Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumAbbott (F-TX) Knew 5 Days In Advance Of Cold Crash That NG Would Fall Short, Blamed Wind Anyway
Texas Governor Greg Abbotts office knew of looming natural gas shortages on February 10, days before a deep freeze plunged much of the state into blackouts, according to documents obtained by E&E News and reviewed by Ars. Abbotts office first learned of the likely shortfall in a phone call from then-chair of the Public Utility Commission of Texas DeAnne Walker. In the days leading up to the power outages that began on February 15, Walker and the governors office spoke 31 more times.
Walker also spoke with regulators, politicians, and utilities dozens of times about the gas curtailments that threatened the states electrical grid. The PUC chairs diary for the days before the outage shows her schedule dominated by concerns over gas curtailments and the impact they would have on electricity generation. Before and during the disaster, she was on more than 100 phone calls with various agencies and utilities regarding gas shortages. After the blackouts began, Abbott appeared on Fox News to falsely assert that wind turbines were the driving force behind the outages.
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On February 12, the Railroad Commission issued an emergency order dictating which customers should be prioritized for natural gas deliveries, and late on February 14, Texas grid finally began collapsing. In two text messages sent around midnight, ERCOT chief Magness told Walker that some wind turbines had frozen and several fossil fuel generators had tripped offline. Blackouts began just before 2 am, February 15. Walker promptly notified the governors office. That was the only time Walkers diary or logs mention wind power. After the two late-night text messages from Magness, Walkers report does not mention wind power again. But it does reference gas curtailments more than 70 times over the next four days, a possible reflection of the scope, severity, and impact of the shortages.
The power outages soon found their way back to natural gas suppliers. The concerns related to natural gas moved from concerns about curtailment to concerns about electric outages for gas producers, Walker wrote on February 15. Power plants, short on gas, couldnt generate enough electricity to power the infrastructure that kept gas flowing from suppliers to users, including the power plants themselves. It created a feedback loop that compounded the problem further. I met with and informed the office of the Governor about the situation, Walker wrote. I interacted throughout the day with ERCOT and the Governors office related to the ongoing issues.
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https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2021/05/texas-gov-knew-of-natural-gas-shortages-days-before-blackout-blamed-wind-anyway/