Posted on 02/17/2021 6:13:45 AM PST by Oldeconomybuyer
Meanwhile they claim to create "better" jobs for US workers installing solar panels made in China, and we go back to the Jimmy Carter years, at the mercy of Iran and Russia because we are not producing fossil energy. And, oh yeah, energy prices go up.
“Electric grid regulators said the U.S. will have to develop vast supplies of power storage — such as gigantic batteries — that rely on emerging technologies that have only recently started becoming economical and feasible on a large scale.”
That’s a great green idea. So then you have to have huge landfills to handle them.
re: “How one Texas storm exposed an energy grid unprepared for climate change”
Idiots.
THIS was a cold weather event redux, first performed in 1989, repeated in 2011 and again here in 2021. Temps this time matched those in 1989, before Texas went with a de-regulated electric market. Temps in 2011 only dipped into the teens instead of the single digits as in 1989 and 2021.
“Report on Outages and Curtailments During the Southwest Cold Weather Event of February 1-5, 2011”
2-01-2011 Feb 2 2011 ERCOT blackouts
https://www.balch.com/files/upload/NERC_8_16_2011_SW_Cold_Weather_Event_Final_Report.pdf
Doc also contains:
“Impact of Cold Weather on Gas Production in the Texas
and New Mexico Gas Production Regions of the United
States During early February, 2011”
“Winterization Document”
Prepared for Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
Prepared by Gas Technology Institute
by Kent F. Perry
An excerpt from pg 188:
After a Senate Committee hearing, the bill was amended and unanimously adopted by the Texas Senate. The House unanimously passed the bill on May 23, and the bill was signed into law by Governor Richard Perry on June 17, 2011.
“February Power Blackouts Across Texas echoed 1989 Failures”
By Eric Dexheimer
Austin American-Statesman, Apr. 10, 2011
Posted Apr 11, 2011 at 12:01 AM
Updated Dec 12, 2018 at 10:13 AM
https://www.statesman.com/article/20110411/NEWS/304119704
Currently 14 states are dealing with blackouts due to this storm. It isn't just Texas.
Be interesting to learn how much of the NG silly problem was driven by loss of wind-generated electrical power.
“Pump failure” sounds especially likely as those pumps have electric motors.
Would it not be a supreme irony to discover that the failure of wind power, cascaded to cripple natural gas generating capacity also?
How “Climate Change” Created an Entire Grid Unprepared For One Texas Storm
They will fix it for sure and it shouldn't cost more than a trillion Dollars or two. Or maybe three.
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