Not only are there large scale outages of electricity, also, alot of residential Texans reporting no water.
That is a gimme for rural Tx. No power, no power to run the well, but in urban areas, that's just strange. Usually they still have water.
Not only are there large scale outages of electricity, also, alot of residential Texans reporting no water.
That is a gimme for rural Tx. No power, no power to run the well, but in urban areas, that's just strange. Usually they still have water.
>>12944702
Rolling Blackouts Across 13 States Beyond Texas
Blackouts will roll across the spine of the American Midwest, stretching from North Dakota to Oklahoma, amid the extreme cold snap that has disrupted power generation and sent demand soaring.
https://www.breitbart.com/economy/2021/02/16/rolling-blackouts-across-13-states-beyond-texas/
I believe it, anon. Multiple hurricanes and now this. Hurricanes, most Texans are prepared for; arctic temps, not so much.
That said, most Texans have well-insulated houses because of the heat in the summer, and generators because of the hurricanes. I don't foresee any deaths because people can bundle up. Normies are mostly mad, and I understand, because of the discomfort.
So, here's anon's question:
Why does Qteam need Texas shut down? Why the outages? Half the upper coast lost power hours BEFORE the snowstorm and most still out. Lots of refinery in that area.
Anon began seeing outages reportedly normies on fakebook beginning Sat night. Storm didnt hit til Sunday night.
The Texas Speaker of the House has called for a hearing on the statewide power outages.
Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, asked the House State Affairs and Energy Resources Committees to hold a joint hearing to review what led to the massive power supply drop-off that has caused all the outages statewide.
“The extreme winter weather Texans experienced this week caused the lights to go off across the Lone Star State,” Phelan said in a news release. “I’m asking these two vital committees to convene a joint hearing on Feb. 25 for the express purpose of helping Texans understand what went wrong and how we can prevent these conditions from happening again."
Phelan said he wants to know what steps regulators and grid operators need to take.
House State Affairs Committee Chairman Chris Paddie echoed that sentiment in the same release.
“The statewide blackouts raise questions about the reliability of our electric grid and its ability to withstand extreme weather events in the future," Paddie added.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/live-updates-texas-speaker-calls-for-hearing-as-millions-remain-without-power-during-historically-frigid-temps/