Posted on Jan 27, 2022
Texas and Beyond: How prepared are U.S. cities for extreme weather?
1.44K
8
3
6
6
0
Posted 3 y ago
Responses: 2
Old article from last year about the freeze. Critics blame "green energy" and ignore other major contributors: An independent grid not connected to region, failed gas and coal sources, privatization, lack of cold weather mitigation practices and increased demand on limited supply.
https://www.businessinsider.com/texas-blackouts-millions-lost-power-in-storm-went-wrong-2021-2
https://www.businessinsider.com/texas-blackouts-millions-lost-power-in-storm-went-wrong-2021-2
Texas blackouts explained: Arctic weather shut down power plants as demand for heat surged, and...
Unusual arctic weather caused power plants to stop working just as households needed more heat, pushing the state over the edge.
(1)
(0)
SGT (Join to see)
When your water supply to generators is stopped then generators shutdown. No power then pumps for gas lines and their monitoring equipment shutdown which means no gas. Energy companies in Texas rolled the dice by not insulating waterlines. They craped out.
Its not like it hadn't happened before as in 2011 west Texas got nailed by artic air. Their water lines were above ground and not insulated which resulted in blackouts and boil water notices. ERCOT could have learned the lessons of EPE but chose to ignore them then they got a big freeze. The price of their stupidity was paid for in lives lost.
Its not like it hadn't happened before as in 2011 west Texas got nailed by artic air. Their water lines were above ground and not insulated which resulted in blackouts and boil water notices. ERCOT could have learned the lessons of EPE but chose to ignore them then they got a big freeze. The price of their stupidity was paid for in lives lost.
(0)
(0)
If they are going to depend only on "green energy" they are going to get slammed, just like Texas.
(1)
(0)
Read This Next