Frozen Pipelines covered in Ice and Snow power outage during Winter Storm Uri caused by natural gas … [+] pipelines freezing
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Texas, along with most of the country, is about to get hit with an Arctic blast that will plunge temperatures to extreme lows. But the all-too-recent memory of Winter Storm Uri in February 2021 causing rolling blackouts, hundreds of deaths, and billions in unexpected utility bills leaves Texans more worried than the rest of the country about their power staying on next week.
Unfortunately, their worries are real despite Governor Abbott’s insistence that all will be fine. Almost three years after that traumatic event, Texas’ state legislature and regulators have done little to insulate their constituents for the next big freeze beyond requiring weatherization inspections, a woefully insufficient measure.
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Instead, Texas policymakers used the tragedy to subsidize expensive and unreliable fossil fuels. The state legislature’s main response to Uri was authorizing billions in state money to double down on the main cause of its last disaster: natural gas power plants.
Gas plants are “disproportionately vulnerable to failure”
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the North American Electric
AEP Reliability Corporation found that Texas’ over-reliance on natural gas was the main cause of blackouts during Winter Storm Uri – more than 80% of ERCOT’s natural gas powered backup generators failed, prolonging outages while residential electricity demand spiked 250% higher than normal because people cranked up the heat.
Gas
GAS generation has become our grid’s hidden Achilles Heel: A recent report from the Union of Concerned Scientists found gas plants are “disproportionately vulnerable to failure” in extreme temperatures and were responsible for 56% of the capacity knocked offline during Uri. The problem is that extreme cold can freeze gas plant equipment like valves, water lines, sensors and inlet air systems and embrittle rubber and silicone seals.
Fortunately, the market forces that Texas Republicans tried hard to suppress are too strong, and ended up saving ERCOT during last summer’s extreme heat waves, when the state was hotter than 99% of the Earth’s surface.
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Because of the free market orientation of Texas’ electricity system, it produces more electricity from renewables than any other state and is second only to California when it comes to grid scale battery capacity. And as I outlined in an earlier article, these clean resources kept the grid float and Texans cool in unbearable heat.
These same renewables and batteries will make a meaningful difference next week. During the worst of the upcoming freeze wind power is expected to produce at least 10 GW on the coldest mornings, with solar adding at least 7 GW mid-day along with 3 GW of batteries that can ensure clean power can meet atleast a fifth of ERCOT’s forecasted peak demand of 80 GW.
Renewables and batteries aren’t a silver bullet
However, renewables and batteries are not a magical replacement for unreliable natural gas plants. Other extremely cost-effective measures can prepare the Texas grid to weather future big freezes, as noted by Energy Innovation researchers in the aftermath of Winter Storm Uri.
The first is energy efficiency. Texas, and much of the south, has poorly insulated houses that rely on inefficient electric resistance heaters. Fortunately, technological advancements and policy delivered through the Inflation Reduction Act point to a better way. Replacing these resistance heaters with heat pumps that are often three times as efficient can cut consumer electricity bills using a federal tax credit to offset much of the upfront cost.
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(From the Big Freeze Report: ERCOT slide showing cold weather impacts on electricity consumption by … [+] customer class)
ERCOT
Texas energy expert Doug Lewin estimates inefficient resistance heaters in poorly insulated homes contributed 30-40 GW of demand during Uri’s worst conditions, accounting for 45-55% of the total load and thereby precipitating the grid collapse.
The Texas Public Utility Commission has been authorized by the state legislature to develop rules to increase residential energy efficiency, but the agency hasn’t even started the process more than seven months after the bill was signed by the Governor. Texas has a golden opportunity to pass strong energy efficiency standards that could result in a heat pump boom in the state aided by Inflation Reduction Act tax credits.
The second is ending the Texas grid’s isolation by connecting it with the rest of the country. A geographically larger grid is a more reliable grid – make the grid larger than the storm, as they say.
It makes intuitive sense – the nearby Southeast and Southwest experience different weather patterns and temperatures, with different impacts on renewable and fossil power plants’ reliability. And it would have dramatically reduced the astronomical power price spikes that hit customers during Uri. A recent report by Grid Strategies found that if the Texas grid had been connected to adjacent regions during Uri it would have yielded savings “approaching $1 billion for 1 GW of additional ties between ERCOT and the Southeast, and over $100 million for most of the other [nearby regions]”.
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Even outside of extreme events, connecting Texas’ ERCOT grid to the rest of the country can save consumers lots of money. A recent study from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory found some of the most valuable opportunities for interregional transmission lie in exchanges between Texas and surrounding regions.
LBNL study showing that Texas will benefit the most from grid interconnection
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
What comes after this storm?
With another big freeze bearing down on Texas, it’s hard to witness the understandable angst that Texans feel about whether their grid will hold up. What makes it worse is that we’ve known for years how to make the grid more resilient against extreme weather.
I hope that blackouts, sky high bills, and unnecessary suffering never happen during extreme weather events. But what comes after the storm is where hope becomes reality. For a reliable grid, Texas policymakers just need to take common sense actions.
