lawandcrime | A late undercover cop left behind a letter in which he said he
participated in the New York Police Department’s and Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s conspiracy to undermine civil rights leaders and Black
nationalists in the 1960, and to kill them, said attorney Ben Crump in a press conference Saturday, joined by three daughters of Malcolm X. Notably, the former officer, Ray Wood, said he was involved in the arrest of two men from Malcolm X’s security team shortly before the assassination. He said Thomas Johnson, one of the men convicted in the murder, was innocent
“I participated in actions that in hindsight were deplorable
and detrimental to the advancement of my own Black people,” Wood said
in a letter read by his younger cousin Reggie Wood. “My
actions on behalf of the New York City Police Department were done
under duress and fear that if I did not follow the orders
Reggie Wood said Ray Wood wrote the letter, dated January 25, 2011,
while suffering failing health. Crump said that attorneys worked to
corroborate the letter’s version of events.
“This letter helps me to understand the pain and guilt that Ray felt
for the last 55 years,” Reggie Wood said. “He conspired to help the NYPD
assassinate Malcolm X.”
“Several months ago, the Manhattan District Attorney initiated a
review of the investigation and prosecution that resulted in two
convictions for the murder of Malcolm X,” the NYPD said in a statement
to NY1.
“The NYPD has provided all available records relevant to that case to
the District Attorney. The Department remains committed to assist with
that review in any way.”
The FBI declined to comment.
of my
handlers, I could face detrimental consequences.”
power-grid | Worldwide, similar experiences occur when electric utilities
deregulate. Percentage increases in residential electricity prices from
2000 to 2010, as a result of deregulation and privatization of electric
utilities, in the following countries are:
Chile,
+166 percent; Canada, +72 percent; Czech Republic, +133 percent;
Ireland, +100 percent; Hungary, +117 percent; Norway, +106 percent; New
Zealand, +203 percent; Sweden, +88 percent; U.S., +42 percent; and the
U.K., +86 percent. Electricity price increases globally after
deregulation far exceed general price and wage gains, making the general
population poorer but power generators and retailers richer.
Cold weather during February 2011 and ineffective weatherization that did not protect the plants caused many Texas electric power plants
to shut down. Electricity prices spiked much higher, and Texas
experienced prolonged and frequent rolling blackouts that primarily
affected residential customers.
During another Texas cold snap in January 2014, two large power
plants unexpectedly closed down because of incomplete weatherization,
which resulted in the danger of rolling blackouts. As a result, Texas
wholesale electricity market prices spiked higher–from a usual $30 to
$100 per megawatt-hour to more than $4,500 per megawatt-hour. Under
existing rules, all generators receive the same $4,500 per megawatt-hour
regardless of their average costs.
The current incentives in electricity markets harm residential
electricity consumers. Texas electricity generators, with multiple
plants on the interconnection grid, receive much more money if they do
not weatherize a few of their plants properly. As a consequence, these
poorly weatherized plants must shut down during cold weather. All
generating plants that remain online receive the spiking electricity
prices, and the generating company makes much more money than if all
their plants were operating properly. This is only one way privatizers
are gaming the Texas electricity market: using laws and rules set up by
their lobbyists.
Seven years ago at the top of the most recent credit bubble, it was
believed that electricity prices would rise dramatically. Consequently,
privatizers overpaid when purchasing electric utilities. Instead, U.S.
natural gas prices unexpectedly dropped–a result of the nationwide shale
gas fracking boom – and pushed many privatized Texas electricity
generating companies into bankruptcy.
Houston-based Dynegy Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection in July 2012. Edison Mission Energy,
which operated electric generating plants in 12 states, filed for
bankruptcy protection in December 2012 and exited Chapter 11 in March
2014, when the company sold for $2.64 billion to NRG Energy, which has
operations headquarters in Houston. Texas electricity generating company
Optim Energy
LLC – which is owned by ECJV Holdings LLC, which is owned by Cascade
Investment LLC, a Bill Gates investment company – filed for Chapter 11
bankruptcy protection in February 2014.
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., Texas Pacific Group and Goldman
Sachs Capital Partners took TXU – at that time, the main electricity
supplier in Texas – private in 2007 in the largest private equity
leveraged buyout (LBO) on record and renamed the new company Energy
Future Holdings Corp. (EFHC), headquartered in Dallas. In one of the
largest nonfinancial bankruptcies in history, EFHC filed a prepackaged
Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April 2014.
Although these generating companies are dealing with bankruptcies,
they cannot plan for and invest in new power plants to meet expected
electricity demand in Texas. This results in below-standard reserve
margins, which threaten Texas electricity supply and system reliability.
The North American Electric Reliability Corp.’s (NERC‘s)
goal is to safeguard North America’s electric power system reliability.
The nonprofit reports on insufficient electrical power level capacity
during peak load periods. Energy emergency alerts indicate electrical
capacity shortfalls and are a leading indicator of inadequate system
reliability. Texas is under increasing stress and has had three NERC
Energy Emergency Alert 2 incidents and two more serious NERC Energy
Emergency Alert 3 incidents since 2006.
