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Friday, 19 February 2021

900 bucks to charge a Tesla

 Texas Freeze Raises Electricity to $900 to Charge a Tesla


21st Century Wire,

18 February, 2021

As a result of the record-breaking freeze in Texas, massive demands have sent retail energy and electricity prices skyrocketing.

One power supplier, Griddy, went so far as to tell 29,000 of their customers – now fully exposed to the real-time swings in wholesale power markets – to switch to another provider because spot electricity prices pushed as high as $9,000 a megawatt-hour.

In recent years, Texas officials were lured into adopting supposed ‘green’ energy policies and production, and promoted the sale of electric cars, including Telsa motors, whose billionaire owner Elon Musk has recently begun relocating a large part of the company’s operation to the Lone Star state. But at the current price per megawatt-hour, charging your Tesla is liable to set you back about $900.

Charles Kennedy from Oil Price reports…


IMAGE: A frozen Texas wind turbine is being doused with petrochemicals in order to remove the ice of the blades. Billionaire owner of ‘green’ manufacturer Telsa motors, Elon Musk, never anticipated his electric car revolution could be hampered by failing ‘sustainable’ green energy grids in Texas.

The electricity shortage in Texas amid the cold snap has sent spot electricity prices soaring so much that the surge in power prices equals a cost of $900 for charging a Tesla.

The typical full charge of a Tesla costs around $18 using a Level 1 or Level 2 charger at home, according to estimates from The Drive. This estimate is based on an average price of $0.14 per kWh of power.

However, the extreme winter weather this week has sent Texas spot electricity prices soaring, as the wind turbines froze in the ice storms and reduced the wind power generating capacity in the Lone Star State by half.

Spot electricity prices at the West hub have soared above the grid’s $9,000 per megawatt-hour cap, compared to a ‘normal’ price of $25 per megawatt-hour, FOX Business notes.

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) called early on Monday for rotating outages across the state as extreme winter weather forced wind power generating units offline, while electricity demand set a new winter peak record.

At the same time, freezing cold and ice storms cut offline almost half of the wind power capacity in Texas.

“We are dealing with higher-than-normal generation outages due to frozen wind turbines and limited natural gas supplies available to generating units,” ERCOT said.

SEE ALSO: Green Power Fails: Will Texas Be Able to Reboot Its Power Grid?

In Texas, wind power generation overtook coal-fired generation in 2020 for the first time ever, with wind power now accounting for 25 percent of the Texas electricity generation. Natural gas-fired power generation is the leading source of electricity in Texas, with more than 45 percent share.

While oil-and-gas rich Texas is the leading U.S. state for wind power installations, the frozen turbines in the Arctic weather have strained the grid so much that rolling outages in Texas continue for a second consecutive day.

“The wind-dependent Texas grid is experiencing rolling blackouts, prices the equivalent of $900 per Tesla charge, and an expected supply shortage of 10 GW–the amount of electricity needed to power 5 million homes,” Alex Epstein, Founder of Center for Industrial Progress, tweeted today.

Here is my video from yesterday

A winter storm in Texas, global warming and the Great Reset



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