In Texas’s Black-Swan Blackout, Everything Went Wrong at Once

  • Natural gas output malfunctioned as wind turbines froze
  • This happened a decade ago but limited steps were taken
Watch: Total U.S. oil production now plunging by a third, the most ever due to snow and ice. (Source: Bloomberg)

The finger-pointing began immediately: It was the frozen wind turbines that foolishly replaced traditional sources. No, fossil fuels were at fault. No, Texas’s deregulated power market, unique in the country, had allowed companies to skimp on maintenance and upgrades.

As the hours ticked by and millions more were plunged into frozen darkness, a more sober reality emerged. The greatest forced blackout in U.S. history, as this event has almost certainly become, was the result of a systemic and multifaceted failure. There are no promises of when power will be restored and little likelihood that the episode won’t be repeated in a corner of the country hard hit by climate change.