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas’ (ERCOT‘s)
reserve margin forecasts for 2014-2023 are used as an indicator of
Texas’ electrical system reliability. ERCOT’s forecast reserve margins
show that Texas will fall significantly below the NERC reference reserve
margin standard of 13.75 percent beginning in 2015 and continuing
through 2023. New electric power plants are not being built fast enough
to keep up with growing electricity demand in Texas because of the
deregulation and privatization of Texas electric utilities. NERC and
ERCOT predict the increased probability of brownouts and rolling
blackouts in Texas.
npr | An ancient, well-preserved tree that was alive the last time the
Earth's magnetic poles flipped has helped scientists pin down more
precise timing of that event, which occurred about 42,000 years ago.
This
new information has led them to link the flipping of the poles to key
moments in the prehistoric record, like the sudden appearance of cave
art and the mysterious extinction of large mammals and the Neanderthals.
They argue that the weakening of the Earth's magnetic field would have
briefly transformed the world by altering its climate and allowing far
more ultraviolet light to pour in.
Their provocative analysis, in the journal Science,
is sure to get researchers talking. Until now, scientists have mostly
assumed that magnetic field reversals didn't matter much for life on
Earth — although some geologists have noted that die-offs of large mammals seemed to occur in periods when the Earth's magnetic field was weak.
The
Earth is a giant magnet because its core is solid iron, and swirling
around it is an ocean of molten metal. This churning creates a huge
magnetic field, one that wraps around the planet and protects it from
charged cosmic rays coming in from outer space.
Sometimes, for reasons scientists do not fully understand, the magnetic
field becomes unstable and its north and south poles can flip. The last
major reversal, though it was short-lived, happened around 42,000 years
ago.
This reversal is called the Laschamp excursion, after lava flows in
France that contain bits of iron that are basically pointed the wrong
way. Volcanic activity back then, during the flip, produced this
distinctive iron signature as the molten lava cooled and locked the iron
into place. Iron molecules embedded in sediments around the world also
captured a record of this magnetic wobble, which unfolded over about a
thousand years.
"Even though it was short, the North Pole did
wander across North America, right out towards New York, actually, and
then back again across to Oregon," says Alan Cooper,
an evolutionary biologist with Blue Sky Genetics and the South
Australian Museum. He explains that it "then zoomed down through the
Pacific really fast to Antarctica and hung out there for about 400 years
and then shot back up through the Indian Ocean to the North Pole
again."
dailymail | 'The Adam and Eve story', a 1966 work by
former US Air Force employee Chan Thomas, was only partially published
until recently when censored sections of the book were released for the
first time in more than 50 years.
In
the remarkable text, Thomas claims Jesus lived with the Naga tribe in
Northern India for almost 18 years in the period of his life which isn't
mentioned in the Bible.
'Curiously enough there was a tribe in the extreme north of India called the Naga tribe,' Thomas wrote.
'They
told the British of Jesus' having been there as a
late-teenager-young-adult who attended the Nacaal Temple as a student
and graduate of the temple.'
According
to Thomas, Jesus was considered a 'genius' by the Naga people and spent
ten to 15 years learning to speak and write the local language.
Thomas
says Jesus's last words were actually spoken in the Naga language and
he translates them as 'I am fainting, I am fainting, darkness is
overcoming me'.
In another section of the book Thomas also
claims that Jesus was abducted by aliens on Easter Sunday and says two
'angels came to earth in their space vehicle to take care of the
aftermath of Jesus' crucifixion'.
It
then goes on to say that the Genesis story is actually a parable about
the collapse of a previous civilization, in an extinction event before
Noah's Flood.
Thomas begins the book
with dedications to several US generals who are famous among conspiracy
theorists for their covert work during the Cold War.
According to the Daily Star,
the name 'The Adam and Eve Story' comes from Thomas's view that the
book of Genesis is really a parable about the collapse of a previous
civilisation which became extinct before Noah's flood.
reddit | Just as we have seen with KGB
declassifying huge amounts of formerly-classified "Tartaria" documents,
apparantly the CIA had some special interest in "The Adam & Eve
Story". It is basically a "research paper" explaining various
earth-cycle catastrophes. It is pertinent to "missing time" and "history
falsification" theories, and presumes many technologically-advanced
ancient civilizations existed before us.
NOTE:
The actual CIA dossier on the "Adam & Eve Story" also includes lots
of peripheral documents up front, so skip to around pages 19-24 if you
want a quick glance at the pertinent section.
