Texas

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
i read where electric has a 10,000x increase in price
Remember when Shrub's administration said California's 2001 energy crisis was due to "market forces" and blamed the people rather than the real cause, Enron manipulating the energy market?

"The biggest problem in California is consumers are not going to see the price signals. If they don't see the price signals, they are not changing behavior so the problem is going to get worse," Lay said.

So, OK, this is a real natural disaster. It was also predictable. Capitalists fail to account for the value of human lives in their spreadsheets.

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schuylaar

Well-Known Member
i read where electric has a 10,000x increase in price
so now Texas will fvck people for their leaderships shortcomings by cheaping out and passing the cost on to..the consumer in addition to having to put up with the inconvenience.

'if you want de-regulation Texas, this is what you have to put up with':wall:
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Remember when Shrub's administration said California's 2001 energy crisis was due to "market forces" and blamed the people rather than the real cause, Enron manipulating the energy market?

"The biggest problem in California is consumers are not going to see the price signals. If they don't see the price signals, they are not changing behavior so the problem is going to get worse," Lay said.

So, OK, this is a real natural disaster. It was also predictable. Capitalists fail to account for the value of human lives in their spreadsheets.

View attachment 4829995
how apropos +rep:clap:
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Texas leaders failed to heed warnings that left the state's power grid vulnerable to winter extremes, experts say
Texas officials knew winter storms could leave the state’s power grid vulnerable, but they left the choice to prepare for harsh weather up to the power companies — many of which opted against the costly upgrades. That, plus a deregulated energy market largely isolated from the rest of the country’s power grid, left the state alone to deal with the crisis, experts said.

Millions of Texans have gone days without power or heat in subfreezing temperatures brought on by snow and ice storms. Limited regulations on companies that generate power and a history of isolating Texas from federal oversight help explain the crisis, energy and policy experts told The Texas Tribune.

While Texas Republicans were quick to pounce on renewable energy and to blame frozen wind turbines, the natural gas, nuclear and coal plants that provide most of the state’s energy also struggled to operate during the storm. Officials with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the energy grid operator for most of the state, said that the state’s power system was simply no match for the deep freeze.

“Nuclear units, gas units, wind turbines, even solar, in different ways — the very cold weather and snow has impacted every type of generator,” said Dan Woodfin, a senior director at ERCOT.

Energy and policy experts said Texas’ decision not to require equipment upgrades to better withstand extreme winter temperatures, and choice to operate mostly isolated from other grids in the U.S. left power system unprepared for the winter crisis.

Policy observers blamed the power system failure on the legislators and state agencies who they say did not properly heed the warnings of previous storms or account for more extreme weather events warned of by climate scientists. Instead, Texas prioritized the free market.

“Clearly we need to change our regulatory focus to protect the people, not profits,” said Tom “Smitty” Smith, a now-retired former director of Public Citizen, an Austin-based consumer advocacy group who advocated for changes after in 2011 when Texas faced a similar energy crisis.


source

This is the capper to the article:

The North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which has some authority to regulate power generators in the U.S., is currently developing mandatory standards for “winterizing” energy infrastructure, a spokesperson said.

Texas politicians and regulators were warned after the 2011 storm that more “winterizing” of power infrastructure was necessary, a report by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the North American Electric Reliability Corporation shows. The large number of units that tripped offline or couldn’t start during that storm “demonstrates that the generators did not adequately anticipate the full impact of the extended cold weather and high winds,” regulators wrote at the time. More thorough preparation for cold weather could have prevented the outages, the report said.


NERC is being BLAMED for Texas's official's own failures. It's a non-profit, run by out of state poo-bahs with real jobs elsewhere and the elected officials who were given adequate warnings after a similar event in 2011 are doing everything they can to shift blame away from themselves.
 
