Good luck tomorrow, then.
BillYeoman said:
2.5 million without power in the area after a Cat 1.
This is concerning going forward. Especially after Derecho.
I know there are a lot of so called "libertarians" on this thread but this is unacceptable.
The State of Texas continues to fail on a reliable power grid and affordable energy
ktownag08 said:BillYeoman said:
2.5 million without power in the area after a Cat 1.
This is concerning going forward. Especially after Derecho.
I know there are a lot of so called "libertarians" on this thread but this is unacceptable.
The State of Texas continues to fail on a reliable power grid and affordable energy
This has nothing to do with the State of Texas power grid failing. There's enough generation available at the moment, but when lines fall over and/or trees fall into lines due to Cat 1+ hurricane winds this happens. There's already regulations in place regarding proper protocols for keeping power line right of ways maintained.
Just ended up being a direct hit on the countries 4th largest city. This is what happens.
BillYeoman said:ktownag08 said:BillYeoman said:
2.5 million without power in the area after a Cat 1.
This is concerning going forward. Especially after Derecho.
I know there are a lot of so called "libertarians" on this thread but this is unacceptable.
The State of Texas continues to fail on a reliable power grid and affordable energy
This has nothing to do with the State of Texas power grid failing. There's enough generation available at the moment, but when lines fall over and/or trees fall into lines due to Cat 1+ hurricane winds this happens. There's already regulations in place regarding proper protocols for keeping power line right of ways maintained.
Just ended up being a direct hit on the countries 4th largest city. This is what happens.
Bull**** talking point. In the last 3 years our ability to deliver power in emergencies has been a joke.
In my 50 years of living here I have never seen such an incompetent energy infrastructure management.
It is is a joke
This was a Cat 1 btw.
William Foster said:BillYeoman said:ktownag08 said:BillYeoman said:
2.5 million without power in the area after a Cat 1.
This is concerning going forward. Especially after Derecho.
I know there are a lot of so called "libertarians" on this thread but this is unacceptable.
The State of Texas continues to fail on a reliable power grid and affordable energy
This has nothing to do with the State of Texas power grid failing. There's enough generation available at the moment, but when lines fall over and/or trees fall into lines due to Cat 1+ hurricane winds this happens. There's already regulations in place regarding proper protocols for keeping power line right of ways maintained.
Just ended up being a direct hit on the countries 4th largest city. This is what happens.
Bull**** talking point. In the last 3 years our ability to deliver power in emergencies has been a joke.
In my 50 years of living here I have never seen such an incompetent energy infrastructure management.
It is is a joke
This was a Cat 1 btw.
I agree. I shudder to imagine a direct cat 3+ hit. Or even a cat 2.
Trying to figure out your "libertarian" comment though. What is "libertarian" about the current structure of energy companies down here? How is libertarianism to blame for this? I don't consider myself a libertarian, just genuinely curious.
Dill-Ag13 said:
Enraging that the only update information available to me is a tracker on # of customers restored and an 8:30pm press release
Charlie Murphy said:
Not sure why centerpoint keeps referencing bringing one million customers back online by Wednesday. That tells me nothing.
The Whataburger app works as a power outage tracker, handy since the electric company doesn't show a map.
— BBQ Bryan (@BBQBryan) July 9, 2024
Still nearly 1.9 million power outages. pic.twitter.com/d8srWmw1oV
Quote:
This has nothing to do with the State of Texas power grid failing. There's enough generation available at the moment, but when lines fall over and/or trees fall into lines due to Cat 1+ hurricane winds this happens
My dad worked for AEP for 46 years. He was the storm coordinator and spent many a hurricane away from us in South Texas to go work in other parts of the state and country. Most of the electric entities won't bring crews in until after the storm passes because they want to make sure that these guys can actually get in. Crews likely started staging yesterday in Austin or San Antonio once it became more clear where the storm was going to make landfall. I expect you all will see lots of crews from outside of Houston making their way into town today and tomorrow. Remember that as of 72 hours ago, this storm was going to hit the central Texas coast.Ferris Wheel Allstar said:
This is just plain neglect.
CenterPoint admits thousands of out-of-town repair crews weren't staged in the Houston area ahead of Hurricane Beryl CenterPoint said Tuesday that it had mobilized thousands of crews to assess and repair damage caused by the Category 1 storm. But most of them aren't in Houston yet.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Have the WX experts acknowledged a superior computer model?
Have they declared a clear winner this go round?
Who is in the running for the triple crown?
The next storm is the Preakness. Who do we need to keep an eye on? Which models are legit? Can they repeat their performance?
Coarse global ensembles were consistently too weak & too far south with Beryl once it passed west of Jamaica, accordingly depicting its Gulf landfall too far south.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) July 8, 2024
Short-term observations vs. forecasts made it easier to rule out the outliers:https://t.co/qd22rH4vzv pic.twitter.com/ECJ3mHh1Fe
AgLiving06 said:
Get an interlock not a transfer switch. It needs to be near the breaker box though. They can use conduit to get you closer or around things. Without seeing your set up figure or what you would put the generator and then do the measurements to the gas meter and breaker box. You can get 100 ft hose from the meter