Here is what u/redacted sent me:
There
is insurmountable evidence that we are the 6th advanced civilization to
exist upon this earth, each time getting wiped out by a calamity. I've
wondered why America has long had the Smithsonian cover up many ancient
artifacts that don't fit their narrative, such as the hieroglyphs in the
grand canyon, or the bones of giants all over America, but then I
realized the truth rather recently... control. The CIA just declassified
a document called [The Adam and Eve Story] (https://www.cia.gov/library/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP79B00752A000300070001-8.pdf)
which is about exactly this. Nobody is quite sure who wrote it, however
it appears to be written by a scientist working for the government
deciphering ancient texts then stumbling upon a terrible fact, that
every 5-6-thousand years, the strength of the poles wane and begin to
change positions and when this occurs, the mantle keeping our landmass
in it's current position turns to jelly, causing the landmasses to be
pulled 90-degrees, while the water on the earth stays put, like dropping
an object into a glass of water then spinning the glass in a circle...
water stay's put while the world around it moves. So, the world as we
know it is obliterated in days, submerged under the ocean for 40-days
(ala Tale of Gilgamesh, or Noah and the ark) until the poles finish
their shift at which point the North pole becomes the South and vice
versa. I believe that the rest of the story which was redacted tells of
the survivors having to live in caves and resort to cannibalism to
survive. I believe it's why the Aztec and N.American Indians both tell
of a white man visiting them and giving them seeds to grow and teaching
them how to harvest. I also believe those in power know this, and want
to keep is a secret knowing full well that if they don't, they might
have massive riots and won't be able to keep their "livestock" docile.
What better way to fool the masses than to make them think they are
being saved (such as the boats in the movie 2012), when in reality they
are being taken to a facility where they will be used to feed the elite?
How long will it take to regrow enough vegetation on Earth to not
resort to cannibalism? Do some research on [our poles currently moving
rapidly now!] (https://www.smalljoys.tv/earths-magnetic-poles/)
Then read up on all the elite politicians and leaders visiting
Antarctica now! I couldn't find any credible links, which is odd due to
how many have been going up there, from the Pope, to John Kerry, to
major leaders.
theverge | Google has fired Margaret Mitchell, co-lead of the
ethical AI team, after she used an automated script to look through her
emails in order to find evidence of discrimination against her coworker
Timnit Gebru. The news was first reported by Axios.
Mitchell’s firing comes one day after Google announced a reorganization to its AI teams
working on ethics and fairness. Marian Croak, a vice president in the
engineering organization, is now leading “a new center of expertise on
responsible AI within Google Research,” according to a blog post.
Mitchell joined Google in 2016 as a senior research
scientist, according to her LinkedIn. Two years later, she helped start
the ethical AI team alongside Gebru, a renowned researcher known for her
workon bias in facial recognition technology.
In December 2020, Mitchell and Gebru were working on a
paper about the dangers of large language processing models when Megan
Kacholia, vice president of Google Brain, asked that the article be
retracted. Gebru pushed back, saying the company needed to be more open
about why the research wasn’t acceptable. Shortly afterwards, she was fired, though Google characterized her departure as a resignation.
After Gebru’s termination, Mitchell became openly
critical of Google executives, including Google AI division head Jeff
Dean and Google CEO Sundar Pichai. In January, she lost her corporate
email access after Google began investigating her activity.
“After conducting a review of this manager’s conduct, we
confirmed that there were multiple violations of our code of conduct, as
well as of our security policies, which included the exfiltration of
confidential business-sensitive documents and private data of other
employees,” Google said in a statement to Axios about Mitchell’s firing.
usnews |America's most consequential adversaries on Thursday pounced on the news of historic and deadly outages
in Texas, saying the Biden administration should focus on taking care
of its own citizens before assuming it has the mandate to advance its
interests abroad at others' expense.
The Kremlin
early Thursday took aim at American concerns in recent years at the
Russian energy pipeline known as Nord Stream 2, which runs from its
territory through the Baltic Sea and into key U.S. allies, notably
Germany.
"It
probably makes sense for our American partners to be less interested in
Nord Stream 2 and to a greater extent be interested in the events in
Houston, Texas, [its] energy and heat supply," Dmitry Peskov, a
spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin,
told reporters Thursday morning. And, taking a dig at a state that
prides itself on its energy independence, he added: "Of course, gas
[supplies] would not be in that way here."
Iran, which U.S. officials privately say was behind
this week's attack on an American base in Iraq, ran an almost gleeful
gallery on the home page of its state news service entitled, "More Than
3.5 Million Texans Are STILL Without Power, Storm Death Toll Hits 23."
It includes pictures of the widespread devastation in Texas wrought by
the historic cold temperatures and broad outages.
And
China's state-run Global Times published an op-ed Thursday morning
blasting the massive electric grid failures in the Lone Star State,
which have caused two dozen deaths and left more than 3 million without
power amid bone-chilling cold temperatures in an area largely
unaccustomed to severe winters. The plight of its citizens shows that
China and others should no longer look to the U.S. for an example of
leadership, it claimed.
"It
is a severe natural disaster after all, and we cannot say that the U.S.
is an ugly country just because many Americans are also suffering from
man-made calamities. But what is happening there has undoubtedly shown
that the U.S. is an ordinary country with serious shortcomings,"
according to the outlet, which is run by the Chinese Communist Party but
is not considered a mouthpiece for it. "Actually, every country has its
own problems, so the U.S. should focus on solving its own woes rather
than denouncing other countries."
omaha | Nebraska’s publicly owned utilities
generated more power than their customers used during this week’s brutal
cold snap in the country’s midsection.
