ENERGY
& ENVIRONMENT
The winter storm that crippled Texas this week and
heat wave the hit California last summer show much more needs to be done to
protect power supplies from extreme weather.
By ERIC
WOLFF, DEBRA KAHN and ZACK COLMAN
02/21/2021
07:00 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/21/texas-california-climate-change-power-grids-470434
Texas and
California may be worlds apart in their politics and climate policies, but they
have something in common: Extreme weather crashed their power grids and left
people stranded in the dark.
The two
sprawling, politically potent states have devoted massive sums to their power
networks over the past two decades — California to produce huge amounts of wind
and solar energy, Texas to create an efficient, go-it-alone electricity market
built on gas, coal, nuclear and wind. But neither could keep the lights on in
the face of the type of brutal weather that scientists call a taste of a
changing climate.
That
presents both an opportunity and a challenge for President Joe Biden,
potentially aiding his efforts to draw support from lawmakers and states for
his multitrillion-dollar proposals to harden the nation's energy infrastructure
to withstand climate change. But he’s already facing entrenched resistance to
his pledges to shift the nation to renewable energy by 2035 — including from
fossil fuel advocates who have sought to scapegoat wind and solar for the
energy woes in both states.
The
catastrophe this week in Texas left more than 4 million people in the dark and
the cold, and even more without clean water, when a rare blast of Arctic air
drove temperatures down, freezing both natural gas plants and wind turbines.
Texas
“planned more for heatwaves than for ice storms,” said Dan Reicher, who worked
in the Clinton administration's Energy Department on renewable energy and is
now at Stanford University. And the onus now is on figuring out how to prevent
a repeat — a tricky situation given the independence of Texas’ grid and sharp
opposition from Republicans there to linking up to other states and giving
federal regulators oversight of its power system.
So far, the
Biden administration has shown little sign of pushing its agenda on Texas,
which already leads the nation in wind power. But Congress is eyeing hearings
to look at this week's power failures, which are likely to put a spotlight on
the state's grid.
“How much
and how far does the Biden administration want to dig into this from the
broader federal perspective? And that remains to be seen,” Reicher said.
Though
scientists haven't definitively tied climate change to the polar vortex that
sent temperatures plummeting this week, evidence is starting to show that years
of rising temperatures in the Arctic may be playing a role in altering the path
of the jet stream that fed the frigid winds into the southern states.
“The way I
think about it is you’re opening the door to the freezer," said Katharine
Hayhoe, atmospheric scientist and professor of political science at Texas Tech
University.
And while
Texas A&M University climate scientist Andrew Dessler said the link to
climate change hadn't been settled, it's undeniable that climate change is
fueling more “tail risk” events that were once considered rare. And both Texas
and California, which suffered both a devastating heat wave and record
wildfires last year, present important questions for how to safeguard critical
infrastructure in a warmer world.
“It's kind
of the insurance question," Dessler said. "How much do you pay for
insurance and take the chance that you'll never use it, versus not having
insurance and then getting wiped out?"
California
has been experiencing the effects of climate change on its grid for years —
wildfires that threaten transmission have grown in size and duration, heat
waves have increased in intensity and duration, and droughts in the Northwest
are restricting crucial supplies of hydropower. In response to mounting
liabilities from wildfire damages, which forced utility Pacific Gas &
Electric Company into bankruptcy in 2019, the state's utilities have
increasingly been shutting off transmission lines during wind storms in order
to reduce the likelihood of sparking blazes.
In an
effort to reduce carbon emissions and bring more power generation in-state,
California set aggressive renewable targets, increasing the amount of solar
capacity on its grid in the past decade to 27 gigawatts in 2019, more than
one-third of the nation's solar output, according to the Solar Energy
Industries Association. And to balance its grid, it's helped build an 11-state
power market that enables it to export excess solar power during the day and
draw in electricity from other sources after sunset.
But
August's unplanned blackouts — the state's first since the energy crisis of
2000-2001 — underscored other weaknesses in California's grid. A state analysis
of the failures that shut off power for 490,000 customers for two hours one
night and 320,000 customers for less time another night, pinned blame on the
historic West-wide heat wave, which saw demand surge and limited the amount of
power California could import from other states. But it also pointed to the
state's high proportion of renewables, which see their electricity output drop
sharply as the sun goes down, requiring other power plants to ramp up quickly —
and which they were unable to do that week.
Like California,
Texas suffered from an energy shortage at a key moment: In the space of an hour
early Monday morning, 30 gigawatts of generation — one quarter of the state's
entire capacity — dropped off the grid just as a deep freeze drove demand up to
levels usually only seen in summer. That led to several days of blackouts
affecting 4.4 million Texas customers.
