When Public Utility Commissioner Lori Cobos pressed the state’s climatologist on how to account for extreme weather in strengthening Texas’ electricity grid, she didn’t use the C-words.
“I don’t think that we can rely on the old models anymore,” said Cobos, who was appointed to the commission in June. “We’ve got to really kind of think more progressively going forward on how we’re calculating statistics and what data we’re using, given the weather fluctuations in Texas and all over the country.”
“Weather fluctuations” and “extreme weather” were the phrases Texas regulators largely stuck to last week in a meeting about hardening the state’s electricity grid — just a few days after the world’s preeminent climate change scientists released the most dire report yet on how human activity is warming the globe at a rapid pace.
Texas is already experiencing hotter and longer summers, sea level rise, and increasingly intense hurricanes due to climate change — trends that are expected to accelerate in the coming decades if humans continue to emit unsustainable quantities of greenhouse gases.
With climate change looming over the discussion, officials on the Public Utility Commission of Texas hesitantly questioned the Electric Reliability Council of Texas and the state’s top climatologist on how those trends could be factored into regulations for the power grid that covers much of Texas. Commissioners pondered how to plan for an unknown that scientists agree is bringing new weather extremes.
“What about the next extreme event?” said Jimmy Glotfelty, a newly appointed PUC commissioner. “We need to think, at some point, about an event that’s worse than what happened in February.”
That’s the fundamental question for those managing the power grid: What is “extreme” weather in Texas? The definition will underpin the agency’s rules on how far power plants must go in upgrading and weatherizing to prevent another grid catastrophe — and it’s unclear how or if Texas will include forward-looking climate modeling in the parameters.
The utility regulatory agency is developing rules aimed at ensuring that power plants can withstand extreme weather after a winter storm crippled the grid and left millions of people without power for several days in February, one of the worst environmental disasters in state history. The storm caused the deaths of as many as 700 people, according to a BuzzFeed analysis, and caused an estimated $86 billion to $129 billion in economic damage, according to The Perryman Group, a Texas economic firm.
Lawmakers responded with Senate Bill 3, which required upgrades to the electricity grid but largely left the details to the PUC. During the Thursday meeting, PUC staff and commissioners said lawmakers had left the agency little time to implement the new and complex regulations.
The PUC has published a preliminary draft of rules and estimates that large power plants would not need to implement the rules until the winter of 2022. Medium-size and smaller power plants would have deadlines of winter 2023 and 2024, respectively.
“We’re left trying to define what a weather emergency is,” Barksdale English, a director of compliance and enforcement at the Public Utility Commission, said in his remarks to commissioners Thursday. “The best we’ve come up with is to think about all the historical weather data that exists in the state.”
But, he noted, “there’s a lot of different ways to slice that data.”
Despite the uncertainty about how to factor climate modeling into new rules for the power grid, Doug Lewin, an Austin-based energy and climate consultant who has observed the Public Utility Commission for more than a decade, said that Thursday was a “milestone moment” politically, given that a Texas regulatory agency asked about extreme weather at all.
A decade ago, Texas’ top politicians sowed confusion about climate science while suing the Obama administration over federal efforts to cut down carbon emissions. In 2014, Texas Republicans’ party platform called climate change a “political agenda which attempts to control every aspect of our lives.” The most recent platform states that while the party supports objective teaching of scientific theories, science, including climate change, should be taught as “challengeable scientific theories subject to change.”
“This is what the Texas government, and society in general, is struggling with, is the long tradition of climate [change] denial,” Lewin said. “But climate change is not a 2050 thing. It’s happening now, in real time. So, that’s the shift [electricity regulators have] got to make.