But energy experts say the targeted rolling blackouts criticized by Gov. Pete Ricketts prevented Nebraska and other states from catastrophic failure of a shared electricity grid.
Those
cuts, dictated by the Arkansas-based Southwest Power Pool, likely
prevented Nebraskans from living the nightmare facing Texas, where
millions went without power for days.
The
World-Herald spoke with energy experts, utility leaders and others
about what happened, why it happened and what might prevent a repeat
occurrence.
Why did Nebraska have rolling blackouts?
A
polar vortex brought freezing temperatures to the southern U.S., with
the cold snap staying for days as far south as the Mexican border.
Utilities
in Oklahoma and slices of Texas that belong to the power pool struggled
to operate some natural gas, coal and wind power plants not equipped to
run in such cold temperatures.
Getting
natural gas out of the ground was also slowed in both states, with
frozen wells and pipelines making it harder to deliver the gas needed to
generate electricity and heat homes.
Even in Nebraska, where colder
temperatures are common, some power plants struggled in sub-zero
conditions to operate at full capacity, including coal-fired units in
Nebraska City.
The loss of
that power production left the power pool, which manages electrical
supply and demand across a 14-state power grid, with a power imbalance.
pressenza |Hours after writing his screed, Boyd announced his resignation and apologized.
But he qualified his apology by saying that he never meant to imply
that the helpless elderly were the lazy ones—just everyone else. “I was
only making the statement that those folks that are too lazy to get up
and fend for themselves but are capable should not be dealt a handout,”
he wrote in a manner that suggested he was “sorry, not sorry.”
Most Republicans are not as overt as Boyd in their faith in social Darwinism. Take Texas Governor Greg Abbott,
who instead of openly blaming Texans for their own suffering instead
decided to blame climate-mitigating policies and renewable energy
programs like wind power. Speaking on Fox News, Abbott railed against
the “Green New Deal,” claiming that a reliance on wind turbines was
disastrous because the state’s wind-generated power “thrust Texas into a
situation where it was lacking power on a statewide basis.” For good
measure, he added, “It just shows that fossil fuel is necessary.”
The conservative Wall Street Journal, which has long been hostile to
tackling climate change through renewable energy, repeated this claim in
an editorial blaming “stricter emissions regulation” and the loss of coal-powered plants for widespread misery in the snow-blanketed South.
In fact, millions of Texans are going without power because of the Republican emphasis on cheap power over reliable power.
Seeing electricity generation as a profit-making enterprise rather than
the fulfillment of a public need, GOP policies in Texas have made the
state vulnerable to such mass outages. Moreover, plenty of wintry areas successfully run wind turbines when properly prepared to do so. And, Abbott did not see fit to point out that harsh winter temperatures lead to frozen natural gas pipelines—the real culprit in the outages.
Even as a majority of Texans now believe that climate change is really happening, their governor in late January vowed
to “protect the oil and gas industry from any type of hostile attack
from Washington.” Apparently protecting Texans from the ravages of the
fossil fuel industry is not in his purview. This is hardly surprising
given how much fossil fuel industry contributions have ensured Abbott’s loyalty to oil and gas interests.
The conservative mindset can be counted on to prioritize private
interests over public ones. In a Republican utopia, the rich are noble
and deserving of basic necessities, comforts, and life itself. If they
have rigged the system to benefit themselves, it means they are smart,
not conniving. In the future that Republicans promise, “Only the strong
will survive and the weak will parish (sic),” as per Boyd’s post. In
other words, our lives are expendable, and if we die, it is because we
deserve it and were simply not smart enough to survive.
theeconomiccollapseblog | We are getting a very short preview of what will eventually happen to
the United States as a whole. America’s infrastructure is aging and
crumbling. Our power grids were never intended to support so many
people, our water systems are a complete joke, and it has become utterly
apparent that we would be completely lost if a major long-term national
emergency ever struck. Texas has immense wealth and vast energy
resources, but now it is being called a “failed state”. If it can’t
even handle a few days of cold weather, what is the rest of America
going to look like when things really start to get chaotic in this
country?
At this point, it has become clear that the power grid in Texas is in
far worse shape than anyone ever imagined. When extremely cold weather
hit the state, demand for energy surged dramatically. At the same
time, about half of the wind turbines that Texas relies upon froze, and
the rest of the system simply could not handle the massive increase in
demand.
Millions of Texans were without power for days, and hundreds of thousands are still without power as I write this article.
And now we are learning that Texas was literally just moments away
from “a catastrophic failure” that could have resulted in blackouts “for months”…
Texas’ power grid was “seconds and minutes” away
from a catastrophic failure that could have left Texans in the dark for
months, officials with the entity that operates the grid said Thursday.
As millions of customers throughout the state
begin to have power restored after days of massive blackouts, officials
with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, or ERCOT, which operates
the power grid that covers most of the state, said Texas was
dangerously close to a worst-case scenario: uncontrolled blackouts
across the state.
I can’t even imagine how nightmarish things would have eventually
gotten in Texas if there had actually been blackouts for months.
According to one expert, the state really was right on the verge of a “worst case scenario”…
The worst case scenario: Demand for power
outstrips the supply of power generation available on the grid, causing
equipment to catch fire, substations to blow and power lines to go down.
