Why did the electrical grid fail in Texas

As Texas officials point to political issues, outside energy observers could see the looming humanitarian crisis that an Arctic blast would cause the state. At its peak, almost five-million customers were without power this week as ERCOT, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, struggled to keep the grid from total failure. On Wednesday morning, 2.9 million were still without power as temperatures dropped to as low as zero degrees, and ERCOT announced more outages were coming.

Electricity comes to Texas

Galveston, Texas, got the first powerplant in the state in the 1880s, and electrification came slowly. An attempt to dam the Colorado River to power Austin was a failure when designers didn’t account for low water levels during the summer months. Power stations popped up to support cities and large towns, with a more significant effort to provide electrification for factories beginning during World War I. The independent utility companies began to link together, and the power grid in Texas was born.

In 1935, Congress passed the Public Utility Act (PUA) to end market power abuses over electricity distribution. Title II of PUA created the Federal Power Act, which created interstate electrical distribution regulations and defined federal and state jurisdiction to set wholesale and retail electricity prices. Three electrical grids were born, The Eastern Interconnection, the Western Interconnection, and the Texas Interconnected System.

Why did Texas create an independent grid

Texan energy producers didn’t want federal oversight for distribution, safety, plant construction, or pricing, so they created an independent grid closed to interstate transmission. At the time, the decision made sense. Texas was rich with coal, oil, and gas and could dam larger rivers such as the Colorado.

When World War II started, electrification accelerated in Texas to help with war production. During the war, Texas was allowed to operate under an exception and connect to out-of-state power grids. The electrical system in Texas operated without minimal oversight and regulation until a series of events from 1965 to 1976 changed the landscape.

On November 9, 1965, a 230-kilovolt transmission line in Ontario, Canada, “tripped,” which send a cascading failure through the power grid in Canada and the northeastern United States. In a matter of minutes, 30 million people were without power. It was the largest non-disaster-related power outage in history until 2003. The simple failure exposed how vulnerable the United States electrical grid was, and in many ways, still is.

In response, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) was created in 1970, and regulation came to the state. The grid run by ERCOT remains outside the reach of federal regulators. ERCOT regulates intrastate electrical transmission, and at the time of its creation, Texas had no interstate connections.

In 1976 a small Texas utility company deliberately sent electricity across the border to Oklahoma for a few hours. The “Midnight Connection” set off a legal battle that threatened to bring the state under federal regulation, but ultimately ERCOT and regulators prevailed. Additionally, Texas was allowed to maintain two small connections to the Eastern Interconnect as an outcome of the legal action, which remains today. Texas has two more additional links to Mexico, providing and sharing power to the neighboring nation.

How did Texas get into the current situation

Before fracking was perfected in the 2000s, light sweet Texas crude became harder to find, and oil was an expensive energy source. Coal mining operations in the state also decreased due to low-quality coal and operation costs. The Texas power grid increasingly moved to natural gas, which is cheap and plentiful. Additionally, natural gas power plants are more affordable to operate and produce fewer carbon emissions.

The lack of federal oversight created neglect within the power plants. Texas has experienced multiple cold snaps that have crippled electrical production in the past, including 1989, 2003, 2006, and 2011.

In 2011, widespread outages tore through Texas because electrical failures crippled the natural gas supply, coupled with demand. Power plants had to be taken offline as instruments, and cooling systems froze solid. 

Power plants in Texas are built to operate in the blistering heat that blankets the state in the summer months. Under federal rules, Texas would require more robust winterization, but power operators are exempt from these regulations.

Fundamentally, power plants are steam generators that require a lot of water. Superheated steam at high pressure is used to spin turbines that produce electricity. The water then must be cooled to prevent the boilers from destroying themselves and then turned back into steam. If the water in these systems starts to freeze, the plants can’t operate.

After the power outages of 2011, ERCOT recommended several changes, including more robust winterization for power plants. The changes never happened because they were guidelines only and due to the cost involved. Some of the recommended changes, like installing heaters in wind generators to keep hydraulic fluids from freezing, were ignored.

