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		Texas power consumers to pay the price of winter storm
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		 [February 18, 2021] 
		By Scott DiSavino and Stephanie Kelly 
 (Reuters) - Texas residents suffering a 
		winter storm that has left millions without power are set to face a 
		future challenge in higher utility bills, after the days-long cold snap 
		put an unprecedented strain on the state's power network.
 
 Some 2.7 million households in Texas, the largest electricity consuming 
		state in the United States, were without heat on Wednesday as freezing 
		temperatures in a normally temperate part of the country overwhelmed 
		demand, causing blackouts and widespread anger.
 
 Wholesale power prices soared more than 300-fold, stirring memories of 
		the price spikes that accompanied California's energy crisis of 
		2000-2001, when Enron and others artificially increased prices.
 
 Consumers won't be forced to fork over thousands of dollars when their 
		next utility bill comes due, say analysts, but state utilities will 
		likely hike bills after this year, both to pay for the record price 
		spikes and to fund updates to Texas's grid to make it more resilient.
 
		
		 
		
 Texas operates an independent grid closed off from the rest of the 
		country. On Wednesday, power prices in Dallas and Fort Worth hit $8,800 
		per megawatt-hour (MWh), compared with the more typical average of 
		roughly $26 per MWh. Over time, the state's grid operator, the Electric 
		Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), could impose higher costs to 
		consumers to prepare for subsequent, similar events.
 
 "The wholesale market is allowing record high prices, and those record 
		high prices are eventually going to be paid for by end-consumers," said 
		Tyson Slocum, director of the energy program for Public Citizen, a 
		consumer advocacy organization.
 
 Blackouts instituted by ERCOT as electric heating demand exceeded 
		forecasts and overwhelmed generation have brought the state's 
		deregulated electricity market sharply into focus.
 
 "Debates about electric policy and energy policy are going to come very 
		soon as this issue is dissected and discussed and analyzed," said Bill 
		Magness, ERCOT chief executive, at a Wednesday press conference.
 
 CONSUMER PRICES GOING FORWARD
 
 Texas is the only state in the continental United States that runs a 
		stand-alone electricity grid. Unlike other U.S. grid operators, 
		regulators in Texas use scarcity pricing to ensure reliability, but that 
		can cause real-time prices to soar due to shortages.
 
 While there has been no evidence of price manipulation, similar 
		shortages occurred during California's energy crisis, when energy 
		traders like Enron withheld generation and took other steps to boost 
		prices, raising concerns in some quarters.
 
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			Overhead power lines are seen during record-breaking temperatures in 
			Houston, Texas, U.S., February 17, 2021. REUTERS/Adrees Latif/File 
			Photo 
            
			 
            "Price spikes, especially in the ERCOT market, are not by themselves 
			evidence of market manipulation, but there is enormous opportunity 
			for market manipulation," Public Citizen's Slocum said.
 Since 2010, ERCOT's reserve margin - the buffer between what it can 
			produce versus forecasted demand - has dropped to around 10% from 
			about 20%, putting pressure on generators during electricity demand 
			spikes.
 
 ERCOT should review how extreme weather causes simultaneous 
			generator failures and incorporate that into reliability statistics 
			to help improve reserve margins depending on seasonal demand, said 
			Jay Apt, co-director of the Carnegie Mellon Electricity Industry 
			Center.
 
 Several grid operators procure reserves through what is known as 
			capacity auctions and pass that on to customers. "Naturally, their 
			prices will go up a little bit, but the hope is that the tradeoff is 
			you don't have several days without power," he added.
 
 ERCOT could also winterize equipment, another potential cost. That 
			could include insulating pipes in natural gas facilities or adding 
			de-icing equipment to wind turbines.
 
            
			 
			Most customers who pay power retailers at fixed rates will avoid 
			massive price spikes. There are exceptions, however, and those 
			consumers could face hefty bills.
 Griddy, a Houston-based company that provides wholesale electricity 
			at variable rates for a monthly $9.99 membership, said on Monday 
			that it urged customers to switch to other providers with a fixed 
			rate, even as it admitted that it looked like other providers were 
			no longer accepting switches "until later in the week." The company 
			has 29,000 customers, according to local media reports.
 
 "Texas, we hope you're staying safe! And yep, things suck right 
			now," the company told customers on its website. The company did not 
			respond to a request for comment.
 
 (Reporting By Scott DiSavino and Stephanie Kelly; Editing by David 
			Gaffen and Richard Pullin)
 
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