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rkymtnman

Well-Known Member
Texas leaders failed to heed warnings that left the state's power grid vulnerable to winter extremes, experts say
Texas officials knew winter storms could leave the state’s power grid vulnerable, but they left the choice to prepare for harsh weather up to the power companies — many of which opted against the costly upgrades. That, plus a deregulated energy market largely isolated from the rest of the country’s power grid, left the state alone to deal with the crisis, experts said.

Millions of Texans have gone days without power or heat in subfreezing temperatures brought on by snow and ice storms. Limited regulations on companies that generate power and a history of isolating Texas from federal oversight help explain the crisis, energy and policy experts told The Texas Tribune.

While Texas Republicans were quick to pounce on renewable energy and to blame frozen wind turbines, the natural gas, nuclear and coal plants that provide most of the state’s energy also struggled to operate during the storm. Officials with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, the energy grid operator for most of the state, said that the state’s power system was simply no match for the deep freeze.

“Nuclear units, gas units, wind turbines, even solar, in different ways — the very cold weather and snow has impacted every type of generator,” said Dan Woodfin, a senior director at ERCOT.

Energy and policy experts said Texas’ decision not to require equipment upgrades to better withstand extreme winter temperatures, and choice to operate mostly isolated from other grids in the U.S. left power system unprepared for the winter crisis.

Policy observers blamed the power system failure on the legislators and state agencies who they say did not properly heed the warnings of previous storms or account for more extreme weather events warned of by climate scientists. Instead, Texas prioritized the free market.

“Clearly we need to change our regulatory focus to protect the people, not profits,” said Tom “Smitty” Smith, a now-retired former director of Public Citizen, an Austin-based consumer advocacy group who advocated for changes after in 2011 when Texas faced a similar energy crisis.

source
Gov Abbott: "its a 100 year storm. it would cost too much to prepare for soemthing this infrequent"

Mother Nature: "this happened in 1989, 2011 and 2021"
 

CunningCanuk

Well-Known Member
Being in rural northern California and worrying about our house burning down for about 5 out of 12 months every year, I have a hard time being anything but sympathetic to their issues, nor wanting to tell them they deserve it for their votes and lack of planning. This state being the polar opposite, yet still with the same problems, because people in general are just not as awesome as we think they are. I feel for them, despite their idiocy in thinking that Cruz is anything other than a complete slimeball pos.
Not everyone in Texas votes for Republicans. The Democrats who wanted better representation and voted for it are suffering too.

I don’t get the “fuck Texas” attitude myself.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Progressives target 'Cancun Cruz' in ad to run on 147 Texas radio stations
The left-leaning No Excuses political action committee is launching an ad to run across 147 different radio stations in Texas taking aim at Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) going to Cancun, Mexico while his state deals with the fallout of a major winter storm leaving millions without power.

The 30-second ad dubs the senator “Cancun Cruz” for flying to Mexico on Wednesday as well as Cruz's defense of the trip on Thursday the day after photos of him on a flight headed to the resort city surfaced, according to The Washington Post.

I was hoping for an Onion type of ad on Youtube, no luck.
 

CunningCanuk

Well-Known Member
they had the audacity to tell (try to) other states how to "find" election fraud. nope, sorry, but texas can go f themselves.

there's a famous saying: those who criticize wind turbines shouldn't live in natural gas houses.
I understand the sentiment but I think it’s important to remember the people who implemented bad policies are not suffering one bit. The Governor is warm. Ted Cruz would be on a beach in Mexico if he didn’t get caught at the airport.

The citizens are the ones suffering and 40% of them voted for better representation than they got.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I understand the sentiment but I think it’s important to remember the people who implemented bad policies are not suffering one bit. The Governor is warm. Ted Cruz would be on a beach in Mexico if he didn’t get caught at the airport.

The citizens are the ones suffering and 40% of them voted for better representation than they got.
Most of the time the people are taught a bitter lesson, but this bunch are trumpers and this incident will have little or no impact, just like Donald's lack of covid response made little difference. Perhaps with the changing demographics in Texas it might speed up the conversion to purple, but remember they elected Louie Gohmert too, so there are a lot of shitheads there.
 
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