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Probe Into Texas Blackout Begins 02/26 06:17
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -- The catastrophic Texas blackout was a wider failure
than the state's power grid, which teetered on the brink of an even bigger
collapse during a freeze that knocked out electricity to 4 million customers,
energy executives said Thursday.
One CEO said he sounded warning days before what became one of the worst
power outages in U.S. history, including to the office of Republican Gov. Greg
Abbott, whose regulatory appointees came under sharp criticism during the first
investigative hearing since last week's crisis.
Leaders of other power companies said they thought the system would hold,
while also acknowledging that a failure to buttress their generators against
subfreezing weather contributed to the outages.
"Who is at fault?" state Rep. Todd Hunter, a Republican, demanded of
witnesses during hours of testimony at the Texas Capitol.
President Joe Biden is set to fly to Texas on Friday, in what will be his
first visit to a major disaster site since taking office.
Abbott has zeroed in almost singularly on the Electric Reliability Council
of Texas, accusing the state's embattled grid operator of misleading the public
about the readiness of a system that was minutes away from total collapse in
the early hours of Feb. 15, when temperatures plunged and demand for
electricity vastly outstripped supply.
But energy executives, including those whose companies lavishly donate to
Abbott and lawmakers, made clear that the fault is far wider.
The testimony offered a troubling new look at how quickly America's energy
capital ran out of energy. Curtis Morgan, the CEO of Vistra Corp., told
lawmakers at the outset that the blackouts affected plants that could have
generated more power that was urgently needed. He said when officials from his
company called utility providers, they were told they weren't a priority.
"How can a power plant be at the bottom of the list of priorities?" Morgan
said.
"You-know-what hit the fan, and everybody's going, 'You're turning off my
power plant?'" he said.
At least 40 people in Texas died as a result of the storm, and 10 days after
the blackout started, more than 1 million people in the state were still under
boil-water notices.
ERCOT officials have claimed that the scale of the forced blackouts --- the
largest in Texas history --- were necessary to avert an even more catastrophic
failure that would have wiped out power to most of the state's 30 million
residents for months.
"Obviously what you did didn't work," said Democratic state Sen. John
Whitmire of Houston, which had more than 1 million outages.
"It worked from keeping us (from) going into a blackout that we'd still be
in today, that's why we did it," ERCOT president Bill Magness said. "Now it
didn't work for people's lives, but it worked to preserve the integrity of the
system."
Among Vistra's subsidiaries is, Luminant, which operates nearly two dozen
plants across Texas. Morgan blamed outdated lists of critical infrastructure in
Texas for darkening gas processers and production sites as grid managers began
shutting off parts of the system.
Morgan didn't say how many of the company's plants were turned off or for
how long, but he did say the company was within three minutes of power going
offline at one nuclear plant, and that the main power grid in America's energy
capital was just moments away from total collapse Feb. 15. He said he had
reached out to state officials, including Abbott's office, with concerns.
"We came dangerously close to losing the entire electric system," Morgan
said.
Of Texas' power generators that were not operational during the storm,
Magness said the freeze was responsible 42% of the failures. A lack of fuel and
equipment damage unrelated to the weather also contributed, but Magness said
that for 38% of the plant outages, the problem remains unclear.
Republican lawmakers pulled no punches in criticizing DeAnn Walker,
chairwoman of the Public Utility Commission, who was appointed to the
regulatory agency by Abbott. Several were frustrated by her claims the
commission had little enforcement leverage over ERCOT.
"You are the chair, I would contend you are choosing not to leverage the
authority we have given you. That is a serious problem," Sen. Brandon Creighton
said.
The outages lasted days for millions of Texas homes, and millions more lost
water as water treatment plants shutdown and miles of pipes burst across the
state. The toll of the storm included at least 15 hypothermia-related deaths
around Houston, said Democratic state Rep. Ana Hernandez, vice chairwoman of
the House State Affairs committee.
The crisis has put Texas' power and fossil fuel industry under heavy
scrutiny from lawmakers who reap millions of dollars in unlimited political
contributions from energy interests, more than any other sector.
Since 2017, Vistra Energy and its political action committee has donated
more than $1.4 million to Texas politicians and groups associated with both
political parties, according to state campaign finance records. Lawmakers also
heard early Thursday from the top executive of NRG Energy, which has donated
more than $405,000 since 2017, including $30,000 to Abbott.
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