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Re: Biden Admin Denied A Houston Grid Upgrade Request. Then Hurricane Beryl Knocked Out Power For Millions

By: monkeytrots in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 13 Jul 24 11:02 PM | 20 view(s)
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Msg. 55123 of 58487
(This msg. is a reply to 55073 by Beldin)

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Really, folks ?

CenterPoint is the electricity provider for about 2.8 million businesses and homes in the Houston area, and it covers major ports, oil refineries and massive petrochemical facilities,

Is there really any doubt about why this application was denied by the Brandon Brigade ?

I lived om Houston from 1978-1985. Thru tropical storms and a couple of Hurricanes. Pine trees are the predominant veg for most of the area, which require a sandy/sandy loam soil for their growth. Bayous provide the overwhelming percentage of 'drainage' for the entire region, carrying massive amounts of water to the Gulf.

One tropical storm, Carmen I thinks, stalled out over Houston and dumped over 18 inches of rain in less than 8 hours. The freeways are almost NEVER flooded, but the access roads go about 6 feet under, and the underpasses to the freeways are often 3-4 feet deep. That tropical storm flooded our neighborhood streets with about 3-4 feet of water. Our house (as were most in the area) was about 4-5 feet above street level. I did manage to drive thru the standing water (go slow, don't stop, and stay as far from center as possible). Didn't stall, but was going thru water up to the base of the car windows. Talk about a hoot !!! Had two vehicles at the time, one a 77 Accord, the udder one a 65 Plymouth Fury Tank.

When the underpasses would flood, would take my Fury down to the one closest to the house and tow vehicles out from the underpass so folks could get home, and not strand themselves and everybody else trying to get out. Big ole nylon tow strap made from a USAF 'jet catching net/ arrestor barrier' across the ends of runways. Could haul a semi with that thing, and with that Fury. Used to PO the hell out of tow truck drivers that I was providing a 'free service' to those folks. I got a good laugh about it, but none of them ever tried to mess with me.

In 79 or 80, was asked to man Mobil's emergency action room monitoring a hurricane offshore and keep the production platforms updated when they would radio in for updates/reports (a few hundred miles away). Had a contact number for 'higher level action' if required - but didn't have to use it. Was a pretty quiet night actually.

Lived north of Houston downtown, about two-three miles south of Humble. When the hurricane in 1983? hit, had a tornado go right over our house, slept thru it, but it DID take off the tops of one of our pine trees. Now that storm did do quite a bit of damage to downtown Houston, and took our electricity out for about a week. It wasn't a fun week, but it also wasn't really all that bad.

MOST ELECTRICITY IN HOUSTON IS NOT TRANSMITTED BY OVERHEAD WIRES AND POLES. It is almost ALL buried.

Now, that means poles don't get taken down, howsomever, buried cables under 2-3 feet of water DO present a tad bit of a problem. Just sayin.

Amywhooz, the above and $5 should git ya a cup of coffee most places. *s*

ps: Beryl was NOT much of a storm and was nowhere near hurricane strength by the time it got to Houston.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Biden Admin Denied A Houston Grid Upgrade Request. Then Hurricane Beryl Knocked Out Power For Millions
By: Beldin
in 6TH POPE
Sat, 13 Jul 24 5:03 AM
Msg. 55073 of 58487

http://dailycaller.com/2024/07/12/biden-grid-houston-reject-hurricane-beryl/

By Nick Pope
The Daily Caller
July 12, 2024

The Biden administration turned down a Houston utility’s request for funding to upgrade grid infrastructure before Hurricane Beryl knocked out power in the city this week, according to E&E News.

CenterPoint Energy — the Houston-based utility — applied for about $100 million from the Department of Energy’s (DOE) $10.5 billion Grid Resilience and Innovation Partnerships (GRIP) Program, but its application was denied by the agency in 2023, according to E&E News. GRIP funding is specifically meant to “improve the resilience of the power system against growing threats of extreme weather” across the U.S., and Hurricane Beryl ultimately knocked out power for millions of people this week in the largest power outage in CenterPoint’s history, according to local outlet ABC13.

Specifically, CenterPoint requested the assistance “to fund high wind and flood mitigation projects,” and it was flooding and high winds from the storm that teamed up to knock out power in Houston, according to E&E News. The utility wanted to upgrade the power lines and poles that were damaged by Hurricane Beryl, though it is not clear that the upgrades would have been completed before the storm hit Houston.

It is also unclear why DOE denied CenterPoint’s request and what role municipal and state government entities may or may not have played in setting the stage for weather-related outages.

CenterPoint is the electricity provider for about 2.8 million businesses and homes in the Houston area, and it covers major ports, oil refineries and massive petrochemical facilities, according to E&E News. However, it was not among the 58 selectees receiving $3.5 billion in total from GRIP that DOE announced in October 2023.

“These are highly competitive processes with applicants from around the country,” CenterPoint told E&E News. The firm added that it “incorporated the feedback from DOE” in a subsequent application for GRIP funding filed in April, but selectees for that round of funding will not be announced until later in 2024.

CenterPoint declined to comment when contacted by the Daily Caller News Foundation, stating that the company is focused on recovery efforts and restoring power.

“There’s no denying that the nation’s grid has a significant need to upgrade aging existing power infrastructure to withstand the effects of increasingly frequent and severe weather,” a DOE spokesperson told the DCNF. “The Biden-Harris Administration has provided the largest electric grid infrastructure investment in history, including over $20 billion available to DOE to help strengthen and modernize the grid through extremely competitive solicitations, grant programs, and loans.”

Houston is located on the Gulf Coast, an area of the country that is particularly susceptible to hurricanes, and it is also home to crucial oil, gas, petrochemical and commercial infrastructure. Moreover, Houston and surrounding areas are under an official heat advisory, and hundreds of thousands of CenterPoint customers will be without power until next week, according to The Associated Press.

“I don’t understand how the grant application could be rejected,” Ed Hirs, an energy economist at the University of Houston, told E&E News. “This is the home of the petrochemical part of America. I mean, for God’s sakes, what’s DOE thinking?”

“CenterPoint is clearly a matter of national security,” Hirs told the outlet. “This is the communications hub for the oil patch and petrochemicals and refiners.”


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