Texas has several grids that are ccompletley down and keep crashing as they try to get them going. The wind farms are frozen and the solar panels are covered in snow and ice. My sister in law has been without out power for two day and this is day 4 for my nephew. Here in Oklahoma, we have started having the rolling blackouts, but they are timed for an hour to an hour and a half. We have tried to keep faucets dripping so they won't freeze. We have a well, so we don't have water supply when the power is off, but we have lucked out in not freezing up.
The irony of a State as Texas who has major oil production reverts to Windmills and solar panels for a large percentage of their energy supply, it's mindblogging. Did anyone in Texas who pushed these renewable energy sources consider what would happen if they were frozen in ice? I'm guessing that's a negative. I've been to Dallas several times in ice storms and graduated from Univ. of Arkansas, Fayetteville. Ice storms are the norm in winter. Add snow on top of that, and you have recipe for disasaster.
Former Ki17er @USMC.MCSF FAST TEAM 1/Europe -0341/8152/0231- Current CEO PSSG {priv sec}.#FactsMatter #SyntaxGrammar #WWG1WGA
redo your research on wind energy controlling "most" of the grid. the numbers don't add up. so what's really going on?#fuckthemanipulation