The Texas Power Grid is Holding; ERCOT Predicts Peak Energy Use Friday Morning

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas’ supply and demand graph has shown the state’s grid has had enough capacity to keep up with Texans’ demand for power to stay warm during the Arctic blast that rushed into the state Thursday morning.

However, Texans are using more electricity than ERCOT forecasted. Yesterday the peak Thursday was expected to be about 70,000 megawatts, but Thursday night, Texans already used about 74,000 megawatts.

ERCOT predicts energy use will peak at about 8 a.m. Friday.

ERCOT predicts that energy use peaks Friday at about 8 a.M. The Railroad Commission of Texas says crews continue to inspect critical gas infrastructure across the state making sure they’re winter weather ready. Political reporter Julie Fine is keeping an eye on the power grid with more on this.

Wednesday, Gov. Greg Abbott, ERCOT and the Public Utility Commission of Texas promised the grid would hold and there would be no repeat of February 2021 when thousands were plunged into darkness and more than 200 people died when the power grid failed.

“I agree with them based on these conditions, the biggest difference from this and Uri is the weather. It’s going to be warmer, it’s going to be drier, it’s going to be sunnier, it’s going to be windier. All of those accrue to a higher likelihood of the grid staying up,” said Doug Lewin the president of Stoic Energy Consulting.

WHY IS MY POWER OUT IF THE GRID IS OK?

There could be issues with power that have nothing to do with the grid, like localized outages due to the high winds.

Oncor tweeted Thursday night that crews would work through the night to restore power.

Oncor’s outage map shows less than 800 outages affecting 24,929 customers in North Texas as of 11 p.m. Earlier Thursday the electric delivery company said most of the outages were caused by high wind and the outages were being fixed.

If you experience an outage you can text OUT to 66267, use the MyOncor app to report it, call 888-313-4747 or select “Report an Outage” on Oncor’s website.

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