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February 17, 2021 • EPE Related News

Texas counties with fewer power outages are not part of state grid

Texas counties with fewer power outages are not part of state grid

El Paso County is on eplace to experience minimal power outages, despite battered by the historic winter storm

Counties with fewer power outages are not part of Texas grid | khou.com

LINK TO BROADCAST STORY at 6PM

Author: Jeremy Rogalski

Published: 7:14 PM CST February 17, 2021

Updated: 7:22 PM CST February 17, 2021

HOUSTON — Some parts of Texas battered by the winter storm had relatively few homes lose power.

They are primarily in areas outside of ERCOT, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, which manages the electric grid for 90% of the state and operates separate from federal oversight and regulation.

El Paso County is one place to experience minimal power outages, despite getting battered by the historic winter storm.

“We had about three thousand people that were out during this period, a thousand of them had outages that were less than five minutes,” said Eddie Gutierrez, vice president of strategic communications for El Paso Electric.

Gutierrez said the company learned a hard lesson and after a big freeze hit Texas in 2011. It invested millions in cold-weather upgrades.

“Making sure that we had we could winterize our equipment and facilities so they could stand minus-10 degree weather for a sustained period of time,” he said.

On the east side of state, several counties around Beaumont also suffered relatively few outages, according to the website poweroutage.us which collects and aggregates data across the country.

The Beaumont area is served by Entergy, which also beefed up winterization efforts after the storm a decade ago.

“We’ve added more insulation to some areas of our plants, placed additional heaters on critical equipment and added more barricades to block wind from other key equipment,” said Entergy spokesperson Allison Payne.

But weatherization standards are voluntary in Texas, and state utility regulators said they have traditionally focused more on hot weather and hurricanes, not the bitter cold.

“There’s probably a need to take a look at what those standards are and see if they need to be adjusted,” said Andrew Barlow, spokesperson for the Texas Public Utility Commission.

The issue is likely to come up in coming weeks at the Texas capitol, as Gov. Greg Abbott has made ERCOT reform an emergency item on the legislative agenda.

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