"The
deep freeze that blanketed most of the U.S. in the past few days killed
dozens and temporarily plunged millions into darkness. Yet the country
narrowly escaped an even worse calamity as natural gas and power
supplies buckled across several states, laying bare just how vulnerable
the electric grid has become to a full-on catastrophe," reports Gerson Freitas Jr. of Bloomberg News.
"The storm
evoked memories of deadly 2021 winter blast that caused widespread
blackouts in Texas. But while that system hit a region unaccustomed to
extreme cold, this one spread across the Midwest and Northeast — two
areas that should be well-prepared. The fact that they weren’t
highlights the flaws of a system that’s facing limited natural gas supplies and the unpredictability of solar and wind power."
Several utilities, including the Tennessee Valley Authority, the nation's largest piublic utility, imposed rolling blackouts. Spire, a natural-gas firm in Alabama, Missouri and Mississippi, asked customers to lower their thermostats to between 65 and 68 degrees. Gas shortages also plagued parts of Texas and Wisconsin, and water systems reported problems with breaks and high usage.
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