Thu. Nov 14th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Thousands of frustrated Texans have shivered in homes without power for a second day after an icy winter storm across the southern US, as fading hopes of a quick fix have stirred grim memories of a deadly 2021 blackout.

The freeze has been blamed for at least 10 traffic deaths on slick roads this week in Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma.

And even as Texas finally began thawing on Thursday, a new Arctic front from Canada was headed toward the northern US and threatening New England with potentially the coldest weather in decades.

Wind chills could dive below minus 45 degrees Celsius.

In Austin, city officials compared the damage from fallen trees and iced-over power lines to tornadoes as they came under mounting criticism for slow repairs and shifting time lines to restore power.

“We had hoped to make more progress today,” Jackie Sargent, general manager of Austin Energy, said. “And that simply has not happened.”

Across Texas, more than 280,000 customers were without power on Thursday night, down from 430,000 earlier in the day, according to PowerOutage.us.

icicles hang off an electrical line with brown trees behind it
Hundreds of thousands of Texans have been without power in the icy conditions.(AP: Tony Gutierrez)

The failures were most widespread in Austin, where impatience was rising among 150,000 customers nearly two days after the electricity first went out, leaving many also without heat.

Power failures have affected about 30 per cent of customers in the city of nearly 1 million at any given time since Wednesday.

By Thursday night, Austin officials backtracked on early estimates that power would be fully restored by Friday evening, saying the extent of the damage was worse than originally calculated and they could no longer predict when all the lights would come back on.

For many Texans, it was the second time in three years that a February freeze caused prolonged outages and uncertainty over when the lights would come back on.

icicles hang off the front of a yellow school bus in Richardson, Texas
Schools in Austin and Dallas have been closed due to the weather. (AP: Tony Gutierrez)

Unlike the 2021 blackouts in Texas, when hundreds of people died after the state’s grid was pushed to the brink of total failure because of a lack of generation, the outages in Austin this time were largely the result of frozen equipment and ice-burdened trees and limbs falling on power lines.

Source link