If the grid had gone totally offline, the
physical damage to power infrastructure from overwhelming the grid could
have taken months to repair, said Bernadette Johnson, senior vice
president of power and renewables at Enverus, an oil and gas software
and information company headquartered in Austin.
For years, I have been telling my readers that they have got to have a
back up plan for power, because during a major emergency the grid can
fail.
RT | Texans may be suffering without electricity in bitter
temperatures, but Young Turks host Cenk Uygur can see the bright side,
as podcaster Joe Rogan and others who relocated to the state are
“freezing their asses off.”
Two dozen Texans are dead, food supplies can’t reach supermarkets, and nearly 200,000 homes
are still without power as of Friday morning, as freezing temperatures
wreak havoc on the Lone Star State. So paralyzing is the weather that
firefighters in San Antonio on Thursday were unable to extinguish a
burning apartment block due to frozen fire hydrants.
One pundit managed to find an upside, however. On Twitter, Uygur, a
progressive commentator, celebrated the fact that Rogan, a libertarian
podcast host who had recently moved to Texas from California, was likely
suffering.
“Only upside of Texas power outages is people like
@joerogan, who were so proud to leave CA and move to TX, freezing their
asses off,” he tweeted on Thursday. “They
said they wanted less government. Congrats, mission accomplished! I
hope you're not asking the government to come help you. #Freedom”
Uygur was instantly hammered for his apparent gloating. Commenters reminded
the progressive pundit that California, a byword for liberal statism,
regularly suffers from blackouts and wildfires, while Texas, known for
its economic libertarianism, just got hit with the cold snap of a
century.
mxdwn | Acclaimed pop singer Grimes has shared a few updates from her social media accounts
on the ongoing winter storm in Texas. Hit with unprecedented cold and
snow, Texas is currently experiencing widespread power outages, leaving
millions throughout the state without heat and electricity.
Earlier today, Grimes
tweeted that she had spent several days in Austin without power and
drove south to get out of the storm. A native of the Vancouver, Toronto
area, the singer also responded to a Twitter thread, wondering if there
was a way for Texas cities to “mass salt cuz then ppl could get food or
go to warming centers.”
Just spent however many days in Austin w no power, no heat + a baby in -0. drove south all night 2 escape incoming storm but roads r rly dangerous rn. Super worried about ppl. What’s best way to get food and heat to ppl rn? This is a v dangerous esp for kids
Grimes also used her social media channels
to share helpful resources to those being impacted by the weather
including warming stations across north Texas, mutual aid funds
throughout the Dallas, Houston and Austin areas, as well as a separate
thread complete with ways to cope with freezing temperatures. Additional weather reports show that more freezing temperatures and snow are heading toward the area this week.
Meanwhile, Austin Energy also reported that customers in the Austin
area “should be prepared to not have power through Wednesday and
possibly longer.” The multi-talented Grimes famously relocated to the Austin, Texas area recently with her Tesla-founder boyfriend Elon Musk, and their young child.
maxim |Tesla CEO Elon Musk
ridiculed the Texas electrical grid operator for being unreliable after
millions of Texans were left without power during a powerful winter
storm that hit the Lone Star State with historic freezing temperatures.
The billionaire electric car mogul moved from California to Texas in December—following the lead of podcaster pal Joe Rogan—to build a new Tesla factory in Austin.
On Wednesday, Musk tweeted that the state’s energy agency, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), “is not earning that R.”
Meanwhile, the New York Post reports
that Texans have been posting on social media about sleeping in their
Tesla cars to keep warm during the cold nights—thanks to the "Camp Mode"
feature that allows Tesla owners to use the car's climate control for
more than a day without draining the battery.
wfaa | The Texas power outage has become the Texas power outrage. Electricity supply and demand in Texas has really stabilized now. But when it was grossly out of whack over the past several days,
the cost of power in the wholesale market went crazy. It went from
about $50 per Megawatt to $9,000. That didn’t affect retail many
customers because they were on a fixed-rate plan. See explanation of
plan types here.
But if you were on a variable or indexed plan, your rate — and
therefore, your electric bill — may have skyrocketed. One customer
messaged us:
“Mine is over $1,000…not sure how…700 square foot apt I have been keeping at 60 degrees."
“Using as little as possible 1300 sq. ft. house and this is my bill. How is this fair. I only paid $1200 for the whole 2020.”
That tweet was accompanied by a screenshot of their bill, which now stands at $3,801.16.
When your electric company tells you to switch but there has been a hold on switching for over a week now. Using as little as possible 1300 sq ft house and this is my bill. . How is this fair. I only paid $1200 for the whole 2020 year @FoxNews@wfaa@tedcruz@GovAbbottpic.twitter.com/AylTS4m0j4
Then, I spoke with a guy named Ty Williams. He sent screenshots of
his three electric meters (one for his home, one for a guest house, and
one for his office). Last month, his bill for all three was $660. So
far, for this month’s electricity, he owes more than $17,000.