According to ERCOT, over 50% of the electricity it generates is produced by natural gas. Historic demand created cooling in the pipelines that transmit the resource. Propane, a form of refined natural gas is actually used as a refrigerant in industrial applications. As demand skyrocketed the natural gas in the pipelines cooled and turned into a refrigeration system on a statewide scale. The pipelines literally froze, cutting off the gas supply and shutting down power plants. Once the pipelines froze, the frigid ambient temperatures kept them locked in ice.

Additionally, Texas deregulated electrical markets in 1999 under Texas Senate Bill 7 (SB7). The bill unbundled the state’s vertically integrated public utilities and created a fully deregulated retail market. This action split generation providers (companies that make electricity), transmission owners (companies that own the distribution infrastructure), and retailers (companies that sell electricity) apart in most markets. This change represented complete free-market enterprise for 70% of Texas residents.

Electricity pricing in Texas has become cutthroat, with consumers only interacting with a retailer in most markets. By 2017, 92% of Texans had changed their electrical provider at least once, seeking lower rates. Risky retail schemes were created by companies such as Griddy. Griddy enabled their retail customers to buy electricity at wholesale market prices. The benefit was rock bottom rates unless demand outstrips supply. When that happens, retailers have to purchase electricity on the spot market at higher rates. On Monday, Griddy advised their 29,000 customers to leave or face electrical bills that could be in the thousands of dollars due to the explosion in wholesale pricing.

What happened on February 14

To use a cliche, it was a perfect storm. Power plants require a lot of maintenance, and sometimes to perform that maintenance, plants have to be taken offline. Operators plan these major overhauls during times of low demand. In Texas, that time is in the winter months. Before the devastating winter storm’s arrival, about 14 gigawatts of power generation were already offline.

As temperatures plummeted, ERCOT leaders knew they had a crisis on their hands. At times of high electrical load, businesses have agreements with power utilities to shut down operations to help keep the grid from getting overloaded. In Texas, auto manufacturers and others were asked to shut down operations as temperatures dropped, but it wasn’t enough.

Cash starved electricity producers started to experience mechanical failures as power plants literally froze. Coal, natural gas, oil, and even a nuclear plant went offline as instruments and water systems froze solid. The outages created another impact that made the situation worse.

As the power failures cascaded, power for natural gas distribution also failed. The supply shrank just as struggling electrical producers needed more gas to stay operational. With demand skyrocketing and supply shrinking, spot market prices for natural gas gyrated widely. Some power plants went offline because the cost to continue to operate was too high.

At the peak, about 25% of the power generation lost was wind-driven. Wind farms started to shut down as the turbine blades iced over, reducing their aerodynamics. In some edge cases, the non-winterized turbines themselves began to freeze. 

Coupled with failing transmission lines both due to the weather and from overloads causing systems to trip, rolling blackouts to save the grid no longer became possible. The electrical system essentially collapsed.

Over 40 gigawatts of electrical generation went offline at its peak, sending millions into the dark statewide. Ironically, the fully deregulated free market created a Soviet-era-grade electrical grid. Years of neglect, lack of investment, and lack of oversight by and of ERCOT resulted in a system incapable of dealing with this type of disruption. In the Eastern Interconnect and Western Interconnect, operators can cope better with a loss of electrical generation capacity. Interstate connections enable the purchase from a broader market to shore up demand during outlier events. 

The human cost

By Tuesday morning, the situation in Texas was moving from bad to worse. 911 systems were being flooded with calls by frightened and freezing citizens asking when electricity would be restored. For the few homes with natural gas for heat or hot water, gas line pressure failed. The same deregulated markets mean most electrical retailers won’t “buy” excess powers from homes with solar. So despite Texas being a mecca for solar energy, deregulation eliminated the cost incentive to install solar panels.

