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Texas grid independence is being called into question after ERCOT failed to meet unprecedented electricity demand and millions of Texans went without power for days in sub-freezing temperatures. To put it mildly, people are mad. But despite a lot of political finger-pointing, I’ve seen few people pointing in the right direction.
The Southwest Power Pool (SPP), our grid to the west, went into conservation operations on February 9 and declared an Energy Emergency Alert on February 15, asking customers to conserve energy. By February 16, SPP no longer had enough power to meet demand and began implementing rolling blackouts. Conditions in that region have slowly improved on a similar timeline with Texas as the worst of the winter storm passed, though SPP remains in a state of conservation operations.
Texas’ other neighboring grid, the Midcontinent Independent System Operator experienced the same condition of power demand due to surpassing the amount of available electricity, and it similarly implemented rolling blackouts this past week.
The biggest problem here was infrastructure failure due to a lack of investment in modernizing and stabilizing the grid and its supporting infrastructure.
We also need to establish a capacity market — which means setting heavy fines for power generators that are not available during critical times and paying power generators, including households with their own solar power systems, to have back-up power that can be rapidly made available to the grid during times of extreme need.
Finally, Texas should continue investing in the proactive transmission systems and renewable power generation, like wind and solar, that have produced major economic and environmental benefits for our state so far.
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