lmao lmao.

Reminder that Texas is a separate grid, which is deregulated and financialized, according to neoliberal ideals of efficiency.

  • emizeko [they/them]
    hexbear
    42
    14 days ago

    I would never live in Texas but if I did I would have like 20kW of batteries on the wall of my McMansion's garage and a generator, they would pay for themselves within a couple years of this bullshit

    • Mactan [he/him]@lemmy.ml
      hexbear
      25
      14 days ago

      the inevitable end for those with the wealth to survive the mortgaging of our utilities. you will have to have water treatment too because the water from your municipality or well will not be safe

    • Snackuleata [any]
      hexbear
      24
      14 days ago

      That is the solution most people go for. Rather than get mad and demand power be a public utility, rugged individualism prevails, everyone who can buys a generator, and the poor get shamed for being idiots for not buying one and deserving to suffer for their mistake. I'm still a bit bitter arguing with people that the government should do basic infrastructure spending on the power grid and being told instead everyone should only look out for themselves. I'm glad I moved out.

    • Rom [he/him]
      hexbear
      13
      14 days ago

      Probably after a single price surge, even

  • Dolores [love/loves]
    hexbear
    36
    edit-2
    14 days ago

    fascinating to me that texans can be bled like this in the heat and their minds don't turn to murder

    • supafuzz [comrade/them]
      hexbear
      32
      14 days ago

      all those guns to protect themselves from "criminals" and they're too us-foreign-policy-brained to realize that the real criminals robbing them are at the power company

      • Dolores [love/loves]
        hexbear
        11
        14 days ago

        right? like a texan chud is ready to shoot somebody for driving too slow, but when a company is forcing them to pay absurd costs or sweat their balls off...

        they can't countenance the idea of taking revenge

      • keepcarrot [she/her]
        hexbear
        6
        14 days ago

        If it weren't for all those immigrants hogging the air conditioning! - texas

  • Chronicon [they/them]
    hexbear
    35
    14 days ago

    One megawatt can usually power about 800 homes on a normal day but as little as 200 homes on a hot day in Texas.

    texas delenda est

  • FuckyWucky [none/use name]
    hexbear
    34
    14 days ago

    Natural monopolies and all. Gotta shove a market everywhere, even where it makes no sense.

  • CoolerOpposide [none/use name]
    hexbear
    31
    14 days ago

    God if only we could harness the power of the sun to power devices that COOL our homes… somebody please get working on a way to make this happen

    • @porcupine@lemmygrad.ml
      hexbear
      21
      14 days ago

      if someone were so authoritarian that they'd disrupt the free market in this way, President Biden would simply have no choice but to impose tariffs on them to protect American business from such dangerous foreign technology

    • Tunnelvision [they/them]
      hexbear
      16
      14 days ago

      I hate talking about solar here because you hear the dumbest fucking arguments against it that it makes me want to get violent.

      It can’t support all our energy needs? It’s better than using 100% fossil fuels though you have to start somewhere.

      What about when the suns not out? BITCH ITS FUCKING TEXAS

  • AntiOutsideAktion [he/him]
    hexbear
    26
    14 days ago

    I love free market basic utilities because of the informed choice you have as a consumer to choose to use it when you hear about price changes before you're charged

  • UltraGreen [comrade/them]
    hexbear
    25
    14 days ago

    I hate it here. Texas is a hellhole. There are zero redeeming qualities about living in this state. It's too hot, the environment is ugly and barren, every city is a concrete jungle, flat and full of parking lots and nothing else.

    If my power goes out at the peak of the heat, I guess I'm killing an ercot exec?

    • invo_rt [he/him]
      hexbear
      24
      14 days ago

      every city is a concrete jungle, flat and full of parking lots and nothing else

      I visited Dallas once. Stayed in a hotel for a weekend-long event. Wanted to go get food. "Hey, I can see stuff right across the street, let's walk." The street is a fucking massive highway with no crossings unless you walk like a mile in either direction to get to an intersection and then a mile back to get to the food. Repeat to get back to the hotel.

      youre-awful

      • atyaz [he/him]
        hexbear
        4
        14 days ago

        I had the exact same experience in Dallas. Do we work for the same company or is that just how Dallas is everywhere.

        • JayTwo [any]
          hexbear
          5
          14 days ago

          That's just metropolitan Texas. Houston is just as bad if not worse. Austin is a lot better though but only because the bar is pretty low.

    • Tunnelvision [they/them]
      hexbear
      8
      14 days ago

      Having power go out during peak summer never used to happen. Texas sucks ass, but genuinely we produce enough energy that we often sell it to the other energy grids from what I understand. We shouldn’t really have any brown/blackouts at all other than the freezes.

      • HexBroke [she/her, comrade/them]
        hexbear
        5
        edit-2
        14 days ago

        Summer probably wasn't as hot (as 2023 and probably 2024)

        On an hourly basis, ERCOT load had never exceeded 80,000 megawatts (MW) before this summer. Not only was a record 85,464 MW load set on Aug. 10, but demand breached 80,000 MW on 42 days between June 1 and Aug. 31

        16 percent growth in two years will cause challenges for any infrastructure

        Population and GDP cannot explain peak summer load growth of 9 percent in 2022 and 7 percent in 2023

        • Tunnelvision [they/them]
          hexbear
          8
          edit-2
          14 days ago

          Ercot has been saying this for almost a decade at this point though. I’m not arguing it isn’t hotter than it used to be, I’m saying it’s more likely that they’re lying about the reasoning for it. Like their lack of modernization of the infrastructure in general.

          • Assian_Candor [comrade/them]
            hexbear
            11
            edit-2
            14 days ago

            ERCOT is a bazinga system operator set up by the characters from looney tunes. They're the only system operator without a forward capacity market. Everyone else pays uneconomic reserve plants money just to stay connected and ready to respond to demand spikes, but the brain trust at ERCOT decided it would be cheaper for rate payers to not do that. Turns out it is until it isn't, and the only way they have to balance supply with demand is to curtail demand with eye bleedingly high real time prices since there isn't enough slack in the system.

          • HexBroke [she/her, comrade/them]
            hexbear
            4
            14 days ago

            I would be surprised if there isn't any manipulation of the market.

            Some of my state's SOE electricity generators got sued by the federal government for price manipulation on the national energy market (and then they gave up and changed the rules to try and stop it)

  • OgdenTO [he/him]
    hexbear
    19
    edit-2
    14 days ago

    The cost being measured in MWh - does that mean that this is the production cost, and that the KWh rate that people are paying is even higher?

    This is $.688 per KWh, which is high, but like only about 4 times the cost of my regular priced electricity in my region.

    Does this jumping 1600% mean that normally electricity is less than $.04 per KWh. That is incredibly low! There's no way that what people pay for electricity in Texas. This must be production costs, right?

    • Chronicon [they/them]
      hexbear
      19
      edit-2
      14 days ago

      it's wholesale costs, not costs of production, there's at least one more layer of middlemen in there before the consumer gets anything. Avg residential rate is 14.3 cents/kWh (but businesses only pay 8.7)

  • Evilphd666 [he/him, comrade/them]
    hexbear
    9
    edit-2
    14 days ago

    maybe-later-honey Freedom isn't free honey.

    maybe-later-kiddo look kiddo battery tech and national grids are nice but have you thought about shareholders?