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166

Things are surreal here in Texas right now. From Dallas to San Antonio, century-old low temperature records were shattered almost every day this week. The state is blanketed in snow and ice, and the power grid has failed.

What began Sunday morning as an exciting novelty — six inches of snow in Central Texas — has devolved over the week into something more sinister. Four million Texans are now without power, many of them unable to drive on roads covered in ice and made impassable by snowfall.

There have been massive pile-ups on the interstates and highways, many of them fatal. Food is running low for some people, and lines outside grocery stores stretch into the hundreds. One friend told me more than 1,000 people were lined up outside a grocery store here in Austin.

Cities and towns across the state have issued notices to boil water, citing decreased pressure in their water systems mostly due to pipes freezing and bursting. On Wednesday night, all of Austin went under a boil water notice after the city’s main water treatment plant lost power. Some people I know have lost water entirely and, not knowing when they might get it back, have begun melting snow in their bathtubs.

Families with newborns have gone days without power. Pipes have burst in nursing homes, flooding them in the middle of the night in near-zero temperatures. Hotels that still have power are booking up as people abandon darkened neighborhoods. Those of us trapped in our homes are texting and calling friends, families, and neighbors: Do you have power? Water? Food?

Things are surreal here in Texas right now. From Dallas to San Antonio, century-old low temperature records were shattered almost every day this week. The state is blanketed in snow and ice, and the power grid has failed. What began Sunday morning as an exciting novelty — six inches of snow in Central Texas — has devolved over the week into something more sinister. Four million Texans are now without power, many of them unable to drive on roads covered in ice and made impassable by snowfall. There have been massive pile-ups on the interstates and highways, many of them fatal. Food is running low for some people, and lines outside grocery stores stretch into the hundreds. One friend told me more than 1,000 people were lined up outside a grocery store here in Austin. Cities and towns across the state have issued notices to boil water, citing decreased pressure in their water systems mostly due to pipes freezing and bursting. On Wednesday night, all of Austin went under a boil water notice after the city’s main water treatment plant lost power. Some people I know have lost water entirely and, not knowing when they might get it back, have begun melting snow in their bathtubs. Families with newborns have gone days without power. Pipes have burst in nursing homes, flooding them in the middle of the night in near-zero temperatures. Hotels that still have power are booking up as people abandon darkened neighborhoods. Those of us trapped in our homes are texting and calling friends, families, and neighbors: Do you have power? Water? Food?

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

Spot on. Agreed 100%

[–] 3 pts

Honestly, i dont blame Texas on this one. The idea Houston would need to winterize its powerlines is dumb. All because some freak storm that makes its way every hundred years caused damage?

[–] 1 pt

Winterizing power lines? What moron came up with that advice?

[–] 0 pt

Agreed, absolutely moronic. It was a nuclear power plant that was never properly freeze proofed for cold weather, or equipped with insulated plumbing for cooling water conduits. It was the water in some of those conduits that froze. When flow sensors detected this, the plant automatically shut down on its own. There being NO base load power supply from the primary power source to the rest of the grid, unreliable wind turbines would shut down also because they have to synchronize with the base load power source first before they come online. Wind turbines like solar power cannot work independently from the base load power grid unless they would be charging massive battery banks that could act as the amp load and voltage buffer. In other words there would be no way to regulate the massive voltage spikes that would occur without the base load source that could result in damage to tranformers along with home and industrial equipment. So the reason for this power outage is simple enough to figure out.