Williams wondered: “How in the world can anyone pay that? I mean you
go from a couple hundred dollars a month...there’s absolutely no
way...it makes no sense.”
ineteconomics | In 2002, under Governor Rick Perry, Texas deregulated its electricity
system. After a few years, the electrical free market, managed by a
non-profit called ERCOT, was fully-established. Some seventy or so
providers eventually sprung up. While a few cities – including Austin –
kept their public power, they were nevertheless tied to the state
system.
The market system could, and did, work out most of the time. Prices
rose and fell, and customers who didn’t sign long-term contracts faced
some risk. One provider, called Griddy, had a special model: for $9.99 a
month you could get your power at whatever the wholesale price was on any given day. That was cheap! Most of the time.
The problem with “most of the time” is that people need electric power all of the time. And Texas’s leadersknew
as of 2011, at least, when the state went through a short, severe
freeze, that the system was radically unstable in extreme weather.
But they did nothing. To do something, they would have had to regulate
the system. And they didn’t want to regulate the system, because the
providers, a rich source of campaign funding, didn’t want to be
regulated and to have to spend on weatherization that was not needed –
most of the time. In 2020, even voluntary inspections were suspended,
due to Covid-19.
Enter the deep freeze of 2021. Demand went up. Supply went down.
Natural gas froze up at the wells, in the pipes, and at the generating
plants. Unweatherized windmills also went off-line, a small part of the story.
Since Texas is disconnected from the rest of the country, no reserves
could be imported, and given the cold everywhere, there would have been
none available anyway. There came a point, on Sunday, February 14 or the
next day, when demand so outstripped supply that the entire Texas grid came within minutes of a collapse that, we are told, would have taken months to repair.
As this happened, the price mechanism failed completely. Wholesale prices rose a hundred-fold
– but retail prices, under contract, did not, except for the unlucky
customers of Griddy, who got socked with bills for thousands of dollars
each day. ERCOT was therefore forced to cut power, which might have been
tolerable, had it happened on a rolling basis across neighborhoods
throughout the state. But this was impossible: you can’t cut power to
hospitals, fire stations, and other critical facilities, or for that
matter to high-rise downtown apartments reliant on elevators. So lights
stayed on in some areas, and they stayed off – for days on end – in
others. Selective socialism, one might call it.
When the lights go off and the heat goes down, water freezes and that
was the next phase of the calamity. For when water freezes, pipes
burst, and when pipes burst the water supply cannot keep up with the
demand. So across Texas, water pressure is falling, as I type these
words. Hospitals without water cannot generate steam, and therefore
heat; and some of them are being evacuated right now. Meanwhile, ice is bearing down on the power lines.
finance.yahoo | Billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates on Wednesday rebuked a claim made a day before
by Texas Gov. Greg Abbott that put the blame for that state's massive
cold-weather power outage on the failure of renewable energy sources,
such as wind and solar.
In fact, extreme weather like the winter storm that swept across the country
in recent days will become more likely as climate change worsens, Gates
told Yahoo Finance, advocating instead for an expansion of renewable
energy as part of his call for the U.S. to achieve net zero carbon
emissions by 2050.
On Tuesday, Abbott blamed the outages on wind turbines and
on the Green New Deal, a plan for combating climate change that the
Texas governor called "a deadly deal for the United States of America."
Bill Gates, who has been emitting ten thousand times more greenhouse gases than the average person for decades, wants us to believe that he really cares about climate change and the solution is for him to start more companies and make more money off other people's labor.
“Our
wind and our solar got shut down, and they were collectively more than
10 percent of our power grid, and that thrust Texas into a situation
where it was lacking power on a statewide basis. ... It just shows that
fossil fuel is necessary,” Abbott told Sean Hannity in an interview cited by the Washington Post.
When asked about the blame directed at wind energy by Abbott, Gates said, "He's actually wrong."
"You can make sure wind turbines can deal with the cold," adds Gates, the former Microsoft (MSFT) CEO and author of a new book entitled, "How to Avoid a Climate Disaster.”
"[The extreme cold] probably wasn't anticipated for the wind turbines
that far South. But the ones up in Iowa and North Dakota do have the
ability to not freeze up."
The storm struck a large portion of the
U.S. on Monday, bringing snowfall and ice that caused power outages for
millions of people. Overall, more than 150 million people came under a winter storm warning, the National Weather Service said.
'The extreme events are coming more often'
The cold blast hit especially hard in Texas, where as of Tuesday 4 million households lacked power, the Washington Post reported. Some conservatives blamed frozen wind turbines for the power outage but wind energy contributes a fraction of the state's power in the winter, the Post pointed out.
The
loss of power caused by blackouts of thermal power plants — which
mostly rely on natural gas — outpaced the loss caused by frozen wind
turbines by a factor of five or six, the Post reported.
"Actually,
the main capacity that's gone out in Texas is not the wind, it's
actually some of the natural gas plants that were also not ready for the
super cold temperatures," Gates says.
NYTimes | The crisis dates back to the 1930s, when the Federal Power Commission gained the authority to regulate
interstate transmission of electric power. But politicians in Texas,
with their slavish devotion to the fossil fuel industry, didn’t want
Washington regulating the electricity business and chipping away at
those hefty profits.
