Ideas for a brighter future for all

Lessons from the ‘Texas Deep Freeze’

In February 2021, the US state of Texas experienced some of its coldest weather on record – around 20℃ below average.  

Texas infrastructure was not designed to deal with such extreme low temperatures. The cold snap caused chronic electricity and water shortages, and a major disaster was declared. 

The consequences have been bleak. Dozens of people have died and others, especially the vulnerable, were left shivering in their homes. 

While Australia does not generally experience such cold winter temperatures, our electricity systems are also vulnerable to climate change, extreme weather and power outages. So, there are valuable lessons to be learned from the Texan disaster. 

 

What happened to the power system in Texas?
Long Lines
Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman via AP

Essentially, the freezing temperatures appear to have caused power generators to fail while, at the same time, electricity demand reached a new record winter peak of 69 gigawatts.

It’s understood that due to the extreme weather, up to 46 gigawatts of electricity generation was unavailable, spread across many types of generators including thermal (coal, gas, and nuclear) and renewable (wind). With record demand and failing generators, the system operator was forced to cut power to homes and businesses on a rotating basis. Up to 20 gigawatts of customer demand was unmet due to these outages. 

The Texas power grid is not well connected to those in neighbouring states, and so could not draw electricity from those power systems. 

For millions of people in Texas, this meant they were without power in freezing conditions and essential services such as hospitals experienced critical issues, including water outages and hospital bed shortages. 

The combination of high power demand and low supply meant prices skyrocketed on the wholesale electricity market, where electricity generators sell power to retailers. 

The average daily price during the extreme weather was close to the US$9,000 per megawatt hour price cap. For a point of reference, the average daily price in Australia’s market in recent months has been between A$20/MWh and A$40/MWh.

The Texas crisis serves as a warning to the world. Here are three lessons for Australia. 

Lesson One: We must prepare our electricity system for climate change
Bushfire damage
Crews worked across Australia to replace bushfire-damaged power poles after the Black Summer fires, such as here in Brogo, NSW. AAP Image/Sean Davey

As US-based energy expert Fereidoon Sioshansi noted to us recently: 

"With climate change, we need to revisit our outdated assumptions about resilient grid planning in Texas and places such as Australia."

Australia’s energy regulators should consider climate change when approving new transmission investments. 

And greater interconnection between the states would provide more resilience to extreme weather, allowing states to provide energy to other states whose power supplies are damaged by extreme weather. 

Lesson Two: Don't support the technologies of yesterday

Like Texas, Australia’s east coast market — called the national electricity market (NEM) — is an “energy-only market”. This means generators get paid only for the energy they produce, not the capacity they make available to supply electricity in the future. 

The issues in Texas have led to discussion among economists and politicians about whether Texas needs a “capacity market”, where generators get paid for the capacity they make available. 

They say a capacity market would make the system more reliable. But we believe this is misguided for three reasons. 

First, a capacity market would not have changed the outcome in Texas because no one anticipated a scenario like this (see Lesson 1!). 

Second, a capacity market in Australia is likely to be used to support existing, ageing, unreliable coal-fired plants, because they are already in the electricity system. 

Coal-fired plants are inflexible — they’re slow to respond to signals to produce more electricity. This means they’re more likely to detract, rather than add, resilience to our system.

Instead, we need flexible options that respond much faster to high electricity demand. These include technologies like battery storage, gas-fired peaking units (which run only at peak demand) and pumped hydro. 

But this flexibility isn’t rewarded under a capacity market, because capacity would be paid for irrespective of whether electricity production can be turned on quickly (or not). 

Power
It’s critical Australia implements enduring policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. AAP Image/Julian Smith

Third, there’s a better option for creating a more resilient, reliable system: a so-called “operating reserve” market.

This involves providing incentives to customers to reduce electricity use at short notice when power supplies are low.

Generators and customers that can rapidly respond to challenging conditions are paid in this separate market (but only when necessary).

Australia’s regulators are currently considering whether to introduce this type of market. While Texas has a similar scheme, it focuses on creating higher prices to encourage spare capacity, rather than paying consumers and generators to make electricity available if needed.

 
 
Lesson Three: We need to do our fair share and decarbonise our electricity system rapidly

To prevent extreme weather from becoming a bigger problem, it’s critical Australia implements an enduring policy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. 

The simplest way of doing this would be transitioning the existing renewable energy target into an emissions intensity scheme. 

Essentially, this is where lower emissions generation (such as renewables) gets rewarded, while higher emissions generation (such as coal) gets penalised. 

Allowing renewable energy generators to export their greenhouse abatement to other sectors would underpin faster decarbonisation and greater investment in new electricity supply. 

Australia has always been one of the most fragile continents when it comes to the effects of climate change. We need to prepare our electricity system to be resilient to more extreme weather. 

But we also need to rapidly scale up the decarbonisation of our electricity supply to ensure Australia plays its part in reducing global greenhouse emissions.

Authors

Dr Tim NelsonTim Nelson is an Associate Professor at Griffith University and is widely published in Australian and international peer-reviewed journals. He holds a PhD in economics for which he earned a Chancellors Doctoral Research Medal and a first class honours degree in economics. Tim is also a fellow of the Governance Institute (FGIA and FCIS) and a graduate of the Australian Institute of Company Directors (GAICD).

Tim was recently appointed the Executive General Manager, Energy Markets at Infigen Energy. During 2019, Tim was the Executive General Manager, Strategy and Economic Analysis, at the Australian Energy Market Commission where he established its thought leadership and quantitative analysis capabilities. Up until November 2018, Tim was the Chief Economist of AGL Energy and led the company’s public policy advocacy and its sustainability and ESG strategy. In particular, he led development of AGL’s revised Greenhouse Gas Policy, climate risk disclosure and the Powering Australian Renewables Fund (PARF) concept.

He is currently researching electricity tariff design in a high penetration renewables environment, management theory in relation to climate change responses by companies and modelling climate change mitigation scenarios in the energy sector.

Follow Tim on Twitter

Dr Joel GilmourJoel Gilmore is an Associate Professor at Griffith University and is passionate about providing critical analysis that helps industry and government transition our energy sector to a low emissions future. I’m particularly interested in the integration of renewable generation into our grids, and how electricity markets could (or should) evolve over time to provide the right signals for investors.

I draw on a broad background of physics, engineering, market modelling, policy work and economics to deliver a big picture view – while still undertaking detailed, quantitative analysis to make sure recommendations are backed up by hard data.

Follow Joel on Twitter

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