Home » Economy » Crenshaw on wind turbines: Texas learned 'too many renewable energy lessons from California'
Crenshaw on wind turbines: Texas learned 'too many renewable energy lessons from California'
Ex-Shell Oil president on Texas winter storm: ‘We’re living in a third world situation’
Former Shell Oil President John Hofmeister, who lives in Houston, says he has been without power since Monday morning following the ‘brutal’ winter storm in Texas.
Republican Texas Rep. Dan Crenshaw on Wednesday took a crack at explaining why Texas' energy infrastructure couldn't handle this week's winter storm in the state.
Continue Reading Below
The unusually harsh winter storm has killed at least 23 people, according to the New York Times, and left millions of customers without power in the state amid dangerously low temperatures.
"With blackouts across Texas, many are wondering: what happened? Leftists are cheering a 'red state' having energy problems," Crenshaw tweeted. "Here's the truth about what happened."
He said that "A mix of over-subsidized wind energy and under-investment in gas power" led to an insufficient supply of baseload energy to meet "a massive spike in demand."
TEXAS POWER GRID HIT BY EXTREME STORM
"Also, Texas infrastructure isn't designed for once-in-a-century freezes," he said.
Crenshaw added that some wind turbines in West Texas had to be "de-iced," leading to a drop in wind power from 31 gigawatts to 6, and the existing wind energy stored in batteries was also depleted because the batteries could not handle the cold weather.
We and our partners use cookies on this site to improve our service, perform analytics, personalize advertising, measure advertising performance, and remember website preferences.Ok