Earth Cooling Dramatically
Winter storms are wreaking havoc in central and southern States. The climate news has turned catastrophic. People are angry; however, the federal government is too busy with its delusional psychosis over global warming and the COVID pandemic.
People don’t realize how bad and multifaceted the situation is. We have full-scale blackouts in Mexico, millions of Americans still in the dark with no power and heat, and the biggest outage in American oil and gas history. A loss on this scale is already generating an energy crisis, meaning each and everyone one of us will be paying more for energy.
Governors Wind Energy Coalition
How the Warming Arctic Helped Drive a Deep Freeze Into Texas Source: By Brian K Sullivan, Bloomberg • Posted: Wednesday, February 17, 2021
The sub-zero temperatures causing blackouts across the southern U.S. are connected to climate change.
The Earth’s poles are warming faster than anywhere on the planet. While the consequences of that aren’t completely understood, it’s becoming apparent that many of the world’s extreme weather events owe the Arctic at least some of the credit.
A blast of cold air that swept out of Canada in mid-February, moving across the Great Plains and deep into the South, has overburdened the electrical grid and triggered widespread power outages in Texas, which like many southern states relies predominantly on electric heating, according to the Energy Information Administration. It was the second time in six months that extreme temperatures have brought grids to their knees a heatwave ac
Texas Power Crisis Moves Into Fourth Day With Millions in Dark
Bloomberg 2/18/2021 Naureen S. Malik, Mark Chediak and Josh Saul
(Bloomberg) The crisis that has knocked out power to millions of homes and businesses in Texas and the central U.S. is poised to enter a fourth day, with millions still in the dark.
While Texas’s grid operator was able to restore power to 1.8 million homes Wednesday, 1.2 million remain without electricity, according to a spokesperson. That’s about 3.6 million people based on the size of the average household. Around 43 gigawatts of generation was still offline as of 6 p.m. local time enough to power 8.6 million homes.