So the business went entirely unregulated
until the formation of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas in the
1970s. But ERCOT has been anything but reliable. While it is
technically overseen by the state, its board is really just an industry club. Several of its members don’t even live in Texas.
On Saturday, Gov. Greg Abbott solemnly declared the state would not see another accident like Thursday’s deadly 100-plus-vehicle pileup on a frozen Fort Worth highway. On Monday, he reassured Texans that power would return. That day, two million people were plunged into darkness, and many into 8 degree weather. Then four million. By Tuesday, 10 people had died
in the Houston and San Antonio areas alone. Water pipes burst across
the state, forcing people without power to boil water just to drink it
safely.
After taking a beating on Twitter, Mr. Abbott spun around on Tuesday and blamed the utilities. He promised an investigation into ERCOT. George P. Bush, the state land commissioner, cravenly blamed the renewable energy industry, a talking point that caught fire among conservatives.
It was all just cow pie, though: Renewables like wind and solar can contribute up to 20 percent of the Texas power grid, but they were forecast to account for just 7 percent of the winter grid, with some 80 percent
of electricity in the state’s capacity projected to come from natural
gas, coal and a bit of nuclear power. And while some wind turbines in
Texas froze, many of them kept turning. By Tuesday, renewables were
helping to get the power going again. But it wasn’t enough. Each time
the power came back up on Tuesday, demand spiked, and the power supply
ran right back down. The rolling blackouts would just keep on rolling.
On Wednesday, Mr. Abbott ordered
natural gas producers not to let their supply out of the state until
Sunday, and to instead send it to the electrical grid. How soon this
could help the millions of Texans who continue to shiver in the darkness
is unclear. ERCOT has, once again, ordered utilities to cut power.
“It
feels colder than 25 degrees outside. I’m shivering in the house. … My
hands are freezing. My feet are freezing, and my nose is freezing,”
Laura Bettor, a psychologist in Austin, told me as she watched people
ski down her street. “People’s phones are down because they can’t
charge. And the government here? Everything about the state government
here is stupid.”
nbcnews | As large parts of Texas woke up Thursday to another day of a power crisis amid extreme winter weather, issues with water systems added to the misery for much of the state's population.
Texans
were under notice to boil tap water before drinking it after days of
record low temperatures damaged infrastructure, caused blackouts and
froze water pipes.
Millions
across the U.S. were left without electricity or heat in the aftermath
of the deadly winter storm as utility crews rushed to restore power
before another blast of snow and ice this week.
Out of more than a million people in the
U.S. who did not have electricity, Texas accounted for nearly half with
511,421, according to the tracking site poweroutage.us. The state dropped below 1 million power outages for the first time Thursday.
In
Texas, the extreme weather disrupted water service for more than 12
million residents, forcing many of the more than 680 water systems in
the state to issue boil water notices.
Other parts of the
country are bracing for snow. Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island,
New York City and the tristate area are expected to see 6 inches of
snow, while Washington, D.C., is expected to get 2 to 4 inches.
At least 37 people have died because of weather-related fatalities since Thursday, the majority in Texas.
Another
major winter storm is expected to track from the Lower Mississippi
Valley into the mid-Atlantic and Northeast through Friday, the National Weather Service said, bringing more heavy snow, sleet and freezing rain to further complicate recovery efforts.
Travel
remains paralyzed across much of the United States, with roadways
treacherous and thousands of flights canceled. Many school systems also
delayed or canceled face-to-face classes.
However, staying home also carried risks in places without power.
The
winter weather has caused blackouts in Texas that affected 1.8 million
customers Wednesday night, according to the tracking website poweroutage.us. That number was down to just over 511,000 as of 11:28 a.m. local time, the site said.
Without
power or heat, some Texans posted videos on social media of them
burning old furniture to stay warm. Others shared images of flooding
caused by burst pipes and collapsed ceilings.
The extreme winter weather this week and accompanying
problems — water facilities without power and lines that broke after
freezing — disrupted service for more than 12 million Texans, forcing
nearly 680 water systems to issue boil water notices, according to a
spokesperson for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
Nearly 264,000 Texans live in areas where water systems are completely nonoperational.
slate | Of all the continental states, Texas alone has its own power grid. (The rest of the continental U.S. is covered by two other grids.)
The reason for this is very Texan: The utilities wanted to avoid the
oversight from the federal government that comes with interstate
business. So Texas developed a massive market governed by the rules of
supply and demand that led to low prices for consumers.
But
according to Ed Hirs, an energy fellow at the University of Houston,
there’s no incentive for Texas power generators to jump in at a moment’s
notice, thanks to the way the market is structured. The average
wholesale price of electricity for the past decade or so has been lower
than what it costs to provide that electricity. He notes that the
high-cost generators know they have to be ready to go in the summer, but
after that, they “button up and go fishing,” and it can be difficult to
bring them back online quickly. For some companies, providing that
reserve power in offseason times, such as February, could prove very
rewarding if an unusual spike happens. But it’s a high-risk venture, and
larger companies are motivated to avoid sinking so much into the cost
of producing supply without a reliable demand. So Texas doesn’t have a
lot of reserve power.
