I just assumed most people in Texas have heat pumps- AC in the summer and 
minimal heating in the winter when needed. When the entire state gets a deep 
freeze, everybody is running those heat pumps non-stop, and the generation 
capacity simply wasn’t there. i.e. coal or natural gas plants have some 
turbines offline, etc.,. in the winter because historically power use is much 
much less. The odd thing is its been days now, those plants should be able to 
ramp back up to capacity - but clearly they haven’t. Blaming this on wind 
turbines is BS. In fact, if it weren’t for so many people in Texas with 
grid-tie solar systems, the situation would be even worse. 

And of course, the real issue is Texas’ closed grid - any other state could 
pull in more power from neighbors.

-John

> On Feb 15, 2021, at 11:34 PM, Cory Sell via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> wrote:
> 
> Ercot has already released actual documentation of the outputs. Wind is NOT 
> the biggest loss here. Even if wind was operating at 100% capacity, we’d be 
> in the same boat due to gas and fossil fuel-related generation being 
> decimated. Estimated 4GW lost for wind doesn’t make up for the 30GW+ 
> estimated being lost from fossil fuels. 
> 
> I only interject because people are already pointing their fingers at 
> renewables being the cause here and trying to pawn off the blame to 
> wind/solar to further their agendas to reduce renewable energy R&D and 
> adoption. Sure, wind isn’t perfect, but looks like solution relied on failed 
> in a massive way.
> 
> Sent from ProtonMail Mobile
> 
> 
> On Mon, Feb 15, 2021 at 10:17 PM, Robert Jacobs <rjac...@pslightwave.com 
> <mailto:rjac...@pslightwave.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> How about letting us Texans have more natural gas power plants or even let 
>> the gas be delivered to the plants we have so they can provide more power in 
>> an emergency. Did not help that 20% of our power is now wind which of course 
>> in an ice storm like we are having is shut off... Lots of issues and plenty 
>> of politics involved here.. 
>> 
>> Robert Jacobs​
>>  |   Data Center Manager
>>  <http://www.pslightwave.com/>
>> Direct:      832-615-7742 <tel:832-615-7742>
>> Mobile:      281-830-2092 <tel:281-830-2092>
>> Main:        832‑615‑8000
>> Fax:         713-510-1650 <>
>> 5959 Corporate Dr. Suite 3300; Houston, TX 77036     
>>  <https://www.facebook.com/pslightwave/>     
>>  <https://www.linkedin.com/company/pslightwave>      
>>  <https://twitter.com/PSLightwave>
>>  <http://www.pslightwave.com/>               A Certified Woman‑Owned 
>> Business 
>> 24x7x365 Customer Support: 832-615-8000 | supp...@pslightwave.com
>> 
>> ​This electronic message contains information from PS Lightwave which may be 
>> privileged and confidential. The information is intended to be for the use 
>> of individual(s) or entity named above. If you are not the intended 
>> recipient, any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of the contents of 
>> this information is prohibited. If you have received this electronic message 
>> in error, please notify me by telephone or e-mail immediately.
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+rjacobs=pslightwave....@nanog.org> On Behalf Of 
>> Mark Tinka
>> Sent: Monday, February 15, 2021 10:06 PM
>> To: nanog@nanog.org
>> Subject: Re: Texas internet connectivity declining due to blackouts
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On 2/16/21 04:14, Sean Donelan wrote:
>> >
>> > Poweroutage.us posted a terrific map, showing the jurisdictional 
>> > borders of the Texas power outages versus the storm related power 
>> > outages elsewhere in the country.
>> >
>> > https://twitter.com/PowerOutage_us/status/1361493394070118402
>> >
>> >
>> > Sometimes infrastructure planning failures are not due to "natural 
>> > hazards."
>> 
>> I suppose having some kind of home backup solution wouldn't be too bad right 
>> now, even though you may still not get access to services. But at least, you 
>> can brew some coffee, and charge your pulse oximetre.
>> 
>> Mark.
>> 
> 
> 

Reply via email to