Jeremiah Devereaux, 27 (Source: Denton County Jail)
DENTON, Texas – A 27-year-old man has been arrested following a series of incidents in women’s restrooms and locker rooms at a local gym and two university campuses, police said.
Indecent exposure arrest
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What we know:
Jeremiah Devereaux was taken into custody Saturday, Jan. 31, after officers responded to a criminal trespass call in the 1300 block of S. Loop 288. Witnesses at a local gym reported that a man had entered the women’s locker room, sauna, and bathroom. Devereaux allegedly ran from the scene but was arrested by officers on an outstanding theft warrant.
The arrest led to a joint investigation involving the Denton Police Department and the University of North Texas (UNT) Police Department.
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Authorities linked Devereaux to an indecent exposure incident that happened Friday, Jan. 30, at the UNT campus, where a man reportedly exposed himself to a woman in a restroom. UNT Police subsequently obtained a warrant for his arrest in that case.
Police noted that Devereaux has a history of similar behavior. In January 2025, he was arrested at Texas Woman’s University (TWU) for criminal trespass and resisting arrest after he allegedly attempted to follow a woman into a bathroom stall.
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Devereaux is currently held in the Denton County Jail on a $5,000 bond.
Possible additional victims
Detectives believe there may be additional victims who have not yet come forward. Anyone with information or who has had a similar interaction with Devereaux is asked to contact Detective David Acrey at 940-349-7993. Anonymous tips can also be submitted to Denton County Crime Stoppers.
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The Source: Information in this article is from the Denton Police Department.
After a pleasantly warm spring week, North Texas is headed into a warmer one. Are we back in summer mode?
Sunday is starting partly sunny with day temperatures topping out at 77 degrees and a calm breeze of 5 to 10 mph, according to the National Weather Service’s Fort Worth office.
Overnight temperatures are expected to bottom out at 53 degrees.
The coming week is forecast to be warmer with temperatures ranging in the 70s and 80s during the day. On Thursday, the daytime temperatures are expected to be in the lower 80s.
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There are some sporadic chances of showers throughout the week in the forecast, specifically on Tuesday and Thursday. The rest of the week is looking sunny, for the most part.
The latest Dallas weather forecast from KXAS-TV (NBC5):
SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy and mild. High: 75. Wind: S 10-15 mph.
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MONDAY: Mostly cloudy and mild. Low: 54. High: 76. Wind: S 10-15 mph.
TUESDAY: Mostly cloudy and mild with a 30% chance of morning showers, maybe some rumbles of thunder. Decreasing clouds in the afternoon. Low: 60. High: 75. Wind: S 10-15 mph.
A&M was very good as well last season, winning its first eight games en route to a 48-11 record and a share of the SEC Tournament title. Ace pitcher Emiley Kennedy is gone as are key bats such as Koko Wooley and Amari Harper. But head coach Trisha Ford is confident in a team picked to finish sixth in the SEC’s preseason poll.
A groundout by Edwards is followed by a lineout from Sauni. DeeDee Baldwin comes in to pinch-hit but strikes out on a 3-2 pitch. The Aggies suffer their first loss of the season.
Two strikeouts and a groundout send us to the last of the seventh.
Preseason All-SEC selection Perez strikes out, Wark flies out and Dement pops out against Canady as the teams are down to their final three outs.
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Peters stays strong with a strikeout, groundout and flyout. The heart of the Aggies order is coming up, down one.
Vrazel reached on a one-out infield single, but was erased on a fielder’s choice. A long flyout from Kowalewski ends the inning. Canady has settled in nicely after the two first-inning runs.
The first error of the game gives Texas Tech a late lead. Davis reached on the miscue then made it to second on a passed ball. A double from Williams gave TTU the advantage as Sidne Peters enters to end the half-inning.
Canady matches Munnerlyn’s perfection as the game heads into the final stretch tied.
Texas Tech goes down 1-2-3 for the first time all game with the new pitcher in the circle.
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A two-out hit by Perez goes for naught as the score stays tied. Kate Munnerlyn takes over at pitcher on the other side of the break.
Vrazel crashes into the wall making a catch on a long Pannell flyout to begin the half-inning to the delight of a soldout Davis Diamond crowd. Lessentine then induced a popup and strikeout to maintain the tie.
Edwards reached on a hit by pitch, but a flyout, strikeout and groundout for Canady ended the frame.
Terry reached to the begin the inning and made it to third base with two out. But Dement and Powell teamed up on a fielder’s choice to tag her at third base after a grounder to the shortstop off the bat of Williams.
After Kennedy Powell singled to start the game, Canady retired two Aggies on groundouts. But a Wark home run to left field tied the game. Dement struck out to end the inning.
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Davis takes the third pitch of the game deep for a home run. Williams then followed up with a homer of her own on a 3-2 pitch. Lessentine retired three of the next four to get out of the inning.
The Aggies are wearing cream-colored jerseys. A&M volleyball coach Jamie Morrison, who led his team to a national title, is on hand to throw out the first pitch.