Julie
Cohn, a historian with affiliations at the Baker Institute at Rice
University and at the Center for Public History at the University of
Houston, added that in Texas there is no law or regulatory entity
requiring a power system to have a certain amount of backup in case of a
sudden spike in demand, as is the case elsewhere. It’s possible that,
because of its isolation, the Texas grid was unable to pull power from
the surrounding regions. But as Gürcan Gülen, an independent energy
consultant and a former researcher at UT Austin, noted, the surrounding
regions were dealing with their own blackouts, so it’s unlikely that
would have helped much.
At
least one expert has argued that Texas had little reserve power on hand
simply because it had little need to worry, given its abundant natural
gas resources.But natural gas, which powers a large
percentage of Texas electricity plants, was a major culprit in this
week’s blackouts. Multiple technological elements in the extraction and
distribution of natural gas failed in the extreme temperatures,
knocking out about half of its normal output. This would have been a
huge problem even if natural gas’s role in the state’s power generation
wasn’t taken into account: Texans rely heavily on natural gas for heat
and fuel during the winter, and when demand skyrocketed as temperatures
plunged, the utilities were forced to prioritize individual houses and
hospitals over the power plants. And even then, some of those power
plants that received the natural gas were forced to halt operations due
to the cold.
The
cold was punishing for other power sources as well: At least one
nuclear power plant partially shut down in the cold, and some coal
generators failed in the frigid temperatures.
gpenewsdocs |Corporations have stepped beyond lobbying governments. They are
integrating in policy making at the national and international levels.
From agriculture to technology, decisions historically made by
governments are increasingly made by secretive unaccountable bodies run
by corporations says Nick Buxton.
LYNN FRIES: Hello and welcome. I’m Lynn Fries,
producer of Global Political Economy or GPEnewsdocs. Today I’m joined by
Nick Buxton. He’s going to be giving us some big picture of context on
The Great Reset, a World Economic Forum initiative to reset the world
system of global governance.
A worldwide movement crossing not only borders but all walks of life
from peasant farmers to techies is fighting against this initiative on
the grounds that it represents a major threat to democracy. Key voices
from the health, food, education, indigenous peoples and high tech
movements explained why in The Great Take Over: How we fight the Davos capture of global governance, a recent webinar hosted by the Transnational Institute.
Today’s guest, Nick Buxton is a publications editor and future labs
coordinator at the Transnational Institute. He is the founder and chief
editor of TNI’s flagship State of Power report. Welcome. Nick.
NICK BUXTON: Thank you very much, Lynn.
FRIES: The Transnational Institute was co-organizer
of The Great Takeover webinar. So what is it that you’re mobilizing
against by opposing this Great Reset Initiative.
BUXTON: What we’re really concerned about is really
that this initiative by the World Economic Forum actually looks to
entrench the power of those most responsible for the crises we’re
facing. In many ways, it’s a trick. It’s a sleight of hand to make sure
that things continue as they are; to continue the same.
That will create more of these crises, more of these pandemics, will
deepen the climate crisis, which will deepen inequality. It’s not a
Great Reset at all. It’s a Great Corporate Takeover. And that’s what we
were trying to draw attention to.
What we’ve been finding in recent years is that really there is
something I would call it a kind of a global, silent coup d’état going
on in terms of global governance. Most people don’t see it.
And people have become familiar with the way that corporations have
far more influence and are being integrated into policymaking at a
national level. They see that more in front of them. People see their
services being privatized. They see the influence of the oil companies
or the banking sector that has stopped actions such as regulation of
banks or of dealing with a climate crisis.
What people don’t realize is a global level there has been something
much more silent going on. Which is that their governance, which used to
be by nations, is now increasingly being done by unaccountable bodies
dominated by corporations. And part of the problem is
that that has been happening in lots of different sectors but people
haven’t been connecting the dots.
So what we’ve been trying to do in the last year is to talk with
people in the health movement, for example; people involved in public
education; people involved in the food sector; to say what is happening
in your sector?
And what we found is that in each of these sectors, global decisions
that used to be discussed by bodies such as the WHO or such as the Food
and Agriculture Organization were increasingly done by these
unaccountable bodies.
Just to give an example, we have now the global pandemic and one of
the key bodies that is now making the decisions is a facility called
COVAX [COVID-19 Vaccines Global Alliance]. You’d have thought global
health should be run by the World Health Organization. It is accountable
to the United Nations. It has a system of accountability.
Well, what’s actually happening is that the World Health Organization
is just one of a few partners but really [COVAX] it’s being controlled
by corporations and corporate interests. In this case it is GAVI [The
Vaccine Alliance formerly known as the Global Alliance for Vaccines
& Immunization] and CEPI [The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness
Innovations].
And they are both bodies, which don’t have a system of
accountability. Where it’s not clear who chose them; who they’re
accountable to; or how they can be held to account. And what we do see
is that there’s a lot of corporate influence in each of these bodies.
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