On Tuesday, Abeline, Texas, was without electricity, running water, and almost no cell service as temperatures dropped into the teens. On Wednesday, the residents of Houston, Texas, the fourth largest city in the United States, were told they need to boil their water. The electricity to run the water purification plants had been cut off for too long. Residents without power are being advised to buy bottled water and not drink from the taps. The city remains paralyzed with ice-covered streets littered with downed powerlines, and stores were already rationing bottled water before the boil order.

Many homes eliminated landlines phones years ago, relying on cellular and VoIP. Emergency generators are used to power cell towers in the event of a power outage. The generators typically run on diesel fuel or natural gas. In Texas, the towers are running out of fuel, so residents are losing their phone connections.

In Houston, hospital officials declared a mini-mass casualty event as emergency departments have become flooded with carbon monoxide poisoning victims, many of them children. At least 11 people have died from poisoning, fires or have frozen to death in Houston alone.

The political blame game

Republican leaders and right-wing media outlets have been quick to pounce upon the Green New Deal and wind power as the reasons for Texas’s electrical failures. Indeed, the national push for electrification of transit, cars, and heating will be considered in the aftermath. There are political reasons why Texas’s electrical grid has failed, but it isn’t because of the “Green New Deal.”

George W. Bush became the governor of Texas in 1995, and Republicans have run the state ever since. The state has an independent power grid purposely built to avoid federal regulation. Rick Perry, former governor of Texas, was the Energy Secretary for the United States during the Trump Administration.

The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 was architected by former Vice President Dick Cheney and signed by President George W. Bush. The act set stricter fuel economy standards for cars and trucks, created incentives for consumers to buy hybrids and electric vehicles, and helped companies like Tesla grow into a juggernaut. It set new renewable energy standards, pushed for solar and wind power, and set standards for appliances and lighting that eliminated the incandescent lightbulb. It increased some taxes and permit fees for oil exploration and set new home and commercial property construction standards. 

On Monday, former Energy Secretary Perry went on Fox News to talk to Tucker Carlson and blamed wind generation as the cause of the crisis. Mid-interview, to Tucker Carlson’s glee, the former secretary lost power and connection to the studio. During an interview with ABC affiliate WFAA on Tuesday, current governor Greg Abbott eviscerated ERCOT to a freezing Texas audience. He called the handling of the current crisis by ERCOT “completely unacceptable.” 

The governor declared ERCOT reform as an emergency item for the next legislative session and has called for a wide-reaching investigation into what went wrong. Other Texas leaders agree, calling into question the actions and communication plan from ERCOT. However, when Governor Abbott went on national television the same day, he toed the GOP line and blamed wind power and the Green New Deal for Texas’s power outages. 

What is next

In the short term, the critical issue is restoring the power. Cold weather continues to grip the state, leaving plants frozen, roads ice-covered, and power lines down. About three million people are still without power, and ERCOT announced this morning that power would be going out for more people today, not less. 

Texans aren’t having it when it comes to the excuses from government officials. While the suburbs are shivering, they can see the glow of empty office buildings rising from Texas cities’ downtowns. In Galveston, Texas, officials have made a grim request. The medical examiner has requested refrigerated trucks to expand body storage. FEMA is responding to a request for 60 emergency generators to prevent hospitals and nursing homes from plunging into darkness. Hospitals and clinics have also reported that tens of thousands of COVID vaccination doses have spoiled after electrical power failed.

ERCOT CEO Bill Magness is defending the organization’s actions, correctly explaining that some shutdowns were required to prevent further damage to the electrical grid. Powerlines can handle a certain degree of overload but can explode like overheated elements in a toaster when pushed too far. 

Meanwhile, in Moscow, it dropped below 20 degrees last night with snow that turned into freezing rain this morning. More freezing rain is in the forecast for tonight before it turns back into snow on Thursday. The Sam Houston Electric Cooperative reports only one home is without power. That’s Moscow, Texas, ya’ all. 