Texas'
problems may stem partly from its an open market rules that differ from markets
in other regions around the country, many of which require a "capacity
market" where power producers commit to keep their plants available years
in the future. When the cold snap descended on the state, curbing shipments of
natural gas and freezing wind turbines, several power plants that could have
helped fill the gap were off line for maintenance.
And the
state also failed to heed the warnings from a report on a similar freeze in
2011, which called for insulating generators to protect against the cold — a
costly fix, but one that could have mitigated the outages.
Experts say
increasing the connections around the country that allow power to move long
distances could help prevent future blackouts.
Michael
Wara, director of the climate and energy program at Stanford University’s Woods
Institute for the Environment, said both Texas and California could benefit
from greater coordination with their neighbors — and Biden can help with that.
"There's
a shared dilemma between our situations, and it relates to how to take account
of the weather extremes associated with climate change," he said. "In
both situations, the real world exceeded, by a large margin, the planned-for
extreme case."
Texas has
resisted that strategy, and by refusing to cross state lines, the state has
kept federal regulators away from its power grid. That’s left it on its own
when resources fail to meet demand — as they nearly have several times in
recent years when summer heat pushed the system to its limits.
"There's
a lot of finger pointing by politicians in Texas right now, but there's some
very painful lessons for them in terms of the way their market is run,"
said V. John White, executive director of the Center for Energy Efficiency and
Renewable Technologies. "One of the weaknesses of Texas is they're not
connected very well to any other part of the country."
While the
immediate focus there is restoring power across the state, some have started to
look ahead to how the grid can prepare for the future.
"The
one common element from the California situation and what appears to be the
case in Texas, is weather," Richard Glick, chair of the Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, told reporters Thursday. "All the experts tell us
this type of wild unanticipated weather is going to happen much more frequently
than has happened in the past. It's incumbent on us and others to ensure the
grid is more resilient against those particular extreme weather events."
Glick
questioned whether Texas should continue its go-it-alone approach, noting that
nearby states with access to generation over transmission lines managed to
recover more quickly from the deep freeze, including much of the upper Midwest
and even El Paso and Lubbock, Texas, which operate outside Texas' primary
network. That Midwest power network is managed by grid operators linked to the
rest of the country and suffered rolling blackouts on Monday and Tuesday, but
largely recovered by Wednesday.
Power grid
experts have called for a massive build-out of transmission lines for decades
to ensure that energy supply problems those suffered by California and Texas
suffered could be alleviated by supplanting supplies from downed power plants
with electricity from other parts of the country, or even from Canada and
Mexico. That's an approach the Biden administration is likely to try to take,
but they'll need to come up with a way to driving the billions or trillions of
spending needed and figure out how to clear away the bureaucratic problems that
have slowed the process for decades.
"The
problem is not that transmission providers are looking for handouts," said
Larry Gasteiger, executive director of WIRES, a transmission builders
association. "If the transmission [needs are] identified and put into a
transmission plan, we'll build it. Two real areas that are stumbling blocks for
getting more transmission infrastructure built: One is permitting and siting,
the other is cost allocation. Who pays for it."
Green
groups generally agree that more transmission is needed — linking rural areas
with lots of sun and wind with population centers will be key to decarbonizing
the grid — but they don't think more wires will be the end of the process.
Instead, they point to new technologies, like developing "microgrids"
that are less reliant on distant power supplies and rolling out batteries that
can store power for when it's needed.
"First
and foremost, we need to recognize, we probably can't prevent every outage of
this kind that we're probably going to be seeing over the next 30 years,"
said Mark Dyson, a principal for electric power with the clean energy think
tank Rocky Mount Institute. "It's well past time to recognize a
fundamental vulnerability of the power system and take advantage of where we
are now with digital technologies, more distributed technology, storage, and
flexibility and deal with the root cause and not play whack a mole with these
large scale systems."
Republicans
are unlikely to embrace an infrastructure bill laden with green energy incentives,
such as the one Biden plans. But some conservatives argue that the bill could
do a lot to make the energy grid more resilient to weather events.
"It
looks like an infrastructure bill is likely to move and it will include energy
provisions," said former Republican FERC Commissioner Bernard McNamee, now
a partner at the law firm of McGuire Woods.
"I
don't think this is going to be a one simple solution. It's going to be a lot
of hard work, a lot of thinking by smart people to come up with practical
solutions," he added.


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