Sorry but you are still wrong sir. Between 80 and 90 percent of Texas power is from gas, coal, nuclear.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.tex...wer-storm/amp/
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2021/02/16/b...alds-citibank/
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbc...mp/ncna1258185
Bottom line is Texaswas ilprepared due to lack of leadership. Other places that are used to this type of weather do a much better job weathering their infrastructure.
Funny how when things go wrong the right just points fingers and almost never come up with solutions of their own. Nope they just take trips to Cancun and be the hypocrites that they are.
As far as comparing Austin to Lubbock goes, that is comparing Apples to oranges. What is Lubbocks population compared to Austin's. Dallas is a conservative area and guess what, they are in the same boat as Austin if not worse.
As long as I have literature backing what I say I will continue to repeat the facts over and over again. If you wanna continue to parrot the made up lies that you believe then that is your ignorance.
Originally Posted by Little Monster
Little Monster, You probably missed my Post #22,
https://eccie.net/showpost.php?p=106...2&postcount=22
The media is throwing out a lot of inaccurate and misleading info, and the 62% figure I quoted falls into that category.
What I did was go back to ERCOT tables showing power generation by source in 2020. You can download the Excel table here,
http://www.ercot.com/content/wcm/lis...yFuel2020.xlsx
From that table, you can calculate that in 2020, 22.9% of the power generated during 2020 by the ERCOT system was from wind, and 25.3% was from renewables.
You can also calculate wind as a % of the total for January, February, and December, 2020, and those figures are 25.8%, 25.8%, and 27.8% respectively. In other words, normally wind during winter is a high % of the mix, higher than what the press is saying in one of the articles you linked to.
Btw, Before long, ERCOT will publish an Excel table showing the same info for February, 2021, and that will help unravel what happened further.
I specifically did not blame renewables for the problem we're having. I said wind and solar are price competitive, but don't work when the wind isn't blowing and the sun isn't shining, and you have to have sufficient capacity from non-intermittent sources to make up for that.
In your first post in this thread, you appeared to be blaming the crisis we're having on NOT ENOUGH renewable energy. That's not correct. Texas is close to the top of the charts. You can download BP's statistical review of world energy here,
https://www.bp.com/en/global/corpora...ld-energy.html
Take a look on page 61 and you'll see electricity generation by fuel for various countries. The USA generates 10.1% from renewables. Europe generates 18.6%. Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom are tops in the world, with 32%, 25%, and 31% of electricity from renewables. From the ERCOT table, that I linked to above, Texas is 25%. We're one of the world leaders in use of renewables, and most of that is from wind.