Icy weather chills Texas wind energy as deep freeze grips much of U.S.
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[February 15, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - Ice storms knocked out nearly
half the wind-power generating capacity of Texas on Sunday as a rare
deep freeze across the state locked up turbine towers while driving
electricity demand to record levels, the state's grid operator reported.
Responding to a request from Governor Greg Abbott, President Joe Biden
granted a federal emergency declaration for all 254 counties in the
state on Sunday, authorizing U.S. agencies to coordinate disaster relief
from severe weather in Texas.
The winter energy woes in Texas came as bone-chilling cold, combined
with snow, sleet and freezing rain, gripped much of the United States
from the Pacific Northwest through the Great Plains and into the
mid-Atlantic states over the weekend.
An Arctic air mass causing the chill extended southward well beyond
areas accustomed to icy weather, with winter storm warnings posted for
much of the Gulf Coast region, Oklahoma and Missouri, the National
Weather Service said.
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), the state's grid
operator, issued an alert asking consumers and businesses to conserve
power, citing record-breaking energy demands due to extreme cold
gripping the state.
"We are dealing with higher-than-normal generation outages due to frozen
wind turbines and limited natural gas supplies available to generating
units," the agency said.
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Wind turbines generate power at the Loraine Windpark Project in
Loraine, Texas U.S. August 24, 2018. Picture taken August 24, 2018.
REUTERS/Nick Oxford
Wind farms in West Texas, stricken by weekend ice storms, were
particularly hard hit.
Of the 25,000-plus megawatts of wind-power capacity normally
available in Texas, some 12,000 megawatts was out of service as of
Sunday morning "due to the winter weather event we're experiencing
in Texas," ERCOT spokeswoman Leslie Sopko said.
Wind generation ranks as the second-largest source of energy in
Texas, accounting for 23% of state power supplies last year, behind
natural gas, which represented 45%, according to ERCOT figures.
Forecasts call for heavy snow and freezing rain to spread across a
larger swath of central and eastern sections of the country through
Monday, with a storm front in the West likely to dump 1 to 2 feet of
snow in the Cascades and northern Rockies through Tuesday, according
to the weather service.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Erwin Seba in Houston and Heather Timmons in Washington; editing by
Diane Craft)
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