BREAKING: Seattle police fatally shoot suicidal man

UPDATED: February 16, 2021 @ 11:23 PM

[SEATTLE] – (MTN) The Seattle Police Department has reported a man is dead after an officer-involved shooting on Alaskan Way and University along the waterfront. Video of the scene showed a large police presence during the ongoing investigation. The police scanner records indicate officers were called to engage with a suicidal man who had a knife. The man started to approach the officers and he was shot. A Public Information Officer stated the man was shot by two officers, was white, and was declared dead at the scene.

STATEMENT BY SEATTLE POLICE PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICER V. CARLSON

According to a transcript of Seattle Police radio traffic, Seattle police officers were responding to a call of a suicidal man at 9:19 PM. A minute later, officers requested a unit with “40mm,” which would a less-lethal device. At 9:22 radio traffic indicated police has spotted the individual by the cruise dock and had a knife in his left hand. At 9:23 PM police stated, “shots fired, suspect down.”

TWITTER VIDEO OF SPD IMMEDIATELY AFTER POLICE SHOOTING OF AN ALLEGEDLY SUICIDAL MAN

Alaskan Way and surrounding streets along the waterfront are closed and people are being asked to avoid the area.

Black couple home appraisal low balled, believe race was a factor

Five Fast Facts

  • Paul Austin and Tenisha Tate Austin bought a home in Marin City, California in 2016
  • They did $400K in renovations and upgrades including adding a second floor and more than 1,000 feet of new living space
  • An appraiser valued the home after renovations at $989,000, which was below comparable homes in the neighborhood – the Austin’s felt the low appraisal was due to their race
  • A white friend agreed to be their stand-in during a second appraisal, including replacing family pictures and items in the home
  • The home appraised for $1,482,000 in the second visit – which can’t be accounted for changes in market conditions between the two appraisals

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) – In the New Year, systemic racism has continued to force inequity in home ownership rates across the Bay Area, and Black families who are in a position to purchase a home often face discrimination.

It is no secret that home ownership is a proven pathway to building wealth in the United States. But in a competitive housing market with some of the most expensive homes in the country, it is tough for Black Bay Area residents to buy a home to start the process.

Keep reading at ABC 7

Mount Vernon woman arrested for second-degree murder over political sign

UPDATED: February 16, 2021 @ 11:38 PM – neighbors are reporting it was a Loren Culp sign, and not a Donald Trump sign

[MOUNT VERNON] – (MTN) A 32-year-old Arlington woman is dead, and her assailant is in Skagit County jail under investigation for her murder. Skagit County Sheriff’s deputies arrested 55-year old Angela Marie Conjin on second-degree murder charges and her husband John for fourth-degree assault. Anglea Conjin is being held without bail pending her first hearing. Conjin is accused of shooting the 32-year old victim to death after her husband and another man allegedly got into a fight over a Loren Culp sign that was in Conjin’s yard.

According to goskagit.com, deputies responded to a 911 call on Saturday around 5:30 PM, reporting a fight in progress. As deputies were en route, they received another 911 call stating a person had been shot at the same address.

Deputies arrived to find the 32-year-old Arlington woman dead in the driveway. According to a statement made by the sheriff’s department, officers spoke with the home occupants and arrested the couple without incident. Conjin’s first court appearance scheduled for today was canceled. The Skagit County Prosector’s Office reported that charges were filed today using a committee magistrate warrant, and Conjin will have her first hearing on Wednesday at 8:30 AM. Brett Purtzer of Tacoma is her attorney and has a history of taking cases where defendants plead self-defense or mental anguish.

Public records show Anglea Conjin was a teacher’s aide for the Sedro-Wooley School District. In 2019 she trained to be a hairstylist and started working for La Conner Hair Design. Calls and messages to La Conner Hair Design went unanswered. Investigators have not released the nature of the political sign, but a report from Seattle TV station KING 5, indicates it was a Loren Culp Sign. Loren Culp lost the gubernatorial election in Washington state by 545,000 votes but refused to concede and made baseless allegations of fraud without evidence. Public records show Conjin is a registered Republican in the state of Washington.

