Texas
Related: About this forumTexas grid faces winter after failed attempt to get more power online
After saying there was an unacceptable risk of a power grid emergency during a strong winter storm, the Texas grid operator's plan to prepare the state better for extreme winter weather failed to take off this fall.
In early October, officials at the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which oversees the states main power grid, announced that they wanted more power plants available to run this winter. They explained that demand for electricity had grown overall, and past extreme winter storms showed how high demand could spike during frigid temperatures.
ERCOTs plan to entice companies to make more power available involved asking if they were willing to bring some shuttered gas- and coal-fired power plants back online and, if so, what it would cost ERCOT.
As it happened, not a single company thought reviving an old power plant made sense, and the Nov. 6 deadline passed without a single proposal to revive a power source for the winter.
Read more: https://www.texastribune.org/2023/12/01/texas-power-grid-ERCOT-winter-2023/
70sEraVet
(4,145 posts)walkingman
(8,343 posts)walkingman
(8,343 posts)walkingman
(8,343 posts)nature-lover
(1,704 posts)Just passed in Nov.
"Proposition 7 - SJR 93
"The constitutional amendment providing for the creation of the Texas energy fund to support the
construction, maintenance, modernization, and operation of electric generating facilities."
So, it looks like we taxpayers get stuck with the energy companies' "cost of doing business"" expenses again.
Texasgal
(17,154 posts)were too busy calling FOUR special sessions for school vouchers! he couldn't be bothered by our shitty grid! GRRRRRRR!