform as well as I would have hoped.
Publicly owned power generators Austin Energy and CPS Energy, which provide electricity to San Antonio, also experienced problems during both storms, according to data provided by the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), a nonprofit that operates Texas power grid and energy trading market.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/03/06/texas-power-plants
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Ten years ago, 241 Texas power plants couldn't take the cold. Dozens of them failed again this year. (Original Post)
DonViejo
Mar 2021
OP
dalton99a
(81,486 posts)1. And it will happen again.
And what happened this time will be forgotten...because what happened 10 years ago was forgotten!
If the people of Texas don't insist on the needed improvements and changes, then what happens to them next time is on them...not the politicians, not the energy companies...the next time the people of Texas will be responsible for their own deaths and suffering, because they failed...
ananda
(28,860 posts)3. El Paso didn't forget. They joined the western power grid and..
managed very well during last months' polar event.