Conjin’s background indicates she has had financial troubles in the past, including a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, but has no prior criminal record.

You can read our latest update by clicking this link.

Malcontentment Happy Hour: February 15, 2021

Our live webcast from the Seattle Anarchist Jurisdiction

The show from February 15, 2021, featured David Obelcz and our co-host Jennifer Smith.

  • Andy Finseth goes from Seattle Firefighter of the Year to an accused felon, and Dave Preston of Safe Seattle inserts himself into the story
  • Seattle has the biggest snowstorm since 1968, sort of
  • Malcontented Minutes
    • Rupaul’s Drag Race Sherry Pie, aka Joey Gugliemelli, embroiled in a catfishing scandal
    • UFC fighter Julian Marquez asks Miley Cyrus for a date in a cringeworthy way
    • A man hikes over 6 miles carrying a lost dog in the Irish wilderness
    • Senator Steve Daines (R-MT) threatens to block the Senate confirmation of Deb Halland to Secretary of the Interior
    • CDC study indicates ER visits for drug overdoses increased 45% from June 2019 to May 2020
    • Pioneering LGBTQIA+ artist who worked with Madonna, Chaka Khan, and Cyndi Lauper dies of leukemia
    • Dave Chappelle releases a video discussing the hypocrisy of Colin Kaepernick critics
    • A “war” over tips in Cinncinnati nets over $34,000 for restaurant workers
    • Animals at the Oregon Zoo relished playing in the snow
    • Six indigenous artists received $50K grants to support their “bold artistic vision” and protect native American artistry techniques
  • Tacoma “Love” update
  • COVID Five Fast Facts
  • Impeachment closure

Historic freeze in Texas will impact Washington state energy costs

[HOUSTON] – (MTN) Oil went above $60 a barrel for the first time in a year as oil production and refining ground to a halt. Oil and natural gas wells stopped pumping in the Permian Basin, and refineries went into complete shutdown in the Golden Triangle over the weekend, stopping gasoline production.

Engineered to work in the Texas heat, the pumps and refineries cannot operate safely in frigid temperatures. Additionally, with 3.8 million people out of power and rolling blackouts now impacting five states, the electricity and employees required to run these operations are unavailable.

The historic winter storm slammed the Midwest and Texas, bringing accumulating snow as far south as Brownsville, Texas, and even Mexico. Snow and freezing rain have collapsed power lines while Texans, whose homes aren’t designed for this kind of weather, send electricity and natural gas demand to unprecedented levels.

Twitter user @nessanicole10 shows snow in Brownsville, Texas, located on the gulf coast and the Mexico border

The situation in Texas represents a massive disruption to energy distribution in the United States. In the Permian Basin, which includes the Texas cities of Midland and Odessa, one million barrels of daily oil production is offline, representing 9% of total U.S. production.

Locally, this will mean higher prices at the gas pump, even though Washington state is a closed-loop system. Ninety-percent of Washington crude oil comes from Alaska due to the Rocky Mountains preventing pipeline transmission to the region. Almost all of our gasoline and aviation fuel is refined in-state.

In the early 2000s, Shell closed down two refineries in California to tighten west coast supply and raise overall prices. Shell claimed the Bakersfield refinery needed to be shuttered because it was too expensive to operate due to California regulations. In California, regulators indicated they offered full waivers to the Shell Bakersfield plant. Leaked internal memos showed the refinery was one of the most profitable Shell owned. Shell sold the refinery to Flying J, in a deal backed by California. Ultimately the plant was shuttered when Flying J went bankrupt in 2008 due to the Great Recession and plummeting demand for diesel fuel at their numerous truck stops. The permanent closure reduced diesel and gasoline supply in northern California, Oregon, and Washington.

Despite the region’s insulation from Midwest and Texas supply disruptions, distribution costs in our area will go up. With it, you’ll be paying more at that pump.

