| WSJ Opinion / Texas barely avoids blackouts, thanks to natural gas ................................. 
 OPINION
 REVIEW & OUTLOOK
 
 Sept. 7, 2023
 
 Texas Suffers a Solar and Wind Power ‘Drought’
 
 The Lone Star State barely avoids blackouts, thanks to natural gas.
 
 By The Editorial Board
 
 Triple-digit  temperatures aren’t unusual during Texas summers, but power shortages  coupled with urgent orders to conserve electricity are now routine.  While Texans barely averted blackouts Wednesday evening, the state’s  energy ordeals are a flickering warning to the rest of the country.
 
 The  Electric Reliability Council of Texas (Ercot) called a Stage 2  emergency on Wednesday evening, one step from rolling blackouts. “High  demand, lower wind generation, and the declining solar generation during  sunset led to lower operating reserves on the grid and eventually  contributed to lower frequency,” the grid operator’s CEO said.
 
 Businesses  that use large amounts of power were directed to curb their energy  consumption -- i.e., scale back operations. Utilities urged Texans to  unplug electric vehicles, turn off pool filters, and prepare backup  plans for medical equipment in case the power goes out. In other words,  double check that backyard emergency generator.
 
 Texans conserved  enough power Wednesday to prevent blackouts, but they were asked again  Thursday to use less power in the evening -- when many come home from  work and want to crank up the AC. Last month Ercot issued eight  emergency alerts to conserve power.
 
 Ercot says Texas set a new  September record for peak demand on Wednesday, which follows 10 records  this summer. Don’t blame a warming climate. The problem is that Texas’s  booming population and economy have caused electricity demand to grow  faster than the reliable supply -- emphasis on the reliable.
 
 The  state’s refineries, manufacturing plants and data centers need huge  amounts of power. Texas produces 10 times as much solar power as it did  five years ago. An estimated 7.7 gigawatts of solar power capacity will  be installed this year -- about 9% of the state’s peak demand on  Wednesday. Renewables at times can generate 40% of the state’s power.
 
 But  neither solar nor wind provides reliable power around the clock. Solar  predictably wanes during the late afternoon, and the state doesn’t have  anywhere close to enough large-scale batteries to make up the shortfall.  So as usual Texas on Wednesday leaned on natural-gas plants to ramp up,  though this still wasn’t enough.
 
 The Legislature is asking  voters in November to approve a special fund to issue low-interest loans  and grants for building more backup power sources -- namely, gas  plants. So now Texas taxpayers are being asked to subsidize gas power to  back up solar and wind that are heavily subsidized by U.S. taxpayers.
 
 The  Texas power shortages are a harbinger of what’s to come for Americans  amid the Biden Administration’s force-fed green energy transition.  California has avoided rolling blackouts this summer because last  winter’s storms replenished reservoirs and hydropower, though population  and business flight is also working in the state’s favor on energy.
 
 The  North American Electric Reliability Corp. (Nerc) last month for the  first time deemed “energy policy” among the biggest risks to grid  reliability. “The resource mix is increasingly characterized as one that  is sensitive to extreme, widespread, and long duration temperatures as  well as wind and solar droughts,” Nerc said.
 
 Unlike actual droughts, power shortages are caused by, and can be prevented by, government.
 
 Copyright © 2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
 
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