A massive winter storm rolled through Texas last night causing 7,000 megawatts worth of power plants to shut down and in the wee hours of the morning, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), the grid operator, declared an energy emergency.
ERCOT called on state energy suppliers to cut about 4,000 megawatts worth of power demand equal to about 2.9 million homes, leaving homes dark and without heat for up to an hour (some folks for even longer), causing some schools and businesses to shut and creating traffic snarls as traffic lights stopped working during rush hour.
The grid operator reduced that call to about 3,000 MW by mid-morning as some generation returned to service, but they expect the rolling outages to continue until a sufficient amount of generation is back online.
Critical infrastructures have separate power supply agreements with utilities and are less susceptible to interruptions than residential or commercial customers. Obviously, that means hospitals, firehouses, police and other emergency services, but there are also large industrial facilities that have these types of agreements. On the Gulf Coast, that translates to refineries, in Austin, it was the chip fabs.
Throughout the state, power suppliers started “controlled rolling outages” sometime between 5 and 6:00 am affecting hundreds of thousands of customers on a rotating basis. These controlled rolling outages are planned emergency measures designed to avoid potentially longer, and more widespread power outages.
Weather-related unit outages caused the “hourly wholesale power price” in Texas to soar to $3,000 per megawatt-hour, up from about $50 where they usually trade. That’s comparable to about $3 per kilowatt-hour for residential users, though most Texas consumers have long-term power deals with suppliers that protect them from short-term price spikes. Just before noon, the hourly wholesale power price was down to $179 per megawatt-hour, which means that things are stabilizing for right now.
ERCOT has forecast that peak demand would top 55,000 megawatts on Wednesday and 57,000 MW on Thursday before dropping to about 47,000 MW on Friday, still well below the grid’s 2010 summer peak of 65,715 megawatts. We probably won’t know until tomorrow at the earliest which plants tripped and what other factors may have contributed to this power emergency (see update further down), but be sure, an investigation will be demanded.
In other parts of the country, hundreds of thousands were without power due to ice and snow taking down power lines. Crews worked through the night and had reduced that number by early morning. And in Australia, the most powerful cyclone to hit in nearly 100 years has made landfall with winds at the center of the storm gusting up to 186 mph. So while inconvenient, I guess we could count ourselves fortunate.
We are hearing anecdotally that many folks around Austin are experiencing long and repeated outages, but here at Public Citizen’s office we’ve not experienced any outage since before dawn this morning. Possibly because we are just blocks from the Capitol and PUC (which has probably also been a hub of activity since the wee hours of the morning). We hope everyone reading this is somewhere warm with electricity.
UPDATE:
Just heard the rolling blackouts are now over. However, ERCOT warns they might be required again before the current freeze lifts, as late as sometime Friday, as Texas is still down 5,000-plus megawatts of capacity because of extreme weather. We surely don’t want another day like today that so we recommend everyone shut things down at home tonight and at your office before you leave.
ANOTHER UPDATE:
According to the Austin American Statesman:
Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst said late this morning that a broken pipe and a frozen pipe at two Central Texas electric generating plants helped trigger a statewide power emergency that forced rolling blackouts in Austin and across Texas.
Dewhurst said problems at the Luminant-owned Oak Grove plant east of Temple and the Sandow plant near Rockdale apparently were caused by a winter storm that has dropped temperatures to below freezing across the state, and stalled activity in some parts of North Texas with blizzard-like conditions.
At the same time as the two plants were down early today, Dewhurst said other power plants were off-line from Texas’ utility grid, and pressure drops in natural gas supply lines caused by the freezing temperatures were causing problems at other plants.
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OFFS.
That’s “Who’s,” not “Whose”
It’s Fifth-grade English!
Thanks for the correction. Rushing to post this before before the wordpress.com data centers got caught up in the blackouts, I almost posted without a headline. Apparently two of the three WordPress.com data centers are located in Texas – 1 in San Antonio and 1 in Dallas. Fortunately they didn’t get caught up in the blackouts. That could have been a disaster for bloggers around the country.
Why am I very suspicious about this so-called “weather-related weather outage”. How convenient that this comes just when several utilities are trying to build new coal-fired and nuclear power plants in Texas, trying to convince the public that this extra capacity is actually needed. And while Texas is drowning in clean-burning natural gas, a perfect source for base-load power. Would Texas’s ERCOT collaborate with the companies they regulate?
Weather-related unit outages caused the “hourly wholesale power price” in Texas to soar to $3,000 per megawatt-hour, up from about $50 where they usually trade. To bad Enron is no longer around to participate in these juicy profits.
Cameron,
Perhaps your paranoia is deserved.
Back on December 1st when nodal was launched, ERCOT lowered the hourly wholesale price cap (this is a cap on the price the market will pay for power put into the system during an unforseen event – say unexpectedly high demand or an outage from planned generation) from $2,250 to the average of $50 for 60 days to insure there was no market spike while nodal was rolling out.
At the end of the 60 days, probably January 29th, ERCOT reset the hourly wholesale price cap to $2,250 and then raised it to $3000 on Feb.1. Interestingly enough, this was just days before our extreme winter weather event and well within the timeframe that ERCOT knew there might be high demand because of the weather.
When Senator Troy Fraser holds hearings on these rolling blackouts, we can get some answers that should crop up given the timing of these “unrelated?” events.
Great read, but WHO IS blame?
Did electricity deregulation have something to do with it?
And is Dewhurst for real? They forgot to wrap their pipes? What are we here in Texas? A bunch of idiots?
[...] gallivanting around the country, he’d know what was going on, too. PDiddie, McBlogger, and Texas Vox have [...]
I’m delighted to hear that Wind did it’s part! As for solar, I have wanted to convert for a long time, but being retired on a fixed income that barely covers my energy bills does not support that! I’ve even investigated building my own! DID YOU KNOW: Texas is 22nd in the nation for high electric rates, and is highest of all our neighbors? Now the Repubs in Washing are trying to gut the EPA and Clean Air Act. I live between two (now idle) coal-fired plants. Tradinghouse Creek and the new Reisel Plant. Tradinghous Creek is too old and it’s too expensive to update its emissions! Riesel is not going to open because it does not meet the emission standards – EPA said NO. The Waco area hospital ER’s and doctors offices are full of bronchitis patients, exacerbated by poor air quality! Thanks to Perry and his gang, money is once again put before citizen health!
The federal court recently allowed the fed’s to enforce the greenhouse gas emission limits. That is why Texas power stations had to cut power because the EPA is trying to save us from global warming.
Sorry Matt, but the TCEQ had issued a “Pass Permit” notice for the emergency. All power generators, no matter what their emissions, were allowed to run.
The EPA hasn’t started regulations on green house gas emissions.
Also, Matthew, the only time a power plant has to apply for a greenhouse gas permit is when applying for a construction permit or major modification to the plant. That means none of the plants up and running now have greenhouse gas permits.
[...] Citizen asked a series of questions over at TexasVox about our rolling blackouts: who’s to blame? (hint: coal and natural gas) who saved our bacon? (hint: renewables) and who [...]
When power plant operators know days in advance that cold weather is coming, they need to fuel up the plant and keep things warmed up for the known demands that are coming. This is regardless of threats of no overtime pay, etc! Get in there early and just do it!