Texas lawmakers pass power grid reform bill, as experts warn it falls short


Houston Chronicle

Jeremy Blackman, Austin Bureau

May 30, 2021 Updated: May 31, 2021 6:53 a.m.

Texas lawmakers on Sunday passed a final proposal to shore up the state’s power grid in response to this year’s deadly outage crisis, agreeing on a raft of reforms that experts welcomed but also fear won’t go far enough.

The legislation, Senate Bill 3, would require power plants and some natural gas suppliers to prepare their operations for extreme cold, a step that state regulators and many companies have avoided for decades despite repeated blackouts and promises that market incentives would ensure reliability.

It would also create a statewide emergency alert system, force industry participants to communicate more often and mandate that key gas facilities be registered as critical so their power isn’t unintentionally shut off during shortages. Hundreds of gas facilities reportedly lost power during the winter storm, pinching off fuel supplies to power plants.

“This bill offers significant reforms that will strengthen communication, coordination, oversight, and the reliability and resiliency of the ERCOT grid,” said Sen. Charles Schwertner, R-Georgetown. “These reforms are necessary to ensure the problems faced during the Valentine’s Day winter storm never occur again.”

The measure passed unanimously in the House and with just one opponent in the Senate.

The proposals address several longstanding weaknesses, though still amount to a gamble in the wake of one of the state’s deadliest natural disasters, leaving its already isolated power grid vulnerable to similar disruptions for the coming winter, before key weatherization requirements would take effect.

Energy experts have warned that without quick structural improvements to power plants, gas wells and the supply chain that connects them, millions of Texas homes could again be without power in dangerously frigid conditions. February’s storm knocked out power to an estimated 4.5 million homes and killed at least 200 people — and likely many more.

Critics also caution that the final provisions leave broad discretion to gas suppliers, who provide most of the fuel for the electricity grid. The legislation allows for minimal fines against those that don’t comply and leaves oversight of infrastructure updates to the Texas Railroad Commission, whose members receive funding from the industry and have long opposed weather requirements.

For more:

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/politics/texas/article/Texas-lawmakers-forward-final-grid-reform-bill-16213978.php

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