The disruptions out of Texas may be long term. The Southwest Power Pool manages electricity across 14 states in the south and Midwest. It has notified all customers there is a Level Three power emergency that requires rolling blackouts through the entire region to prevent the electrical grid from collapsing.

In southeast Texas, including Houston, the system is so overloaded and damaged that rolling blackouts are no longer possible. Customers have been advised to treat any power outage as long-term and plan accordingly. Videos are showing overloaded powerlines exploding in fireballs, like glowing elements of a toaster.

power lines are exploding throughout texas due to ice, wind, and overloads

Natural gas demand is so high that the required pressure collapses, causing shortages and cutoffs to businesses and homes. The situation will only get worse as record cold, possibly the coldest weather in 150 years, will blanket the Lone Star state tonight. Forecasters expect freezing rain to strike southeast Texas Tuesday night and Wednesday, adding to the region’s woes.

Houston, texas is snow-covered including the downtown freeways with more cold weather on the way

Residents are flooding area 911 systems with calls desperate about the cold and no way to heat their homes or stay warm. Officials ask people to conserve energy, bundle up, and protect the pipes with even colder weather on tap. City officials in Houston have appealed to people to treat this like a Category V hurricane and stay home.

Former Seahawks player Chad Wheeler has a violent past

From Malcontentment Happy Hour, February 11, 2021

Records show Wheeler was shot with beanbag rounds in 2015 in response to a domestic violence report

[SEATTLE] – (MTN) Former Seattle Seahawk player Chad Wheeler remains out on $400,000 bail for a savage domestic violence attack last month. Records show that this isn’t the first time Wheeler has committed domestic violence, and his mental illness was used as a defense.

The Los Angeles Times reported that in December 2015, while Wheeler was the starting left tackle at USC, police were called after he punched walls and windows, and barricade himself in an apartment with a 20-year-old woman and her son. Ignoring police instructions, law enforcement officers had to fire bean bag rounds at the 6’7″ tall, 315-pound wheeler to subdue him. He was detained by police and then taken to a hospital for psychiatric evaluation.

Alleah Taylor in an exclusive interview with CBS This Morning, shared by Malcontent News, told a harrowing tale of the attack that has left her with metal plates in her body and with a closed head injury. In the interview, she described pleading for her life and with an out of control Wheeler.

The NFL has struggled to address the organization’s handling of domestic violence among its players, with uneven enforcement of the code of conduct. Both the Seattle Seahawks and NFL expressed empathy for the victim Taylor while taking a softer approach on Wheeler in part because his contract with the Seahawks ended on December 31, 2021.

If you are experiencing domestic violence you can visit the National Domestic Violence website, or call 800-799-SAFE (7233). If you do visit their site or make a call, be sure to clear your browser and call history for your safety.

David Obelcz contributed to this story.

Winter Weather Advisory issued as snow continues

[SEATTLE] – (MTN) Much of western Washington remains in an icy grip after a storm on Saturday dumped as much as a foot of snow, sleet, and freezing rain from Vancouver to Bellingham. A Winter Weather Advisory has been issued from noon to 10 PM, while Portland, Oregon is under an Ice Storm Warning.

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”27″ gal_title=”February 2021 Snowstorm”]

Snow started falling across much of the region by 7 AM. Much of the Seattle area has received an inch already, with another one to three inches likely before the snow transitions to sleet, possibly some freezing rain, and then all rain tonight.

Area streets including arterials remain treacherous and travel should be avoided if at all possible. Monday will continue a cold wet pattern, but temperatures will climb to 40 degrees, bringing an end to the snow.

February 13 snowstorm gallery

[KIRKLAND] – (MTN) Snow fell on Kirkland for over 24 hours, covering the city with six to nine inches of snow. The snow-covered streets brought out sledders, urban skiers, and pedestrians, who enjoyed the cold air and satisfying crunch of powdery snow. More snow is expected to fall Saturday night and Sunday.

[Best_Wordpress_Gallery id=”25″ gal_title=”February 2021 Snowstorm”]