My wife created this and posted it on her Facebook page. It’s just too good not to re-publish here.
Yesterday, the
morning low was about 4 F. This
morning, Waco airport reported -1
F, a record-setting number for these
parts. We have had about 3 inches of
snowfall up to this point, with some
sort of ice storm predicted tonight.
Our personal experiences a quarter century ago, during two hundred-year-record-setting winters
in Minnesota, had us better prepared
than most of our neighbors, I
suppose. Nothing in the farm shop
froze. I had hot lights and a heater
running in there, plus faucets dripping
and a toilet drained.
On the house, we had
one grey water outfall freeze up, which
I thawed today with pots of hot water, followed by seriously abusing the wife’s hair
dryer. I wanted to use my little propane
torch, but that had been cold-soaked to
about 0 F, and so the propane bottle had
no vapor pressure: nothing came out when
I opened the valve, at all.
The tap on my beer keg refrigerator in the garage also
froze. I thawed it today, too, after
several hours’ exposure to the heat from an old-time incandescent light
bulb.
The Texas power grid seems to have had a serious
problem. Grid demand got close to grid generating
capacity, so ERCOT ordered the utilities
to do rolling blackouts to reduce demand.
These were supposed to be power outages of 15-45 minutes’ duration, at any given location.
It didn’t work out that way.
The rolling blackouts, rather
than preventing a crisis, seem to have
precipitated one.
The evidence is that multiple power plants have gone
off-line, reducing grid generating capacity
very significantly, and forcing the
blackouts to be lengthy and widespread. No
one seems to have a believable answer for why this happened.
There was a lot of talk about frozen wind turbines out on
the wind farms in west Texas, but when I
searched, the answer was the opposite. Despite some windmills shut down for
icing, the actual output from those wind
farms seems to be about twice what anybody had expected.
Then talk seemed to shift to frozen natural gas lines stopping
fuel flow to the power plants. That seems
to be a real issue with the natural gas-fed plants, but it does not explain the stoppages at coal
plants, and one nuclear plant that shut
down.
It is possible for the feed pipeline to a natural gas power
plant to freeze up, but not the natural
gas pipe to a residence. If somebody
offers you that excuse, they are lying
to you. Residences have natural gas pipes
that operate at very low pressures.
Power plant pipelines operate at several hundreds to a few thousand
psi. That makes a huge difference to
what can, and cannot, happen.
Natural gas is not just methane, there is also significant ethane, propane,
butane, water, carbon dioxide, nitrogen,
and often even some sulfur compounds.
Natural gas that is fit to be used as fuel has been processed to be just
methane with some ethane, and only the
merest trace of water. The rest has been
removed. Crummy fuel is cheaper, but has water in it. That water content makes a difference!
For gas transported at high pressures, any obstruction causes a pressure drop, and the corresponding temperature drop can be
quite significant when that happens.
That temperature drop causes ice to form from the water content, which can obstruct the pipe further, or even completely. It takes a lot of heat to melt that ice, once it has formed. If you have ever thawed a frozen pipe yourself, you know that statement to be true. And, the bigger the pipe, the tougher it is to deal with.
Making things even worse,
the water can combine with the ethane,
propane, and butane content to
form things called “clathrates”. These
can freeze to an ice-like substance,
even easier than water can freeze to ice. The cheaper and crummier your natural
gas, the more likely these contaminants
will cause trouble during extreme cold weather.
That’s just physics and chemistry.
You can’t fight it.
While all of this has been going on, fossil fuel prices have surged higher, especially natural gas prices. What was about $3 per million BTU has suddenly
surged as high as $600 per million BTU. Whether
any of this is price gouging, or illegal
speculation, I do not know. But that possibility is real!
All in all, I smell a
rat here somewhere. There are many
questions that need to be asked of ERCOT, and of the utility giants. We will see if anybody we elected actually
asks. It is their sworn job, you know?
Update 2-19-21: the funny above is not meant to minimize the disaster that unfolded in Texas. See the discussion of that disaster in the second half of the 2-19-21 article just above this one.
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