cromwell wrote:I read about the weather in Texas, incredible.
Both sides are trying to blame the other; one side saying that depending on wind turbines caused the power grid to crash, the other that it was all down to fossil fuels.
The was a picture of the Acropolis in Athens in the Telegraph the other day - covered in snow! MrsC was once there in February and it was red hot!
Wind is 18% of Texas power and half of it was still going. Gas is 54% of Texas power and they simply couldn't keep up with demand and had not weatherproofed it against the cold.
It is "trendy" to blame the switch to renewables, but the reality is that Texas has less than half the number of people the UK does, generates 1.5 times the power and can't keep the lights on in a winter storm.
Blackouts have been rolling. If you are off for the night, you're on for the day and probably the next night.
This has been a failing of a state energy sector that doesn't connect to other states and did not make enough provision for cold weather. But it has had some interesting outcomes. People with their own Solar/Battery setup's being islands in the sea of black. EV's doing dual purpose and a shivering population. Yet, when all is said and done, the temps are expected to be back in the 20's C by Thursday. BTW, that image with the low single digits?? Deg F.